![]() ![]() |
![]() |
UFDC Home | Search all Groups | Digital Library of the Caribbean | Caribbean Newspaper Digital Library | Panama and the Canal | Panama Canal Museum | | Help |
Material Information
Subjects
Notes
Record Information
Related Items
|
Full Text |
JRI ST FLITES
A fctfM Ml ram's V1EWARD VIA YO. AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER mean caAdiaiv whisky Let ffce people knovo the truth and the country i safe1 Abraham TAncoln PANAMA. R. P.. MONDAY. JULY I. 19S9 PIVI CINTS m i I MB i ma mm Ld GLORY ir i 111" Atrato umvor fig ' d- ff fen te nt.t.ar.Vipd to the halvard. unfurls or changing ceremony ..at the uni- Jtieaaquarters ,ai; wuarry xieignw ail ahnup nrenares to hoist it aloft kys the NationalAnthem and the k salute to the new National Colors. (US Army Fhoto) sfcsfer Named t 2 CZ Schools ,ols- f sr 1 ttr, f nooi V i tin- I If I I was I If I I ?em- 1 1 :..: was it.. 1 1 i of i act to re ation 1 his ma. iver- The an- jrctes 'Gu- sub sub-rr. rr. sub-rr. a r-ivil in- nclav of an other m a post was nrt r ALFREDO CRAGWELL sity of Panama. Cragwell is the son of the Rev. C. A. Cragwell, a former Canal Zone teacher. Webster has taught 11 years in the Canal Zone Latin American schools. He was graudatcd recent recently ly recently from the University of Nebras ka with a major in Spanish. While at the University he was the reci pient of two regents' scholarships and was selected for membership in Phi Delta Kappa, the national fraternity n education. His ele mentary and .secondary education were receivedvm the canal .one Latin America schools. Webster is married and resides with his wife and three children at Rainbow City. He is the son of the lafre James Webster, for many years a teacher in the Latin Amer ican schools. Boycott Announced I KINGSTON, Jamaica (UPI) The government of this West In Indian dian Indian island has ordered a boycott of South African goods as a pro protest test protest against that country's racial policies. The boycott, ordered by the Jamaican trade ministry, is effective immediately. PARADING SCPXSJPni1 f pay Scouts ant. Cub Scouta ef Atlantic side drew applause from. rpwls. lining the greets as the Fourth oya(rtpP!n!5fej' to the Coco Solo elementary'iachool for a patriotic program. The Judge's Bench DesDite the lone holiday week end, Balboa Magistrate's Court was only moderately Dusy toaay, with intoxication leading the list of charges against the citizenry. Three were nicked on the chaige of being drunk in a public place.' Thomas Fula, 19, Manuel Jaen, 19 and Alfredo Guerra, 29, ah Fana manian, eacn paid a 3 nne lor thei, offense. Three more Panamanians were fined varying amounts for driv driving ing driving in the Canal Zone without a varying amounts for anving in the Canal Zone without a valid o- nerator's licenses. Nelson Quin- tero, 19, ,was assesed $10. J o se Suarez, 38, paid $15 and bergio Jordan, 23 year-old cab driver, was fined $5. Jordan was assci assci-sed sed assci-sed an additional $5 for failure to observe a red light on Tivoli Ave nue. Also appearing in Magistrate's Court today was Prince Alfonso Cumberbatch, 39, Panamanian, who was found guilty of possessing marijuana when he was arrested at Ft. Amador. He was sentenc ed to serve 30 days in Balboa jam iiimiiiiiii MiiiiiiiiiiiiiimnniMiirTiTTnTntriii inn i IVOfT'Tf r..yp- iiinNMUfrirariinMinnmiin wiwi.k iliininmiiMiiMii miiinillnmlWlM6nWilll Colon Resident Sentenced For Commy Trespass Mrs, Sylvia E. Ramsey Small, 34-year-old resident of Clon, was ordered to serve a five-day sus suspended pended suspended jail sentence on a former charge of commissary trespassing, and was given a 10-day jail sen sentence tence sentence when found trespassing a second time at the Rainbow Ci City ty City Commissary June 27. She was holding a gallon of sa salad lad salad oil when arrested. The 10 10-day day 10-day jail sentence was suspended for a year by Cristobal Magistrate Loren B. Hillsinger. Her previous arrest on a com commissary missary commissary trespassing charge has been on March 3 of this year when the sentence was suspended on a year's probation. NAVY ON THE MARCH Member of the Navy's Cristobal Harbor Defense Unit, led by Ens. Douglas J. Youngblood, were among llltary groups participating in the Coco Solo Fourth of July parade. Isihmus Mostly Peaceful And Quiet Over Long Independence Day Weekend Colombian Frigate Takes Lucky 38 Back to Cartagena The Colombian Navy frigate Almirante Padilla, sail sailed ed sailed from Cristobal for Cartagena yesterday with 38 sur survivors vivors survivors of a sea disaster that claimed at least seven lives. Eighteen of the 38 had spent their brief time here in Coco Solo Hospital, while the remainder were installed in the Corozal Immigration Station. Many of them, from the Colombian islands of San Andres and Old Providence, were visited by relatives who are working on the Isthmus! One survivor, Carlos Garcia, a 29-year-old Guatema Guatema-Ian Ian Guatema-Ian who served as quartermaster on the explosion-sunk Ri'o Atrato, is still recovering at Coco Solo Hospital. He is expected to be discharged in another day or two. His repatriation is being arranged by Guatemalan consular authorities here. The 39 victims aboard the Almirante Padilla repre repre-sented.crew sented.crew repre-sented.crew pnd passengers aboard the Colombian 500 500-ton ton 500-ton converted LCr Ri'o Atrato which, burned and blasted, sank early Friday morning 200 miles northeast of Cris- tobal. Survivors reached the Canal Zone early Saturday morning a a-board board a-board the 6100-ton German freieh fr sgeiu,wW!h Jiaescue4 tuern me lessen, commanded ny veter veteran an veteran Capt. Theodor Busch and head headed ed headed for Cristobal, passed within 10 miles of the doomed Rio Atrato only four hours after the initia initia-explosion explosion initia-explosion occurred late Thursday afternoon. The pteular yllowih rfltct rfltct-td td rfltct-td glart dirtcttd Busch's atten attention tion attention to th area and h mad for the art immtdiatoly. Within four hours of reaching the disaster scene, the Essen has picked up 28 survivors, including a mother and three small chil children dren children from the burning vessel it itself. self. itself. Meanwhile the Essen's radio had already alerted the MSTS ship Henry Gibbins, steaming 12 hours farther north enroute to Puerto Rico. Reversing course, the Gibbins notified authorities here and early Friday morning an Air Force C C-54 54 C-54 was on its way to aid in the search. Afttr daybreak, with th plant's hlo, another 11 survivors were pickod from the open sea. Al- In contrast to the highway may mayhem hem mayhem throughout the United States, Panama and the Canal Zone ex experienced perienced experienced mostly peace and quiet over the long holiday weekend. Panama National guard au authorities thorities authorities reported two men kill killed ed killed and one injured in a traffic collision at Las Cumbres, near La Kacienda. Within the Canal Zone William G. Archer, 16, of Parque Lefevre, was seriously injured when he fell to the Madden Road pavement from the rear of a moving station wagon. Apparently the boy had climbed on the car from the road although circumstances surrounded ths r-' cident are not clear. The injured boy is in. Gorgas Hospital. Police on either side of the Zone say the greatest evidence British Envoy Sir Ian Henderson Relieved Fonteyn Affair Is Over PLYMOUTH, England, July (UPI) Britlah ambas ambassador sador ambassador Sir Ian Henderson, who kept an all night vigil near the Panama City jail when ballerina Margot Fonteyn was detained last April, arrived home today. "I am relieved the affair is over," he said, after disem disembarking barking disembarking from the steamship Reina del Mar. The "affaJr" was Dame Margot'i alleged complicity with her husband Roberto Arias In a plot to seize power In Pan Panama. ama. Panama. "Panama City was in a very unsettled state and it was fortunate that Dame Margot expressed a wish to leave volun voluntarily." tarily." voluntarily." Sir Ian is home on leave. of the long holiday was a bump bumper er bumper crop of celebrants hauled in for intoxication. Saturday, as part of holiday ceremonies at Quarry Heights, the new 49-star U.S. flag was raised for the first time. The flag w,as presented otthe Caribbean Com Command mand Command by Lt. Gen. Ridgely Gaith Gaith-er, er, Gaith-er, Command Chief. In the US, President and Mrs. Eisenhower motored back to Wash Washington ington Washington after a weekend in Mary Maryland land Maryland where the President polished up his golf game. It was an un uneventful eventful uneventful trip back, according to reports. Not even a flat tire. At Margarita food went faster than priies during Fourth of Ju July ly July festivities. Tom Sellers, pre president sident president of the Cristobal-Margarita Civic Council which sponsor sponsored ed sponsored the activities, seid thet the bafr-becued steer was served to about 1250 visitors. But several door prizes went un claimed. Sellers announced that holders of tickets 635 and 387 can still claim free dinners for two at the Cristobal Yacht Club, and dinner for two at the Cristobal Gun Club is available for ticket holder 968. Also unclaimed are three cases of beer, contributed by the Mar Margarita garita Margarita Knights of Columbus. A case each may be claimed by holders of tickets 629, 460 and 411. Sellers termed the celebration a great, success, and expressed his appreciation to Albert Motta, who donated the steer for the barbecue, and to members of Cristobal Elks Lodge 1542, who prepared it. The U5 holiday death tally as reported by United Press Inter International, national, International, was still incomplete this morning but at least 210 were known dead in highway ac accidents cidents accidents and another 142 died of drowning or other accidental causes. This was far below the dismal prediction which expected more than 350 to die on the nation's highways. Texas led the nation with 21 highway dead. Illinois had 15, Pennsylvania 14, and New York State 13. Nine states boasted per perfect, fect, perfect, no-fatality highway slates. In bng of the worst holiday tragedies, a private plane on a holiday sightseeing trip crashed into the side of n mountain near Prescott, Ariz. Six persons, four of them children, were killed. A major bright spot in the ho holiday liday holiday picture was the fact that no persons had been killed by Independence Day fireworks. The Safety Council called this 'most encouraging." The Safety Council said the cur current rent current week end was experiencing the nation's heaviest traffic pile pile-un un pile-un In history. It based 'his con conclusion clusion conclusion on Ue facts lha' July 4th and Labor Day tradH'onally wcrp the "most travellM" holidays and 1959 traffic alr'srl" ns six per' cent above record 1958. Nationalists Claim Reds Massing Planes For Attack TAIPEI. Formosa, July 6 (UPI) The official military information icp said todav the Chinese Communists have concentrated 2. 2.-,300 ,300 2.-,300 planes about two-thirds of 'entire Red air force along the east coast within striking range of Formosa. The report came after four rva tionalist Sabres shot down fivi Communist MIG-19s yesterday in a blazing dogfight over the off shore Matsu islands. Twelve of the Red jets newest version of the MIG 15 attacked in what could be the first phase of a new Red offensive. The information service said 79 per cent of the threatening planes are jets. It said they were deploy ed in 47 coastal bases, none of them more than 850 miles from President Chiang Kai-sheks folt folt-ress ress folt-ress island, a flight of only an hour or so. though the search continued, both by air and by sea, until nightfall Fridsy. Sddltiohal Survl vat, 'mmrdt ttumA. : Vr :, ; .N iVL.oco aoio, most were suffering mild btrrhs, shock and exposure. Survivors included two women and three children. The total of persons aboard the Rio Atrato, enroute between Car Cartagena tagena Cartagena and San Andres Island off the Nicaraguan coast, was still of of-ficially ficially of-ficially in doubt today but it was known that at least 46 boarded th ill-fated ship at Colombia. Som reports put the total as high as 49. The Deisel-driven Rio Atrstt was carrying 22,500 gallon of bulk gasoline in its midships hold where the initial explosion took place. The first blast put all radio t quipment out of service, and -with-'. out the accidental presence of tht tssen, it is doubtful any persons would have survived the sinking. No authoritative explanation has been advanced for the explosion which led to the ginking. Chinese Seaman Reported Missing From Ship At Sea A 55 year-old Chinese seaman was reported missing today when the Dutch motorship Ena reached the Cristobal terminal of the Pa Panama nama Panama Cnal. According to police reports the seaman, Chueng Sak, was signed on the ship July 1 at Curacao, Dutch West Indies. The Ena's log shows that Sak was called for his watch about 7:30 on the night of July 4 and a few minutes later was seep on his (iVp wav t0 tne PP de watch sts- mm. At 8:30 the same night the ves vessel sel vessel was searched but no trace of the missing man found. Af the time the ship was 30 miles off the Colombian coast and hte can can-tain tain can-tain ordered the course retraced to search for the man. Upon arrival at the Canal Zone a full report was made to po'ics and to Dutch Consular officials. 'Progressive' Pop Lets Son Smoke LONDON (UPI) 8 london's Sunday pictorial told the story veterday of 'he "progressive" fa ther who allows his 5-year-old son to smokt, swear and "be as free as a bird." "Lots of my friends smoke," the newspaper quoted young Ju Julian lian Julian as saying. "Both girls and boys." Julian attends a "free" school Said his 30-year-old father. Ian. who works for the London Coun ty Council Education Department "No nrownup of the generation r?sponsibl for Ihe H bomb is ?ood enougn to lay down the law on cnorl and bad and right and Potter Leaves For PC Board Meeting In U.S. Gov. W. E. Potter left by plan this morning for the United States i to attend ihe quarterly meeting of the hoard of directors of ths Panama Cana Co. to he held Sa Saturday turday Saturday in Washington, D. C. ., Before going to Washington, he will visit the New York office of the company and attend to other company-government business. Potter is to be joined in Wash ington later this week by Philip L.- Steers, Jr comptroller, who is to leave Tuesday for the United States During thP Governor's absence). Lt. Gov .lohr D. McElheny, will ct as Governor. Arthur ,ery, rieputv COmp troller, will act as comptroller duf. wrong. jSSSSk hig the absence of Steers. A r: Lf PAGE TWO m PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPKB MONDAY, JULY f, U5 THE PANAMA Owned ako published ar THE FOUNDED BY NCLSON KOUNSIVILL im MAEtMODIO AMIAS. editor 1S-S7 M iTKirr r O Bo 134 Panama R. op r Telephone 2-0740 S Linii' Cable Adorebb PNAMCMICANi. Panama Colon Office; 12 179 Central Avenue betwecn i2tm and 13th ntn Foreign Pepeentative JOSHUA B POWIPS. INC 349 Madison Ave., new York H7i n. Y l OCA! my MAIL PTR MONTH IN ADVANCE ,FO tl MONTHS IN ADVANCE, For One Year in advance. THIS tS YOU FORUM THI READERS OWN COLUMN Tk Mail Boi if an open torum for reedert of Ths Panama America. Letters are received gratefully and ars handled in a wholly confidential leaner. I It vou contribute a latter don't of day. Letten art published in the order received. Pleat try to keep trie lerten limited to one poe length. Identity of letter writers Is held in strictest confidence. Thta newspaper assumes no responsibility for statements or opinions oppressed in letters from readers. THE MAIL BOX GIRLS BASKETBALL Sir: t was at the oDenine of the Coiou Aieua ana oui.i' urn ait iviemoiauui, kpieseniinfe hauiuow oer.u uioia muiJi support man they &tn. When taey scoieu u.t urn oasite,., they iju'.. a small enter inaeea. Vvnen tneir opponents Uea tne ii-cne at 2-4 tat; jjahenep cAeertu wiicuy. Xms was the pattern of tne rooting tbrougjriout yietame. wny.' Because aaiae irom parents anu othW reiaiivea oi tne players, there were no rooters present ivos& ttatnbow City. it's tne same ola story lor Kainbow City teams no support irom tneir own townsioiK. ihe aosentees come up wnn aucn excuses as "I aid not know oi tne game.'' or "1 aid not have the tare to attena," or "Ira afraid to attend the games" jor this, tnai or tne ouier reason. Let's inspect these excuses. Tne "I oia not know oi the game" group may be Interested to know tnat a large uelegation oi ban Bias Indians were on nana, tnougn tneir own tem was not piaying. imonnauon cai cai-riea riea cai-riea by pr-i ana radio is just as available to Rainoow City resi residents dents residents as it is to the ban bias Indian oasKetDali laiis. The "1 aid not have the lare to attena" inaividuals mifcYi, bear in mina that I, along with a lot of the other spectators at tne game, an unemployea. Not a single Rainbow CUy family is out of work. , 'ine "im afraid of attending the game' bunch should know that Night Court Judge Sonny Cells is president of the league, and Mane cnarris, auector oi tne Coion lottery oilice, is .ict president. Tnese honest and influential citizens of Colon are surely enough guarantee of whatever protection and timia fans piay wat. ' For my own part, I wish Celis and Cnarris every success with t.heir ipaeue I conEratuiate tne organizers of the Rainbow City team xierbert Moise, Jocelyn Evering and coach Clinton Parris Tney are making a good contribution to sport. as for tne Rainnow Citv reslaents, I have disposed of their most popular excuses. Let then come out and root for their towns team. I will be counting them from my seat next game. Ex-Silver City Resident, MEDICINE filr: in vnnr .Tniv 1 issue I noted that Pancanai set anotner transit record this past year. I notice, also, the continued up uproar roar uproar from pilots concerning working hours and money. I notice, further, that my neighbor, a pilot, still spends most of each day under his house on his big fat southerly exposure, a drink in his hanH- and an abused look on his face. . k 1 must hand it to our excellent governor. Hdw he' manages to lorce an ordinary day's work from this gang of prima donnas remains a mystery to me. A record day or a record year causes me to regard him as something oi a Medicine Man. His success in procuring an hon honest est honest day's effort from each of them for a week running in order to clear up an abnormal situation, leaves me astounded and full of admiration. 1, like most of your readers, am not employed by the Navlga "lion Division. I spend my time in an area of endeavor; which il grow to be beneficial to the commuatijiE jijjiiipli'fc .tftUk.hmit working. I work. I don't go on a picnic through the Canal two or three times a week, stuffing myself with free chow all the day. It .seems to me thai, the one final service our governor could render to his community before his departure would be to de de-finitfc.Y finitfc.Y de-finitfc.Y and uniciuivocally tomt out to rhcs; pseudomaef,tros their proper nlact and value 'n the scheme of things, firmly locate them accordingly, and T.iereuy make it easier for the rest cf uf to go a'ooui our affairs in peace. WTSetune's Trident RAILROAD AND STEAMSHIPS Sir: I have been inrysted In the several letters In "The Mall Box" recently referring to the Panama Railroad and the Panama Lin steamships. Presumably those who would do away with the railroad would suDstitute highway trucking If to railroad s not making a profit, it is at least producing some- revenue.-Have any of the highways here (or anywhere else, excepting toll highways) produced any revenue? Let highway users pay the entire costs of highways plan ning, raising capital, land acquisition, construction, maintenance and repairs, policing, signaling, ad admnstration plus a gener generous ous generous slice for the tax collectors all along the line, and the truth that railroads are the cheapest land transportation would imme immediately diately immediately show up. usr.;.:.:.-.. As for the. steamship line, I cannot see that te Panama Line is costing the taxpayers a bit more than any other private U.S. steamship line. Because of our high costs of building and operating ships Uo subsidize high wages) every ship flying our flag is subsidized in building and, often, in operation. I am heartily opposed to subsidies, but unless we can bring costs down tremendously our shipping Industry would disappear without them. In spite of the cost, It 'lwjuse fqe us to have a large fleet of ships and crews trained to'perate thejyy. The railroad here performs a valuable ahjd iatlsfactdry serv service, ice, service, and would be indispensable in time of emergency or closure of the Canal. Those who would do away with it must have in mind some private gain using public facilities. Gilbert B. Grunwell 1. I 'I1..'" Mil'1 .ll EVI.i 1 1 "Ul ? ...rVt AV7 1st 1 -? "I 1 V v ) f ': J j ANOTHER MOVIE ROLE Famed model Suzy Parker is again before Hollywood cameras, rrmklnir "The Beat of Every- . 1 mov,e P,rl wag AMERICAN PANAMA AM.aiCAN emaa. INC. t 70 I ISO I BO IS 00 14 00 18 SO be impatient if it doesn't appear the eirls' basketball league at the think up some better excuses, or MAN and buses in Its stead. Even 1 iiXi A vis A- J-,4 3 j V j in "len North Frederick." Labor News And Comments By VICTOR RIESEL It was Dick Nixon, once almost booed off tne platform by the lo tions top labor leaders, wno rusn- ed to the rescue of the giant steel I'mon thi other day. He personal ly convinced President Eisealiow- er to wntt certain wordg mto a letter to union cniei ml ml-Donald, Donald, ml-Donald, veteran New Dealer. These words ga e the labor leader a chance to retreat gracefully and temporarily avoid a strike which would have cost his followers mere than $53,000,000 a week in 'wages. Insiders believe that with this move the Vice President has fin finally ally finally cracked the solid' labor poli political tical political front which would have tried to crush him in the 1960 presiden tii election year. Here, step by step, is what hap happened pened happened inside the union high com command, mand, command, th Vice President's office and the White House from last Thursday to last Saturday morn morningtwo ingtwo morningtwo days that made histoiy which may s'hake up natidnal p6- litical circles. On Thursday morning the Unit ed Steelworkers Union high com mand realized that it would h.ive to strike the nigflt of June 30 un less it could get the White Hcise to step in. They knew, for exam ple, that Vice President Nixon had personally told Roger Blough, head of u.S. Steel, that there would be no secret presidential pressure on the industry to yield to the union as there had been for years past. 1 McDonald and his counsel. Art Goldberg, then decided on one final try because some of the u- nion s executive board had pro tested agamst a strike. And be cause an expected six weeks strike would cost the membership some $321,000,000 in wages alona. So Goldberg telephoned Secreta Secretary ry Secretary of Labor Jim Mitchell, his good friend. The union would send a letter to the President, Goldberg said. Could they get a friendly re re-pry pry re-pry which could be used for a way out no secret pressure on the industry, just a way out? Mitchell said he'd make some in inquiries quiries inquiries and that he was for it and he would call back. During that day, Mitchell ran up against the opposition of the President's personal counsel, la'i- or expert Gerald Morgan. In ef effect, fect, effect, Morgan said no. Why start intervening again in labor dis disputes? putes? disputes? Why get into it? When; do you stop? This was one of the most "cri "critical" tical" "critical" conversations held in the White House. Morgan said a pre sidential letter was intercession. Where do you go from there if there is rebuff roLthav President Und thesis, a atrikeJLJusi. wijjl is me rsesioent sroie? jvutcheu rgued for intercession since it would at least avoid a strike now. Morgan wanted to know if this was a precedent and if you would then do this for other industries. There it. rested Thursday night, the only thing that did. The prin principals cipals principals in this drama didn't. Bo'h xides consulted officials inside ana out of the White House. But apparently Mitchell felt quite confident. The report is that he talked with Dick Nixon as he has on tnese matters for a long time now. Nixon said he was with tine Secretary of Labor. The word went out to Goldberg to see rii.at the letter asking the President to intervene, in effect, was sent. I was. Then next day, Friday, the Tre sident, Nixon and Mitchell were at the St. Lawrence Seaway dedi dedication. cation. dedication. There 'was ample time for com munieattpn with the PmW'-nt of the U.Sen they returned it was all settled. The Presilcnt would dispatch a letter to .he u nion. According to insiders thp F.kon- hower letter was dispatched at t In Indirect direct Indirect request and advice from Mitchells friend and mentor, Rich Richard ard Richard Nixon. This was a victory for the Steelworkers. The Presiaent could have witheld his reply or he could have sent a messare through Mitchell. But Eisenhower put it on paper. What he put on paper was what Jim Mitchell helned write in the White House Saturday mnrnin? Uuring those long hours : of dis cussion, Mitchell knew and the other presidential aides knew that L I l ,L. ir; .. ... ne nau me vice president's sup port. The President's reply suggesting a iruce was telephoned first 'o the union chiets in New York. Thev whirled Into, action and h.iH Uheir strategy set long before the noie was made public. They duln'l nave to make good their threat to strike calling a walkout tneir members and many of the nmc.i ni"i council iust don t want. For a while, at least, they are on rne hook thanks to the man they had so long and so bitterly as assailed sailed assailed in the past. """ : -i 3 Jj-e-',g. Walter Winchell In Fidel Castro and Jo Morrow (filming "Our Man In Havana") are Topic "A" in Cuba! !...San. dra Seagram, the distiller's heir esV weds Eugemo Annovazzi, a banker, at Toronto July 23rd Frank Sinatra's new blondquest is Beatrice Riva .. John (Duke) Wayne's son Pat is way out about actress Vickie Lynn, an Indiana charmer. ..Mambo maestro Alfred! to's former wife (Nadine Lang) eloped with Wm. Weiler. the cons truction exec 'Tucky" Astor Guest, estranged wife of socialite Raymond Guest (separated a long time), and former Time-Life staff er J. Bryant are ecstatic... John Ireland is Peggy Lee's companion since her recent divorce ... New feud: Comics Will. Jordan and Jack Carter over allegedly pirat pirated ed pirated routines. f ,,4v .... 