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Ajr INDEPEKDENT; HE y DAILY NEWSPAPER 0 CANADIAN WHISKY A--F 1 j lam "Lei the people know the truth and the country U a" Abraham Lincoln 14th YIAR PANAMA, It. F, TUESDAY, JOtt 88, 195 FlVl CENTS No Word From The Concentration Camp As . Siberia Welc omes Peace-Tourist Nixon NOVOSIBIRSK, July 28 (UPt) Vice-president Richard M, Nixon received the warmest reception yet of his "peace and friendship" tour of the Soviet Union when he I Ui Siberian industrial fiitv todaV. IU I ITOU III fclliw w.m . J a ......j ort rwv .krhif nennni lammed the airoort when the Soviet-built Tu- n civwo ui ivvv viivbi in6 ,v,..w j -, 104 t airliner erarying Nixon and his party:. landed here this afternoon following t one.stop flight from Leningrad Hundreds of others lined the streets from the airport to the center of the city to wave at the cars and buses bringing members of the Nixon entourage into town. ' The vice president acknowledged the warmth of his greeting. by telling the throngs In this f'Chicago of Siberia," 1750 miles east ot wioscow, inai n ww ren so i wi ean know each other better-and bring the peace and rnenasnip max an oi us wan. "I want to express my appre appre-ciatiofor ciatiofor appre-ciatiofor your warm welcome and to extend on behalf of all the people of the United States our best wishes to the people of this city and to the great territories of Siberia," Nixon said inreply to welcoming speeches. "This te a closed city, and I am sure you will agree with me that all cities should be open on both sides. This was an apparent re reference ference reference to the fact that few outsiders are permitted to vis visit it visit this great industrial me metropolis tropolis metropolis of western Siberia. The day was warm and over over-Met Met over-Met c Mivon and his entour- ? landed after a six-hour flight from the west, interrupt interrupted ed interrupted briefly by a refuelling stop at Sverdlovsk on the border be- Mun T.iirnne nnri Asia. Nixon and his personal party were in one TU-104, followed v tarn nthpr nlaneloads of WJ T newsmen. Nixon's arrival coincl d e d with the end of .the day shift In this manufacturing city of vans AAA .wmih; 'fhit fact may have explained the.siW Ct the n question of the friendship And warmth of the vice pres pres-i.nf'a i.nf'a pres-i.nf'a i-Mntinn. 1 Streets along the route from the airport to the city's center were so packed with people that at times it was difficult for the motorcade to get through. Meanwhile in Moscow, Pravda today attacked American "pro "propaganda" paganda" "propaganda" about the high stand standard ard standard of living in the United States. It said the plcturo present present-ed ed present-ed by Americans was false land based its attack on sta statistics tistics statistics "published in a hand handbook book handbook of acts about labor in thVtSA compiled by the La Labor bor Labor Research Association. The Communist Party news newspaper paper newspaper said that the "average" family "that earns 90 dollars a week can. barely make both ends meet." r. Tf .HrtoH that, more than half imnripan families "are not tven included in the category of lucky ones" who make that much. Pravda also said the pro propagandists pagandists propagandists didn't mention the unemployed, of whom there had never been less than 4, 4,-600,00e 600,00e 4,-600,00e in the past two years. It a too called attention to the CFN To Present 9 Word Portrait Of Khrushchev A ward aortralt of Nikite Khruchchav. the world's most powerful dictator, will be sented over CFN at 5:45 p.m. Thnrcnav. Durinn a recent visit to th Soviet Uniori, Avarlll Harrimn spent many hours talking with Khrushchev. His opinions of the' mahnir and oorsonalitv of this Biiblie fiauro feature a special 30- minute film interview entitled "Resort on Russia." Harriman, former New York governor and fnrmor ambassador to the Soviet Union, and three Columbia Broad casting System newsmen appear on this news program. which fallld to show the power plant. 1 A newsman askea Rickover h he thought he was getting run-around. 'Yub." replied the tart- tnneued admiral. RickoverA who Tecently had (riven first demitv Soviet pre mier FroK R. Kozlov and his nartv a euided tour of the US nuclear-powered freighter Sa Savannah vannah Savannah and taken him through the Sftippingport, ra., nuciear power plant, was obviously an- nnvpt The shipyard manager, Voris Kiouotov sara ine nw;iei wouio have to be taken up by author itlps Ann a. decision made on wfelher 4h Americans could see the hiducii workings of the n;p "When?" demanded Rick over. "I would like the same rnurtpsv w rave them (Koi- Inv'a nartvl when we showed them the Shippingport reac tor and tne avannan. u took Kozlov right Into tho re actor room and answerea tT v. J ,.- . .. Nixon emmea in, -xow giaj laps "scanda 1 o u s contrast" be tween the "millionaire and th disinherited." . -Nison and1-his i party got 'tLj' tv,a .it ii mv f r 01?; understanding you 'were td see viet officials to prevent them th tMnir n0 more w ..Mr.Kf. than Kozlov saw in the United nuBoia o ihluiilh; states, we think that is a iair Nixon final y pressured the offi- exchange. we don't want to do clals into letting Vice Admiral anvthlne that', wrong, only Hvman shin's renrtors It was the first such Incident on Nixon's "peace and friend what's fair." Nixon said he was leaving it nn tn-Rirknvpr to st.av and com mon's "peace and friend- tu. T..tn 0j tua savan. ship" tour of the Soviet Union nah ...It,s too complicated for and occurred after he arrived th Dresident said. His remarks got results. Rick- Over was given a thorough tour nf the i shin. Later, he said he had spent to a noisy welcome by jet air linpr from Moscow. Some 1500 persons greeted the nartv at the sun-arencnea air port and crowds thronged a- h th ve eI round Nixon, his wife, Rickover an .!lOUcouW see everything and Milton Eisenhower as they S ?' a. ",T toured the city. At the shipyard wnere tne newly launched atomic ice icebreaker breaker icebreaker "Lenin" is undergo undergo-inr inr undergo-inr finishing? touches. Nixon hailed the vessel as "a symbol of the peoples of the united States and the Soviet Union the atom only for peace, not. for war." A worker shouted: "We quite agree. That is what we. want. wanted to see." Rickover said. "They asked 'were you satis satisfied?' fied?' satisfied?' U said, 'No, but I'm nleaseeV "T don't think anv American has had the opportunity to see what I saw. I was the first American to have the opport opportunity unity opportunity to see the entire nuclear power plant." Kozlov and his wire accom nanisd Nixon anrl his nartv we. want." sr" . u. i i iiuiii iviuoLUW anil' uio l rv j uvw HUt men tne aunospnere H ,,, changed when the party went "" r the A. Wounded Del Pino To Face Treason Charge In Havana ttivivi Tiilv 1R fTTPTl High army eourcea aaid today fvcuici tsii American from Miami who was mnmrii a.nit p.flntureri bv DO- lice here Saturday, faces trial fnr n ?Vi treason a crime punishable by death. nnanltAl rpnorts said Del PI no. who, Is being treated for eveie bums and a bullet wound In the neck, is in "improved" nuiriitinn. Ha DrobabW will be tranaferrfc.i soon from the DO lice hospital to the infirmary of the Cabana Fartress-priscn. ' Del Pino, a one-time rebel who changed sides, was shot whjle trying, to take a Cessna light plane off a highway near Havana, The plane, in which Cuban authorities charged he planned to fly foee of Premier trx J.I rutM int nf Hnha. caught fire and he was burned la the blaze. ". Castro visited Del Pino in the innitAi vMterdav and Ques tioned him for an hour about his activities. Th nrmlr tnlit a news con ference yesterday that he may vn tt nvt tnontha foreien min sters' conference- in Chile to rhara that. Kloaraeua and the Dominican ReDubllc are to blame for, the Caribbean crisis. Castro charged that the two countries are ''governed by die . tatnra rtt.h far.irs eontribut Ing to tension in the Caribbean, he said, include "(lunger, eco nomlcs and Ireedonv" BhnnrH thp shin This was the chance Rickover, the father of tne atomic suo marine, was waitinn for. The Americans were not permitted to leave a catwalk to go to the floor of the ves sel where the reactors were located. Tlitev remained on the walk only a few minutes and then were shown a movie of tne snip, During the fllehft Nixon won agreement to lift the ban on nnrtpvelrmprl film of his tour which American photographers nave Deen una Die to sena iiumc Thp film started leavinn Mos cow immediately. ' .. ...V jr- Leaves PAPERWEIGHTS Junior Johanssons erii their.teeth and give boxing ,the old kindergarten tfy la a preliminary bou beforethe leceni Jrt' pulick ilimokeu Oilbett Edler- left)K hilled as Kid -Tirrv,fTnr arut .Alw.Jiiprrrt aa.2ora. buncfted -1 'out -ill Hwo-roun4BlUKfest. Diplottiatlc Judges called it a draw. ?r- ' -" ' Strike Settlement ' ft. CZ Rates 25 Above RP A fnnnl 7nnA Inknr n A J U I '.m' wm-imi viiv IWISVI IVUUfcl IVUUJ UCtSIIICU 11' JIUI1IV- that the Panama foreign office should have interested self so deeply in the lot of the employes of the Canal Zoni. Bus Service, while employes of Panamanian bus lines con continue tinue continue to get up to 25 percent lower wages than Zone bus employes. i ,, The strike of mechanics and checkers of the Canal Zone Bus Service was settled temporarily yesterday in ttiimi mi U ncui-iuiui Titiury ror ine woraers. unacr rno M. (!... I ... . . rerms or rne serriemenr mechanics with the bus line will now get from about $115 to $200 monthly. Maximum wages for similar workers v in Panama are about $150 monthly. Gursam Gill Singh, operator of the Canal Zone Bus ervire Aon'ioA fnlnu flint U J from pressure brought by the Panama foreign office. The labor spokesman, noting trie sharp reversaLveS- terday evening's settlement was from the position Gill held apparently adamantly early in the ,afternoonr said rne signs poinrea in rne direction ot pressure. ivuvi puic9inuii 111 ine .unc uiu rnor it rnv Fishing Boat Rams 50-Room Tenement, Homes For 400 Residents Sought By Red Cross The Panami Red Cross was faced with the problem today of finding homes for some 400 tenants of a building in the Marafidn area which was rammed by a fishing boat at ebb tide STifciIawfiiriit wiiloti tiaii been anchored close to the buildine, broke anchor and ram- med the butlfling twice wniie oeing ouueicu uj wm, i's uc .i... . .. i . .a 1 u 1 n D.Ik.. AnAmiM nt... .c.nv.J h 4Ka I TV1 nnn( buildinr ovenooKing tne water at tne entrance i rvc..uc "t.- '""'"j "j "c ..k-" t. ..... tha fnnniiiitinn nf th.e huildinr was damaeed to the extent that the rtv viic nas iiiju.vu vu v..v " whole structure is regarded as in danger of collapsing. The Panama -Rent Board Im Immediately mediately Immediately ordered the evacua evacuation tion evacuation nf the rest of the 50 fami lies occupying the rooms, of the frame building. The 31-ton fishing boat re reportedly portedly reportedly had been anchored off Balboa Avenue for about three months. It took some time be before fore before It couid be pulled off the building, because the ebbing tide was too low for other fish fishing ing fishing boats in the vlcinit to go goto to goto fh rescue. The residents of the eight rooms which were destroyed hod ipft for work in the mar ket a short while before the ac cident. However, their furnit-ireH and other belongings had to be retrieved from the water by neighbors. The structure, built during the Construction Days of the Panama Canal, has 50 rooms which are inhabited mostly by fishermen and their,, families. The building is at street level at the Third of November Street-Balboa Avenue Intersec Intersection, tion, Intersection, but the portion built over the beach Is