1 t'- i4.tf ,v-,'v r: Joan Collins' new interest is Bar ry Coe, following her recent beau's reconciliation with nig actress-wue ...Buff Cobb, ex-wife of Mike Wal Wallace, lace, Wallace, is In Texas, they say, to wed her 4th, a Houston oillonaire Gondolier singer Tony Ban is consoling Mrs. Johnny Johnston. But intimates suspect sJle will patch matters with her 'husband ...Venetia Stevenson and Rod Mc Mc-Kuen Kuen Mc-Kuen of H'wood are a steady duet at the Kastside's La Strida . That doll on crutches at Erika's wearing a diamond bracelet a a-round round a-round the ankle of her injured p- was Jane Forrest. ex-Z'egfel- dolly.,, A B'way disc-Jockey was arrested in Boston. Paternity charges by a Boston girl. Mrs. John Barrymore, Jr.. part parted ed parted from he ictor, and radioman Freddie Robbins were oblivious to ie asemHly starers ... Tomriv Tucker, who Is teaching ., Eng'ish t a Jersev school. ooens'Vtri his (mH crew at Palisades Park on (,ie th....Totin Rnmo, Jr. son of th Pen and r-pn'-ll snot. dream ibont Toet' hor'- nrtv dan oh. ter Bari F.llen ...The Romeo Snl- Transportation ACROSS 1 Mover's vehicle 4 Conestogs t Tsxi 12 Exist )3 Expunge 14 Drink made with malt 15 Liners are 62 Muse of poetry 63 Short-napped fabric 64 Affirmative vote 65 Cronus, for Instance 66 Peer Gynt's mother DOWN 1 Flower holder 2 War god of Greece 3 Tidy 4 Has on transportation lfl Onagers 17 Fish eggj 18 Compound ether 20 Carries (coll.) 22 Cleopatra's snake 24 Devotee 25 Bruin 28 Wife of Aegir (myth.) 30 Heavy blow 34 Rowing tool SB Social iniect 18 Assam silkworm S7 Request 38 Follower JPHelp 40 Trill 42 Oriental weight 43 Large plant 44 Shoshonean Indian 46 Pronoun 48 Air transport St Penetrate 8S Feet are earliest mode of transportation 66 One who makes notation 80 Fourth Arabian caliph 81 Mariner's direction JArt (Latin) 6 Aerilorm luel 7 Chemical suffix 8 Birds' homes 9 Dray 10 Century plant 11 Honey-makers Holding the Bag iiuB:yieff.MVi .:sc3njSEMsew'w?!-: ir-t!Aill'jHi'-y o ta's set suspect that the E r r o 1 Flynn's (Patrice Wymore) dis dis-cuss?d cuss?d dis-cuss?d Renotaries between cours courses. es. courses. ..Nan Marsh, daughter, of the Spindletop pro., becomes a bride in Sept. Lucky fella is wealthy Long Island realtor Joel Berger... Rabbi Max Nussbaum, who heipcd Liz Taylor, Sammy Davis, Jr., and Marilyn Monroe convert to Judaism, and Judy Garland are having talks. Ethel Barrymore's estate is ex expected pected expected to be about $10,000. The star was generous to needy thea ter people all her career... Jose Josephine phine Josephine Premice and her groom are in Switzerland to await the image and avoid the Manhattan press ... Joanne Lindville, actress in 'Guid 'Guiding ing 'Guiding Light," has a new Beaumeo. Marfc,Rydel of the soap-ops .JB. Wayni'gv. latest dittjr 'Chickie?" was inspired bv Chickie James, prop, ol The Stable on E. 56th when she isn't displaying her birthday suit in the shows. ..Singer Lu Ann Simms and husband Lor Lor-ing ing Lor-ing Buzzell exoect their blessed blessed-event event blessed-event soon ... It's a bov for the Johnnv (comic books) Goldwaters af Dr's Hoso..."The Feathersy wf uearn, a tortncomine mm. will "ive the censors the;r busiest time in seasons... Don Rickles, 'The Merchant of Venom," and Sandra Burns, daughter nf Burns nnd Al Allen, len, Allen, are serious. Prob'ly will blend ...John frradine is here nursnine Aid a Belle, Savannah Club terpsi terpsi-corker. corker. terpsi-corker. Don't invite Ralph Terrv of the Yankees and M'nnie Minoso of ...Ditto Fred Waring and lark Elaine Malbin...Tbe fnterinde rn' rn'-wiod) wiod) rn'-wiod) crowd started tchtchatting when Jack H'ev, Jr.. walked, in with Vahrie Allan. Isn't she Mfk r-.rxv'o bnvbee anymore? ... The McG'iire Sisters ave the Runyon 'iid the 5on thv ot from "What's Mv Line?" ... Producer Geo. G;lbert and Ida Puente are Answer to Previous Puzzle Cll jpj' p Miete Me t- i a i tsSTO ES USIAfii EST 19 Auricle 21 Siouan Indian (var.) 23 Laud 24 Buries 25 Water 45 Doctrine 47 Egret 48 cart 49 Crescent Crescent-shaped shaped Crescent-shaped figure 50 Region transportation 52 Ancient Irish 26 Comfort capital 27 Clumsy boats 53 Guido's notes 29 Poker stake 54 Get up 31 Close 32 Great Lake 33 a bus 41 Huge vat 43 Number Boundary (comb, form) 58 Make lace edging 59 Greek letter ryy- M' M M FTY iT iT FT iT' iC R !rrIilE!LL znor p r t w. t ffw ' .' 1 rif-irir 1 ' rwn i5i orpr r rfr is ET EE B H iT j I j j H I 2 SWT MCA Srrics, Ino New York making it a habit all over town... it's a girL at the Arnold Archers of The Chords, a vocal crew; a son for the Martin Sloanes of the Blue Book at Dr's Hosp...And a Girl for the Bob Usserys. He's the leading jockey at Belmont... Time mag staffers have a stock- buying club. So far they are los ing their shirts. Jack Wrathers $5,000,000 deal to buy out the Mills Music Co. has blown up after six months of dis cussions. Meaning that Mitch Mil Miller ler Miller remains at CBS.. .John Carter, prominent British Guiana bar barrister, rister, barrister, weds Sarah Lou Harris next week. The nation's top ebony mod el. Me recently divorced a comic ...Model Lisa Hughes and Chuck Reeves, aide to disc-jockey Dick Clark, mended things... Barbara Betroit and Yonkers- Raceway trainer Gene MacDonald will be harnessed today... Justin Gasarch, one of tha district attorney's top probers, and lovely Bette Sue Tan Tan-nenbaum nenbaum Tan-nenbaum merged yesterday... Her fadda is the Bedford Village ty tycoon. coon. tycoon. ..Mrs. Wm. Robinson, wife of the Coca-Cola president, says she has not been secretly divorced from him but has been separat separated ed separated for about ten years. She plans no divorce ... The family of Joe King (King's Rathskeller) requests that no flowers be sent to his fun funeraland eraland funeraland suggests similar sums be sent to the Runyon Cancer Fund. James Farley, Jr., and the builders of that new swank apart apartment ment apartment house arranged to have news newsstand stand newsstand dealer Betty Tiger's license reinstated She will stay where she was. Thanks to one and all ... Is recording star Bobby Darin secretly married to the daughter of a mid, own restaurateur?. ..Do ..Dorothy rothy ..Dorothy Fields, whose songs embel embellished lished embellished Broadway hit musicals (cur (currently rently (currently "Redhead"), has her 126 126-acre acre 126-acre Brewster barony up for sale. Too many rooms (18) and too ma many ny many taxes. ..Buster Keaton, who con controlled trolled controlled all his silent films, is kick ing himself hard for destroying them. Never dreamed that mil lions could be made witn them on TV... Veronica Lake's excitement comes from being impatient a a-bout bout a-bout the divorce decree due this week. The Gallagher Report published by B. P. Gallagher, an authority on newspaper and magazine cir circulation, culation, circulation, relays the following to enlighten readers: "As it must to all macazines, truth is catch catching ing catching up with Time.. .Time applies its very own measurements as to what news means and how to get it read. The result is probably the slickest and most biased presenta presentation tion presentation of 'news' nrinted anywhere in the country.. .The danger in all this is that people are catching on. It may, for' example, explain why in the first six months of 1958, Time's single copy sales dropped by more than 22 percen' under a similar period of '57. Or it could explain why, in the first ten months of 1958, advertising pages are down 16.7 per cent under i simil similar ar similar period of 1957. None of this es escapes capes escapes the attention of the adver advertiser tiser advertiser or agency media director. both of whom are wondering aloud if Time isn't becoming too opi opinionated, nionated, opinionated, too free with the Uuth for its own "good. "In a highly recommended an analysis alysis analysis of hews' magazines, report reporter er reporter Ben H. Bsgdiklan of The Prov Providence idence Providence Journal-Bulletin, points to Time's vaccilations, inconsistencies and slanting in its reporting ot the '52 and '56 political campaigns ... Sports Illustrated continues to go nowhere.. .In a communication that magazines boasted to The Galla Galla-her her Galla-her Report that it made money in May and Jutie of '58, But what happened to the other ten months? ...It is poignantly silent on that point. The conclusion is obvious: It lost money or else it would be r WASHINGTONUjhrj Senate I the United State. ttetwtiH;.a.n:4jr-$ei stock dividend deduo last week voting oatttxet -aciiedul- ed to expire at rnidnight June SO. The debate was Preceded by- a secret huddle btwenrSen.rJoliB Carroll of Colorado and Sen Lyn don Johnson of Texas, at .-wlutn the Democratic leader -emphatic ally agreed that, the Liberal Dem ocrats should bring up for a vote certain tightening of, tax loop loopholes holes loopholes and tax provisoes favoring big business., ;'. i' During the gubaequent voting, three of these were voted down as follows: 1. Sen. Paul Douglas .(111.) lost a move to cut the oil-depletion allowance. 2. Sen. Joe Clark (Pa.) failed to plug the loophole permiVnt' big taxpayers to deduct- yachts, private airplanes, world series boxes, and other entertainment. 3. Sen. William P r o x m i r e (Wis.) failed in his proposal to put those who receive dividends on the same witholdings basis as wage-earners whose taxes aire withheld from payrolls. However, one jmportant propos proposal al proposal by Sen. Eugene McCaitby (Minn.) won. It was to abolish the 4 per cent tax deduction giv en those who made their moacy from stock-market dividends as a- gainst those who earn it from sa laries or government bonds. This so-called George-Humphrey A- mendment proposed by the re cent Secretary of the treasury in order to stimulate the stock mar ket, was abolished. But one day later, the joint committee of the House and Sen ate, with a atroke of the pen, wip ed out the Senate vote. It rein stated tax favoritism for stock- market investows despite the fact that this favoritism costs the treasury $335,000,000 annually. BIG BUSINESS COMMITTEE On the joint committee which unceremoniously overruled the en entire tire entire Senate were: Byrd of Vug'- nia, biggest apple grower in the world: Kerr of Oklahoma, one of the biggest oilmen in the USA; rrear of Delaware,' who usually votes with the Du Ponts all Dem ocrats: plus Bennett of Utah, former president of the U. S. Chamber of .Commerce, and But Butler ler Butler of Maryland, elected with Tex Texas as Texas oil money. On the House side were Mills of Arkansas, King, of California and Forand. pf .Rhode, : Island, al always ways always jeaiovw of the right of the House of Representatives to ini initiate tiate initiate tax legislation; with Simp Simpson son Simpson of Pennsylvania and Mason of Illinois, archconservatlve .Re publicans Only man on the joint committee who battles for small taxpayers is. Sen. Russell Long cf Louhuama. tftt This cldsW-dbor 4nlARtte a-" tion is important because it fol follows lows follows a pattern of what has been happening all during the current 8ttn congress. Both Houses will carefully debate and pass a bill on housing, unemployment com compensation, pensation, compensation, taxes. Then a joint committee, ustlally stacked With conservative's,' will cbmpletely re write the bills voted by the two houses of Congress. That's why so many Senators are up in arms; why so many newly elected members of boi! Houses are wondering what was the use of the landslide victory last November.' REVEALING DEBATE Here is a cross-section of the Senate debate before Senators voted to abolish the 4 per cent tax preference for stock market investors. Sen. Douglas (111.) "The then Secretary of the Treasury George Humphrey was sponsor of the amendment. In his testomony be fore the banking and currency committee, of which I am a member, he represented this as being an aid to persons of low in comes, because he said those with low incomes were the cvi- mary owners of American indus try. "In the light of experience, how wrong does the Senator, think Mr. Humphrey has been proven to be?' Senator McCarthy had just, shown that low-income taxpayers Acrost The 111 ' f9 sfi rIARSON c4aimost no benefit front the i on He agreed with Dougha that, -Humphrey wai about 3$m per cent wrong. Sen? tauscn (Ohiaj'.1 b not preferential treatment riven ta those who derive their incomes from stock holdings over those who derive their income from government bonds?' '-" Senator McCarthy agreei Sen. Lauache ln other worda one who buy s federal eovern- ment savings bonds pays ths full income tax. .is it not also trut that the treasury is comnlifnin because many investors have ri. I cided it is more profitable to pur- vubbb uh:ki wan to Durcfiaia government bonds?' Sen. Douglas "The Eistnhnwa Administration, havinsr riven thi tax favor to the owner of stocks. helped send up the prices nf stocks. It helped stimulate the movement of capital investment into. stocks. But now. they say that Is one reason they must in. crease the interest rate on bonds. is mat correct?" Sen. McCarthy "That it tht argument they make." Sen. Douglas "In other worda. having gotten us into the tlx through the improper benefits la owners of stocks, they now want iu use m a i laci as a leverage to increase the interest rate on bonds." Sen. Carroll "I see the dis distinguished tinguished distinguished Senator from KenttirW (Thruston Morton), who is chair chairman man chairman of the Republican National Committee. This action benefittinj stockholders was taken in 1954. Since 1954 there has not been a Republican Congress in control of the legislative arm of the gov government. ernment. government. In the campaign of 1954 for the first time in 100 years the people of the nation turned away from a Republican President and put into office a Democratic Congress. In 1956 the Democrats held their majority. In 1958 the Democrat nhta greater majority than ever." The senate then voted to reiwit the Humphrey Amendment rirt special tax deduction to stock- market investors. One day later, the joint committee knocked the Senate's vote into a cocked hat. That's why so many Senatori are sore. s March called opK YOKOSUKA, Japan (UPI)-The Navy Thursday? called ofi an air air-sea sea air-sea search for a Scrj-le4)a8ed A3D twin-jef attac ph(nr with tnree crewmen, missing since Tuesday on a flight over the Ja- an srTOeritne fth!. tn. r. rn WHM WSRanMiffrSm training flight. Names vof tht crewmen were withheld. It Is not known exactly hmu many persons live In Latin America, but a reasonable guess would be somewhera around 165,000.000. Thla mesne that although Latin America makes up about one-fifth of all the world's inhabited I lands, It has only about one one-fourteenth fourteenth one-fourteenth of the world's peo peo-iple. iple. peo-iple. These people are not evenly spread, however. The 'island of Barbados, for exam pie, is densely populated with more than 1,000 people livinf in each square mile. ( C Encyclopedia Brltinnlca. STERLING F or the Dining Table, the Coffee break, the Home Bar. the MANTLE. At low, low Prices. And Buying at CASA FASTUCH Means you can win a Diamond on Dumber 20 CINTRAL AMIRICA'S IIADINO Jl Will IRS Chase Manhattan Bank 1 1 A bragging to the countrary.' 4 MONDAY, JVtT I, 1959 PAG I THRU TOT PANAMA AMERICAN A INDEPENDENT DAILY NKWfPAPE I VV"' I: ) IN "HOLLYWOOD, A MONKEY SHINES-Fmzy, the monkey, Is on Cloud Nine even if ' 1 he' not the tpace-trvelin type. The hairy one mimic actresses Barbara Eden left, and -Merry Ander of TV'a "How to Marry a Millionaire." Fuzzy Jhas a key role in the production. Ben-Gurion Dissolves Government In Oimrre With hour Lettwinaers JERUSALEM, July 6 -(UPI) Prime Minister David Ben Gurion resigned last night and dissolved his government in quarrel with four leftwing cabinet ministers wno opposed his sale of arms to West Germany He said the dispute had harmed Israeli prestige. The 74-year-old architect of Is Israeli raeli Israeli independence issued a sting stinging ing stinging letter of resignation which ac accused cused accused the rebellious ministers of having "violated the law,' He said events leading to ms decis ion caused "fundamental aamage to Israel's "security, political po sition and its international posit position." ion." position." .... t The white-haired prune minister leader of Israel since its incep inception tion inception as an independent state in 1948, went to President Itzhak Ben Ben-Zvi Zvi Ben-Zvi and submitted the resignations of the entire 3-V4 year-old cabinet. He agreed,, to.. my regret to tay on as caretaker premier. BennZvi was considered certain to ask Ben-Gurion to form a new cabinet. There is no one else equal to "B. G." in sraeli pol politics. itics. politics. ATTACKED FOUR MINITERS Ben-Gurioa attacked the four, ministers for "opposing his $3,500V 000 sale of 250,000 grenade launchers to West Germany a deal that raised better memories of Hitler's extermination of Jews. The four ministers "violated the Knesset (Parliament) law regard regarding ing regarding joint responsibility and dis disregarded regarded disregarded an additional obligation they assimed on condition to their inclusion in the present govern government," ment," government," Ben-Gurion said. He said the arms deal was agreed on by the cabinet "without opposition" when it came up last neremher. The premier has Oftarged that his opposition sought So raise the issue to win votes in next November's general elec elections. tions. elections. The rebellious ministers, mem members bers members of the leftwing Ahdut Avoda TTnitv rf T.ahorl and manam (United Workers) parties, refused Ben-Gunon's ultimatum mai wiey resign, and forced, him to quit himself. They "violated the law of the state and disregarded an obliga obligation tion obligation they assumed in the Knesset," he said. TNEDERED RESIGNATION "By this (letter) I tender my re&ignStioti frotffttie' goVernment," he said. "My resignation Is tanta- Rebel Teamsters To Attempt Legal Action To Oust Hoffa - o WASHINGTON (U?I) God Godfrey frey Godfrey P. Schmidt, attorney for a group of rebel tea.nster mem members, bers, members, said yesterday he will take di direct rect direct legal action in a month or twoAto- fyPUaBies R. Hoffa as president of 'the big union. He said the strategy of the 12 rank-and-file members would be to have Hoffa disqualified or ex ex-pelled'from pelled'from ex-pelled'from the Teamsters so that ne could not be a candidate to, succeed himself If the legal man maneuver euver maneuver succeeds'- V i SchmidVwno recently resigned as a member of a three man Board of Monitors appointed "by a federal court to ride herd on the Teamsters, said he hoped the monitors would join. in. the action but that this decision was up to them. He said some 263 charges had piled up against Hrtftarjand nis administration since last August only to lie collecting dust while rank-and-file teamsters and union officials hostile to Hoffa's regime had heen disciplined or ousted. "Thse charges are substantial enou; to oust Hoffa as provision provisional al provisional president"'- of the. Teamsters, Schmidt said during a television program (CBS-Face the Nation) Later, in discussing what he termed the need for strong labor reform legislation, Schmidt said that "If a.-business man, had- done a fraction of the things tnat Hoffa did, he'd be in jail in two weeks and he ought 5to be." The attorney, who said he did hot mean Hoff should be ousted without trial, indicated he would ask Federal Judge F. Dickisnon Letts, who set ud the Board of Monitors to frame a jeferee to examine Mie 'charRes against Hof Hoffa fa Hoffa and arrange for a union trial. Schmidt was an original mem ber of the Board of Monitors set up by Letts in a compromise set settlement tlement settlement of a suit by tne rank-and-filo .teamsters who chareed that Hoffa's election was "rigged." -fne1 ouorncy nietuiicu iv av- mate his chances of forcing Hof Hoffa's fa's Hoffa's ouster or to guess how long the procedure might take. He also said it would not erase corruption in the union, the na nation's tion's nation's biggest, any more than "getting. rid of Hitler" by itself would have erased nazism. But he said it would be. 4'a very sub substantial stantial substantial contribution to a cleanup which is long overdue." Reminded that some of Hoffa's close associates would be in cnarge of the union anyway, at least un until til until a new election could be held, Schmidt said "We must take ac action tion action slnwlv ...we can't use a blun derbuss.. .the best way to start it is by taking action at tne top. Asked About Hoffa's Chancot It wan when he was asked if he thought Hoffa could win election in a democratically conducted election that Schmidt revealed his strategy i Of trying to get the Teamster bosp disqualified or ex expelled pelled expelled to block him from seeking the office again.. Hp said an exnulslon "mient run for life" or might be merely for a set period of years. Schmidt said it was his own opinion, that Hoffa could not win reelection in a fairly conducted election. He said he thought a nationwide poll (Gallu) was right two years ago when, he said, it found that 75 per cent of the Teamsters didn't want Hoffa. Reminded, that-many anti-Hoffa union leaders thought the Team Teamster ster Teamster rhieju would, win anyway. Scnmif't- -said, that Ms Just, their own Idea. mount to the government's decis ion to resign." He told newsmen after emerging from the presidential palace that his resignation and the luiesseta approval last week of the armi deal "have to a smau extern re moved the diserace which two fac tions in the government have hrraieht on the state Ahdut Avo da and MaDam mainly Ahdut Avoda." Tn addition to staving on as caretaker premier. Ben-Gurion will continue to function in his dual role as defense minister, r; u: TJiis was the3 latesj; in S neries of crises Ben-Gurion nas' faced since he began fighting for estab lishmsnt of an Israeli state more than half a century ago in Pales tine. RETIRED IN 1953 v Since 1948, he has been out of office only once.1 He retired for "reasons of health" in 1953 but returned to Dower again in 1955 weathering seevral political storms since then. He insisted that Israel needed thA arms deal with Germany as a practical matter that outweighed itter memories of Hitler and the Nazis. ... He had given the four, Opposing ministers until 7 p.m. (noon e.d.t.) to quit. When they refused, the brought down the enure govern. ment. Pickup 8th ph 1st lead: tho prime The prime minister thus rouht rouht on y bthe disclosure in tn1, JWi?V"BJ7' fife el," that Israel .-.had sold West Germany 250,000 grenade launch ers. The disclosure immediately caused a furore in Israel where no one has forgotten Hitler's slaughter of Jews. The cabinet accepted the arms deal last Dec. 14 and Ben-Gunon accused the leftist (parties.,of rais raising ing raising the issue, again only to gart ner votes in next Novembers gen eral election. Tne parliament supported the crime minister on the deal and beat down Communist and other leftwing attempts to smash the arms sale. But the ministers of interior, development transport and health fought Ben-Gurion. The cabinet met on the issue yesterday afternoon. Ben Gurion did not attend because the four ODDOsine ministers were present According to law, Ben Gurion could not dismiss the ministers and thus his only way out was to dissolve the entire cabinet ana try to form a new one without the four dissidents. Disclosure of the projected sale of $3,5000,000 werth 'of arms to West Germany had raised protets against Israel doing any business with the West German state. Re ligious parties also raised their voices against the. deal. Ben-Gurion said it was "vital to Israel's defenses and that the armv came ahead of old memor ies. In an interview last week he said he himself favored diploma tic relations between Israel and West Germany. POP DEMAND RISES , NEW YORK -(UPI) Americans swieged $570 million worth of sott drink cnld thrnueh automatic vpnHino mnrhineof last vear. Ac cording to i-epsi uoia wi.; were are close to one million sott ririnlr units anotted across the na fion, compared with only. 400,000 in 1950. mm1 I Ct H k k i !". i Italian llevspaper I'; v HE'S MOT PI Unci NO A CM KFHafrv French' nosition. left, may be reminiscent of the little Dutch boy who aaved the village by plugging the dike, but Harry isn't serving hi comV i munity W'toaytott, Ohio.' The' 11-yeaf-old stuck his arm in drain pipe while hunting a i chipmunk family. Ho couldn't get it unstuck. So foremen hammee away at tho wall, right, V whllt Harrjt weart helmet to tvoitf dust and (lying-chips. 