supported by wooden piles which were knock knocked ed knocked down by the Sugar Wright. The building has been con condemned demned condemned for some time, but Mexican Army Man Held for Phoney Gas Tank Scheme " rvDT WAWA Tnlv 2ft fTTPTI A former Mexican army offi cer awaited exiraaiuon io mbx lco today to face cnarges o steaHncr tT9.n.onn worth of easo line with a "false b o tt o m . Federal authorities arrested r.t oni Mnnnel Martinez Cas tro Sunday at the request of Mexican authorities. He is ac- Bvicf. Tpmx tne Mexican VU UJ -1 Bnironniont nil mononolv. of stealing the gasoline over a pe rinri nf Aicnr vfurs. AAVIM VJ, W J .The "oil monopoly charged tKot riactm iispH a trunk with vim V VUVAV WW" r a- tank that had a capacity oi 3675 gallons. But the truck aiso ha A hvn hidden r anKS wnn a tntat Kinlnlfv nf lOSO ffkllonS. wvr vawumj o iwm -tvio irAvernment refln' TV 1V4 WUV O ery employes filled the larger tank, the gasoline flowed first intn tna aprret tanks before filllnt the larger tanks. The fiem went undetected for eight years because the em- nlnvna Vnnurlnir the CanacitV Of the larger tank, recorded 3675 pailons each time the truck was filled. Thn Mexican agency said over the eight-year period Castro sold $720,000 worth of gas irom the secret tanks. -a v, r iimi o- su 1 n. rt J"'lfe IT ijW- w vti y v. wv.'--,sr BUILDING RAMMED The waterlogged jon Sugar ghUle on Its de after; slamming into tne ou-room teiiemoiii vuuui w t 7"' morning. Eight roem wert destroye'd, but 110 one was hurt. n V9 ia Muaraia aaminisrronon, is proprietor he largest bus lines operating in Panama City. Former Precirlent B'tmrAn KA Ari wt .L L ..i.m.wv ti. f-i, iws wiiv ,acciv9.ii6 nomination of the administration CPN Party for the 1960 PrecinAnfinl ele-finn C,.J... !Lfc 1.L-1. L. I.J low wages in Panama as the greatest problem facing the present, administration. residents have been reluctant 10 move although at least once a vear thev are threatened with being washed into the water during unusually high tides. Oldlimers Donate Hems To (Zone Library-Museum Harry F. Sedwick of Wilmington Del., one of the Panama Canal employes during construction days, and Mrs. Sedwick, have presented the Canal Zone Library-Museum with a number of i i-tems tems i-tems that date back to Panama Canal construction days. An inkwell and stand, fashion fashion-0H 0H fashion-0H (mm thp nil rim nf French locomotive, combined with guaya- can, probably from a ranroaa tie, and several books and pic pictures tures pictures are among the items in cluded in the gift. The books will become part of the Panama Collection, and, tfce other articles are being placed in the Isthmian Miscellany sec tion in the Museum. Mr. and Mrs. Sedwick were in the Canal Zone during the Old Timers' celebration last Novem ber, and visited the library ana museum. At that time they pre sented the library-museum witn some programs of Construction davs, as well-JB other items. That visit las0November mark ed Mrs. Sedwick's first look at the Isthmus. Following a stormy five-hour meeting yesterday afternoon be tween company officials and 53 striking workers the bus firm an announced nounced announced the re-employment of all at a temporary wage increase. In addition, the company will submit the entire dispute to arbi arbitration tration arbitration by the Canal Bone Trans Transportation portation Transportation Committee upon return of the chairman, Henry L. Dono van. Donovan, civil affairs director for the Panama Canal Co., is pre presently sently presently on leave and will return to the Canal Zone shortly after Sept. 1. !- Earlier yesterday, the strikers hplrt a ripmnnstratinn before the Central Avenue residence of Gill. which is located next to the Casa vwuw .vw i uvrnji j-rutJ J-ri10 VI11UU, 1IHUCU Gill store wiilch was once owned the settlement as an examnle- nf Nasser Speaks Of Arab Dream ALEXANDRIA. EEVPt (UPI) President vGamal Abdel Nasser said yesterday it was me are.im ot every atbd 10 exwrrajnaw js rael "once and for all. Nasser sooke at a rally and iwM a militarv Danade eel ebrating the seventh anniversary nf thi Eevntian revolution uiai nvarthraur Kinff FarOllk.v "We are awaiting aggression by Tirasi anrl aiw luDnorters of Is rael," Nasser said. "We will make it a decisive battle ind get rid of Israel onoe and tor au. "This U the dream el every Arab." faellitlti tt Cvruniu $ wall at fueling and strviee privileges within the Canal Zone. But earlier Gill had insisted that except for fuel, his firm's service and parts business is done exclu exclusively sively exclusively with Panama business firms. Although officials denied there was anything coercive in the ac action, tion, action, Gill's manager, Mahinder Singh Bhullar, was detained f police authorities Saturday on an infraction of immigration rules. Reoortedly be had failed to rertort a change of address required of resident aliens in Panama. Juan Chavanz, head of the Canal Zone Bus Drivers'- Union, hailed hv ths hni li np nnerainr. Proprietors of the store pointed J out that the store was closed dur ing the picketing, but they have no connection whatever with the op op-pratinn pratinn op-pratinn of the bus line, although the store still carries Gill's name according to the conditions of purchase. Bie sumrise of the announced temporary settlement was the re rehiring hiring rehiring of SOVbus route checkers whose jobs had been abolished by the comoanv shortly after the strike began. After the strikers, who incninea 23 maintenance workers as well as thp rWlters turned down flatly the company's first offer of a 10- percent wage increase, me nrm an announced nounced announced the checkers' jobs would be abolished and settlement nego tiations would be resumed omy with the 23 mechanics, welders ana helpers. nf the disoute strik ers had demanded minimum pay of 7. oontt ner hour. Announced settlement terms wr rfont cl tn thnRe offered tne sm- ers at their first meeting with ttv hns enmDanv management: ui reinstatement of checkers, to in clude 10 percent nay increase (2) individual wage increases ior mechanics, welders and helpers, based on service with the compa- "j- ... . li late mirtriav vesteraay inn u.J Mvf1v maintained the 30 1IOU 4.. II...T .... checker's jobs would not oe con lllll.U. . ... Thrnuehout the week long ois- oute the strikers were supnorted by the Panama Chauufeurs union and Foreign Office spokesmen of offered fered offered to "use the good offices of that ministry to bring the two factions to agreement. At the ame nm ranam. --arnmtnt arnmtnt --arnmtnt spokesman sharply erlt erlt-Icliad Icliad erlt-Icliad the bus firm at an "illegal paratlon" wUWn tha Canal Zen. The Canal Zona Bui $ar $ar-vlc vlc $ar-vlc oparatos en a eonctlw contract which grsnt tha earn earn-any any earn-any ffla and mslntananee united labor action. And Foreign Mtnitr Mioupl T Unnnii workers had gained a victory "and t.i.i;.u.j I i cipfjiiancu a uicccueni. Thp Int nf thp PanamantaM worker in the Canal Zone has al ways Deen ot permanent concern to the Foreign Office," Moreno was quoted as saying. Rut a Panal 7nnp lahnr ennbes- man nnintprl niit thp irnnv of For eign Office concern for the Canal Zone Bus Servlee strikers while even before the strike equivalent maintenance jods wim ranama dub firms paid 20 to 25 percent tower wages. - Gill checkers earn about $80 te $125 monthly. Th tbr spokesman said ne found it hard t understand th Ferlgn Office's "dp ewieam with wgt paid Panamanians in th Canal Zon and an apparent, apathy with far lowr wag lv- ( Is In Panama. Final arbitration by the Donovan committee .will be on the ame basis as that used during recent settlement talks involving Gill drivers, who were granted a wage increase about three inctbft'-w: Gill said today he had-no posi positive tive positive plans to ask the Transporta tion Committee to hike bus fares., tj.i. hni tiav remained the same for about ten yesrs within the Ca Canal nal Canal Zone. ;V;" ;':': Unt th hn rnnressionalre Insist ed that without some fom of re- lief or added concessionsi .eonx tinued operations under the settle ment verms wui DanMuyv .vu- , pany within .four months i He declined to' state what 'add 'added ed 'added concessions" he bed in .mind, saying the committtee eould draw its own conclusions since they are authorized to audit mi -company a books. ft f':V, 1 1 s 1 av f 51 TWO TOT PANAMA AMERICAN AX INDEPENDENT DAILI NEWSPAPER TUESDAY,- JULY 28, 1959 THE PANAMA AMERICAN 8Nt Ml) ruat.l-.HCO OT TMI PANAMA AMERICAN PRCS. INC rOUNMB NIUON ftOUNBCVtU. IK HAttMOOie AMI AS. aorroa IS-ST H rrf rT o Ben 134. ni. R. or TCLKPHONI Z-O740 B LlNtfl CLl AOOKIM PANAMMICAN. PANAMA COLON Orricr 12 n Ccntrm. Avinui axrwitN iZth and 1 Stm Stkiit Portion tteEMTATtVI JOSHUA POWERS INC. S4S Madkon Ave. P"- MOWTM IN AAVANCL- torn MONTkl IN A"" : On V in THIS ti TOUR FORUM THI READERS OWN COLUMN ffHE MAIL BOX C.F.N. .Sir: I Just don't, believe the number f morons in the listening nge olvCFN is high enough to warrain, the number of hours cievotedL'to broadcasting the "arrested-development-type" stuff that isrneither informative', educational or even entertaining. Maybe Cit is for the guy at the microphone who stives the lm lm-pressioaof pressioaof lm-pressioaof just doing everything for his own amusement any anyway, way, anyway, jsi H0W-;about some rotation in jobs? Give the guv on KP or the garbage detail a chance to play his favorite records. It should be aon(f -in the interest of variety, if not in Quality of program programming, ming, programming, a? ', If CFN only has a dozen records in stock, how about bor borrowing rowing borrowing n Special Services, the service cUibs or private indivi individuals? duals? individuals? Jilt same songs every hour of the day, every day day In and day out is too much even for this plain dogface. v GI Listener. ' BASKETBALL TROPHY Sir: I aai an ardent basketball fan and saw one of the most ex exciting citing exciting games played this season in the Colon Arena July 20 when the Mentolados team defeated Deportivo Iris in an extra-time contest. It was the first time had I seen the Rainbow City girls . play so hard, as they were faced with elimination from the championship. An added incentive, I think; came. from an arti article cle article -in the same day's "La Hora" which stated that Colon's Gov ernor -.would donate a trophy to the wnlnlng' jteara. as the game dedicated to him. , ForTeasons up to now unknown, this public official failed to show up at the Arena, much less give the i Rainbow .City girls ft trophy. X; This is not the first occasion in recorded time upon which a politician has failed the deliver on a promise. At the same time, with the election coming up, it would be wise for the gov governor ernor governor to make some public explanation of his action. Better ?et, we should make his promise stand good bv donating the rophy he promised to the Mentolados team beore their game this coming Thursday against the same Iris team. Jose Maria Gonzalez should know that the whole commu community nity community of Rainbow City is hurt by his action or lack of action and may show its sentiments should he be nominated and run for a seat In the National Assembly. He should know that we have or can control enough votes to help him and should there therefor for therefor hp mm to hi wnrd and donate to the winning team (Mentolados of Rainbow Cityj ZONE WAGES Sir: Employes of private companies on the Canal Zone should now have evidence enough that they can get results bv organ organizing. izing. organizing. But they shouldnt think they are untouchable. The em employer' ployer' employer' effective weapon Is "reduction in force." After an em employe's ploye's employe's services are no longer required, he is kicked