1 In Port "ROME." July 8. (UPI) A leading Italian newspaper today charged that "fifth columns'" of longshore men 3 under orders from agents oi Moscow" were operating in the port of New York in e shadow pf the 5tiue-ot ju Deny. -The Rome newspaper II Tempo charged that an "international ring ot saboteurs" ;iri U.S. and Austra Australian lian Australian ports was supporting striking Italian seamen and intimidating non-strikers. I asked diplomatic steps against what it said was the "tolerance" of the alleged provo provocateurs cateurs provocateurs by the U.S. and Australian government and their alle ge d "weakness" in com batting ..them. "We hope the 'tolerance' and 'weakness' of some western coun countries tries countries towards the Fifth Columns that assault and damage our mer merchant chant merchant marine does not conceal a wish to help their own merchant! marines' by affecting Italian com petition, II Tempo said. Reports Japs Fly For Trujillo Govt. Denied by Japanese Reform School Grad Hopes He Can Return TOKYO Julv 8 (UPI) The Ja panese government today denied that any Japanese pilots were fly flying ing flying for the Dominican Republic in its campaign against rebel ele ments. The foreign ministry said "There is nn truth" to the charges, which were carried tills week by the Communist New China News A. gency. The New China broadcast was based on articles which appeared In HAivenawri in Cumcikn. A fnrpiun nffire snnkesman said first the foreign ministry had received a report that such a story had ap appeared peared appeared in Caracas. "But it just isn't true he said. He suggested it might have start ed rrom me iaci mat me uomimi; uomimi;-an an uomimi;-an government formed a "foreign legion' in March to help fight the rebels. "Some 20 or 30 Japanese living there appear to have joined," the official said. But it is hardly like likely ly likely that they were pilots." WASHINGTON (UPI) Jasper T trill To in ltlralv nia nn. ly ilumnua of the National Train Training ing Training School whose ambition m to return to his alma miter. The National Training School is a boy's reformatory nere. Jasper. Negro boy from one of Washington's slum areas, was sent there m 1953 as an incorrigi ble juvenile delinquent. 1 He was men only 16, out us rec ord already showed five arrests for drunkenness, assault and oth other er other crimes. Jasper spent three years at the training school. At first he was a tough, rebellious inmate who snt a lot of time m solitary confine confinement. ment. confinement. He was turned down three times for parole. The psychiatrists laid Jasper was i dangerously twwieo Doy, full of hatred and violence, and it wasn't safe to turn him loos on society. Like manv luvenilo delinauents. (Jasper had a first diss mind rhich he had rarely bothered to exercise in academic purauiu. lie puVjt to work now, devising a plan to get out on parole. His scheme was astute: He would read up on psychology, find out why the doctors were faulting him, and learn what to say the next time his case came up for review. "I sot a lot of heavy books on psychology from the school libra ry, and began reading tnem," ne recalls. At first, I was just .try ing to figure now to get out on parole. But I got interested in what I. was reading. After a while I itopped thinking about parole, and started trying to fig figure ure figure out myself." It was at this time that Jasper became acquainted with the jmmmf It New Agreements Nab Tax Dodgers CHICAGO (UPI) Detection of persons who fail to submit either Eederal or state tax re returns turns returns is a basic aim of new Fed eral-state "agreements of co co-operation;' operation;' co-operation;' according to a tax research firm. The Commerce Clearing House said seven states have signed such agreements with the Federal government providing for broad broader er broader exchange of information about income tax returns. The seven are Colorado, Kansas, Kentucky, Minnesota, Montana, North Car olina and Wisconsin, ALL BODIES FOUND OSLO, Norway (UPI)-Search crews have recovered the bodies of all 24 victims of the fire which gutted the Stalheim Hotel at Vos- sestrand June 23, a police official reported Thursday. At least. IT of the victims wen believed to be Americans. HOLE STORYr-farry Sears kneels behind his trophy after winning the Pee Wee Golf Tournament in Orlando, Fla. The Waycross, Ga., 16-year-old fired a 141 in 36-hole final. Mansfield Demands Stale Department Air Harriman Report WASHINGTON, July 6 (UPI) (UPI)-The The (UPI)-The State Department today had under ronsiderdtion a demandfrom Senate Democratic Whip Mike Mansfield (Motl.) that it give Con cresd the full text of former Gov. Averelt Harriman's report on his talk with Soviet Premier iNiKiia Khrushchev. Mansfield sent a telegram to Sfteretarv of State Christian Her ter last night asking that the Har Harriman riman Harriman report be made available to the Senate Foreign Relations Com Committee mittee Committee and to all appropriate State Department personnel. The report previously was "leak "leaked" ed" "leaked" to some newsmen. Its gist was carried Thursday by two newspapers (New York Times and New York Heraia moune j. Mansfield's demand was support. ed by Sen. A.S Mike Monroney (D-Okla.) a former newspaper newspaperman, man, newspaperman, who said there should be "no exclusive release" of such in formation. Monroney said the Har riman reoort should be made gen eraliy available unless it contains material which is classified. Mansfield tod United Press In temational he also saw no reason why the public ; should not know about .parts of the former New York governor's brivate report that did not deal with national sec urity. ;, Mansfield said he was disturb. ed at the department's stand that the document could not be made public because of Harriman's priv private ate private contract with a news syndicate for publication on his accounts of his travels. ; i j Rev. S. Everette Giles, a young Negro minister who had come to tne National Training school as a chaplain. Ia long, patient counseling ses sessions, sions, sessions, the Rev.. Mr. Giles over overcame came overcame Jasper's suspicions of "re "religious ligious "religious people." .He convinced him that Jeaus Christ came Into : the world, not to pat good boys on the head, but to seek out and save bad boys. Even a boy who hated himself and the world, tne chap lain said, could find acceptance, forgeveness and love. The chaplain did more than talk. He helped Jasper to get a parole, and arranged for him to start over in a different environ environment ment environment aa a student at Kittxell Jun Junior ior Junior College, an institution sponsor sponsored ed sponsored by the African Methodist Epis Episcopal copal Episcopal Church at Kettrell, N.C. "I planned, to study chemistry and become a chemical engineer' Jasper said in an interview. "But the more I felt I should devote my life to helping others." Jasper is now a theological stu student dent student at Wilberforce College, Wil Wil-berforce, berforce, Wil-berforce, Ohio. He is working with the Rev. Mr. Giles this sum summer mer summer as a seminarian assistant. When he graduates from theolog theological ical theological school, he plans to go back to National Training School as a chaplain. Murderer Of Four On Weekend Rampage Executed In Spain MADRID, July 4 (UPI)-Quadru-ple killer Jose Maria Jarabo, the "most sensational" murdered in Spain's recent history, was execut ed here early today. Jarabo, 37, part Spanish and part Puerto Rioan, was garroted at nearby Carabanchel prison af after ter after an appeal against a four-way death sentence was turned aown. The series of murders, which took place here last July, were la labelled belled labelled by the Spanish press as "the most sensational of the "century." Jarabo, the press de cided, was the "most sensational killer." Jarabo died at 6:30 a.m. In a dramatic execution by garroting. He went to his execution in a blue suit and tie and apparently without fear wit at the last min minute, ute, minute, eyewitnesses said, he lost his self-control and had to be support support-ed ed support-ed as he sat on the execution stool. Jarabo, whose mother was Puer Puerto to Puerto Rican and father Spanish, kill killed ed killed four persons last year in a weekend rampage. He nv rdered a jewelry store o o-Derator. Derator. o-Derator. the man's wife nd part ner," aiid irfald In an "attempts1!;1 regain a pawned ring fM letter: r r HERE IS THE DOUBLE PAYOFF! PRACTICALLY "SEAL" THESE -INVENTORY BARGAINS AND 11 DOUBLE YOUR MONEY FREE IN OUR FREE WEEKLY RAFFLE FOLD-A-WAY BEDS, w mattress 139.95 BED FRAME Adjustable, double or sinfle 16.75 BAMBOO BLINDS S.95 ELECTRIC WAFFLER GRILLE 24.95 WHISTLING TEA KETTLE 1.95 SET 3 Aluminum Pots 1.50 UPHOLSTERED BACO CHAIR 69.95 RATTAN FAN CHAIR, wrought Iron legs 21.50 MELMAC PLASTIC DINNERWARE 4 Pes. 36.50 To Clear $25.95 1 11.50 . 1.95 I 11.95 f" 1.49 j 1JB9 49.5s 12.50 24.50 Lucky Winners This Week Col. C. 9. Meador Margaret Rennio L. A. Ferguson Mrs. Donald Higgins James N. McNabb Ruth Jemmoth Juana D. de Montecer Arnulfa de Guerrero Silvia de Ramirez Berta C. da Moreno Judith A. de Brown '' Judith B. de Ortega Noeml de Arrocha Hortensia Lima .Young Dalra A. de Jimenez ffht tfurnitur & &(omt ffurrusfung Start 4th Of July Ave. & "H" St. Tel. 2-0725 GRUNDIG on PARADE 28 Beautifully Designed Cabinets... Luxurious and Sophisticated I SO 122 WE 1 MORE... than you had bargained for SO 131 WE 11 LESS... than you ever expected to pay. SPECIAL DUTY-FREE PRICES SO HI WE WjueblsMa l ..uJ ;t,V Central 26-109 Calidonia 1 SO 141 WE MOKDATrJULT 1.1351 octal and Jtherw'iAe Vox 134, & '"tc r $ J ""Hf VpCfvl0F : ? &, 34- Panama 'jJiL ,v pftMj Ji mff L cmJ If uLflmm MRS. GOLDA MEIR TO BE HONORED ATRECEPTION TOMORROW AT HILTON HOTEL Mr.. Golda Melr. Israel's Fereig. Minlrter, will be f oot ooted ed ooted tomorrow morning at a reception given by the Israeli Cul Cultural tural Cultural Committee at the Panama Hilton Hotel The distinguished visitor wUI Uj In Panama only ne day. She is en route from Colombia on an anofttelal toor of South and Central America. Isthmian TeastmasUrs To Moot Tomorrow The Uthmian Toastmasicrs Club has scheduled a meeting for tomorrow evening at six in the fern loom the Tivoli Guest Bouse. Toastmaster of the Evening Pick Home will present speak speakers ers speakers Mickey Kaplan, Paul Moran fed Shaw, Jim O'Rorke and Al francs. The meeting will be evaluted by Vinpeol Siava, and Alf O'Leary till be in charge of table topics. Further information about the ffoastmasters club may be obtain obtained ed obtained by galling Cdr. S. E. Taylor, jSfavy 34. uerry Heishtt Women's n.j. l unrn Wednesday The tjuarry rieigms numc. i league win nave us juiy meei meei-Chro Chro meei-Chro will have a Hawaiian-style i;ng imrsday evening at 7:30 in luncheon Wednesday at 12:30 p.m. tne library of the Balboa USO USO-at at USO-at the Quarry Heights Officers' jb. Service personnel and inter rinh An interesting program has Deen planned, featuring a display of Jewels by Mr. Ditrani of Panama City. Hostesses for the occasion will be Mrs. Clayton Fry, Mrs. Leon Corso and Mrs. William Jones. Birth Announcement Mr. and Mrs. John A. Hunt of Balboa announce the birth of their .t;i4 ii0hter horn Fri- tlav at Go'reas Hospital. She has been named Lisa Michelle. The maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Dunning of Balboa, and the paternal grand grandmother mother grandmother if Mrs. Nellie Hunt of Dia Diablo. blo. Diablo. Charity Card Group, Balboa Woman's Club The Charity Card Group of the Balboa Woman's Club will meet Thursday at noon at tie Fort A- mador Officers Open Mess. Reservations should be made by Wednesday with one of the host- Lock Clothes Closets, Dads, ifjas Steal Male Datis igdin By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK (UPI) The great male robbery is on. .Not since Dietrich donned trou trousers sers trousers in the 1930's and started a fid which became a way of life have we women stolen so many styles from the boys. We are copying their suits, their shirts, their trousers, their shoes and, yes, their hats. Mostly this mannish trend shows throughout fait- clothes. But the ladies in Dallas aren't waiting. Women's Wear Daily reports that for their personal use, Dallss models have been purchasing men's straw hats for casual sum summer mer summer wear. The idea has caught on, and other fashionable women are showing up in the straws for informal occasion. I For fall, throughout the millin millinery ery millinery industry, there is the mascu masculine line masculine trend. Derbies and fedoris re favorite shapes, although there are some towering Cossack types 'which designer Adele Simp Simp-ion ion Simp-ion dubbed 'American Macmil Macmil-lan," lan," Macmil-lan," for the British prime min- AVOID DIAPER RASH Don't let your baby suffer from damp diapers. After very diaper change, uss MEXANA fi i " pm 3-0740 esses, Mrs. Kay Daniels, nama j-4711; Mrs. tmiiy Uoltoo, fana fana-ma ma fana-ma 3-777; Mrs. fclsa laram,. Ma Manama, nama, Manama, i-KMl; or Mrs. rnylus Kuper, Balboa 4442. Fourth Of July Dance Al Cultural Canter A r ow lb of july social event in Panama City was a dance Sa Saturday turday Saturday evening at tne Panamanian-North Ameucan Binational Cen Center. ter. Center. Students and members of the staff and their guests attended the event. Meeting AF Writers League The Panama canal Zone Chap ter of the Armed Forces Writers ested civilians are invited to ai .ei d. Atlantic Camera Club A special movie night will be featured for Atlantic Camera Club members and guest this evening at 7.45 in the clubs rooms at Mount Hope. The films will be "Skin Diving" "Wings Over Britain and "Wings Over U.S.A." A special surprise is also being planned for tonight's meeting REDS CLAIM DISCOVERY TOKYO (UPI) Communist China today reported the dis discovery covery discovery of a copper smelting set settlement tlement settlement dating back mors than ng oacK mors un., 3.000 years. The New China Newi:" 1 ..IA .oll.mnl'. p. mains were discovered in Nan Nan-yang yang Nan-yang County of Honaa Province, Central China, during construc construction tion construction of a reservoir on the upper reaches of the Ahn River. ister whose adoption of Russian hat styles on a visit to Russia made international news. To expand ths manniah trend, there are high crowned clothes, swaggers, and .jU&Gatbo-type slouches. Ev?n women's shoes for fall show the male influence. Last year, one of the new styles for men was the sneaker, done in leather. This fall, women will be taking H over, says the leather industries of America. The sneak sneaker er sneaker Is done in beige, bone, brown and brown and white and black and white combinations. Som look like a bowline shoe with boot-like lacing high around the ankle. Seventeen" magazine, in its fall roundup of fshions for the coed set, pointed to .the 'great male robbery" with copies of a West Point coat, a Chesterfield dress, the heavy knit 'boy sweat sweater," er," sweater," shirts with coin cuff links and button-down collars, and cor cor-duriy duriy cor-duriy pants with belts and houndstooth weitkits. One day spent on Seventh Ave Avenue nue Avenue looking at fall clothes is e- nough to show how we re follow following ing following the boys. Ready-to-wear is full of pin-stripe snd chalk-stripe fabrics, means wear tweeds, co coverts verts coverts and worsted twills. Suits have blarer Iscketi. dou ble breasted jackets reminiscent of riding coasts, and even the men's smoking jacket has beer con'ed. Two ringleaders In this stolen from-the-men movement .rs de signers John Welti, an expert or artorlswear. and ArMd SeaH who ran do anything from casur' clothe to balUowns with equa' aplomb. qppIvo polroohod In r I LI; wist Lutheran Church Begins Spanish Missionary Work Under the direction of the Rev. Robert F Gussick, Lutheran mis missionary sionary missionary counsellor foj; the Carib Caribbean bean Caribbean area, Redeemer Lutheran Church of Balboa., has commene commene-ed ed commene-ed its mission to the Spanish Spanish-sneakine sneakine Spanish-sneakine DODulace of the Isthmus. Sunday evening, services in Spa Spanish nish Spanish are now being conducted bi weekly at the Balboa parish at 7:30 p.m. Instructions in the Lu Lutheran theran Lutheran faith are being held each Thursday evening at 7:30. A reli religious gious religious eurvery is being carried on to Panama City with the distribu distribution tion distribution of Gospel tracts and biblical literature. Announcements of all services ad special events of the work will be sent to call wno oe oe-sire sire oe-sire their names on the mailing list. Napoleon Artigas 0., a native nf Salvador and candidate for the Lutheran ministry, recently arriv ed on the Isthmus witii his family to begin the first full time Luther Lutheran an Lutheran work of this kind in the history of Panama. Artlgas has had ex perience n the protestant mission field of Nicaragua. He has spent six years of study and active work under the guidance of Kev. uus sick in Uw beginnings of the Luth Lutheran eran Lutheran mission work in Guatemala. And he has recently complied further secular schooling in Ma nagua, Nicaragua. For the past three years tne Lutherans on the Isthmus have taken an active interest in the Spanish work here and with the thought that Artigas would one day come to the Isthmus as a full time missionary, Ghe congregation at Redeemer has sent a regulrar monthly contribution to him, that mZb com n ecessarj schooling. The Spi-nish services will con tinue in the Balboa parish until it ... miiro (flt in .g.ek """r r-u ' '' Coast Guard Begins Evacuation Of Men From Burning Tanker PAMERONL La.. rtJPO The jCoast Guard, unable fo. control i raging tire aooara a Belgian tanker, brgan owing crewmem crewmem-bers bers crewmem-bers ashore in life boats yesterday A Coas' Guard cutter and patrol boat at the scene of the firs about five miles off the Louisiana coast here radioed that 26 of the 3 or 34 crewmen of the tanker An An-vers, vers, An-vers, out of Antwerp. Belgium, hav been taken ashor. "Not able to control fire, but continuing efforts," the radio message said. The fire broke out in tne en engine gine engine room, and there was an un un-confinerl confinerl un-confinerl report it had spread to h" bridge. There were no injuries reported. Five more Coast Guard and Na v shins rushed to the scene eland onmmprrial "p nan' pened by stopped to help fight the fir1. Part of the careo consisted o' h'"hlv infimmbl resin and fish oil, and the Coast Guard said if 'he water from the hoses hif rica in the cargo. It mft swell snd nap the bulkheads. They said the f;re mi"M explode the rice dust in he holds. Th tnker lo rrried lumber. phosphorous iron ore and highly tnfimmaMp cot'nn. A Coa' Guard auxiliary boat nulled a 1'feboa' carrying 12 crew crewmen men crewmen the five miles back to shors, and a sheriff's boat nulled in an another other another lifeboat with 14 survivors. A Navy destrover and mln mln-'Weeper 'Weeper mln-'Weeper and twn Coast Gi'ird cut cut-'ers 'ers cut-'ers were rushi1" to Cameron nn Galveston, Tex.. ind a nat nat-""1 ""1 nat-""1 boat from nearby Sabine, Tex., " en route. AN0F sa-fiiHixv r'OPF.VHAGKN, Denmark TtTT)Two high ranVInc Soviet tola's .Trived here Wednesday - f'lcusR seenrltv arrsncementi Premier Nlklta S. Khnish- hiv during his state visit next month. 1 11 I ?' 7,f,, -'', z, Mi . Ill MISS ALICI Margarita Girl Is Honor Graduate From Texas School Miss Alice Ruth Cahmbers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Chambers of Margarita, was among 26 honor graduates in the class of 293 at Texas Women's University at Denton. She receiv received ed received a bachelor of science degree in ursing, and is now working in the emergency operating room at Parkland Memorial Hospital, Dallas. Later this year, she plans to work in the Presbyterian Medical Center in New York-City, at the same time continuing her studies toward a master's degree in nurs nursing. ing. nursing. Attending the commencement exercises at Denton were her par ents and her sisters, Jeanne and Carlg Their stateside visit also included a stop in St. Louis to see Mr. Chamber's mother and sister, Mrs. W. R. Cahmbers an Mrs. Ruth C. Townsend, In Wash ington, D.C., they visited their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Chambers, and tenir three children, and they visited Mrs. Chamber's aunst and unci, Mr. and Mrs. Jarhes A." May," 1a Manhasset, -L. I. Jeanne Chambers has complet- Business Groups Pushing Tax Relief Legislation WASHINGTON (UPI) Busi Business ness Business groups, armed with some ad administration ministration administration support, open a con congressional gressional congressional drive this week for a program of tax relief which they say will spur American investment overseas. Their spokesman will argue that such action is vital to the free world's efforts to combat Russia's worldwide economic offensive. They will appear before the House Ways & Means Committee during tnree days of hearings starting Tuesday. The administration, departing departing from its no-tax-cut poli policy, cy, policy, announced two months ago that it would support a sharply sharply-curtailed curtailed sharply-curtailed version of the far-rsch- ing bill which the tax-drafting com committee mittee committee will consider. The legislation is sponsored by Rep. Hale Boggs (D-La.), an in influential fluential influential mPmber of the panel. But it will have to be whittled down considerably to win committee ap proval. A kev provision, on which tne hearings probably will center, would permit payment of income taxes to lie deferred on earnings from foreign investments as long as tne earnings are re-Invested abroad. A npw tvno nf fnrelen busing.' corporation would be entilletT to claim the tax deferment so long as its earnings were not funneled bark to the United Statep. Ameri Vkw Qtin&hahy Leave: PANAMA 7:30 a.m. Arrive: "SAN JOSE 8:15 a.m. Arrive: SAN SALVADOR 10:35 o.m. Arrive: MEXICO 2:40 p.m. CHAMIIRS flew Art Exhibit On View Al JVB On display at the USO-JWB is the art exhibit of the works of Mrs. Georgia Thomassin of Pa nama. Mrs. Thomassin's exhibition comprises a aeries of watercolors J t .