out with without out without the slightest compensation for his years of service. Who can he appeal to? What lawyer will fight his Tttfse7 Furthermore, before it was ruled that the-Federal Minimum Wage Law applied on the Zone an office messenger would get, $65 monhtly, a janitor $75, a clerk $150 and a foreman or chief clerk $2"1 Now "Ml employes get the flat $1 an hour no seniority, no clas -ifr-'lon. If the minimum Is $1 an hour, the maximum should be more. , Unhappy Employe. BALLAD OF Sir: I write this verse on Gavilan The road thrfc once was neat. Now while the bridge is being built It's Just a dirty street From early morn till late each day Huge trucks go rumbling by ,,,,, While hauling rocks, and scraplnsf mud Pollutes the once clear skv No longer do the songs of birds Re-echo through the trees They've flown away across the bay In search of sea-swept breeze. No longer does the early dawn Bring with it restful thinking Too soon the trucks start by again And with thin hope starts shrinking. There is no calm to read, to write. No pause, no reassurance, It's just a case of conflicts' might. And Just where ends endurance? This noisy curse, could not be worse. And makes each day so dreary, Creating Inward havoc till The very soul is weary. There'll be no end to this we're told Until the bridge has taken hold. So in this meantime, what to do? Just bid the neighborhood adieu. And In the search for peace I'd sav There is no price too high to pay. A.R.M. WALL TO CRISTOBAL Sir: It looks to me as though someone is building a wall along 4th of July Avenue. Up in front of the MP barracks I mean. Well, if they'll take a fool's advise they'll Just keep going with that wall all the way to Cristobal, let's say. They'll need one iventually, so why not start building it now to relieve unemploy unemployment? ment? unemployment? And, of course, it mav as well be ornamental while they're at it. Ever so often one of those cute little cupolas like thev have at Fort Lorenzo and the Sea Wall. i Naturally some critics will sav they are pillboxes, but oer oer-Ifih Ifih oer-Ifih the thought. Pillboxes against whom? Our friends? If these teeming millions" as the geography says weren't our friends this place would be a pushover by rorce m numoers aione. - But there is something that does bother me every nighf Between my kids and the cruel world there is nothing but the admirable Balboa police force and a ilyscreen. whereas on the ether side of the line people only feel safe to retire behind bars. Ornamental bars to be sure but bar nevertheless. Those who can't afford bars barricade themselves up and swelter half the night. I can even remember when the Lock didn't have fences around them. But they have now. -.-Sound Sleeper. DAILY MEDITATION r ( Presented by the Department ! Christian Education of the -,'piscepal Church in the Miuien- fry Dieeese f the Panama Ca- . THI IRONY OF IDOLS "They helped everyone his IWtfhbor. .the carpwiter 1 ceu rtd the foltUmith, and ht that ameetheth with the himmir j Mm that smete the anvil." ' In his picture of the idol mak makers ers makers at work, Second Isaiah sounds strangely modern. This could be ' fold foursome, a sales conven convention, tion, convention, a service -club luncheon or even some church meetings! The ame spirit of comraderie ir.eets tis here as we find In so much f modern life. How enthusiastic Niw York UTI N. tecAi $ 70 f SO OO 14 00 SO li BO KJP. the trophy he nromised. A Mentolados Fan. THE BRIDGE and excited we become about the peripheral things. The essence of idolatry s to make vour gods of these lesser values. The Jews were concerned with the same things we are se security curity security and prosperity for them themselves selves themselves and their families. Thy thought they could get them by worshipping the gods of the iand. We pitch our religion oft the same low level. A recent church ad advertisement,' vertisement,' advertisement,' for example, is con concerned cerned concerned with making prayer "prac "practical". tical". "practical". This is to harness God and iir.r Him for our own ends, but Cod calls us to enlist in His servi-i' to.be used by Him. This is the i rony; the idols we think so rT i cient snd "practical" are worth less. Only God gives courage and strength. Walter Winchell In New York THE fCOPLi OF THE CITY BROADWAY Celebs About Town: Bob ilope narrowly escaping a drunk driv driver er driver on E. 59th in the wee uours. The star jumped back jus! in time. What was -he doing up so early, snyhow?. .Gina Loilo- brigida, the Beautalian, demati J J-I I J-I ing that tie autogriphers ui the hoiel foyer be chased before ' she'd come downstairs (Hell, jDucel). .Paul Newman, of "Sweet Bird" pushing a prom "(with nis firstborn) along nth ' Street in the sunshine. .Greta IGarDo grabbing a hurried orange juice at Leslie s, a fancy Lexing Lexington ton Lexington Avenue hot dog stand. . Hunch-bettor Joe DiMaggio wag wag-1 1 wag-1 ering $2 on a 50-to-l shot at Bel Belmont, mont, Belmont, The horse was Biz Klu, namesake of the Kluszewski, baseball star. .Paulette God God-dard dard God-dard in the heavy rains taking refuge under the Eden Roc can canopy. opy. canopy. .Mary Pickford (Mrs. Bud Buddy dy Buddy Rogers) at the Forum of 12 Caesars with her lovely dgntr. . .Star lark Jeri Southern, whose pashy tones sell records, in town to open at The Den-in-the-Duane . .Mrs. Gene Krupa's 3,000 charm bracelet of tiny diamond drums. Sallies In Our Alley: The Lin Lin-dy's dy's Lin-dy's show-biz bunch were doing a Big Pattycake about Pan-American jet pilot Capt. Sommf;rs, who stole the show with his he heroics roics heroics and then went on to Lon London don London in another place. "Can you imagine," one ham said, "ivirg a performance like that and nut sticking around for the Bows?'' . .Now about that West Side Tennis Club barring Nobel Prizs Winner Buncht's