(..,;. In "Mivd" medium and includes two still lifes "Heliconia" and "Tropical Fruit" and many landscapes depicting the Canal Zone, the Republic of Panama and Taboga. Born in Montreal. Canada, Mrs. Thomassin is now a United States citizen. Before coming to pana pana-ma, ma, pana-ma, she lived in New York City, Washington, D.C. and Fort Myers Beach in Florida. Currently studying oil painting with Alberto Dutary of Panama, she has also had tutelage with William Henry of fort myers Beach and Naples, Fla. This new art display will be on exhibit at the Armed Forrces Ser Service vice Service Center until July 25. ed her sophomore year as a ma thematics major at North texa State College in Denton. She re-f turned to the Isthmus -WHIT "her parents, aboard the S Cristobal to spend the summer vacation. can firms could set up such corp orstions as subsidiaries. Although opposed to the bill's other major tax relief provisions, the Treasury, Commerce and State Departments have announced they would "support" tax-deferral, pro vided Its scope were limited to underdeveloped areas abroad. To apply such benefits on world wide basis, the Treasury said, would result in uncessary tax "windfalls" on long-standing American investments in highly industrialized European countries. But the administration's support of the tax deferral feature has encourageed some backers of the leglslaion to believe that a com promise version of the bill has at least an outside chance of be coming law this year. Chances for House approval are rated about 50-50. Senate action during the current session seems doubtful, at best. Should Congress complete ac action tion action on the legislation before ad- Snirnment it could turn out to s the only tax relief provided for anv grouo this year. Earlier this year the House overwhelmingly approved a pro program gram program of tax relief for self-em-nloved persons to enable ttvem to build up retirement funds. But ad administration ministration administration objections have raised dnneer of a veto, should that leg leg-Wlatinn Wlatinn leg-Wlatinn reach the White house this yea'. LM optimistic . and happy LINEAS AEREAS COSTARRICENSES, S.A. KOSTH 7QSI ,., Al AA10IIJ 10114 SOUTH (D) AS VAKIIIS AM AKI Both vulnerable Wee Kertk East Pass 1N.T. Pass Pass I V Pass Past Pass Pas Opening lead 4 Q spilth reallv had to 20 out of his wav to eo set at his four-heart I contract. He won the opening lead and!S0ne other place where "refresh- noted thai the only way be could lose his contract would be to find all four trumps in one hand and the diamond king in West. He noted a possible safety play to guard against that 4-0 trump break provwea k wouia oe rast that would show up with all four trumps. South promptly led a trump to dummy's queen. II West showed out he intended to lead a heart through East and get back to dummy for a second heart finesse by underleading his ace of diamonds. Unfortunately for this South both opponents followed to the first trump so there wss no prob problem lem problem in that suit. Now South swapped horses in mid stream. Instead of simply drawing trumps and conceding one trick m each other suit he decided to take the diamond finesse. This was right up weft's alley. He took his king and led another diamond which East ruffed. South still had to bse a spade and a club and his fine contract bad been tossed bodily out the window. Q The bidding has been: mi Bouta west i 2 Pass T i You, South, hold: 4JMS4 Af qjl4 What do you do? QI i A Bit three tHamondt. There almcet surely a lm bi the fin rtcp la to set dianwndi a the trump (Bt. TODAY'S QUESTION Your partner continues with a bid of tour clubs. What rln vmi do now? Aauiwwj TeeMaW Point 4 Head Male Democracy Talk Al BalboaMA Harris P. Dawson. Acting Direc tor of -Point 4 in Panama will speak on the Subject Extending Democracy" as part ot me cur current rent current Adventuring in Democracy se series ries series at the Balboa YMCA Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. During the program, an excel lent film will be shown about the work of Point 4 in other countries. From 1953-55, Mr. Dawson was in Washington D.C. with the Inter International national International Cooperation Administra Administration tion Administration as Central American and Caribbean Divisibn director. He has served outside of the United States with Point, 4 and the State Department In Pakistan, Germa Germany, ny, Germany, Austria, and Greece, prior to coming to Panama. Originally from Mobile, Alaba Alabama, ma, Alabama, Mr. Dawson received an A. B. Degree in Economics from Dartmouth College and an M. A. iDegree from the Amos Tuck i School of Business Administration. He has numerous technical cru des in various magazines and has given radio and TV talks on eco economic nomic economic and foreign affairs topics. The public is cordially Invited to attend this interesting program free of. charge. OIVIN PAPAL AUDIINCK ROME (UPD-Msgr. Timothy Manning, auxiliary to the arch arch-bishon bishon arch-bishon of Los Angeles, left here by plane, today for Damascus. Manninf yesterday ws received in private audience by Pope John XXIII. LUXURY SERVICE AT TOURIST FARES Pressure controlled, air conditioned Cabins ; Only 2 teate abreast for your comfort 1 Panoramic windows Deliolous breakfa.it and exquisite hot meals served in flight e Bi.linguai stewardesses give you personalized service - AVE. J. AROSEMENA (Oerifby Kllf alien j is en v v-ejtie ejtie v-ejtie Her twest e4umnW e e-gay gay e-gay Is mevle semerfian, Danny Key.) i'-. Anyone Who has ever had m face aDoear. even momentarily, on a motion picture screen, im mediately becomes me target 01 homogeneous group insUntly re re-cognized cognized re-cognized by al actors-the lolki who "knew you when.' ; Now, don't mistake my mean inc. There are plenty in this group who are fine, wonderful, people those who have remained among mv closest friends from my school days until today. But -there are nthers. Thre'c the one. for example. who confronts you in a public 'place usually a nigniciuo op ments" are served and already anticipating a rebuff, draws him himself self himself up in front of you to cnal cnal-lenge lenge cnal-lenge you with the statement: statement:-"You "You statement:-"You don't remember me, do VOll?" I've developed a stock answer to this one, true or not- I say "No." I There's also the one who may have been introduced to you at a mrtv one niffht back in the dark ages, who approaches you with the request mat you ao a oeneiu performance next Tuesday for a group of his lodge members. When you explain weakly that is the night you have promised to make an appearance on behalf of the Cancer Fund at the Los Angeles Coliseum, he slinks away, mur muring darkly: "Why, that ungrateiui so-anu-w And after all I did for him!" But my favorite is the woman who bounces up to me and ex claims: i "Why, Danny Kaye! You haven't changed a bit!" I suppose I shouldn't let this annoy me, because she obviously means it as a compliment, mil n always unsettles me. I wouldn't like to think that 1 hadn't changed a bit. I think I change a little bit every day. I don t mean only that th lines around mv eyes get deep er or that other physical signs of the passing years manifest thern, thern,-selves selves thern,-selves daily, which they do. I mean that I like to minx i grow a little more every dav. that my interests change and my ontiopS; and attitudes change. Even my work has cnangea ana I'd be the last to try to deny it. But I don't think I've changed as 100 Zuni Indians Battle To Save Flaming Forest SIERAVILLE, Cnlil. (UPD (UPD-One One (UPD-One hundred Zuni Indian fire Kimt? took their skills Into bate the today against a ,agin.g forest fire which already has burned lOv lOv-000 000 lOv-000 acres of valuable timber and threatens to get totally out of hand in the face ot su-au mpn winds. John Biglev. dispatcher for tne Tahoe National Forest, scene of the blaze, said the Indians plus 60 prison inmates brought to I860 the number ot men on tne ure line. Thus far there have been no in juries. He said strong winds had died down during the morning and fire fighters had made "good prog progress" ress" progress" toward controlling the four day old inferno that nas destroyed 27,000,000 board feet of timber and has threatened it least one town. But a special weather bureau mobile unit at the scene of the KU nredicted 40-50 mile winds later yesterday. Winds of similar strength turned tne area into an uncontrollable sea of flame Fri- rift v Smoke in this small mountain town two miles south of the burn, was as thick as fog. It waa so heavy pnotograpners naa air ficulty making pictures. Aiding the fire fighters were four tanker airplanes which have been saturating the Burning area with borate, a chemical fire su- pressor. Bigley said the planes have been landing and taking off from nearby grass valley, as fast at thev could resuDol? their tdnks. Bigley said the 1000 reisdnets of Loyattown, two miies norm iji me fire, have been alerted for Imme Immediate diate Immediate evacuation. But ha 'added ' V Consult ' Voficall 3 No. 3140 (Acrou from Olympic Swimming Pool) j f.h by j DorofhyKillgallen SHiiMh tuuvu mm pvt-uw jww i Since my lsst few motion p'C- (urea, includinc mv present one,. "The Five Pennies," have snown me in more or less legitimate character portrayals, I hay Been asked frequently if 1 have given up comedy and have decided to become a "dramatic actor." My only answer to this is an un unqualified qualified unqualified and slightly horrified no!"-with a capital no. I have no "lusions'Veither "de or "il about trvlne to compete with Laurence Olivier. He doesn't tell jokes. I don't. play 'Hamlet; - Without too mucn vanity ana with some support here and there i think of myself as a fairly fun ny fellow. When I was a spindly Kia at l nomas jeucrsuu ni School in Brooklyn, I used to get ; laughs all the time. My teachers weren't always amused by we but my classmates thought 1 was a riot. I've spent 25 years since then, learning how to polish this natur al inclination to be a fool into a professional sense of comedy. Wouldn't I be foolish, at uus stage of my life, to decide to take up new racket? What has happened to me, as I have grown older, is that I have learned that all comedy doesn't consist of falling into a swimming pool or even of singing tbe names of 54 Russian composers in 38 seconds. Right now I think it suits my character better to play comedy roles within recognizable, human portrayals. In "The Five Pennies,' l play jazz cornetist ttea menms, a friend of mine who has lived life with lots of happiness, som tragedy and a good deal of love. A lot oi tunny utings nappen to me in this picture. Mel Shavelson and Jack Rose have written a script that has some of the best comedy sequences I have ever done but everything that hapeens conceivably could happen to any one in the audience. So help me, Sam Gold wyn, that's the only major change in the kind of movie roles I am doing. People often ask me, "When 'are you going to make another movie like 'Up in Arms'?" Well, "Up in Arms was a good movie in its time, but 'certainly wouldn't want to make .another one like it. And if I did, I don't : think the public would, go see it Because, you gee, while 1 nave been changing; sc-have-you.,. 85 the town was In no Immediate' danger and that residents were able so far to cope with the fly-' ing embers. '.' Thousands of sightseers have motored into the area only to be turned back by the California highway patrol, which has closed state highway 89 between here and Truckee. I Bigley asked that holiday vaca vacationers tioners vacationers refrain from driving Into the area, already congested with heavy equipment, used for battling: the blaze. The fire was brought under ten ten-ative ative ten-ative control Saturday night, but strong winds blew flames across established fire lines, sending it again on its devastating rampage. Bigley estimated it has cost the government $70,000 so fsr to fight the blaze, believed started by a careless camper Thursday. Albania, Russia I Sign Aid Pact MOSCOW, July 6 (UPI)-Albsnt and the Soviet Union have sign ed agieements for Soviet technic technical al technical assistance in the construction of industrial establishments, pow power er power stations, power transmission lines, oil and gas pipe lines and geological prospecting, the Tass news agency said today. The Albanian government ha been granted a long term credit of up to 300 trillion rubles, Tass Slid. SUPER CONVA1R 340 your, Travel Agent our of floss 3.7011 'J. i 1! 4 ! Hi I v. -it l' I I i koitdat, jrtT l, it - - I1B 7AXAMA AiEttiCJUl A DTOtPEfDErT t)AILT KXWirira PA6i rrvi j ft P Long Retires Jo After Gruelling wtvnfieLD. La. riTPn - able after surviving7 At campaign peeebet and a beauty contest bi docton warned him aralnsti rctamed yesterday to his ''lit ''little tle ''little pea patch1-1 aria to oe&- - W- --V; , Long, S-yeare-old, and 41 pounds lighter after- a hecUc six weeks that Included commitment In three mental wards, opened a campaign to beeome governor of Louisiana a fourth time. He arrived at his farm in a black Oldsmobile. His 113,000 air-conditioned Cadillac was wreaked Saturday Dr.. rani Pratt, his psychiatrist, was with him npon his return to the farm on Winnfield'e taldrta: --v ,.,;,;.?:.;- Bow are you; Governor!' a reporter asked, opening his front gate for him. "Fine," Lonf replied. "How are you?" as his car entered, he add added: ed: added: "Good Lack." ' Hr-. got 'out of his car under his own power, although two men stood by to help him. Long Jam Jammed med Jammed a floppy" Panama hat on, looked across the field at a Negro blowing with a tractor, and went into his home. Since he spent last weekend tn his farm home, it has1 been moved back about 40 feet and set up on new pyramidal concrete pillars. Lone calls his 400-aere farm hli "little pea patch." "He wound up ve brief speeches late Saturday night at the Miss Louisiana" beauty con test at Lake Providence, ate part of a cold watermelon, took a oath . asleep and at 0 a.m. Sun Sunday day Sunday was up and on his way to WlnnfieM. After Long suffered a "slight heart failure" last week six New Orleans doctors warned him against opening his campaign with four speeches in the Cajun country of southwest Louisiana and a fifth at the beauty contest: on the other side of the stete. 1 Government Rejects Reds' Missile ROME (UPD The government today released details of a cold-ly-worded note to the Soviet gov government ernment government rejecting Russian threats and protests against U.S. missile bases in Italy. The note was delivered to the Soviet Foreign Office Saturday by an official of the Italian Em Embassy bassy Embassy in "Moscow. It Was in answer to a Soviet note". of June 10 which protested Italy's decision-to allow the sta stationing tioning stationing of U.S. intermediate range ballistic missiles in this country. DAILY MEDITATION (Presented by the Department af Christian Idueatlon ef the i i-piseepal piseepal i-piseepal Church tn the Mission Missionary ary Missionary Diocese el the Panama Canal gene.) FALL-OUT "The earth lies polluted under IH inhabitants.' Fall-out of radio active particles as a result of nuclear testing i a serious problem. Thoughtful scien scientists tists scientists are alarmed at the amount oi pollution in the atmosphere and its possible ill effects on all forms of fife. But there is a fall-out every time we fall away from God's will for us. The effect of our actions has repercussions we cannot per perceive ceive perceive at the time. If our military experts were a ware of all the dangerous effects effects-of of effects-of atomic testing they might well hesitate. But if we could see all the consequences of our evil ac actions tions actions we, too, might stop to consid consider, er, consider, we are responsible for a mor moral al moral fall out which pollutes our world. One consequence is the fear and mistrust which can trig trigger ger trigger the atomic bomb. v. ' V v.. 1 u J AITYfl v r 1 a- I Got. Karl k. Lone, tired but ami Long also is suffering from the after -effects of a nervous Dreax Dreax-down down Dreax-down thought bis doctors say he is "rtional-and fronva small stroke or series of strokes. As Long war leaving southwest Lousiaha to board a plane for the beauty contest Bis air conditioned Cadillac hit a pickup truck in a rainstorm. Long was In another car and escaped injury. But Joe Arthur Sims, the lawyer who got Long out of a state mental hospital at Mandeville, La., nine days ago, suffered a broken wrist. Court Siegelin, director of the Department of Commerce and In Industry, dustry, Industry, hurt his leg. Elroy Janice, driver of the pickup truck, suf suffered fered suffered a cut on his left arm and possibly fractured ribs. The acci accident dent accident happened near Jennings, ha. Lone's automobile was toyed into the garage of H. L, Bjou Bjou-dreaux dreaux Bjou-dreaux Jr., who said it was bajdly damaged. "It's a $12,000 automobile." Boudreaux said. "Twenty five hundred dollars won't fix it." In addition to his speech at Ville Plate, Eunice, Cameron and Lake Arthur. His speeches were no more than five minutes long, and he sometimes spoke two or Base Protests Shortly Before the Russian note, Soviet Premier Nikita Khru Khru-snchev snchev Khru-snchev threatened Italy with rock rocket et rocket annihilation trbm Soviet and Albanian bases in case of war if this country persisted in setting up missile bases. The Italian note to Moscow crit criticized icized criticized the "tone and expressions used in (Soviet) official circles and by the Soviet press" regard regarding ing regarding Italy's decision to accept U.S. missiles.' '"' ' Such terms "do hot 'contribute to that general easing of tension which the Soviet government af firms it wants to follow," the I'alian note Said. It added that Italy had decided to modernize its defense with missiles well after armaments "even more modern and destruc destructive tive destructive were adopted by tne U.SJ5.R." Soviet authorities themselves boasted of their weapons "to threaten the destruction of the Western defensive system includ including ing including that of Italy.' the note said. The note said that Khrushchev's "vague'" :reeit neaTF-- an atom and missile free zone "hi the Balk Balk-kans kans Balk-kans that would include Italy "does not take account of the ac actual tual actual situation existing in Europe today." The Soviet project would alter te balance of military power "to the exclusive advantage of the U.S.S.R.." the Italian note said. Khrushchev in a speech durine his A'hania tour Mav 27th said Ttalv "hd anted unwisely in nuf nuf-Ine Ine nuf-Ine at the riisnosal of the U.S.A. ferritorv for the s-ttinp on of rflrp M rfirect1 "ain? you fthe Albanians) and the Soviet "By thl act." Rhrusr.ehev warned, "'he Italian lovernment is m'htcfiii is country to In Incredible credible Incredible danger. In th event nf an, Attack on us. we will try pri primarily marily primarily to destroy the rocket bases that ar aimed sea Inst u." Khrnshchov said he would arm Albania with mislles If Italy and Greece neeepted American rock rock-st st rock-st bases. L-r.l QGOuHG Pea Patch ' ,- .- .. ., v .. s Politicking three minutes, rested, then fin finished ished finished 'with another two or three minute speech. ?."-v K Long' was thus able to get through his schedule with no more than fatigue.' '.'In all his 'speeches, Long took the same tack. He invited his au audiences diences audiences to look in the eye and decide whether he is "nutty." He charged that his r commit commitment ment commitment to three mental wards since May 30 was a "plot" engineered by bis "lovely wife" and some of his "friends" to get him out of the. way. Whife Girl Shoots, Kills Negro She Mistook For Suilor SAVANNAH, Ga. (UPI) Po. lice filed murder charges yester day against a 17-year-old white girl in the fatal shooting of a Ne gro boy. The girl, Katie Ann CreeL sur rendered voluntarily after Willie Ross, 17, was killed Saturday by one snot fired from a moving car. Police said she told them she mistook Ross tor her former boy boyfriend friend boyfriend who had given her a severe beating. Ross was shot early Saturday as be walked along a Savannah street. Police arrested two Negro suspects shortly after the shooting out iney were released wnen tne white girl appeared at the police station. Leonard J, Hallman, solicitor general's investigator, said the girl told him she did not know she had "killed the wrong man" until she heard the story of the shoot shooting ing shooting on a radio broadcast. Sunday police arrested William Johnson, 23, a former cab driver as an accessory. They accused Johnson of lending a .22 caliber pistol to the girl and of driving the car trom which the shot was tired. Hallman, would not reveal the name of the girl's former boy boyfriend, friend, boyfriend, but he said "there is such a man, and he apparently did beat ner up pretty hadly." Bathers Form Human Chain To Save Family PATCHOGUE, N.Y. (UPI) Nearly 75 bathers formed a hu man chain into-tke Atl a-to ti-frl ucean yesterday to rescue five members of a family who plunged suddenly into deep water while swimming off Long Island, There was no lifeguard on duty when Mrs. Eleanor Gerina. ss. her daughter, JHrs. Beatrto, Pace 33, and her grandson, Raymond Pace, 12, stepped off : a ledge aoout 125 reet from shore. Mrs. Pace's husband, Angelo, 37, and her uncle, Philip Bonura, 47, rushed to the rescue. They aiso piungea into the deep water Other bathers on Brookhaven Beach then formed a human chain anu pujieu an live ur ine Strand ed swimmers to safety. Cops Apologize DULWICH, England (UPI) r once nere wrote a dozen mo' torists letters of apology for giv ing mem speeding tickets. The speed cops admitted they erred in writing up drivers after clocking them on a hill 440 yards long. A ludg. Saturday ruled that the law calls for speeding tickets only when the distance measured is at least 528 yards. linn:!!.'! Rape in North, r MUST DIE Georgia -born Marina Fred O. Davis, above, 24, has been sentenced to death in Beaufort, B.C., for the rape of a Negro woman. If the sentence ia carried out he will be the first white man to be executed for assaulting a Negro. Negro Teacher Charges Rape IN YVVCA Room ST. LOUIS (UPI) A! South era Negro school principal charged- today she was beaten and raped in her unlocked YWCA room. The principal, who was staying at the "Y" while attending the National Education Association Convention, said she was attacked by a Negro. Police related the principal said the man entered her room in the downtown YWCA, hit her in the face, warned her not to scream, then held a knife to her throat and raped her. She said the man told her not to call for heln for five minutes after he left. She said she wait waited ed waited the five minutes, then screamed. The principal said she had left the door to ner room unlocked so a woman friend, with whom she was sharing the room, could get in. The manager of the YWCA, Mrs. Anna Lee Scott, said all doors to the building were locked when the assault occurred She said at that hour, the only entrance to the buildine could be gained by ring ringing ing ringing a bell. irblus Properi-y' 4t Corozol Goes Sale By Bid The U.S. Army Caribbean Pro- tperty Disposal Office has issued invitations to bid on more than 100 items of foreign excess personal property located at Building 718, Corozal. Bids, which must be sealed and submitted in quadruplicate, will be opened in the bid room of Bullduie 706, Corozal, at 9 a.m. Ju Ju-ly ly Ju-ly 20. Arrangements to inspect the property can be made by con contacting tacting contacting the property disposal of officer ficer officer at 85-4149. Miscellaneous equipment Includ Includes es Includes electrical clamps, centrifugal sump pumps, surveying sets and nneumatic ttr?s. Various parts for L-19, L-23 and L-20 aircraft also are Included. 2f0 RIDS ARRISTID SEOUL, Korea (UPI)-A total of 29n Communist spies and sub versive agents were arrested In the stetmed-un drive In South Ko Korea rea Korea during the past five months, a top counter-intelligence authori ty said today. JOHMNIE WALKER Silvestre & stre u di AVt. 27.02, Cuba fiA&Wth "SPORTS Daily at 30 (S Your Community Network 830 Kcs. PANAMA South, Midwest 17hI!3f6l!cgroes Sought For Beating, RapeJlegro HEMPSTEAD. N.Y- July (UPI) One white and six Negro, youth were sought today for the beating ana raps oi a zr-yearoia Negro wo man. : Mrs. Eugenia McClendon told po lice sha was draeeed for her bov friend's ear, beaten and raped at gunpoint by the youths who first posed as policemen. Mrs. McClendon. who is separated from her husband, said she was drinking soda early yester day wnue parted wun ueorge Denner son, 28, of AmityviUe, near Hemp stead Lake state park. The seven youth. 17 to 17 vrars old, appeared and the apparent leaoer, a Negro,- said, "we're cops Keep your mouth shut." He point pointed ed pointed a gun at Dennerson and the other youths dragged Mrs. Mc McClendon Clendon McClendon from the car. The woman broke away and ran but fell and was seized bv the youths and raped by all of them, she said. Sha was bruised on the arms, eyes and head. Dennerson drove away and sum summoned moned summoned police. Mrs. McClendon said when sha finally broke away from her. attackers. The leader pointed the gun at her but it apparently misfired. Democratic Senators Pledge Civil Rights Legislation WASHINGTON (UPI) Senate Democratic leaders, faced with fresh GOP charges of foot-dragging, pledged a new yesterday to pass a civil rights bill before Congress winds up its work for the year. While Democratic spokesmen did not say so publicly, one of their aims was to keep the civil rignts Issue from shattering their 1960 presidential nominating con convention vention convention next July. "We want to get a civil rights bill passed this year," senate Democratic whip Mike Mansfield said. "And the indications are that we will pass and send to the President a good biljj" Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R-N.Y.) who challenged the Democrats to get going in a Senate speech a few days ago, renewed his prod ding in a Sunday uevision-raoio interview. Javits said "The oMjMns tnei deserves" the 'won't do' tag, up to now" is civil rights. Asked if the republicans also were not "Dlavine no it cs" on civil rights, Javits said that while he would not want to whitewash any body," the Democratic majority has the prime responsimuiy ior getting, the bill through. "I do not nbnestly believe that there is conscious foot-dragging on the Republican side which is in any way t obe compared wun the strong opposition of the en entrenched trenched entrenched Southern group to civil rights legislation," he said. Art Students Should Report At JWB Tonight Thnsn individuals who have sign nd un for the new USO-JWB Art man are being asked to meet Martin Farbman, the instructor, at the Armed Forces Service ten tenter ter tenter in Balboa tonight at 7 p.m. All interested persons are in invited vited invited to attend this meeting, which will be a short one, to determine the future schedule of sessions Brostella Panami PARADE 7:00 p.m. 1090 Kcs. COLON 1C39 TH,,LN(PR??l?i-E, SHRINKINQ HOUSE-Thls is the house ! l?r5'2l V ,bc,room Phta. garage. Photo and "Better Living," Du j0nt employe magazine. OR I AMI CAUSE TROUBLE NEW ALBANY. Miss. (UPI The worst part of Ralph Bark- ley's nightmares occur when they're over. Barkley, 64, had a nightmare about something at attacking tacking attacking him. He kicked. When he woke up he found his foot, had gone through a bedroom window and he was hospitalized. Democratic National Chairman Paul M. Butler chareed Sunday there was "no discernible differ ence between Dixiecrats and most congressional Republicans on civil rights. He said the Repub Republicans licans Republicans were "trying to play both sides of tne street" on the issue. "In spite of all the protesta protestations tions protestations in how much they believe in civil rights," Butler said in a local TV interview, "the re republicans publicans republicans line up solid with the Dixiecrats on these issues." Sen. Thomas C. Hennings CD CD-Mo.) Mo.) CD-Mo.) chairman of the judiciary subcommittee handling civil rights legislation in the Senate, told the Senate last week a number of his meetings nad to; be cancelled for kackfl;r as well as sent. Democrats were ab- At the same time, Sen. Ken neth B. Keating R-N.Y.) said in a weekly radio program that the Hennings subcommittee so far "has engaged primarily in a teeth pulling, and stalling operation," - Kealhg'noteduftflat bill to give tne attorney general power to seek injunctions In all civil rights cases was rejected by the Hennings subcommittee. He said ne will carry this battle to the Senate floor. House action on a civil rights bill, which already has cleared the subcommittee stage of consid eration, was expected to pre precede cede precede any Senate committee ap approval. proval. approval. If that happens, those fighting move to takp un the Hnuse-passed for a bill this year will probaH probaH-bill, bill, probaH-bill, when it reaches the Senate, without letting it go to the hostile Senate Judjcjary Committee. Tnis was done in 1957, when Congress passed the first major civil rights legislation since reconstruction days. Nixon Will Fly AA's Jetliner On Moscow Visit SYDNE?, Australia (UPD-U.S. Vice President Richard Nixon will fly non-stop from Washington to Moscow later this month in the first inter-continental Boeine jet liner to be delivered 'to Pan Am erican Airways, Colon Clarence Young, vice president of fan-American now visiting Melbourne to complete plans for a 400-room hotel, said Nixon and his delegation accepted the company's invitation to make the Moscow flight hi the new Jet. Young said this would be "a dramatic demonstration of United States strides in International av aviation." iation." aviation." Dolores Del Rio Feels 'Wonderful' After Virus Bout TEMPLE, Tex. (UPI) Ac Actress tress Actress Dolores Del Rip reported today she was In "wonderful" condition and ready to return to work after a week in a hospital here as a result of a virus in infection fection infection contracted in the Orient. "I am looking forward to start starting ing starting rehearsals for the production 'Road to Rome' in Mexico City," Miss Del Rio said. The brunette star was released from Scott and White memorial Hospital here yesterday for a checkup and minor surgery fol following lowing following her virus infection. She said she will return to the nospl nospl-tal tal nospl-tal for regular checkups, Baptist Church Holds Niqhtly Revival Meetings The Panama Baptist Church at Guachapali will hold a series of revival meetings this week, begin beginning ning beginning at 7:30 each night. A different subject will be dealt witti at each meeting, to which 4, w Demo Chairman Calls On Party Solons To Drop Their Conservative Stand WASHINGTON (UPI) Demo Democratic cratic Democratic National Chairman Paul M. Butler called on his party's con congressional gressional congressional leaders yesterday to abandon their "conservative and moderate" stand or risk losing the 1960 presidential election. Without naming names, be took a direct slap at Senate Democratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson and Speaker Sam Rayburn. He said they are following a "conserva "conservative tive "conservative and moderate" program to the dismay of "quite a' few Demo Democrats crats Democrats around the country." Unless the Democratic Congress shows "initiative" and takes a "positive progressive attitude," he said, the party faces a tough situation in 1960." He urged the Democrats to pass "progressive" bills even ff' they knoW "President Eisenhower will veto them. Butler, appearing on a television origram (ABC-Celebrity), thus lined up publicly with a band of "liberal" Democrats who have been criticizing their congressional leaders, especially Johnson. LdKSCXV fJlAKI ' i who receives o AS ADVERTISED IN TO BE ABLE TO DOUBLE YOUR MONEY IN OUR FREE WEEKLY RAFFLE This Week's Lucky Dorothy Chong C. Farguaharson Mrs. Robert Bachal Inea deOp&jzatoz Angala d Oalindo Lillian Joshua Margaref SaffC If Youjp. Sales Slip ends in 2 i6V WON TOO! Free "Chico'de PRO Sfamps -if THE JEWELRY STORE 18.45 Central Av. (137) WHERE YOU DOUBLE 1 1 that could have been bought Information first appeared in Most vocal among them have been Sens. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.), William Proxmire (D-W.is.), Jo Joseph seph Joseph S. Clark (D-Pa.) and Pat McNamara (D-Mich.). Butler said "younger memberi of Congress" will return to Wash Washington ington Washington "in a fighting mood" for the second session of the 86th Congress next year because "they know they will have to have a solid record of accomplisnment ia : order to win re-election." ,. ,,1- He said he was "encouraged" by the reception in Congress to recent reports from the Demo Democratic cratic Democratic Advisory Committee. Tha group, an arm of Butler's national committee, has issued several xt ports at variance. with the Johnson Rayburn policies' "We believe Ve have to try to influence the Democratic leader leader-shin shin leader-shin of the Congress to come along with the national program, rather than the conservative and mod moderate erate moderate program which they are try trying ing trying to follow," he said. .'i CViViA AUTOROTOR NOW the most elegant wafer thin man's watch in automatic Winners YOUR MONEY FREB ' war '''' L the public is invited. .;;r';.-v!,v;i:7i!'.'.'i' It Slim Half-Game Separates Braves, Giants, Dodgers ::r By NORMAN MILLER .vjfEW YORK, July 6 (UPI) Funny thing; if tfiat font National League pennant race wound up in a tnree-ieam ue, wumuu WII, that's not bo far-fetched, Bud. It almost happened 51 years ago, To know. And Ine way the Milwaukee Braves, San Francisco Gianta and Loa Angeles Dodgers are hanging in there, k could hap happen pen happen -in 1959. What's more, If the Pittsburgh Pirates remain in contention, this could be the closest four-club race in baseball history. As the teams take the mid sta sta-aon aon sta-aon break for tomorrow's All-Star came, the Braves lead the Giants by three percentage points and the Dodgers trail both by a half- game. The Pirates, in fourth place re only 3 1-2 games off the lead. How close can it get? In 1908, the Chicago Cubs beat out the deadlocked John McGraw Giants and the Fred Clarke-led Pirates by one game! Milwaukee regained a sHm first place margin yesterday when CirHen Willey beat the Philadelphia Phillies, 54, with a four-hitter while the Giants di divided vided divided a pair of 4-2 decisions with the St. Louis Cardinals. le Dodgers won a double-header from the Cubs, 4-1 and 5-3, and the PirsHs swept the Cincinna Cincinnati ti Cincinnati Reds, 7-5, and 3-2 an 11 In Innings. nings. Innings. In .the American League, the Cleveland Indians retained a two two-fame fame two-fame lead while the world cham champion pion champion New York Yankees fell furth further er further back. Cleveland edged the Detroit Tigers, 5-4, and Chicago beat the Kansas City Athletics, 4-3, both in 10 innings. The Washing Washington ton Washington Senators blanked the Yan Yankees, kees, Yankees, 7-0, and the Boston Red Sox won a doubleheader for new manager Billy Jurges, beating the Baltimore Orioles, 9-0 and 6-3. Joe Adcock and Ed Mathews each drove in two runs to ease Willey's path fo victory over Phi Philadelphia. ladelphia. Philadelphia. Every Braves player hit safely at least once in the 13 13-hit hit 13-hit assault on their former team mate, All-Star pitcher Gene Con Con-ley. ley. Con-ley. This was the 10th time tWg year the Phils have been blanked. f flunks SERVICE CENTER COCO SOLO 7:00 AIR-CONDITIONED 4) Victor Mature 4 Yvonne De Carlo TIMBUKTU" Tues. "The House of Secrets' BALBOA THEATRE 6:15 8:30 AIR CONDITIONED DESIRE WHOLESOME ttgW OTHERWISElSf Tues. Stag. Show and MARGARITA Rod Stelger e Maria Landl 7:00 "ACROSS THE BRIDGE" Tuesday "Fire Dawn Below" PARAISO 7:00 "THE DEFIANT ONES" Santa "Caged Fury" and "The Tall Texan" BALBOA 2:0C fCOCO "ABOVE AND BEYOND" "Leathernecks Have Landed" TODAY-'ii'PflBA?Esi-s-TODAY TVOL CAP IT OLIO VICTORIA RIO 9M 0.20 0.35 0.20 6.25 0.15 0.35 0.20 Two Spanish Picture STRANGER IN MY LEGION OF THE SEPARATE TABLES KITBE T RAJA ,,u TA,?!SL DOOMED wilh R. Hayworth Z clZL, M1'1 W'th 8111 W11InamS THE GUNRUNNERS ! fn CantlnflM THE SILENT with Audie Murphy PECADORA ENEMY BULLWHIP anc patrlcla Owens 5 eon EmUla Oulu with L. Harvey with Guy Madison nd David Nlven i m Bin whit a reserve AU-siar outfielder, hit the first grand slam homer of his' major league career for the Cards to sink his former Giant teammates in we opcuw. Jack Sanford was the victim, i-r-nie Broglio pitched a six-hitter for his third straight victory. A two run first-inning nomer by Willie Mays staked saro Jones to n eariy ieaa m w iu6ui iu6ui-cap. cap. iu6ui-cap. Jones was relieved after sev seven en seven innings, however, and after Stu Miller ran into trouble, John Johnny ny Johnny Antonelli had to be summoned to get ue last iwo wuia m u ninth. Stellar relief pitching ty Dan Danny ny Danny McDevitt in the opner and by Sandy Koufax and Johnny Klipp Klipp-stein stein Klipp-stein in the nightcap helped the Dodgers win a pair from the Cubs. Chaiiie Neal and km noages hit homers to help give Los Ange les the first-game lead and then McDevitt made it stand up Aim two-hit shutout pitching for -.ur ' i f l T, r-i innings in reutri in iwgei Koufax protected the lead for 3 2-3 innings of the nightcap and when he faltered, Klippstein struck out Ernie Banks with two men on in the, ninth for the game-ending out. Banks had hit his 23rd homer earlier in the game. Don Hoak's homer touched oil a three-run, sixth-inning rally that gave Harvey Haddix and the Pir Pirate ate Pirate an opening-game triumph ov over er over Cincinnati. Frank Robinson and Pete Whisenant homered tor the Reds. In the nightcap, at.er Gus Bell's two run ninth-inning homer had sent the game into ex tra innings, Bill Mazeroski deliv ered a two-out, llth-inning single that clinched the victory for Ron Kline. Cleveland preserved its Ameri American can American League lead by pushing a a-cross cross a-cross an unearned run in the 10th inning on George Strick Strickland's land's Strickland's double and Detroit first baseman Larry Osborne's er error ror error on le fewer'' grounder. Gary Bell gained the victory in relief. Luis Aoaricio singled, stole sec ond and came home on Nellie Fox' 10th-inning hit to make White box reliever Turk Lown the winnei ov er the A's. An eight-inning homer by Aparicio and a ninth-inning blast by AV Smtth.haa enabled pvt White SoxMoni the score. Losing pitcher Ned Garver knocked in a pair of Kansas City runs with a homer and a single. Camilo Pascual pitched a four four-hitter hitter four-hitter to beat the Yankees with the help of homers by Roy Siev Siev-ers, ers, Siev-ers, Harmon Killebrew (his 28th) and Jim Lemon. Pascual fanned 10 Yankees. Killebrew and Lemon each drove in three runs. The set setback back setback was the seventh in a row on Sundays tor the Yankees! Boston snapped a seven-game losing streak when Tom Brewer pitched a three-hitter in the op'.-n-er and the Red Sox hitters sent Hoyt Wilhelm down to his fourth straight defeat in the nightcap. Jackie Jensen and Don Buddin hit homers in the Sox' 26-hit two two-game game two-game assault. THEATERS TODAY DIABLO HTS. 7:00 e David Niven e Jean Seberg "BONJOUR TRISTESSE" Tues. "The Rose Tattoo" "Escape From Red Rock" Cruz 7:0(1 ICamp Bierd 7:00 ME AND THE COLONEL SOLO 2:30 Margarita 2:30 I "On The Thres Thres-I I Thres-I hold of Space" STEADING HITTERS Based en 200 official at bats) National League G AB 77 316 73 261 73 258 66 223 80 320 70 214 80 322 79 294 78 305 78 310 65 216 It H 56 117 44 91 54 90 27 74 56 106 28 70 53 105 52 95 64 95 49 96 39 67 Pet. .375 .349 .348 .i32 .331 .ZV .326 .323 .311 310 .310 Aaron, Mil. White, St. L. Gilliam, L.A. Logan, Mil. Cepeda, i.f. Cunn. St. L. Temple, Cm. Robinson, Cin Mays. S. F. Cimoli, St. L. Stuart, Pitt. American League Kuenn, Det. 73 292 51 262 44 297 45 321 41 232 32 266 52 306 64 290 44 288 28 258 34 104 .356 90 .344 99 .333 Kaline, Det. 67 Runnels, Bos. 75 Fox, Chicago 78 Woodling, Bal. 73 Mantle, N.Y. 70 Power, Cle. 76 Minoso, Cle. 76 106 .330 73 .315 81 .305 92 .301 86 .297 Bridges, Oet. 80 Kubek, N.Y. 68 85 .295 76 .295 Runs Batted In NATIONAL LEAGUE Banks, Cubs Robinson, Reds Aaron, Braves Cepeda Giants Mathews, Braves 76 73 ri 63 53 AMERICAN LEAGUE Killebrew, Senators Jensen. Red Sox Lemon, Senators Colavito. Indians Maxwell, Tigers 70 60 60 57 57 Home Runs NATIONAL LEAGUE Mathews, Braves Banks, Cubs Aaron, Braves Robinsun, Reds Cepeda, Giants 25 23 22 .8 17 AMERICAN LEAGUE Killebrew, Senators Colavito, Indians Allison, Senators Lemon, Senators Triandos, Orioles rs 54 21 20 20 LEADING PITCHERS listed enrllor moreNdeclslonV ; i National League W L Pet. Face, Pirates 12 0 1.000 Mizell, Cards 9 3 .75C Antonelli, Giants 12 4 .750 Newcombe, Reds 9' 4 .6?2 Podres, Dodgers 8 4 .667 American League McLish, Indians 10 3, .7(59 Mossi, Tigers 7 3 .700 Shaw, White Sox 7 3 700 Wilhelm, Orioles 9 4 .602 Wynn, White Sox 11 5 .688 TODAY ENCANTO- 35-201 "THE SOUND AND THE FURY" - Also: -"THESE THOUSAND HILLS" SBS5 TODAY REX THEATRE IN COLON EXCLUSIVE RELEASE! Shows at 2:30 8:00 SECOND BIG WEEK! CecilBDeMille's TheTen Commandments CHARITON VUL ANM HL5T0N BRYN N ER BAXTLR tDWARDG WONNt R0BIN50N 'DE CARLO km PAGET jonn DREK ALL BY HIMSELF Jockey Joee Ulloa pushes' Bob horns a three-length winner In Saturdays $3000 added one mile and one-quarter U.8. Independence Day Classic at the President Remon racetrack. Ml Deseo, which finished second by a half-length over Buen Mozo II with El Tun Tun-chi chi Tun-chi another neck further back, barely stuck his head into this picture. IN THE WINNER'S CIRCLE Classic winner Bob poses with his horsehoe of roses after scor scoring ing scoring a relatively easy post-to-post victory in the US Independence Day Classic. Grey-haired Peruvian Ambassador Jose F. Mariategui, reportedly a co-owner of the colt, and trainer Jose Reyes Olguin (with hat) pose with their prospective track champion. Double Four, Deauville Win Feature Events At Racetrack KOBBE KEGLING KORNER MIXED LEAGUE Teams The Quints W 8 7 6 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 Jesters Doggoners Holy Rolers Weve Had It The Fours The Sevens Ichiban Tankers Shud Havs Quints 4 Sevens The Quints, remained the only. team without a blemish, whon they ran their winning streaK 10 eight successive wins. Although only one pin separated the Quints and the Sevens, the victors had an easy time, amassing a differ difference ence difference of 273 in the total pin fall. The Quints enlisted the services riiff Porior mt the enlist- mont naid off because Cliff came through with flying colors, hitting a 526 scratch. Be iwo gais m the Quints' ranks rattled the lumb er for a 509 handicap set for Dee Thomas, and 548 lor Lois Crumit. For the Sevens, the nest on tne lanes was Ray Sutton's 486 han dicap. Jesters 3 lehibans 1 The Jesters spotted the lehibans 64 pins per game but overcame the hundiran in three of the four tries. They took the opener by 79 pins the second rouna oy inree sticks, dropped the third by 69, but were 13 to the good in toiai pins. Jim dinger of the Jesters led his team with 550 and Ray Burton broke 531 both handicap. For the lehibans, two damsels were the tops. Pat Carter scored 532 and Jinny Hassler 504 both handicap. Doggoners X Tankers 1 In a nip and tuck tussle, the Doggoners and Tankers split the four points. The Yankers won the ASTHMA and BRONCHITIS RELIEVED Aithma and Bronchltli attacka ruin Tour alp, undarmln your atrnrth nil weaken your heart. Mendaca tarta to work throtiKh our blood to ov.Tconia aathma and broncliltla at attack tack attack a. it halpa dissolve atranfling niu niu-cua cua niu-cua and promotea free, eaay breath breath-Iiik. Iiik. breath-Iiik. Mendace't action la affectlva eveft tn old and ftubborn caaaa. Oft Men Men-daco, daco, Men-daco, from any drufatora today and '( liow much better you Bleep and breathe tonight, and how much better you will feel tomorrow. Mandate tilth in dlacomfortt of Aathma, Broa Broa-thltii thltii Broa-thltii and Hay Farar. S o opening and closing rounds by close margins of 9 and 18 pins, whereas the Doggoners took the middle game by 51 sticks to as assure sure assure them the total pin chit. Big Bruce Hassler, pinchitting for the Doggoners walked away with top honors for his team with a 501 scratch and 573 handi handicap. cap. handicap. He had plenty of cooperation from three members of his squad; Jim Boyle 539, Louise Park er 522 and Tom Smith 523. For the Tankers, Dorin Covairt was a "500" scratch kegler with a 515 and 575 handicap. Bill Beebe broke 542 and Wil Conklin cover covered ed covered 524, both handicap. We've Had It 3 Holy Holers 1 A few breaks one way or an another, other, another, and the results could have been different, but as. events turn ed out, the Weve Hat It, had it and collected three winning points. The first game was taken by the Weve Had It by 29 sticks, and were then toppled by 33, but cam? back strong to win the last round and the Tp, by 23 and nine pins. The three point pickup for the winners was a good come comeback back comeback because last week they drop dropped ped dropped all four. Bob Mathias rolled a good se series, ries, series, tallying 524 scratch and 578 handicap, to give a big lift to the Weve Had It. Bill Fleshman had a respectful set with a 523 'handi 'handicap. cap. 'handicap. For the Holy Rollers, Rev Reverend erend Reverend Lou Karry despite a weak op?ning game, finished with a 558 handicap, and Odie O'Donnel added the women's touch with a 509 handicap. The Pour i 3 Shud Havs 1 When hostilities opened it ap peared as if the Shud Havs' luck turned, because thev corraled the opener by 57 pins. However they fell by the wayside, when the Fours captured a close one by 22 sticks. In the finale, the Fours finished with a bang, when they rol'ed a 929 game and overcame the deficit in Total Pins, and gave them three winning mark markers. ers. markers. i For the victors, anchor man, Wiley Williamson started out with two low games but uncorked a 212 singleton and made 548 han handicap dicap handicap series. Joe Sortlno also came ud with his best game in the finale to give him 571 handi handicap, cap, handicap, and Bill Bond completed the roster of 500 bowlers for the Four wi"! 535 handicap. Th? Shud Havs were loaded with the 5C keglers. having four in the ranks. Senor Garc! made 537, Mrs Cain 534. and her Don Juan 519, and reliable Sal Lsqui Lsqui-cjara cjara Lsqui-cjara 527, all handicap. "MtLLv.1 f . Double Four and Deauville, a pair of British-bred sprinters, rac raced ed raced away with the featured Vene Venezuela zuela Venezuela Independence Handicap and the Cycle League Handicap, res respectively, pectively, respectively, yesterday afternoon at the President Remon racetrack. Double Four scored from start to finish under a good ride by ve veteran teran veteran Hernani Moral Tatin nosed out Dependable and Xistullari in a blanket finish for the place. Double Four sprinted the six fur furlongs longs furlongs in a fast 1:12 over the slow racing strip. Deauville similarly scored from post-to-post and both returned the identical win divided of $3.40. Deauville was ridden by the day's winningest jockey, Heliodoro (Pa- pito) Gustines, who was at his best. Deauville sprinted the sev en furlongs in a creditable 1:25 45. Aralpina was second and Don Lucno third. Gustines nooted home La De- siree, ($19.80), Lo Moscoso ($4.80) and Lady Edna ($14.80) besides Deauville to be easily the best rid rider er rider of the day. Mora also won a thriller aboard Maniart to be next best. Leading jockey Braulio Bae Bae-za za Bae-za only managed to win one race. 7 The day's best win payoff was Sputnik's $26.80 in the nightcap. The Sputnik-Albigense one two paid $95.20 tops for the day. The dividends: FIRST RACE 1. Lo Moscoso $4.80, $2.80 2. Festival $3.60 SECOND RACE La Desiree $19.80, $5.80 Platano $3.80 v First Double: $57.80 THIRD RACE Naranjazo $7, $4,40 Filon $25.80 FOURTH RACE Meteor Lady $9.40, $7.40 1. 2. 1. 2. 1. 2. Barrarnda $5 Qulnlela: $55.20 FIFTH RACE 1. San Vicente $7, $3.1 2. Black Bee $3 SIXTH RACE 1. Puerto Madero $3.80, 2.40 2. Atrayente, $2.60 , SEVENTH RACE 1. Maniart $10.20, $3.60 2. Princesa Gitana $5.40 Second Double: 119.20 EIGHTH RACK 1. Lady Edna $14.80, $6.20 2. -Maese $3 ; Quiulela: $18.40 NINTH RACE : 1. Double Four $3.40, $2.60 2. Tatin $3.80 One-Two: $13.20!; TENTH RACE; 1. Deauville,; $3.40, $3 t 2. Alpina' i'- ,tj ELEVENTH RACE 1. 'Sputnik $26.80, $5;. 2. Albigense $3.60 One-Two-; $95.20 Editor: CONRAOO 8ARCEANT m National 'LeafiM w L PcK OB 44 33 .571-,. 4 35 47 37 J40 VI 43 39 J40 V 39 41 .481, 5Vi 37 42 .4M ;t 35 45 .431 im 29 4t J77 15 Milwaukee San Francises Let Angeles Pittsburgh Chicaao St. ..Louis Cincinnati Philadelphia Today's Games NATIONAL LIAGUI No games scheduled. TOMORROW'S GAM I Major League AUStar at Pitts burgh. Yesterday's Results Milwaukee 200 010 110-5 14 1 nLil.J.t..:. AAA AAA AAA A J A rnuaampma uuv uuu uwu Willey (42) and Crandall; Con- ley, Farrell (8) and Sawatski LP-Conley (6-5). (First Game) San Francisco 010 000 0102 t 2 St. Louis 1 000 04Q OOx 4 7 1 Sanford, Wortiungton (8) and Schmidt, Hegan (7), Landrith (8); BrogUo (3-5) and H. Smith. LP LP-Sanford Sanford LP-Sanford (7). HR-White (8). V (Second Game) San Francisco 201 000 1004 9 St. Louis 001 000 0012 10 2 S. Jones, Miller (8), Antonelli and Landrith: Blaylock, McDaniel (3), Bridges (8) and Katt, H. Smith (6). WP S. Jones (10-8). LP Blaylock (4-5). HR-Mays (14). (First Game) Los Angeles 002 110 0004 12 1 Chicago 100 002 0003 S 1 Craig, McDevitt (6) and Rose- boro; Buzhardt, Henry (4), Hob Hob-bie bie Hob-bie (7), Elston (9) and S. Taylor, Averill (7). WP-Craig (3-0). LP- Buzihardt (4-4). HRs Neal (10), Hodgea (15). (Second Game) Los Angeles 010 003 1005 3 0 Chicago 000 200 0013 9 0 Williams, Labine (4),' Koufax ffi) Klinnstpin f!H and Rnuhnr-n- Drott, Hillman (4), Hobbie (5),f Henry (7). Elston (8) and Averill. WP-Labine (3-7). LP-Hobbie (9-7). HKs-Koseboro (4), Banks (22). (First Game) Cin. 102 010 010-5 8 2 Pit. 103 003 OOx T IS J PurVev T.awrenra m Arenva (6), Schmidt (7) and Dotterer; Haddix, Face (9) and Burgess, roues is;. wr-Haadix (6-6). LP LP-Lawrence Lawrence LP-Lawrence (3-9). HRs-Robinson (18) Hoak (7), Whisenant (5). (Second Game) 11 Inninoa Cin. 000 000 002 002 5 0 Pit. 020 000 000 13 S 1 Brosnan, Peiia (8) and Bailey; Kline (7-6) and Kravitz. LP-Pefia (3-6). HR-Bell (11). Tony Brooks Wins Europe Grand Prfo By ROBERT AHIER RHEIMS, France (UPI) Tony Brooks of England won the Grand Prix of Europe auto race yesterday after Stirling Moss, a fellow Brit Briton, on, Briton, piled up his car against a retaining wall in a futile effort to tJ)r the lctd. Phil Hill of Santa Monica, Calif., finished second and Jack Brabham of Australia was third. Only 11 cars finished the race out of the 22 .which started. t Moss, who hau set a lap speed re record cord record with an average speed of 209.287 k.p.h. (129.76 m.p.h.) only a few laps previously, ran of 't the track at the Thillois curve ust before the straightaway to the grandstand. His BRM 'hit-the pro tective barrier on the side of the track. rAv -i 1 LOOKED LIKE CAUGHT FIRE It was at first' feared that his car had burst into flames. But what had caueht fire was a stand of wheat growing In the area of the Darner Moss had, nit.4Vtlie flames could, be seen from the grandstand.' tf ,; Aftr hia nra.hl Mrtsa drove his car back' to the Spirts, had it checked auickiy. and men return ed to the race to take eighth place among the lr cars which fimsnea. Brooks, driving an Ararl, took the lead right from the start and kept it all the way through the race. His average speed, was 2u5.- 079 k.n.h. (127.15 h.n.h.V fori the 50 laps around the 8.3 kilometer" (5.16-mile) course. His time was two hours, one minute 26.5 sec onds. , WATCHED BY LARGS CROWD A crowd of 50.000 watched the race under a scorching;, 100-degree sun.: The race wis not marred by any deaths or serious injuries de-, spite the act that1 the tCWs melting from the heat; at some, points of the track. Hill, a 22-year-old Californian driving a FerrarV was timed in an average speed of 204.308 a. p.h. (126.67 m.p.h). His overall time Ml I : American League W L Pet. 44 32 .. 579 43 35 J51 2 41 31 J19 4Vh 40 31 J13 I 40 40 .500. e 37 41,. 474 I 33 43., .434 11 33 44 429 11V Coeveland Chicago Baltimore New York Detroit .. ,j Washington Kansas City Boston Today's Games : AMERICAN HA0U1., 1 No games scheduled..-., TOMORROWS GAME Major League All-Star Game at Pittsburgh. Yesterday's Results Washington 12 010 0307 U S New York 000 000 0000 4 0 Pascual. (8-7) and, Naragon; Maas, Terry (3), Shants (0) and; Berra. LP-Maas (6-5).. HRs-Stev. ers (9), Killebrew (28) and Lemon! (20). ; 1 first Game) 5 Boston 000 350 010 9 li X Baltimore 000 000 0000 3 1 1 D r J YrrT-! . t urcwei .o-o) auu yviuio: srowal Portocarrero' (5) and Ginsberg. LP-Brown (5-4). HR-Jensen. (Second Game)' Boston 100 020 201-i 14 1 Baltimore 000 001 2003 5 oniminn, oumvan loj ana US US-lev: lev: US-lev: Wilhelm. Fishor m anil ' 7 Tnaodos. (10 bminai) Cleveland 011 001 010 15 13 ft Detroit 000 200 200 04 8 V Garcia, Score (7), Bell (9) and and-Brown: Brown: and-Brown: Fovtack. Mnrcan ( Kiri. ning (10) and Berberet. WP-BeU to e;. ur-Morgan (hj, Hit-Brown (3). (10 innlnga) Chios ffn nni dm rni.i -i .. I- irvv w UU B I X Kansas City 001 101 000 0 3 9 0' Latman, Lown (7) f-and tiLoUar:.' i?'STri,,,id House. WP-Lwvn (5), A. Smith (6). ... Regulalions For Use Of PanCsiiial Swimming Pools Now that the summer vacation season is in full swing more children and grownups., are using : Canal Zone swimming-pools on the Isthmus. To insure that evevy one will continue to enjoy this privilege without danger of mis- haps we are publishing the rules and regulations which cover ail Panama Canal swimming pool!. ; Balboa, Gam boa, Cece Sole v, ' and Gatun : . v .. '? 