boy. How do you like those S.N.O.B.'s? Midtown Vignette: It wis a thrilling Saturday night sight rn Wait ilrA 5tot k'tiuaan Rn.lH. way and 8th Avenue... The srSfieT was the front of the N.Y. Times Bldg. . That newspaper was holding up its edition to wait for a flash about the Pan-American plane (with 113 on board) in distress 4 hours above the air airport. port. airport. .Most of the pressmen and other workers were outside getting some fresh air. . WYn-n they were signal'd to resume work, one shouted: "The pUne's okay! Nobody killed!". .Iheir lusty cheer echoed thru the Broadway Canyon. Memos of a Midnighter: Mulil Mulil-Millionaire Millionaire Mulil-Millionaire Woolworth Donahue (Barbara Hutton clan) and Judy Church are keeping the Long Is Island land Island social gossip breezy. He met her in Palm Beach where she was the prettiest barmaid in town. .Allan Jones' boy -Jack soon middle-aisles with. Elinor Donahue of the "Father Knows Best" TV show. .Errol Flynn's current jail-bait first caught his attention when she was a con contestant testant contestant on Groucho's show aoout two years ago. .Rita Graole's Detroit night club boss, Leo Ad Ad-ler, ler, Ad-ler, is also the biggest Chrysler dealer in the world. He rewirrl rewirrl-ed ed rewirrl-ed her with one of the converti convertibles bles convertibles after her month's booking. "He restored my faith in nitjht club owners," writes Miss G-a-vie. "Usually, when business is good or bad they all cry '. . Toots Shor reports: "The deal for my new 52nd St. place u set. Hope to resume early in '60". . Ex-"Miss Vermont" (Sandi Si.np Si.np-son) son) Si.np-son) married Dr. Walter Franc ke, a Billings, Montana medic, on June 28th. Now in Munich. Show Business Saga: .Some of the veterans of the Broadway scene were reminiscing last night. . .The most amusing story was new to us. It dealth with Billy Rose, songwriter, showman, mil millionaire. lionaire. millionaire. . When he marrwd Ziegfeld star Fanny Brice her name was famous. Mr. Rose was "coming up" via several sung clicks. But his renown wis still to come. Whenever his name was mentioned to non -Broadwayites, the speaker invariably added: "You know, Fanny Brice'i hus band . .When he bought his first theater on Broadway he cov covered ered covered it with one of the largest e e-lectric lectric e-lectric signs ever seen. Th lights rad: "Billy Rose's Mannaitaa Theater". ."Who," inquired a cop on the beat, "is Billy Rose?". ."He's the guy," was the reply, "who marnea Fanny Brice.'r Show Business Saga: Some of the veterans of the Broadway scene were reminiscing last night. .The most amusing tn tn-ry ry tn-ry was new to us. It dealt with Billy Rose, songwriter, showman, millionaire. .When he married Ziegfeld star Fsqny Brice her name was famous. Mr. Rose was "coming up" via several song clicks. But his renown was still to come. Whenever his name wis mentioned to non-Broadwayites, the speaker invariably added: "You know, Fanny Brice's hus husband band husband ". .When he bought his first theater on Broadway he cov covered ered covered it with one of the largest electric signs ever seen. Tb lights read: "Billy Rose's Msn Msn-hanttan hanttan Msn-hanttan Theater". ."Who," inquired a eop on the beat, "1 Billy Rose?". ."He's the guy,' was the reply, "who married Fan Fanny ny Fanny Brice.' For Diversion Seekers: "Lady Chatterley's Lover" (Little Carne Carnegie). gie). Carnegie). A thoroughly entertaining film. The "scene" that was sr.id to be so sinful is breathtaking. ."The Horse Soldiers" (Aston, one of the Very Best. ,Koino Vincent's song (at the Copa) in which Texans are kidded. Full if knee slapperi, .The exciting Patterson Johansson fight films, especially in slow motion. They reveal The Swede's 2nd lethal blow while befuddled Patterson's The Washington Merry WASHINGTON -Political c-oss- currents can blow public fi figures gures figures into strange places. And the most ironic twist of fat!" to day is to see Richard Nixon, who a few short years ago was handing out subpeonas to com communists munists communists to appear before his Un-American Activities Commit tee, now in Moscow trying to patch up a peace with tne Com Communists. munists. Communists. However, the Kremlin moves in strange ways, and it might just happen that young Nixon could come home with accom accomplishment. plishment. accomplishment. Certainly he's not un aware of the stakes. "If I can break the deadlock in Geneva," he conimea to a friend just before he left, "no thing can stop me in 1960." ' lnat was onr reason he prepar-ibeaver Vice President' makes no d so" carefully for YWs misslon'mitakes, Herter sent a top Rus- to Moscow. He proposed to Sec Secretary retary Secretary or States Christian A. Her Herter ter Herter that he take up with back was wince. turned. Makes you Cast of Characters: Broadw.iy producer Don Wolin (still ir his 20s) has been in Venezuela for over a year. He now owns his own recording firm, frozen fish plant, real estate holdings and safety glass factory. He esti estimates mates estimates winning about 8 mil'ion dollars. "So I can put' my own money into Broadway show". . . Elia Kazan who writes only to the females in the hit he staged, "Sweet Bird". . Bob Harrison, who returns to the scandal mag field soon with "N. Y. Confidential." He "secretary" controls the company publisning it. To Lee Mortimer's amaze amaze-ment ment amaze-ment (he and Jack Lait fou to' root for its click. Mrs. Lait and Mortimer will share royal royalties. ties. royalties. .Mothers Are Like This: Pianist Eugene List's mother waited until his career was es established. tablished. established. She then went to night school and is now a coast phar pharmacist. macist. pharmacist. BALBOA Theater Big Stage Show! SUNDAY, AUG. 2 Show Time: 3i$!f 7:35 Admission: .50 1. 