1. Use of this swimming pool is limited to the following person nel: Any U.S. citizen having com missary privileges evidenced by tin duly issued authority card aoa tnt guests f such persons, their, de-, pendents, students enrolled in U.S. citizen schools that have cer hfied swimming pool identifica tion cards, and Armed Forces per sonnel as evidenced by their iden tification card. i 2. All persons must take a show er before entering the swimming pool. 3. Non-swimmer children are admitted to pool only for classes or with their parents or guardian. 4. Persons with open cuts, open blisters, or broken skin areas art not to be permitted in the pool. 5. Use the scum gutter for ex pectorating or blowing of the nose. 6. Running on the deck, boister ous or rough play in the pool or on One diving boards is prohibit en. ', .: 7. Only persons attired in bath ing suits and in bare feet may pnter ? the pool enclosure. ; v 8. Any swimmer refusine to con form to regulations may be de- pnvea or the use of the pool, . Any swimmer may report the pool supervisor any infraction of these regulations. ; ;, tT-. : was iwo. nours, one minute. 54 s'econds. -'i The only other American to finish the race was Harry SchelL a New Yorker who now "spend most of his time in Paris. Sihell placed seventh in a BRM. l r i; DRIVE-IN I 52? iTOIlAY 2 ?? I vc. -w mmrm u v:ov. ; a ONJ5 DAY RELEASE! JUNE HARRIS ''" i Lawrence HARVEY; In -A I 'I ill l ikirhi ii Tomorrow WAHOO NIGHT! WITH FULL PRIZES! KARL'MALDEN n a v w?n i ,-: v "BABY DOLL MONDAY, JULY 6, 1959 , PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER esommouse JCiUges vr w o-z in l KT- "l t ,,12 .Jf.. - ...... M m HUT Amato's Control Earns 7-Hitter By MARK B RANDOM w runetip : k taaa ammmmm 0 I ft 1 Y v7. l . I sds es ess LITTLE MO'S BACK-Maureen Connolly is back on tennis courts, but not in competition Now Mrs. Norman Bricker and the mother of two, the United States women's singles cham champion pion champion Of 1951-52-53 and Wimbledon titleholder in '52-53-54 is conducting clinics in California by JOE WILLIAMS The nation' boxing experts took as brutal a beating from In In-gemar gemar In-gemar Johansson as Floyd. Pat Patterson terson Patterson did, only they didn't bleed to fluently. These are competent, conscientious, experienced critics. Why, then, the colossal goof? Three hours befort the fight we were visited by a young Swed Swedish ish Swedish friend, Sven Ekstrom, sports editor ot tne uoieDorg vana News. Sven had watched Johansr aon come up" from the amateurs; wis at the ringside the day he 'disgraced Sweden" in the O- lynpics; nas seen mm an m iu fights. By the time Swen got here, Jo Johansson hansson Johansson had ooncluded sparring; for the nxt four days (five as it turned out( with the rain post ponement)Mhe would 'relax ana grow stronger," This; like other Johansson unorthodoxies, had in incited cited incited diverse journalistic reaction. Incredulity, skepticism, ridicule. Our young Swedish friend has a captivating" way;'pfvhistoihg his blong Nordic head metronomical- .'leiimMgaJ iment or disagreement, we can not always tell,- 'Ya," nodded Sven. 'Thia is Johansson. This is his way. Al Always ways Always it is th? same. Back home, reading the American dispatches, we are lurprjsed that you are aurprised, We' conclude, you dtt not kflow ,thts man." Johansson's refusal in camp to throw his right hand. .the punch he stopped. Eddie Machen with in one round to qualify for the championship, exasperated, mys mystified tified mystified and infuriaer .so confus ed the experts that he became, in their considered judgment, (a) an imposter, (b, a bum, (c) a hustler, et cetera, et cetera,- et cetera. Sven turned on the metronome iain. 'Ya. Tb" rieht hand, he never once throws in sparring anvf'me. It i the left, hand he seeks for the oerfection. The rirht is the knockout hand. The left is the winning hand." This called for a slow retake. , 'vou see." natiently xp'ain xp'ain-ed ed xp'ain-ed our young friend, 'the left hand i of the ?reater imoortanc? because unless the opponent is maneuvered into the" direct Mine of Are, it is pointless to throw the right. NONI SO BLIND AS "This Johnasson's thinking 6n 11 boxing. This is why he works over and over and over, with the left, seeking the perfect timing. This left is not meant to be de destructive. structive. destructive. It is, may I say, the little brother to the big right, Ex Except cept Except it is the very key to Johans Johansson's son's Johansson's hole offense." This is precisely the way Jo Johansson hansson Johansson trained, precisely the Title Fights Top Boxing In US NEW YORK (UPI) Two world title fights, for the welter welterweight weight welterweight and bantamweight crowns, feature this week's boxing sched schedule. ule. schedule. Don Jordan of Los Aneeles de- way he fought, precisely the way pnfls his welter (147-oound) title he described his strategy and in- against unbeaten Young Denny tentiqns. to y the boxing writers. Moyer jn his hometown, Port Port-Unimpressed, Unimpressed, Port-Unimpressed, they doggedly pur- nd, ore, Friday night. Their sued the mystery of the slumber- Grounder will be staged out ing right. . it will De ready when I'm ready." He would smile. And darned if it wasn't. The writers had never seen Jo hansson fight. They did not know doors at Portland Meadows. Lanky Jordan, making his sec second ond second defense, is favored at 9-5 over speedy, 19-year-old Moyer, who seeks his 21st straight pro- the man, as our ,y.wjDg friend ijssional victory and f4 toV said in .trufchio they t-could notlout. -B f f know him, and his departures from the conventional were so radical he was rendered suspect. Besides; be was a foreigner, and the steacH of the Brian London fiasco still assaulted their nos nostrils trils nostrils accordingly, he was dismiss dismissed ed dismissed as another D;Awtp hand-picked pop over, and so the 'infallibil ity of experting, along with the Their bout will be televised and broadcast nationally by NBC. Wednesday night, Algerian Al Al-phonse phonse Al-phonse Halimi of France de defends fends defends his world bantamweight (118-pound) title against Joe Be- cerra of Mexico in the first fight show at the new Los Angeles Me Memorial morial Memorial Sports Arena. -' Halimi is favored at 2-1 al- invincibility of Patterson, toppled though he hasn't defended in 19 and crashed. I months because of an arm injury, v j He did have six non-title boms anno DECcaoru inn since tneR however. He seeks his pock K6S6AKI.H job 28th vicotry in 29 professional ,. , bouts. He was beaten only once. V"1, "I'f-''""" "' He registered 15 knockouts, actual competition,, yet to pre sume authoritatively, that he can or can not fight is frivolous. E- qually hazardous to critical pres prestige tige prestige is the use of workouts to as assess sess assess ability and prejudice results. What could have been less por por-tentious tentious por-tentious of the impending sham shambles bles shambles than Patterson's sudden, un unwonted. wonted. unwonted. feMQity,. fti training? AnjH?dlenaV iob or research also contributed to the disparage disparagement ment disparagement of th fighter and the em embarrassment barrassment embarrassment of the experts. That Johansso" ha'' fouoht top .r- skine with knuckles ripped clear Becerra of Guadalajara, Mexi co, is the top-ranked bantam con contender. tender. contender. A terrific puncher, ne scored 20 knockouts while win winning ning winning 32 of his 35 fights. Their 15-rounder will be tele televised vised televised nationally by ABC. The week's boxing schedule in includes: cludes: includes: MONDAY Las Vegas, Nev. Eddie Andrews vs. Don F'ullmPi. Mobile, Ala. Johnny Gorman vs. Guy Sumlin. TUESDAY Richmond, Calif. In a well played same July 4 at Jarman Field, Fort Clayton, the strong, well disciplined vVest- inghouse nine aefeated the VFW All Stars by a 32 score in a tune up game, prelude to states tourn tourneys eys tourneys for both teams. The teams will leave for the States, shortly, for invitational and tournament play for the championship of their respective leagues. With the score deadlocked at two all for six innings, Eddie Cor rigan, Westinghouse short stop came through with an infield sin glB, in the bottom of the seventh, to acore Carroll with the winning run. The VFW ALL STARS took a 1-0 lead in th second inning when Cage singled and scored as he was moved around by an infield out and a single by L. French. Westinghouse evened it up in the third when Amato opened the in inning ning inning with a walk and scored when the throw from home got by French and Reichart. VFW took the lead at 2-1 in the top of the sixth on a double by Bateman to score Brandon from first. Westinghouse came back in their half of the sixth to tie up the score on a single by Morris, a 'beautiful sacrifice by Rogers and a single by Allen. The VFW All Stars saw in .it. tempted squeeze play in the top of me sevenin cum into a double play when Amato .whiffed Hud'd'leston and Garcia, Weatfnghouse catch catcher, er, catcher, put the tat 'on fcettia coming in from third.' Credit is rendered the AmAri. can Legion and Westinghouse for paying we yrw team since there is an age difference of two vesrc in the American Leeinn hull pinh and additional experience. Their help is invaluable to the VFW All Stars and the VFW League ap predates the chance to sharpen their players against the superior Bettis who went Hip Hist anno fvr the VFW All Stars ffave tin nnlr five hits and showed that he has me ability to pitch creditable Halt against a stroncer team r-.no fe'M! .wa the leading hitter for me vrw ah stars. Garcia, Mor Morns ns Morns and Allen each had one for two for Westinghouse. Ihe DUblic is nri?id tn these games and boosters tickets are still available. Sale of the tick- eis will nelp send the VFW All stars to the U.S. for their tourna ment. -- The box score: V.F.W. All Stars French, L. 2b Reichart, cf Huddleston. c French, W. 3b Pnester, lb Brandon, ss Cage, If Zent, rf Bettis, p Fortune, If Bateman, r f Totals of skin striking the big bag waS;Tony Dominguez vs. Hill Moyer. o,. .o,.. rresno, uaiii.T-ora rouey vs. And that for the Archie Mr Mr-Brid? Brid? Mr-Brid? bout, he was ill condition conditioned. ed. conditioned. "verwei"h (20B) and 'puff 'puffing ing 'puffing likp a winded porpoise at the finish," in the words of our young friend, a ringside witness. may .no' have' bee", kriown "n to now. This Jhformation, readily a a-vallablp. vallablp. a-vallablp. wou'd have put the dis disputed puted disputed deicsion with the shoo worn American in a far different pers pective. . .What's that? Oh, yes. Wc goofed, too. Alvin Williams. WEDNESDAY Log Angeies -Alphonse Halimi vs. Jose Becerra (world bantamweight ..title) TV. THURSDAY None scheduled FRIDAY Portland, Ore. -Don Jordan vs. Denny Moyer (world welterweight title) Tra Tra-dio. dio. Tra-dio. Auruba, Dutch West Indies Indies-Charley Charley Indies-Charley Cotton vs. Boy Nando SATURDAY Hollywood. Calif Dwight Hawkins vs. Danny Kidd AbKHE Rbi 4 0 2 1 1 4 9 110 4 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 4 0 10 0 2 12 0 0 2 110 0 3 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 10 1 I 71 I 4 110 0 3 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 10 0 10 2 0 10 0 4 0 1?' 2 1110 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 10 1 2 10 0 0 25 3 5 4 2 Wcttinghouit Carroll, If Bright., T. lbrf Bright, F, ef Scott, lb Garcia, c Corrigan, ss Morns, rf2b Roger, 3b Barnes, 2b Allen, cf Amato, p Tettls Off Amato: 2 runs, 7 hits, 7 in innings nings innings Off Bettis: 3 runs, 5 hits, 7 in innings nings innings Struck Out: By Bettis 6, Amato 7. 2b: L. French, Bateman ER: VFW 2, Westinghouse 2. Lob: VFW 8, Westinghouse 7 B.B.: Amato 2, Bettis 8. Win Winner: ner: Winner: Am-Uo, Loser: Bettis. Umpires: Bateman and B. Barnes. Time 1:47. Scorer: Brandon. VEGETABLES FRUITS JUICES BIRDS YE quiclcTfrozeij, foods are farm farm-fresh fresh farm-fresh apd flavorsomc. Gfowa inclusively for Birds.Eye, these jead-tosetVc quick quick-frozen frozen quick-frozen Birds Eye! Foos are carefully l sheeted, cleaned and packed to meet' top top-erade erade top-erade U, S. food Standards. Enjoy your favorite frnits, vegetables, fruit juices, fish and poultry, all year 'round regardless of season. Slock th b4$t-gt Both today I: raotTiD FOODf Harvard Wins Both Eiohf-Oared Rowing Championship Cups SENLEY-ON-T H A M E S, Eng England land England (UPi) Harvard University won both of the eight-Oared cham championships pionships championships in the conclusion of the Henley Hegatta Saturday, taking both tho Grand Challenge Cup with its varsity eight and the Thames Challenge Cup with its 150-pounders. The United States missed a cnance lor anotner title wnen Navy Lt. Harry Parker of Phila Philadelphia delphia Philadelphia lost to defending cnam cnam-pion pion cnam-pion Stuart Mackenzie of Aus tralia in the diamond sculls fu.al. The Harvard varsity eight cov covered ered covered the one-mile, 550-yard course on the Thames River in 6:57 to beat the Thames Rowing Club bv two and three-quarter length?. The time was 27 seconds behind the record set by Cornell two years ago The Harvard liirhtwei chts re. tained their crown in the Thames Challenge Cup by beating London University by two and a half lengths in 7:13. Mackenzie was clocked in 8:39 in becoming the fifth man in his history tory history to win the Diamond Sculls three times. St. Edmund's Hall and Lincoln College, Oxford, won the Stewards Cup for tour-man crews in 7 39. defeating Italy's Moto Guzzi crew. ?ii t; fl r i TROPHY FOR HAWKS The Signal Service "Hawks" from Fort Clavton receivo awarrfo kr fi,iw ; .u- r,' ed Forces Company Level Basketball Tournament. Major John H. Rooney receives: the team-trpohy from Col. John D Comey Ft'"Ti Clayton post commander In the backgrounl are Pfc. Dick Kyllo, Pfc, Skip Krogerv Sp4 Charles Whaley, coach; Pfc Richard Tan- cack, Sp4 John Wilson, Pfc. Larry Thoine and Pfc. Everett Fields. Team members not shown were Sp4 Ray Swanson Sp4 Terrv Tro Tro-mas. mas. Tro-mas. Sp4 Wesley Jones and Pfc. D?nnis Freeman. iik ,! pwi P. A. CLASSIFIEDS OFFICIAL LIST OF THE- NATIONAL LOTTERY 0F BENEFICENCE PANAMA, REPUBLIC OF PANAMA Complete Prize winning Numbers in the Extraordinary Drawing Uo. 2104, July 5, 1959. The whole ticket has 5t pieces which comprises the two series "A" and "B" First Prize Second Prize Third Prize 3642 3183 1632 $100,000.00 $ 30,000 00 $ 15,000.00 4m No. 0042 0142 0242 0342 0442 0542 0642 0742 0R42 0942 $ PriiM .100.00 .100.00 300.00 300.00 300.00 300 00 5,000.00 300.00 300 M 300.00 No. 1042 1142 1242 1342 1442 1542 1642 1742 1R42 1942 I PrliM 300.00 300.00 300.00 300.00 300.00 300.00 5,000.00 300.00 300.00 300.00 No. 2042 2142 2242 2342 2442 2542 2042 2742 2S42 2942 Prizes 300.00 300.00 300.00 300.00 300.00 300.00 5,000.00 300.00 300.00 I 300.00 I No. 3042 3142 3242 3342 3442 354? 3642 10ft 3742 3842 3942 f Prizen 300.00 300.00 3O0.00 300.00 300.00 300.00 ,000.00, 300.00 300.00, 300.00 No. 4042 4142 4242 4342 4442 4542 4044 4742 4842 4942 I Prizes 300.00 300 00 300.00 300.00 300.00 300 00 5 000.00 300.00 300 00 300.00 IS I No. Prize, No. Prizes No. Prlze No. Prizes No. Prize 5042 300.00 0042 300 00 7042 300.00 8042 300.00 9042 300.00 5142 300 00 0142 300.00 7142 300.00 8142 300.00 9142 300.00 5242 300.00 6242 300.00 7242 300.00 8242 300,00 9242 300.00 5342 300.00 6342 300.00 7342 300.00 8342 300.00 9342 300.00 544? 300.00 6442 300.00 744" 300.00 8442 300.00 9442 300.00 554? 300 00 654? 300.00 7542 300 00 8542 300.00 954? 300.00 504' S.sVMI.M 664' 1WM 7042 .' 100.00 864? 5,000.00 9R4? 5.000.00 574' lOr.nfl 074? 300.00 774? 300 OA 874? 300.00 9742 300.00 5R4' 300 00 682 3n0 00 784? 300.00 8842 300.00 9842 300.00 5942 300.00 6S42 300.00 7942 300.00 8942 300.00 9942 300.00 Approximations Derived From First Prize !'!!!! J 25H i 2Mfl ,'"ft0 nf41 xmM 3644 1'00n I 1,00.00 3eso 1,00.00 3634 1,000.00 3638 1,000.00 3638 1,000.00 .. a40 4,W0t) Ji 1,000.00 364J 1,000.00 I 3647 J. 000 00 3649 tOOO.OO 3651 lioOO.OO Approximations Derived From Second Prize s S S $ St S SI II 1 0183 mM ""3 800 Z'S3 WM ilia 500.00 8183 500.00 6183 500.00 78? 500.00 8183 500 00 9183 500.00 VM Ill, SilO, V.li J5JM J'W 2S0.M SHJ 250.00 I 3185 25lToO 3IV" 2MM0 JIM 2MMI0 3191 250 00 3175 250.00 3177 250.00 3179 250.00 3181 ,0.00 3184 250.00 I 3186 250.00 3181 250.00 I 3190 250.00 3192 MO M Approximations Derived From Third Prize 0632300.00 j 2632 300.00 3S32 300.00 mt '7M M2 30(U)0 2 300.00 7631 300.00 8632 300.00 I 9.132 300.00 2no on i IZ m m ISS2S IS'- litlt- 1S1 IrXI 1 m "mm. 1 i7o ?o7o 1624 200.00 1626 200 00 l2 200.00 I 1S30 200 00 1633 200.00 1635 300.SO 163T 200.00 1639 200.00 1641 200 00 ' 1 ... Priie-winnlng Numbers of esterday's Lottery Drawlnf were sold at: The 1st Chlrlqui; 2nd Panama and 3rd abroad. The Nine Hundred whole tickets ending: in 2 and not Included In the above list win One Hundred Dollars $(100) each. Signed by: The Governor of the Province of Panama ALBERTO AI.EMAN The Representative of the Treasury, JOSE MANUEL SllVERA WITNESSES: Alberto Jose Gotl Vargas Ced. 28-12322 Levy Dorch Ced. 8-45-324 2nd Notary PnWtc.-Panama JOSE DOMINGO SOTO PABIO A. PINFX M. Secretary KjrTC. The winning ticket with the last cipher end with the two last 1 ciphers apply only to the First Prize. The Tlrst Prize end Ihe 2nd end 3rd Prizes are drw,i separately. The ap approximation proximation approximation are calculated on the First. Second and Third prizes In case a ticket should carrv th numbers of each prize, the holder la entitled to claim payment for each DRAWING OF THE 3 STRIKES Sunday, June 14, 1959 Drawing; Number 805 Fraction First Prize 42 Second Prize 83 Third Prize 32 Ticket $11.00 $220.00 3 00 60.00 2.00 40.00 The prize will be-paid! In arconiant-e with the Official List of Panama In 1 Ihe office of Ihe National Heneficlenl Lottery situated on Central Avenue. PLAN OF ORDINARY DRAWING NoT 2105 WHICH WILL" TAKE PLACE SUNDAY, .11 LY 12. 1959 Divided In tw aeries of 2(T fractions each denominated "A" and "B" HKST PR17 1 drat Prize Series A"nd B, of I Seednd. Price. Seriea A and B of 1 Ti.lrd Prize. Seriejl.A and B oi IS" Approximations. Series A and B. of 9 Prizes Series A and B. of 90 Prize. Series A and B. of 900 Prizes Series A and B. of J26.00no each series 7.SOO 00 each series 3.900 on each series 26(1 00 each series 1.3OO 0O each erles 78 00 each series 26 00 each series SF.rONI) PR1ZK 18 Approximations Series A and B, of 3 Prize. Serlea A and B, of THIRD PRIZE 18 Approximations. Series A and B. of f 9 Prizes Series A and B. of 65 no each series 130 00 each (cries 52 00 each aeries 78 00 each serlea ."2. 000.00 'i l.VSOO.M 1 7.800 (10 !? 9.360 00 St 23.400 fJO 14.040 fT" 46.800 SO t 2.340 Of) 2 340 00 t 1.872 0 1 404 00 107' I'rues Total I176.956.; PRIZES ARE PAID WITHOUT Price of a whole ticket $26.00 Price of a 52nd part 0.50 DISCOUNTS OR TAXES -1.".-. -v. ? i u THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDITENDKNT BAILT KZITSPAPia MONDAY, JtXT t, mi PAGE IIGHT Classified Ads Classified Ads Classified Ads Classified Ads Ji -I AGENTS; I claimed rt. dose u.m I $ L LSI viCil ilj tvl Jn rbone Panama 1-0740 for I agents or our offices' AT" U-J7 "H" sheet, Panama libreria preciado t tttmt M agencias I Mo ta i n I C JJ-tH NTUP It I 11 -r V information about CUS- I ""Nl l- MiSFicTnN. 1 uS Pl.a CASA ZALDO-Crntral Ave. 5 .GOURDES PHARMACY 12 L. C,.iUsi ft FARMACIA LOM- I I0B- TV- 11 BJn- I -"-"' Jk1 -l'Kr',fcW l Sifieds. Charj. TOUr ad if LYrn'o 2S 4 8frt MRlSoiithTf JulyA. A J St, LEWIS SrRVICE-Ave. TivoU N.Jl FARMACIA EST ADOS UNIDOS-14 Crntml Aw. I gat -jn.ft for SUB. I I "J- -.liAl A i tjCVJ- i$ rnmmereial I fFSZTir i 1 1 t iuJS i HOIJSFHOLD EXCHANGE-! Fes d la Oai Ave. Ma. 41 FOTO DOMY-Justo Xnmtmetm Art. mui St FAB- ,""- 1 5 1 1T?r 1- V J"fT I S I . hi -t r-r 1 1 ... rrtrr. : mn if rTTrm-i V V I Resorts M Apartments Automobiles Miscellaneous nome Arnaes ieoi csuue tartar carrion. btwt Sinta Clara and Rio Hate. Ntw lew rates. Pheiit Balboa 1866. PHILLIPS OceaMioe Cott.aas Scuta Clara R. Sa P. Plwne Pa- um S-1877 Critrob.l 3-1673 CIRRO AZUL A h.suriful, ro ro-matic matic ro-matic tpef fot fun and re'. Soene' four week-ends in a pleai pleai-a a pleai-a n I enyironmenf, iwimming. kiine., fcoatinj in eoel, freah water The ber meali. drinki, dance munc at an Elegant Club, lifuated en the banki of Hie lake. Come and eniey younelf. Houses FOR RENT: Completely fur furnished nished furnished three bedroom residence, prevomsW occupied by Bolivian ffMinijt' in Eeuadoi Avenue No 'tfy LiinjKn, rfininqroom. ;-riithrt, efiee. rwe bathroom, "Midi rom with wivice. wash tubs, raic. innde patio, hot water In ali tirviees, direct tele tele-phaiw phaiw tele-phaiw line. For ir,ettion, see fft tci-.tdtt Averika Ko.. 30 or Fe Fe-4visa 4visa Fe-4visa at Jf Em Street, rear Mer Mer-d d Mer-d Vaate. FOR RENT: Chalet upttiirs. 2 bedreem, iniv painted, tid Via tspans. betide Radio Mira Miramax, max, Miramax, white fievieo, Tel 3-6351. FOR RENT: Frnihed chalet In '48th end, Bella Vista, left hand 'No. 25. Two bedrooms, living living-room, room, living-room, dining room, kitchen, ervice, $100 00. Garden. Tela. 3-1683 and 1-6887. FOR RENT: Furnished 3 bed bedroom room bedroom residence with servants, -Golf Heights, months of August m4 September. $250 per month. Call 3 6648 office hours. Commercial Sites FOR REN T: Office space, Mercedes building, above Avenida -fctlboa's Post Office, with terrace floors, acoustic ceiling, private bathroom, watchman, very rea reasonable sonable reasonable rent. Tel. 3-3054. PORTRAIT ON A PORTRAIT A fantastic story in American ; art history has unfolded. Tbe only two life portraits of Thomas Jefferson by Gilbert Stuart have been foemd after disappearing or a ceotunu Artist OrkMXi Campbell discovered thes J80i painting, teft, m aarnfJlW?w .Tork strop. X-rays revealed an 1800. portrait underr&thVBiOTrSlweat ta wis, right. 830 Xc&. Panama Commercial Guide ADVERTISE IN Ads only cost $0.85 per col. inch , FOR INFORMATION CALL 20740 J i LIFE INSURANCE mil JIM RIDGE General Atenl Gibrallar Life Ins Co. for rates and Information , Tel. Panama 2-0S52 Monday thru Friday :00 a m In 12:1)0 j 2:90 n.m to 5:00 ' Saturday: :0n a.m. to 12:1X1 Listen To The OAS "Pa namerican .(Record Show 12:30 p.m. HOC-YCN Evry Sunday FOR RENT: Very modern tvrd bedroom apartment, best loca location. tion. location. Call 2-2466 during office hours. FOR RENT: G.I. approved, furnished apartment, m o d e r (t building, screened, convenient location, Automobile Row. Ms. 36, Tel. 3-655, after 7. 2 2-5046. 5046. 2-5046. FOR RENT :i furnished apart apartment ment apartment parlor, dinfngroom, ke3-. room, kitchen, porch, garage, til tiled, ed, tiled, screened. $55 00 Apply No. 112 Via Beliseria Porras, near Roosevelt Theatre FOR RENT: Beautiful Pant Pant-house house Pant-house in El Cangreje "Madurito Building." Three Bedroom, Two Baths, Maid's Room and Bath to be avai'able from August 7th. For information call Telephone" 2-2844 from 9 to 1 2 and 2 to 6 p.m. i v..- 1 FOR RENT: In Cangrejo, fur furnished nished furnished or unfurnished apartment, two bedrooms, all around balcony, maid's room with service, gar garage, age, garage, with water, Alberto Navarro Street. La Castellana building, Tel. 2-2883 or 3-1318. FOR RENT: Cangrejo Fully furnished modern. cool one room apartment, hot water, bal balcony, cony, balcony, ete. Call 3-1789. SERVICES TELEVISION SERVICE Experts in TV. radio, Hi-Fi and transistors. We do more Work, because we do it the best. Phone 2-1905. Crawford Agencies. Tivoli Avenue No. 18-20. Protect your home and proper property ty property against Insect damage. Prompt scientific treatment cn emergency or monthly -. budget basis. Telephone Pronto Service, Panama 3-7977 or Colon 1777. 1090 Xc&. Colon THIS SECTION AUTOMOBILE FINANCE Government Employes Service Personnel Finance Your New Or Used Car GOVERNMENT EMPLOYES FINANCE Co. LOW RATES UP TO 36 Mo. on new cars AGENCY DEHLINGER No. 43 Automobile how Phone 3-4DR4 3-4085 All Types of Auto Insurance QUESTIONS SINCERITY BELGRADE (U1'1)-Vk Pics ident Aleksandar Rankoviq said Saturday thai if all Balkan na nations tions nations were as sincere aboul an atom free zone in the Balkans as Yugoslavia il would he a reality instead of an idea by now. "Vu goslavia if- the only country in this pari of lh world in which no vockel bases wil! ever be erected," Rankovie paid. FOR SALE: 1956 Chevrolet, Bel-Air, 4 door, sport sedan, powerglide, radio, w.w. tires, $1350. House 1512 A, Balboa. Tel. 1389. FOR SALE: 14.1 Ford sedan, good tires,, ,; run fine, inspected $175.00. Pahahia 3-7810. FOR SALE: 1959 Pontiac, leav leaving ing leaving Isthmus. Quintero. Tels. 3 3-6029 6029 3-6029 and 4-0489, FOR SALE:-1958 Ford Country sedan I Station Wagon) Fordor, 6 passenger, V-8, 265 h.p. Ford Ford-omatic, omatic, Ford-omatic, back-up lights, heater, $2175 00 1950 Willys jeep with winch $750 00. Call Vic Melant at 6-347. FOR SALE: I 957 Ford station wagon, 6 cylinder, standard, radio, heater, etc. 16000 miles, excel excellent lent excellent condition. Balboa 1253. FOR SALE: 1949 Pontiac, 4 4-door. door. 4-door. 5 cylinder, very good con condition. dition. condition. Phone 3-4855. FOR SALE: 1958 Mercury Montclair. two-tone, blue, white side wall tire, practically new, approximately 17,000 miles, push button control, power steer steering, ing, steering, power brakes radio, heater, one owner. Call 83-6105. FOR SALE: Chevrolet 1955, white side walls, radio, excel excellent lent excellent condition, new tires. $900.00. Call Balboa 3294. FOR SALE: 1955 Ford, excel excellent lent excellent condition, 4 new tires, $725. Call Navy 3554 or can be seen at quarters 805-B, Far Fan. PERSONALS ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS DRAWER "A" DIABLO BOX 1211. CRISTOBAL, C.I. PHONE BALBOA 3709. Animals AKC Boxer5' 5 mot. hschrkn ears clipped had shots. Call Bal. 1503. FOR SALE: AKC Registered Toy Bull Boston Terrier Puppies. Call Navy 3986. Lillian Thomas Dies, Funeral Set For Tomorrow Funeral services will be held tomorrow for tho late Mrs. "Lil "Lillian lian "Lillian Thomas, a 65-year-old Gre Gre-nadian nadian Gre-nadian who died Saturday night At Santo Tomas Hospital following a lengthy illnes. The funeral is scheduled to leave St. Paul's Church at 3:30 for Herrera Cemetery where burial will take place. . Mrs. Thomas, a resident of Par Par-que que Par-que Lefevre, is survived by her sons, Donald and Oscar; daughter, Rose, Junetha, Marie and Ruby. stepdaughter, Mrs. Blades; sister, Mrs. Olive White; brother Walter and Donald Thomas, and several grandchildren and other relatives. Investment Clinic Tbe weekly USO-JWB investment clinic under the guidance of C. T. Rirhardson. Jr.. meets this eve evening ning evening at 7:30. All active parti participants cipants participants are urged to attend this session. LOFTY CALLING Determ Determined ined Determined to be on top of the play. Tommy Tripp is in a good spot to second guess the umpire during this impromptu base baseball ball baseball game in Topeka, Kans. The lad is perched high atop the backstop awaiting pitch. J ; ''! 1 ( 1 i i jf o.wasi 4 ' ii. lliairi 'I mm ; i i FOR SALE: Office safe 500 Lbs. Inside dimensions 20x16x12 inches. Masonic Temple Bldg., Cristobal, C.Z. room 11, or Tel. 36-633. NOTICE TO FISHERMEN 33 1 discount on all fishing tackles. This is not a tale, but permanent reduction of price. ABERNATHY, S.A. Across tide street from El Pana Panama ma Panama Hotel. FOR SALE Winchester, model 12-16 Gauge, 16 Ft. Fiber glass bottom boat with outboard motor and trailer. Fishing rods and reels. Polaroid Land Camera, Model 95A with case and flash attachment. Qtrs. 21 11 -A, 5th St. Curundu, Tel. Curundu 5264. FOR SALE: Plants. House No. 9081, 8th Street, New Cristobal. Phone 50, Colon. FOR SALE: Brambach Baby Grand Piano, excellent condition $350, or best offer; Argus C44 Camera, Telephoto lens, view view-finder finder view-finder $90; Double bed $20; Wicker table, $5; Mirror $3. Phone Balboa 2-1665. Call Panama 3-7935 for filling and repairing carbon dioxide fire extinguishers. Rapid service. Dry Ice-Incorporated. Bring this notice to EDITORIAL CARIBE 21-42 "B" AVE. and receive your FREE GIFT Especial gift for HEBREOS FOR SALE: Winter Spinet pia piano. no. piano. Excellent condition. Phono Balboa 3173. FOR SALE: Mink stole. Ranch mink, half-ski, letout. Sacrifice. Phone Curundu, 83-3231. FOR SALE: Gibson refrigerator good, cheap and two good chairs. Ecuador Avenue No. 10, downstairs. Labor Sec. Sees Possible Agreement In Steef Wage Dispute Before July 14 NEW YORK, JuJy UPI) Steel wage negotiations resume later today after a July 4 week end cooling off period. Labor 5acre tary James P. Mitchell wicihe saw a good possibility a new contract would be reached in the nine days left for bargaining be fore the new nationwide strike deadline. Mitchell, appearing on the Mu tual Broadcasting System radio program "Reporters Roundup, said one heartening sign was ac ceptance by both sides of Presi President dent President Eisenhower's plea last week to extend their talks beyond the original July 1 strike deadline. The United Steelworkers have set midnight July 14 as thir new walkout hour. If no contract has been written by then, 500,000 basic steelworkers will quit their jobs across the country. When the negotiators for 12 major steel makers and the un ion recessed their steeped up talks Friday for the week end, the industry was standing firm on its insistence it could pay on wage increases this year that would boost production costs. The union stood just as firmly for higher wages. During last week's wage talks, sporadic wildcat steel strikes oc occurred curred occurred across the country. The wildcatters later returned to work on orders of David J. Mc Donald, Steelworkers union pres ident. One of the worst yrouble sports was at Duluth ,Minn., where sea man members of the union pick eted oreboats. The seaman division of the w- South American And Russian Players Make Tennis History wiMRi.F.noN. England (UPI) South American and Russian nlavers made tennis history in the 73rd Wimbledon championships while the United Mates njaae nw by making a relatively poor show ing. Alox Olmedo of Peru and Ma ria Bueno of Brazil became the first South Americans to reach Hi mpn't anH women's sinclcs linals in the world's No. 1 tournament. They celebrated by winning the titles in straight sets. Wimbledon crowds, perhaps a hit tired watch watching ing watching U. S. and Australian perfor performers mers performers Erab the tournament's big prizes, gave both South Americans big ovations. The United States failed to win the women's singles title for Ihe first lime since 1937 and failed to reach the quarterfinals in men s doubles for the first time in ?2 years. While Miss Bucno snapied the I 'tilled States victory string m women's singles Saturday by de defeating feating defeating Darlene Hard of Monto- Ix'lln. Calif., a young Russian made history at the staid old all FOR SALE: Diningroom set, table with six chairs buffet. Solid mahogany. 243-C, Coco Solo 36- 760. FOR SALE: Electric rente, 30 inch, Kenmore, overhauled, full full-width width full-width even, $100. Navy 3260. FOR SALE: Electric roaster, electric sewing machine, Servel refrigerator, coffee master, pres pressure sure pressure cooker cabinet, motor 60 cycle, 1 hp, 1 ph., 220-240, house 551, A neon Boulevard. FOR SALE: Upright vacuum cleaner, large wall mirror, dining room set, sectional sofa, end tables, washing machine. FOR SALE: Haywood Wake Wakefield field Wakefield Living Room Set OAK Dining Room Set Bedroom Dressing Tables Radio- Phono Phonograph graph Phonograph Tools Toys TV Tel. Navy 3123. FOR SALE: Frigldaire 9 e f Porcelain, Solid Mahogany Dosk. Call Balboa 1503. FOR SALE: General Electric Clothes Dryer, good condition. Qtrs. Ill, Albreok, Phone 86-4144. FOR SALE: Leaving country country-Mahogany Mahogany country-Mahogany dining table seats eight Phone 3-3485, Pan- Boats & Motors FOR SALE: 8" Bench Saw and 4" oiner en table with 2 shaft V h.p., 60 cy. motor. One Vi h.p. motor G.E. New, 22 cal. Supermatic pistol. Pistol case with spotting scope. Misc. 12 gauge ammo. Calle Balboa 3444. For a quick sale yacht messenger, Diesel powered $450, register registered ed registered length, 45 Ft. Balboa Yacht Club, owner Nealy Ashby. Lessons LEARN TO DRIVE :Dua control car.. $3.00 per hour. Tel. 3 3-0338, 0338, 3-0338, Panama. nion finally called off tfct pickets Saturday night, enabling moroon moroon-ed ed moroon-ed ore boats to start moving again. Pickets also were withdrawn at Superior and Two Harbors, Minn. Lloyd Bartledt, co-chairman ol the sailors negotiating team, said the strike had accomplished its purpose, "to force 12 steam ship companies under contract to finally sit down and negotiate.' Bartledt said striking crewmen would report back to their ships as soon as possible. . 1 -if: A total of SO ships had been tied up by the wildcat walkout. When the two four-man bar bargaining gaining bargaining teams decided to take the weekend off, they issued a statement saying that the prob problems lems problems with which they had been dealing were "exceedingly wear wearing." ing." wearing." Unofficially, it has been esti estimated mated estimated the union wants a lVto 15-cent hourly wage increase. The companies have replaied with re newed demands-for a one year wage freeze. Spanish Classes At JWB Tonight Conversational Spanish for be ginners is on the agenda this eve evening, ning, evening, at 7:30 at the USO-JWB Armed Forces Service Center in Balboa. Under the direction of Claudette de Villafranca, tnis group meets each Monday and all registered students are invited to attend. England club. Toomas Lejus, 16, gave Russia ils first Wibbledon crown by winning the boys' ju junior nior junior title with a 6 2, 6-4 victory over Ronals Barnes of Brazil. The championships emphasized that the United States has only one top-notch male player Peru vian born Olmedo and that its women may have to work hard to regain the Wightman Cup next month at Sweickley, Pa. Olmedo was performing as an official representative of the United States Lawn Tennis As Association sociation Association Friday when he whipped Australia Rod Laver in the men's singles final. Barry MacKay Of Dayton, Ohio, onlv native-horn IU. S. player seeded in the Wim bledon men s singles the paet two years, bowed to Laver in the emi emi-finals. finals. emi-finals. Miss Hird and Jeanne Arth of St. Paul, Minn., produced the on) St. Paul, Minn., produced the only championship won by U. S.-born players when they defeated Beverly Baker Fleitz of Lonrj Beach, Calif., and Britain's Chris Christine tine Christine Truman Saturday in the worn en's doubles final. FOR SALE: Lets 500 and 1.000 meters, in the Niter Hipedreme Urbanlxatiee across Hie Rente Racetrack. All lots with street (rents, sewage, water main and electricity. Call W. McBamett. Tel. 4-0976. FOR SALE: Beautiful residence. 4 bedroom, livingroom, dining dining-room, room, dining-room, library, recreation room, large kitchen, pantry, maid's room with service, hot water, ter terrace, race, terrace, garden, garage, land 1,800 m. 9th. Street No. 28, San Francisco. FOR SALE: On double lot m Santa Clara, beet location, next to church: 2 bedroom chalet,, livingroom, bath, kitchen, large perch, garage, fully furnished with ( beds, G.E. refrigerator, Rock gas. electric light and water, for only $2,450.00 cash. Tele Telephone phone Telephone 2-5079. FOR SALE: 3 apartment house in San Francisco, $9,500.00, 500 mt 600 mt. in Paitilla $6.50 int. lOOO-Jitt. in Nuevo Arraijan given iway, $400. 8,000 mts. in Pedrsjal $1000 00. only. Two houses for only $16,000, mort mortgage gage mortgage $104000, produces $318 a monrti. Thomas Real Estate Agencies, Calidonia 259, phone 3-1069, P.O. Box 6338, Pan Pan-ami. ami. Pan-ami. Rooms FOR RENT: Comfortable rooms for responsible couple and stu students. dents. students. Uruguay Street and 48th. Tel. 3-6506. Partis Scout Unit Provides Guided Activities For More Than 500 Girls During the eight years ttie In ternational Girl Scouts has been in operation in the Canal Zone, more then 500 girls have participated in troop meetings, outdoor camps and joint )rtsvitiwab,lhe American Girt mmmVm Wuchachas Guaas of Panama j An official of the organization pointed out that the Scout group provides desirable leisure activi ties and good leadership for the girls, who range in age from six to 18. The International Girl Scouts, when first formed here, was a part of the physical education program of the Zone schools, and in 1954 went under the sponsorship of the Commynily Chest. Several of its leaders have been sent to the States and to Latin American centers for straining. .The Zone headquarters for the International Girl Scouts is in Pa Paiso. NICE MEDICINE F s h i o n model Jackie Cezanne is finish finishing ing finishing premedical courses at 'JJew York's Columbia University and has. been accepted by the medical school. She says. she felt an urge to become a doctor. tv rATUFDi Tvdcal of the TV dads is Hugh Beaumont, who plays the head of the fam fam-By By fam-By In "Leave It to Beaver." Beaumont received a "Father ot the Year" Award. v INVESTOR'S GUIDE y SAM SHULSKY Q. We invested part of our sav ings to help supplement our in come. We boutht Am. Water Works, Colorado Fuel, Eastern Gas, Murray Corp., Sunray Mid Mid-Continent, Continent, Mid-Continent, Western Union and Is Israel rael Israel Oils. So lar they have done nothing to help our income. Should we sell everything and wait for a dip in the market? I would like to buy General Telephone, Phil lips Pete, Burrougfts, and Sperry Rand. Or would you suggest oth ers? A. I don't understand how you expected to increase your income with stocks, .such as Murray, which pay no dividends and low priced oil stocks which don't even show earnings. It seems to me you leap be before fore before you look and now you want to do more of the same. Why, for instance, would you want to sell American Water Works, Eastern Gas, Western U U-nion nion U-nion and Sunray which do yield gooa dividends? And why would you want to buy Burroughs, General Telepnone, Phillips all excellent gro w t h stocks which yield less than the ones you now have? And what makes you think some one will ring ar bell when there is a dip in thj market nd gains oecome available? There is no reason for selling some of your stocks, just as there was no reason for buying others in tne tirst place. Weed out the ones wnicn don't pay a dividend of around 4Mi per cent, and put tne proceeds into some good stocks which do on the list I am send sending ing sending you. Q. My husband's estate is about $50,000, all in banks drawini; 3 1-3 per cent. I will require month ly income, l would appreciate your neip. A. You have, a worrisome task. A sum tyaj,p shoMrovide about $2,500iTrear. TheHty pro problem blem problem is thatii-ou kept piling up cash and must now invest in or or-a a or-a high point' h the market's his history. tory. history. I am sending you a list of good grade investment eompaniea. Plan on putting about haft your funds into th tover the neat year Duying ennere common shares or preferreds and debentures conv convertible ertible convertible into common. Space vour buying and take your time. y. What is your opinion of life insurance stocks. I have been ad vised to buy four different issues. They tell me that $10,000 invested in them in 1946 would be worth $70,000 today. Does on home to pay taxes on stock didends A. Stocks of life insurance com panies are generally regarded as extreme examples of growth stocks. However, this is a highly specialized field and should not be gone into Without the advice of experts. Life1 iflwflittce stocks very often sBjt'jt Bfgli "prices and have wide price movements. That business of $10,000 invest invested ed invested in 1946 being worth $70,000 could be apllied to? hundreds of situa tions of insurance, electronics, au automation, tomation, automation, etc. One does not have to pay r tax on stock dividends, altliougS frity must be taken into consideration in computing the cost of your ori original ginal original stock. Rochester Red Wings Pull Close To Bisons' By Sweeping Twinbill NEW YORK Tnlv R fTTPn The Rochester' Red Winps nulled to within a game and one-half of ... -. --T-7 a" f pace-setting Buffalo in the Inter International national International ta?ue bv Hnwninir flip Bisons in both ends of a Sunday doubleJieader. A bases-loaded- home run by Frank Verdi snarkerl Rnrhester tn ft 9-4 Irilimnh. la tha nnisnar JnA uie neu wings oatuea meir way to a i-a victory in the nightcap. Rochester totaled 26 hits in both games. The Bisons almost' pulled the second game out of the fire, SCOrinff five runs in the wvonlli inning before Jimmie Hiland, who relieved starter Cal Browning, but out the blaze. The Montreal Royals and Toron Toronto to Toronto Maple Leafs split a twinoill, the Royals breezing to a 10-2 vic victory tory victory in-the nightcap after drop drop-Dine Dine drop-Dine the ODener. 4-3 Hnmo rune by Jim King, Archie Wilson and Joe Aitooein carried Toronto home in front in r.n fircr na.mo Prn Valdes pitched a five4iitter for Montreal in the nfterniopo Bill Short allowed only two hitiC HiivniiiK lYii'iimona io a a-u vic victory tory victory over Havana but the Cubans' DOlinreil hflrlf tn talra fho eso.nrl . V. I V. game, 4-1. beWnd the hurling of niiriiniuiM in me-opener. - A Miami at flnlnmhim ilArtfOo. ir.uai.uMq UVUI1'. header was curtailed when rain interrupted the opener with the' score tied l-l in the fifth inning HOLIDAY RECEIPTS STOLEN NEW YORK (UPI) A Bight watchman makins hli mnrnins rounds discovered the theft of $4. ooo in July 4 receipts from a safe at uoney island s Steeplecha se Park amusement grounds, poll rpnorlprl Priltru anirt tha cafo h lice ad been forced open during the night. ine tneti was not discovered til a.m. un- Today's Opening STOCK PRICES NEW YORK. Juiv riTPT Mocks advanced cautiously todafj aiier me long holiday weekend. aj mo M Advocate Asbestos 358b Alleghany Corp 12V4 Aluminium Ltd 30Vti Amer Cyanamid 81H Amer Motors 45 Amer Tel and Tel 81 Anaconda Copper uv Arkansas Fuel S3 AVCO Mfg 15V4 Beth Steel 58H Bettingre Corp 11H Bicroft Uranium 60b British Pet I 15-18 Burroughs J6H Canadian Eagfo lib Celanese jgc,, Cerro de Pasco 394 Chicago Great West 48b Chrysler 8034 Cities Service 54 H Coastal Caribe i Colgate PalmoHv 89 Colorado Fuel 27 Creole Pet Bi 49 Crown Cork gad teal TOV Cuban Venezuelan Oil Du Pont J52 El Paso Natural Gas 11 Fairchild Engine 8 Fargo Oil g Felmont Pet vii Cfetleral Dynamici 86 Crefieral Electric 80 General Motors 54 General Plywood H Gulf Oil mvi Harsco Steel 4114 Hayden Newport 20 Howe Sound yyv, Imperial Oil .41 Intl -iPetj, ... ... J314 t New Eng Tel mm! Te! I80V4 Northrop Air 35 Olin Mathieson 84' Pancoastal tM Pan Israel Phillips Pet Pure Oil Royal Dutch Shell 42 San Jacinto : 10Vb Servo Corp 31V4 Shell Transp fVk Signal Oil atd (mm m Sinclair Oil 80 Socony Mobfl 4414 Sperry Rand 3314 Standard Oil Iff n Sterling' PreoisioU 4 Studebsiker-PaekfPfl tl Textron jg TJnderwoorl United Canso 0S PAb US Rubber 88 US Steel J04H WestiDghouse W 9514 Wheeling Steel U Don Drysdale, Wynn to Start AlPSflfGame PITTS BURGH. Jsilv t 1VPJ DoniDrysdaleLos Angeles Dodf. VdiNWirWd Early Wynn, Veteran .Chien iWhite Sat wnrlr. horse, today were named tiie start starting ing starting pitchers for tomorrow's 25tn annual All-Star Game. The selections were announced at a news conference this morn morning ing morning by National League manager Fred Haney of the Milwaukee Braves and American League pi--lot Casey Stengel of, the Yankees. Haney said Milwaukee's Lew Burdette, here of the 1W7 WorW Series,, would b the National League's scond pitcher, "tle "tle-pending pending "tle-pending on how things go." It will be D-rysdale's first all all-star star all-star game appearance. The 32-year old hurler, who leads the senior loop in strikeouts with 122, has 8-6 record this season and an earn earned ed earned run average of 3.31 Wynn, 38-year-old right bander, has appeared in four All-Star clas- sics and was the winner of last year's game. He leads the Amer American ican American League i victories with an 11-5 mark and has an earned ru average of 3.83. Haney and Stengel announced the following batting orders: National LeagueJohn Temple, 2b; Ed Mathews, 3b; Hank Aaron, rf; Willie Mays, cf; Ernie Banks, ss; Orlando Ceoeda lb; Wally Moon, If; Del Crandall, e, and Drysdale, p. American League Minnie Mino Mino-so. so. Mino-so. If: Nellie Fox. 2br Al irlin cf; Bill Skowron, lb; Rocky Co- lavito, rf; QusTTiandoS, c; Har Harmon mon Harmon Killebrew, 3b; Luis Aparicio, ss, and Wynn, p. Stengel said! "Wynn has beaten me enouch times fnr ma in Irmto he's good. Who follows Wynn? Tell me the score and Til tell you. Haney said he selected Drysdaf because "against a right handed lineup wanted a right handetf pitcher. If I start my own mas (Burdette) everyone says I'm pre prejudiced. judiced. prejudiced. So 111 start him (Dryl dale) and come in my own man." PAPER MAKES CHARGE . MOSCOW (UPI) The Soviet newspaper Pravdi mirt tnAw Jtussia's k exhibition m New York is a "headache to some Ameri Americans. cans. Americans. The Pravda story said cer certain tain certain circles in the United St a tea fear the exchange of exhibitions between the Soviet Union and tha' United States may ease the tola war. I.-V 4 4 I 1... MONDAY, JULY 6, 1951 THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PAOI MINI THI STORY OP MARTHA WAYNI BY WILSON SCRUGGS PRISCILLA'S POP Happy Landing Ay AL VIRMIII f '.,..'.. -- ir A u I I levin nv V -v VAIU AT 1 03W,CUY. SmyiU CHECK MY iTHAHKVO0,C.MO,BUTVCHteEA) FfiOT A UTTEC FROM HOC SHE TMAT' JUST $h SL MAN H MIS ) I DID I I j U ; u jUnV if fo"6 10 "W. AITOWntftnV BOSCW.AKSfMAL MAKIW Us6CW J THINK W ? A DKZAH. A fey & ORE AM tOU j V SAYf IMWJKWS, 1 MEAWEBCnOMV PAD FDRTW.T THAT CONS irTEjmrjKrr. QTeUtsT OCu fwgL SETA) (, CAR LYLC 7 A AND IVEr-- 3 1 UG$ BUNNY End of Cesrferaatloa Caught Wet-Handed BY MIRRILL BLOSSL-R l n I v n il i i : 1 I 1 1 it 1 jj ygl j JRICKLIS AND HIS PRIRNDS AJ.LIY OOP. King Size Y V. T. HAMLIN " T LJ OUGWTA MAKE A PRETTY J looks uke our. why; i x-lcokin' wuaaaT, 1 I UTTLE OLD aOU VOUU ) SO I'M OONNA TRY TO i I VSIST3 KINDK ONt I AV IT fiT IT OUT IN ONE DO MDU OH.YEH...THW THINK I COUNTRV ROCK'S VOU CAN" COMPAJimVSlY 5 MY T, OSCAJ?, ThStPvI I LUNATIC UNCOVERED 1 V THB S3fiE8T NUGGET 1 y"M' tofsifek True Life Adventures The DRIFT SHIFT BOOTS AND HIR BUDDItl Dory Stands Firm 4 BY BDGAR MARTIN TO TOW, Y GCHWv 'STOP (Wsfb Vtfb..AV; TAWS iflr RSI yi 1W fcy Wf A grvlot. Ine!' T.M. R.g. U.i. Pn, Of.L CAPTAIN IASY Stranded Y LKSLII TURNER COWE BAC! I hCi I TW A JOKE.OR AUr 1' HAVt VOU 60NB C. rS .,-...1 IT'S STILL MILES TO V HHAf-' DAKROi AWD THAT BA3 COULP BE WILL SLOW ME DOWN! HE GAWE? SHE StEWED Zr"-f 'WlPN'T PRV INTO MYBUSINESS were, on WHO it' with WAIT! MMSE he overhearp HIS NAWE WHEN X ASKEW HOW TO FIND HIS CASTLE I MORTY MIBKLI Friendly Devil BY DICK CAVALLf Kay, watch me 6CARE ) CVE-RYBODV IN THI J v COSTUME iiTji " -4 HI THERE, CjWINTIHDR MORNING. '' I6NTIT, rffA. wiNTHB0P5y (ScTy firtMEWHEBE IN THAT EXPERIENCE, THERE'6 A TREMENDOUS PSYCHOLOGICAL MESSAGE CV IH( NCA W. bM. T.M. f. U.S. Ptt. Wf. OUR BOARDING HOUSI with MAJOR HOOPLB OUT OUR WAY BY J. R. WILLIAMS AMOS ARE YOJ PAINTIN6 A PICTURE OR JUST KILL ING FLIES WITH VOJR 6I?U5H f OH, NOW I 6BB IT ""THAI A KEN P. V HOP5C0TCH IM AM. v INK fJOTTLE: IT TAKE CARE HOVJ YOJ 3 EST, 3 UEANDER.ERE YOU AROUSE-W MY ART STS VNATH.' rtVY ANCESTOR, 6AM80ROUGH HOOPLE, ONCE $kWE(?ED A HAPLESS-CHAP WHO HICCUPPED DURINE- ( OOPTPAIT illTTlKli ma-HAK-KTJMPH WORKC 1$ PlD SACRED TO A HOOPLB HE ' a WENTfOt6i THE- woeo 1 n IM MOT OOlHfi OH,MA,MY60SHI 4 WHY WE'RE V ZJ TO HAVE YOU SICK, T MDU 5AIP WE SPOSEPTBB '.J THAT'S ALL.' YOU'RE COULP SLEEP MILES AWVMILE (S KI0TUSEPTDTHI6 OUT -IS THIS 1 AWAY FROM J rLAr BACK SO I CAKJ OUT 1 J, I keep rium' y LOOK OUTPURIMO THE JHftlnir- r-"i I CWT aSSo!l IN' lWNSHTIAeSlf. jIlf'llTX I OUT AM SPOILING IT-' WHVM0THeaeT6AY- ''"''" T.M..,.h..,., .,.,.,..,,,. THg HAUNTfP CAMP .-Tq, I BfS TIME TO TOSTIWS POK TVW MNTfiR, BUT MRS. POLAR BEAR CAN WNP NO OAVB HOL15 TO WTHPRANW TO. LAST RESORT: SHE UBS taowM iki tub i tsA mym St' op k rRVDOBcmsua yocK CURLS UP AMP VJAJTB.... " Will Dim ftl"MiM wwumchua t ...POR NATURB T3 BUI1 O AN COVER HER ANt? KEEP HER SNUS ANP WARM wHILE 6HE HIBERNATES. SIRE GLANCES By Calhroith ft wn T.M. INf. 9 1Mt NCA Unm, M. 'You're marrying a good file clerk, my boy. She'll always know where your clean handkerchiefs are!" $k IS T.M. Ik. Il l Pal. 4-2 f ) 1M by MIA tAM. IM. "That man has a pretty good place to work. Mo women, no telephones .!!" Big Hand For Two Arrangers By DICK KLIINER NEW YORK (NEA) Two voio voio-ei ei voio-ei are raised to proclaim the coming ot ihe arranger. And tel television, evision, television, say both Llmer Bern Bernstein stein Bernstein and Ralph Burns, has done the job ot finally giving the ar arranger ranger arranger his due. Bernstein is the man who's composed such movie scores as 'The Man With the Golden Arm." Now he's turning his at attention tention attention to television; he's, been commissioned to create scores for two new series next year, 'Riverboat" and 'Staccato." 'These tell the story of my life," ays Bernstein. River River-boat,' boat,' River-boat,' like 'Ten Commandments,' is in the classical vein. 'Stacca 'Staccato,' to,' 'Staccato,' like 'Golden Arm,' is jazz. I find it easier to work in both me mediumswhen diumswhen mediumswhen you switch back and forth, the chaifge is refresh refreshing, ing, refreshing, a source of stimulation." Bernstein is particularly excit excited ed excited about 'Riverboat." It'll be something new in TV music a symphonic suite will be written and recorded and then, etch weekt liell take one theme frofm I think this constant" expo sure," he says, 'may make this classical tppe of music popular. It s constant e xp o e which makes a hit. Like 'Peter Gunn' I think Hank Mancini. who wrote it, would be the first to ad admit mit admit he could have, written a jazz niecefM:?tAihSbould -Have h a pperied. But the c'onsti lit ex po po-sure sure po-sure of hearing it every week on the TV show made it a hit. 'I'm honing th same thing will work for 'Riverboat.' Although it wi'l be svmohonic in character, Bernstein's 'River 'Riverboat boat 'Riverboat Sjiite" wpn't be heavy. It'll b lightin4 wic. And' the whole thin wflr tNMtiietely re recorded, corded, recorded, long before the first 'Riv 'Riverboat" erboat" 'Riverboat" 'how goes on the air. And it will be scored like a fea ture Mm, another first for tele vision. ment. Then, when the other sing singers ers singers saw how good he sounded with good arrahgment, they in insisted, sisted, insisted, too." . Ana so, Burns says, arrangers are now in demand. About 1V months ago, the union pushed through a new scale for arrang arrangersalmost ersalmost arrangersalmost double what it had been previously. 