00 Read Our I Mi Skating on Thick Ice ;; ),K- By DREW PEARSON Khrushchev the whole question of the Berlin stalemate and try to break it He took up with Eisenhower the idea of extending to Khrush Khrushchev chev Khrushchev an invitation to visit the U hited States. Eisenhower turned him down. He didn' like the idea of invit inviting ing inviting the No. 1 man of the Krem lin to Washington at a time when his foreign minister was giving the West such a rough time at Geneva. Ike's negative attitude, leaking back to Moscow, may have been why Khrushchev remarked that he was puzzled about the aim of Nixon's visit. Herter, on the other hand gave Nixon the green light to do any anything thing anything he could to change Khrush chev and get the Geneva talks off dead center. w But just to make sure the eager sian expert, Foy Kohler, along to guide him. Ironically, Kohler is the former head of the Voice of America, who came in for attack by Sen. Joe McCarthy at a time when Nixon was McCar thy's chief defender. Nixon has made other back stage moves to make sure his trip is a public relations success. He pressured Deputy Premier Frol Kozlov during their Capitol Hill meeting to lift all censorship on American newspapermen ac accompanying companying accompanying him. This has now been done. He also insisted that he visit some of the key cities of Sibe Siberia ria Siberia instead of the usual sightsee sightseeing ing sightseeing cities of Tashkent and Kiev. This has been partially granted. PUBLIC RELATIONS CORPS He also told the American Em Embassy bassy Embassy he would do his usual nano-snaxing stunt, which so flabbergasted the Japanese when he got out of his car and began shaking hands and bussing babies along his line of march. He is also taking along at h's special request Ralph de Toleds Toleds-no no Toleds-no of Newsweek, the writer Featuring JACK BROOKS Comedian and Pantomime Artist MARILYN GUMIN Singing Star GROVER RUWE Ventriloquist and THE JOE GUMIN QUINTET ALSO On The Screen JOHN WAYNE 4 Maureen O'HARA - in "THE QUIET MAN" Show Time: 1:30 5:10 8:50 p.m. Classifieds - Go -Round who turned out the rave book on Nixon. Newsweek is represented by its diplomatic editor, Edward Vveintal, and its publisher, Mal Malcolm colm Malcolm Muir, but added de Toleda Toleda-no no Toleda-no when Nixon urcrad it. Another author of a rav hnnk on Nixon, Earl Mazo, is on the trip, not as the representatlva ot the New York Herald Tribune, which he normally works for, but as the representative of Han Han-per's. per's. Han-per's. Jinx Falkenberg, the charming DM'hlir rlatinnc viurt ,i,iFa ' V. 1 BUM VVUC of Tex McCrary, is also on the trip. The young man who sits down with KhrUshchev has played some long shots in his spectacular ciimo up ambition's ladder, such as when he borrowed $150 from the Erco Company, whose naval contract he was renegotiat renegotiating, ing, renegotiating, to fly back to California to answer a newspaper ad want wanting ing wanting a bricrht vounc man tn mn for Congress; or when he got oh a ranama-nound ship in mid mid-ocean ocean mid-ocean to fly back to Washington ana investigate Alger Hiss; or when he faced about 50,000,000 people on television to exolaln his $18,000 personal expense fund. And like the others, -this mis mission sion mission to Moscow k a long shot. But long shots and irony have paid off in the career of Richard M. Nixon and nrhana t h i One to the leaders of a govern ment which he has "so long bat battled tled battled against will pay off, too. DOLLARS AND FRIENDSHIP One thousand foreign high school students stood hefnr Pr. ident Eisenhower the other aay as ne praised their plans to study in the USA. They had come to Whintfnn under the American Field Ser vice, which Is niacin them with American families for one vear, and Ike extolled thin iwnnU.M. people program as one of the most conrrt'etive parts of his foreign policy. On that very same day, how however, ever, however, Ike's, cabint was driving s financial solke in the same pmeram he was praising. The State Department had sen' a letter to Congress ask'ng that American fmiii wVin im port foreign high school students get an income tax deduction. The deduction, State Depart ment officials said wnuM "in. crease mutual under standing between the Deorl of the iTnit.n States and the people of other countries. But suddenly the State Depart Department ment Department meekly withdrew it if. quest. A bi-Dartisan srnun nf nlna congressmen, led by Hale Boggs of Louisiana, had introduced the State Department proposal to give a tax deduction to help pay the expenses of these fore'gn students. But Secretary nf tho Treasury Bob Anderson said no. ine uepanmeni ot lleaiui, k k-ducation ducation k-ducation and Welfare had also endorsed the proposal for a tax reduction. President Eisenhower had nru. ed the Nitional Catholic Wel Welfare fare Welfare Conference, the Protestant "international Christian Youth Exchange,' and the American Field Serlvcs for bringing. 1000 students to tne United Stt. n. nually at no cost to the govern ment. But when the Troiitirv nhUr-t. ed, the rest of the Eisenhower administration meekly bowed o the edict that the tax dollar comes ahead of international frendship. Note: Similtaneously, the same Treasury Department OK'd a pro 0sed i tax benefit for .the du POnt .Company, which has been finlorort to ,iell ill General Mn. tors stock under a court decree The Treasury was perfectly will ing to fix the tax on GM stork ai ?4.w a siidre ne price psio for it instead of the current price of $55 a share. LABOR NEWS And COMMENT tv VICTOR II1SIL v Millions ef Americans' went their easy way each day never think in that laber rack, eteertnf) touch-4 r their dally lives, then t pecketbookt end their bread winning, now knew different. Per almost almost three years the stem hat been told rhem by the racket bust ; ing committee heeded by the crusadi ng Sen. McClellan. I asked the tied'ceted senator