'On TV," Burns says, 'they're finally getting to realize the im importance portance importance of music. The first years of TV they were- so busy with technical things, but now they seem to be thinking about mu music." sic." music." Burns knows this field, too. He's arranged many of the spec spectaculars, taculars, spectaculars, and is presently work working ing working up the score for the soming Burl Ives special, "Holiday, U. S.A." He says few years 4fc all they wanted was "unobml "unobml-sive" sive" "unobml-sive" music, so most of the musi musicians cians musicians simply played the melody line. Now, they're interested in better arrangements. All this mades life better for the viewer. But, for Burns, it means almost every night works until 4 a.m. & ill Rlph Bums Is the other voice with happy tidings for the ar arranger. ranger. arranger. Burns is one of the busi est and best arranger-conductors in New York. Although he's un under der under contract to Decca, he coes a lot of free-lancing. At the mo ment, he s busily working up the arrangements for Johnny -Mathis' next recording, doing a job for a coffee commercial (with marim bas), and getting his own new al albumfull bumfull albumfull of songs of New York ready for release. Meanwhile, he s happily watching the album he did for Decca on Progy and Bess climb the charts. 'The arranger is" finally com ing into his own," says Burns, 'both on records and TV. I give Frank Sinatra most' of the credit for this. He always Insisted on eood sound, good orchestration. Before he came along and insist insisted, ed, insisted, the record companies didn't give much thought to arrange- DICK'S PICKS: There's an in? fectious beat to "Ain't a Hanfe rin by Bob Hope and Rosema Rosemary ry Rosemary Clooney on RCA. 0; hen: "Ring-a-Ling-a Lario" (Jimmie Kodgers, Roulette); Take It Like a Man" (Rod McKuen, Decca); 'Our Future" (Nancy Steele, Cel Celebrity); ebrity); Celebrity); 'Honey Doll" (Ran, Hard, NRC); 'NowUs the Hojiirl (Tommy Mara, Felsted); W Moves Me" (Eddie Holland, UA)f "Turn To Me" (The Isley Broth Broth-ers, ers, Broth-ers, RCA); "Young Blues" (The Frantics, Ddlton). You can wander into high-class spots, via new records. On UA, Stanley Melba and his Hot!; Pierre Orchestra jjlay for 'DaM ing At the Cotilliift'; on Efi est, the Ernie Warren Trio entetfi? tains on 'An Evening In Pea Peacock cock Peacock Alley At the Waldorf-Astoria"; on Roulette, Don Redman and The Knights of the Round Round-table table Round-table play 'Dixieland In Hign So Society") ciety") Society") on Coral, Dorothy Lou Loudon don Loudon entertains with her Blue An Angel gel Angel act. i Coincidence plays a big part in record sales. All of a sudden, two spoken records are out fea featuring turing featuring the voice of Abba Eban, the retiring Israeli ambassador to the U.N. Both make interest- ing listening. On Spoken Arts$lfiS ban reads from the Psalms anf Ec-'.esiastes in both English and Hebrew, and he reads well. On a UA album called 'Israel Speaks" excerpts from some of his speech-' " are heard with narration pf .vt- Eleanor Roosevelt. This on living history. MILLS EXPAND f MINNEAPOLIS (UP I) General, Mills Inc. ha announced oiani' to extend its flour milling opera operations tions operations into Gmtemala. About a year age, the flour division begaa operations in Caracas, Venezuela. AfOVAS PANAMA AfiWAYS PANAMA QUITO '50: Today's TV Pro2 ram roo cry mws 7 .10 S :1ft Industry en Pirtdt 100 1 30 Treuurt 4:00 Mr. WliaH :Ofl 4 SO BuecartMra, Rpt 10 00 1:00 Roy Hofr, Rpt, I JO PANORAMA 10 30 7 :W Clun-oom Cmri 1 1 00 Omi. Math II No. 11 11 IS 4 Slar Anthooffy Club Checkerboard Rpt 10-M-JA Movie Time Dudt Bandit Mr. Adam &i IV Rpt S-30-S7 Arthur Murray CFN NEWS Erie: Sieve Allan. Courtesy of Aerorlas Panama Airways PHONES: PANAMA: 3-1057 3-1698 3-1 699 OFFICE HOURS: from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Drysdale Wynn, Am a me UdRcacr story ion pooa 8 fri Threat Of Caribbean War Hangs Over OAS invasion Investigation WASHINGTON. July 6 (UPI) The threat of a shooting war hung today over a meeting of the Organization of Am-riran States (OAS) on the Dominican Republic's invasion charges. . The three countries have placed their armed forces on a war footing. Reports from Ciudad Trujillo, the Domini. .n Caoital Quoted high government officials as referring publicly to the possibility of "open belligerence." The OAS was expected to summon a special meeting of the foreign ministers of the 21 American nations to dis cuss the tense Caribbean situation. " Dominican ambassador Virgilio Dial Ordonez told the Organization last week that Cuba and Venezuela backed vasions of his country June 14 and June 20. He said 3,000 men were training in'Cuba and 25 warplanes had been obtained by Venezuela in preparation for a new invasion. Cuba and Venezuela heatedly denied the charges. They sa d that Dominican Republic planned tomb Santiago. Cuba, and Ma Ma-racaibo, racaibo, Ma-racaibo, Venezuela. Diaz Ordonez told the OAS that , threat to the peace existed which required that the Inter-A-mertcan foreign m,n'ste"s""?m0"," ed under terms of the Rio Mutual AssWance Treaty. He said speedy action was needed to avoid ca catastrophe" tastrophe" catastrophe" and "bloodletting. ' I" 'It1 was doubtful that the Domi Dominican nican Dominican Republic could get the min ministers isters ministers to agree to meetings on broader grounds, such as to dis discuss cuss discuss economic problems and means of strengthening represen representative tative representative democracy. Venezuelan President Romulo Be Be-tancourt tancourt Be-tancourt said in Caracas last night TODAY! 75c. 40c. 1:30 3:50 6:25 M v RICHARD HENRY WIDMARK FONDA X DOROTHY DOLORES - uii niir iiirun WARLOC aua Hint nutOfHCMic dm ALSO: THE SENSATIONAL FIGHT INCEMAR JOHANSSON vs. FLOYD PATTERSON 0 WEDNESDAY Weekend Release! o "FROM NOW ON THERE'LL ALWAYS BE A DOOR BETWEEN US" Wfi M A M ww witirt iv OBSESSED' . STEPHEN BOYD BARBARA NICHOLS ProducW y tutor del gul6n SYDNEY BOEHM Dlrlgida pot HENRY HATHAWAY 20tn CinbuaScop I Cntur-f on COLOR oof DE LUXB tn maravlHoio Sonldo Etarol6ntco d Alt F d.lH.d 'JLLU1 iluiihwii i i 9:00 p.m. ANTHONY -QUINNl MTU (' cademv s I "ViWlnnrr' J i PW S J "wnv.mm m Actress o. J TryyTiThe Year ifliVaVifiT?) IIAS THE I II ir 1 that he would refuse to permit any OAS representative to enter his country to investigate the Domi nican charges. Cuban Minister of State Raul Roa said at a reception that his government : was completely m posed to any foreign ministers" meeting. COVERUP Skirts go flying but dancer in Rome, Italy, maintains her modesty with a pair of knee-length bloomers. She was taking part in a festi festival val festival in the Borghese Gardens. After 20 Years She Has Her Gas Stove Back SHEFIELD, England (UPI) It took 20 years but today Mrs. Edith Slack was cooking with gas again. In 1939 Mrs. slack anci nv; husband moved into a municipal house. City gas officials promised to move her gas stove there. Mrs. Slack waited. World War II came along, and Mrs. slack did her bit by cook cooking ing cooking on the new house's coal stove. After the war she still waited for her stove. "My husband Joe was a quiet man. He didn't like making a fuss," she said. He died recently. Mrs. Slack then raised a fuss. Sne bombarded the gas board with complaints, produced docu documents ments documents and erupted in a long-repressed desire to denounce cook cooking ing cooking with coal. The gas board finally admitted thry had lost Mrs. Slark's gas stove. Yesterday they sent her a new one. PEBBLE? British screen star Belinda I-e stops to fix her .3al at Cannes, France. W Xv rV"v -r4v v' i . v i f f !;'$' . -i,,., T Miami's Cuban Population Quiet After 2-Day Riots MIAMI, July 6 (UPI)-An un uneasy easy uneasy calm settled over Miami's Cuban population today, following a two-day outburst that saw Cu Cuba's ba's Cuba's consul general badly beaten and arrested for Inciting a riot. Police dispersed a rally by Cu Cubans bans Cubans in a downtown park yes'er yes'er-fay fay yes'er-fay on the heels of Saturday nights fist-swinging, pipe wielding melee when pro-Castro Cubans broke up a meeting of about 50 Cubans who called themselves anti-communists. The pro-Castro faction was re ported to have shouted long live Russia" during the outburst. Consul General Alonso Hidal Hidalgo, go, Hidalgo, 32, hospitalized in serious condition with head and face In Injuries, juries, Injuries, was arrested with Cubn tourists commissioner Rafael Valdes, 29. Both were released from jail after Havana Mayor Jose Llanusa personally inter interceded ceded interceded with Miami Myor Rob Robert ert Robert King High. Llanusa came to Miami to help celebrate the July 4 holiday, and Valdes said pro-Batista forces staged the brawl to "discredit and insult" Llanusa. Police said the riot was Instigat Instigated ed Instigated by occupants of two oars who taunted occupants at a house in this city's Cuban section by driv driving ing driving around it and shouting "Long live Russia. Down with Batista." A large crowd quickly gathered The occupants replied "Down with Communism." Thirty minutes later, four carloads of men re returned. turned. returned. Hidalgo led them up the steps of the house, where he was attacked. Hidalgo said he approached OXFORD HOSTS STUDENTS OXFORD, England (UPI) Fif Fif-tv tv Fif-tv students from the University of Northern Illinois at De Kalb Sunday began a month long European seminar at Oxford Uni University. versity. University. Each vear Oxford invites a different American university to send delegates to a govern ment seminar. SEAWAY OPENING SITE This is St. Lambert Lock of the St. Lawrence Seaway at Montreal. It Is here that. Que?n Elizabeth, Prince Philip and President Eisenhower v; the new waterway at its formal opening June 26. The St. Lambert Lock is the nearest of the Seaway's seven locks to the Atlantic Ocean. CENTRAL SHOWS: 3:45 6:17 8:49 1:15 JOHN GAVIN SANDRA DEE DAN O'HERUHY SUSAN KOHNER ROBERT ALDA E "To find out what was going on." Valdes said rh occupants in the house "to find out what wa dalgo and shourd: "There's the consul...let's get him." They spilled out of the house and tansled with Hidalgo and Val des on tne .front lawn, beating on the cars with pipes. After the fight, six shots were fired into the house from a- speed speeding ing speeding car. No one was injured. Police and the FBI refused to comment on the extent of pro pro-communist communist pro-communist leanings among Mia Miami's mi's Miami's Cuban population, but one detective said he thought the shouts of "Long live Russia" were only taunts to the anti-communists. Three others were arrested In the fracas, including a 14-year old boy. The others were identi identified fied identified s brothers Miguel Artgel Castro, 31, and Antonne Enri- .I.L.J u 4l,A qu tasrro, o, unriiu Cuban premier. Miami Mayor Robert King High, in s statement yesterday called the incident "regrettable." "It's regrettable." High said, "That 'ODeration friendship which was begun in Havana and had its direction there should have such an unfortunate ending. "It's my hope that this incident will not mar the friendly relations that have existed for so many years between these two great ci cities." ties." cities." Yesterday police dispersed a Cu Cu-ban ban Cu-ban meeting in a downtown park. They said the gathering "could prove dangerous." JAPANESE EMIGRANTS YOKOHAMA (UPI) A group of 760 Japanese emigrants to South America left this port city to today day today aboard the Argentina Ma Ma-ru. ru. Ma-ru. Among the emigrants were nine newlvwed couples and nine future brides of Japanese already in South America. JJwdah PRICES: $1.00 and $0.b0 tab the house TURNER if.x- VI ,4JV mm IP SSr fEARi GRANT) Dan Flood Casts Eye Over Decides Navy Squadron At The following is the Congressional Record version of a June 30 speech fe;, the House of Renresentatites bv Rep. Daniel J. Flood (D-Pa.). Flood, a frequent and controversial Congres sional commentator of US-Panama, relations, on this occasion dealt with broader aspects of trou trouble ble trouble in the Caribbean at large. ;uJr.r- RF.P DANIEL J. FLOOD (D- Paj Mr. Speaker, since 19o7 thoughtful observers have noted a rising tide of discontent among members of the inter-American community of nations. Featured by widespread tweak- down in the constitutional process es of law and order, this political turmoil was effectively dramatized in 1958 by attacks on the Vice President of the United States dur during ing during the latter part of his South A A-merican merican A-merican tour. More significant than this, how ever, have been a series 01 revo lutionary developments in the Car Caribbean, ibbean, Caribbean, many of them of Commu Communist nist Communist origin and pattern. In that key region, long re recognized cognized recognized at the Mediterranean of the Americans, the violent gov governments ernments governments in Veneiuela and Cu Cuba, ba, Cuba, a number of political assas assassinations, sinations, assassinations, an invasion of the Canal Zone by Panamanian uni university versity university students, and successive invasions of ismmian countries by mercenaries from Cuba, have supplied further evidence of th deteriorating situation ana tocusjt .... . . . L ernments of the all American nations on the problems of hem hemispheric ispheric hemispheric security. As to the policies of the United States with Latin America, they are deeply rooted in history. Though included today in tne good neighbor policy, the essen tials of this policy include not on only ly only the doctrine of nonintervention and the no-transfer principle, but also, the historic and fundamental Monroe Doctrine. In spite of the late advances in means of warfare and the neces necessity sity necessity to adjust our defense policies BEST DRIVER Cart C. Crimm, 44, is the "Driver of the Year." The Okmulgee, Okla., truck driver hasn't had an accident in 26 years. Amer American ican American Trucking Assn. gives the annual award. Red Visitor Blames US-Soviet Chill On Harry Truman SAN FRANCISCO, July 6 (UPI) Soviet deputy premier Frol Hoz Hoz-lov lov Hoz-lov said last night former Presi President dent President Harry Truman was respon responsible sible responsible for "spoiling good relations" between the United States and Russia. The Kremlin's No, 3 man made the comment during a quiet stroll before retiring to his hotel. He did not elaborate. Newsmen accompanying Kdzlov on the Nob Hill walk pointed out that his route was similar to that which Truman usually takes when he visits San Francisco. That drew a chuckle from So Soviet viet Soviet Ambassador to the U.S. Mik Mik-kail kail Mik-kail Menshikov, who accompanied Kozlov. "The same route, yes but not the same road,'' Menshikov said. The deputy premier nodded in agreement. "Truman was responsible for spoiling good relations between our countries,' Kozlov said. "Roose "Roosevelt velt "Roosevelt was a great man." Tickets On Sale For Theater Guild Reservations for the theater Guild's for (he next show "On "On-dine", dine", "On-dine", may now be made by calling Mrs. Mary Emlaw at Bal Balboa boa Balboa 4205. The three-act play by Jean Gi Gi-raudoux raudoux Gi-raudoux is a romantic fantasy which had a very successful run on Broadway Directed by Don Musselman, the play will run six nights starting next Monday. It is open to theater-goers in Panama as well as in the Canal Zone. Tickets are $1. Gordon Dixon and Ann Haskell play the leads in the play. Others in the cast include Kathy Cox, Sue MaHe, Kathy McConaghy. Victor Herr. Micheal Wilson, Chris Shillock, Cynthia Orr, Brian C6x, Joe Trower, Vena Bennett, Charles Pearre, George Garcia, Carlos Meggers. Chris Hearon, Phyllis Snee. Members arp urged to make their reservations early. to tihem, the essential elements of U.S.-Latin American policy still contemplate the security of the Continental Republic coupiea wun the defense of the Western Hem Hemisphere. isphere. Hemisphere. Essential to mese is me securi security ty security of the strategically situated Caribbean Sea. Back of all is our etihmian Can Canal al Canal policy. It is most significant, Mr. Speak Speaker, er, Speaker, that, when commenting on the recent Cuban invasion of Panama, President Ernesto de la Guardia, Jr., stated: "That was not just a group of adventurers from our country or even from Cuba. These peo people ple people were mostly Cubans, but di directed rected directed by and led by militant Communists. Their ambition is the long stated one of taking ov over er over me Panama Canal." There could be no clearer state ment than this, and by one who is in a position to observe at cose hand. Moreover, it is supported by overwhelming evidence, as I have epeatedty endeavored to show. The formation of Communist- ori,nted governments in the Car- ibbean on the flanks of the At lantic approaches to the Pana Panama ma Panama Canal and recent attempts to invade Isthmian countries are clear violations of the Monroe Doctrine. As such, Hhey constitute threats -not only to the United States, but to all the Americas. Among the preventive measures currently proposed is the forma formation tion formation of an inter-American volun volunteer teer volunteer police force under the Orga Organization nization Organization pf American States. Its purpose would be to "deter or counter any use of force against any Latin American country." That objective, Mr. Speaker, is one of great magnitude. It appeals strongly to the credulous. But to the well informed of all the Americas, it is a proposition that requires careful scrutiny be fore serious consideration. First, what Is the Organization of American States I?t is essen tially a consultative, intergovern mental institution of the 21 Amen can Republics aimed at achieving peace and justice, promoting hem hemispheric ispheric hemispheric solidarity, strengthening collaboration among these nations, and defending their sovereignty, territorial iategHty, and independ ence Second, what are the features of the member countries? Some are great nations of vast areas, large populations, and tremendous po tential strength; others are small and weak All,, however, are extremely zealous defenders of their free dom and highly nationalistic. Some have special tre'ty in interests, terests, interests, such as Columbia and Panama with respect to the Pa Panama nama Panama Can'l and Panama Rail Railroad. road. Railroad. Third, what types of force would be required to accomplish a mis mission sion mission such as that envisioned by the promoters of the policy force idea? To be effective, it would have to include military, naval, and air units. Fourth, who would pay the costs of these units, who would supply the personnel, and above all, who would issue the. orders? Would the last include representatives from Communist-oriented govern governments ments governments as obtained during the Ko Korean rean Korean operation? These and many other practic practical al practical questions must be answered in any realistic appraisal of an Inter Inter-American American Inter-American Police Force proposal. One featur"e of this polic? force dream is truly puzzling: That it would be formed by "volunteers." There is no doubt that many would volunteer for service in such a body. I have traveled ex extensively tensively extensively in this Hemisphere, ob- BUBBLY Actress Cindy Rob Rob-bins bins Rob-bins relaxes in a vineyard of California's Napa Valley. The Hammond, La., native is a be beginner ginner beginner in the movies but has already Won some fame as "The Champagne Girl." She says she shampoos her hair with cham champagne, pagne, champagne, wears chamnagne-rol-lred dresses and drinks it, too. Ch oppy WcM Will Calm All served its people 'closely, tried to read widely in the history of the Americas, and iormed many treasured friendships among its peoples. -.A I think I know the types of ad adventurer venturer adventurer ;and cut-throats most likely to volunteer for service s voluntef police, to enforce peace on Latin American coun countries. tries. countries. If tr formed, i -would certainly like to see them in oarade en Pennsylvania Avenue. Would countries like Brazil, Ar Argentina, gentina, Argentina, and .Mexico with, .-their own highly- trained armed forces permit intervention by any inter- American police lorcef Would countries like Colombia and Panama allow their treaty interest In the Panama Canal to be jeopardized? Most certainly, thy would not. At Panama, extreme agitations for greater participation in canal revenues and for "nationalization" have already played into the hands of those theorists who, with out thinkinz the problem through. are advocating' internationaliza internationalization" tion" internationalization" under the Organization of A A-merican merican A-merican States or the United Na tions. It is indeed interesting, Mr. Speaker, that the Secretary Gen eral of the United Nations, wnue attending an international confer ence, spent considerable time in in-May May in-May of this ygar With the Govern Governor or Governor of the Canal Zone at Miraflo- res Locks observing the operations of the Panama Canal. What does that mean? Recent word from the Isthmus, however, indicates that the peo people ple people of Panama' already recognize the dangers confrontiirg their coun try. J" They know that it is to their advantage and best interests to deal with the one nation that has been proved a tested friend rath'r than with n organize, tion of many nations, most of which have no treaty interest in the Panahie Canaahd tie 4rF concern for the weil-belrig of Pa Panama. nama. Panama. They also know that the cre creation ation creation of an international police force to "protect" the nations of Latin America would serve as the first step-"toward internationaliza internationalization tion internationalization of 'the'Snama' Cartal; -Leaders from other Latin American na nations tions nations are equally antiphathetic. Thus, Mr. Speaker, the evidence is clear: That proposals for an inter-American police force in the Caribbean or elsewhere in the A- mericas, are not only unrealistic but chlreithseWousJ,iiplorna chlreithseWousJ,iiplorna-tic tic chlreithseWousJ,iiplorna-tic hazards". '' ''''" As to the suggestion for "volun teers," the experienced leaders of some of the American Republics, who include graduates of West Point and other military institu tions, would no doubt, eliminate such invaders, of their countries. even if unget the aegis of the Or ganization df 'American States! What arrangements the United States may make with other governments with respect to Car ibbean nroblems, I cannot nrecHct. But what I can state is that cur rent turmoil in the Caribbean is not something "new: rather if is old. It Tias been handled before and it can be handled again, and in line with tested principles of in ternational law and policies deriv ed from a vast background of ex perience. In this connection. Mr. Sneaker it should be remembered that for manv years nrior to World Wsr II, the United States maintained a SDecial service snuadron for di diplomatic plomatic diplomatic missions in the Carib Caribbean bean Caribbean and Central American areas. It was not a part of the U.S. Fleet but an Independent unit eortina directly under the Chief of Naval Ooeratidns. Thus It was free of interruptions of CENTRAL C! I WEDNESDAY The Start The delight The greatness of thetf.Y.fdtfK ,f - NMlWlM' WHAT jP v LOLA JCte WANTS TX LOLA f I (Caribbean, fie tralnlnf exercise ami ipirtantly. Its main base ef eper- ations was at talbe, Canal Zone. World War II has long tine past. New situations in Caribbean areas are rapidly unfolding..; With them will come new problems f jffave character.. Present U.S. forces in the Car ibbean include a South Atlantic force based at Trinidad and uniti In training at Guantanamo. i ; Though they may quickly ba augmented by air,. these fleet ele-" rrtents are primarily organized a4 'engaged in training for protectie against active aggression, ffrjhf As far as is known, there. ii no, force of suitable capabilities far the diplomatic tasks that are dal dally ly dally looming larger. Such tasks ar certainly not for "volunteers" or ether ama' teurs, but for professionals un under der under able and disciplined leader.' ship. Moreover, what Is need-' ed is continuous showing of that flag. Thus, lir. "Speaker, an Imme diate step in strengthening tha security of all the. Americas would be the reactivation, in line with our historic policy, of an adequitei ly organized, appropriately cowri tuted, and independent soeIa! service souadrptir, otjerated direct ly under the Chief of Naval Operai tions and based on the strategic center of the Central American? Caribbean danger zone the Etpa' ma Canal Zone. iwewflay Sod odors. Weather Or Not This weather report for the H hours ending 8 a. m. today tt prepared by the Meteorological and Hydrographie Branch of th Panama CanaJ Company: TEMPERATURE) ii i ii i i High 93 M Low IS 77 HUMIDITY: High ........ 94 95 Low 57 78 WIND:- V : (max. mph) NW-1 N-21 RAIN (inches) 0 .12 WATER TEMP: (inner harbors) S3 84 LAKf iLEVAtiONS: Gatun Lake Madden Dam 82.98 215 .57 BALBOA TIDES TUESDAY, JULY 7 High Tim. 4:37 a.m. 4:45 p.m. Time 10:47 a.m. 11:06 p.m. Ht. 14.9 ft. 15.2 ft. Low Ht. 1.8 ft. 0.6 ft. 0. Shows: 4.54, 6.56, 8.58 She's the sweetheart of the beach generation.. l IHUIX up I RELEASE! 1 0.75 0.40 Y I Shows: 1.17, 2.25. I II ifhi |