for 1 a summation ofwhat he has found during the w e sr y g years ef ptobing. Here Is his reply, written especially for this ce'umn: :- SENATOR JOHN L. McCLELLAN v j WASHING! ON. I am very gratefu' for the opporutnity"" and privilege aflordtd me by Victor Riesel to write an article .for his rnlnmr. fillnnff hi CUrMHt trifl to Africa. Mr. Riesel is a man of highest inUgritv rare courage and exceptional ability By his writing he haf enlightened our citizens ano pe,iormed a great seVvice In alcrtn.g them to dan dangers gers dangers to oui lnttrna) security by reason of corruption, racketeering and inproptr practices in some segments of organized labor. One of tut major issues b for the Co".urss todav is labor reform 'eaisiatior Crime, corrup tion exiiloitauor and abuses have in som artas reached propor proportions, tions, proportions, 'h-t chanenge the power and supremacy in. established gov gov-ernme'i ernme'i gov-ernme'i Hofft and- others have hurled this challenge jt the United States Cofigress He has said that We (the Teamsters) will not be stopped by the McClellan Committee by laws or by the courts;" that We (the Team Teamsters sters Teamsters ray even.uallv do whet labor unions do in Europe, call general s t n k "; "We (the Teamsters') are organizing in all transportatijn fields. W are try trying ing trying to create a conference of tronsmirtatif.il unions. We are now in a position to control the S'rike issues., If Cmgress is stu stu-oid oid stu-oid eniufh to p. ss a bill banish banishing ing banishing secondary bcycotts. we will fix it so all cot.tracts expire on the same day.' He further said, "They talk a a-bout bout a-bout s3"ondary boycotts. We can call a primary strike across the nation that will straighten out employers once and for all." A A-gain gain A-gain Vr. Hoffa stated "They (the Cmgress) can pass all the bills they want to and it won't mean a thing. None of the bills worry ire Harry Bridges, testifying before the House Un-American Activities Committee on April 21 this year, was a,ked "If a request hot to work ship came from a Commu Communist nist Communist co'intv would it be honored' as if r ca.ne from any other countrv'" Answet: "yes." The answer the Congress shil give o this cha'.enge is of keen and vitii interest to every Amer American ican American citizen Shan law and order prevail or shall we bow to the dictate? or petty tyrants p Will Congress face up to dufy and meet iti responsibility? We shall soon kn.w I vntid for the Kennedv-Ervin hill aa it naaxed the Sena e I would vote for it again today, if I had no opportunity to vote tor a strong r measur ine mu .in us present form wi'I do a great deal of good bui it. does not by any means fully meet the legislativ$ needs. It will not as it is now writ written, ten, written, co"rect all & the evil condi conditions tions conditions nd improper practices that we now know exist. It 'can be strengtheneo and if should be before 1 is enacted Into law. Tremendous progress has bei made in this legislation since the origins' Kennedy bill was intro. duced in tte Senate early in 1958 Considerstle muscle was added to th,s measure by the manv umt-ndmenU that were a dopted 'o it dunng the course of debate in the United States sen senate. ate. senate. if th W. iiiac of Rrenresenta- tives will nr.w add additional pro visions and an.uiaments to k and m.ilri pomnarable imorove- ment.t in it to those made bv the Senate wi can yet pass ah ex ceptionally good lanor retorm bin in this session of Congress. I am indeed gratified and take some m asm e of oride in having successuflly proposed amend ments (a) riat. a fiduciary respons ibility on the part of any person isndiin? union tunas. I'M Ponnit all nFon. hand ling union funds to bonded; (c) Require unions to mac a a-vailahle vailahle a-vailahle to all members copies of collective bargaining agree- ments bv which thev are affect ed; A r.HOiiir reiK.rting and ac counting of ii nos of unions in 'rustes'iiiiip at the beginning of the tru'eeslup and semi-annually. thereafter I (e) Tight n up -the provision tor reports by labor relations consultants and employers who retain them; m s'.inv haii the nrovisions' barrine ex-.onvicts from serving nf triiat and resDons- ibility in labor organizstions; () Make it near mat notnmg in the lull u intended to reice or limi the ferfronsit-ilitles of u- nions or the rifms o union mem members bers members uader any .other Federal ot State Lsw M I am also most gratified and tn hav; soonsored what 'i now "Title lof the Ken-l p.,I,..Frvin nlll- nowiiarlv known as the "Bili W.RiBhts of M?m M?m-W W M?m-W o' T abor I nion Title I (he B'U of Rights amendment) , the vrv heait of labor reform legislai'.n for the protection 'of rank-and file due paying union members from abuses, oppression and exploitation by arrogant, die die-tatorial tatorial die-tatorial union b'.ses. The Bill of :hts title to tnis bill uaraa s: . U) Eiual rights and privileges to every member, subject t reasonable union rules and regu regulations lations regulations to tiommate candidates, vote ateno meetings' and part, cipate in un.on affairs. (2) Freedom lor every mem member, ber, member, subject to reasonable union rules and regulation!-, to meet and ai'etable fceely with other members and to express any views, arguments or opinions. , (3) Ibe right of the union mem bershio to vote on changes in dues ard assessments. (4) The right of any member to sue the union or any union official. lit any. judicial, administrative or legislative proceedings, subject to the right of the union to re require quire require any such member to pur pursue, sue, pursue, for1 a maximum of six mopths, administrative remedies as 'provided b" the constitution and by-laws of the union. (5) The right of any member to be granted fair procedures and protection against the impo impo-s'tion s'tion impo-s'tion of arbitrary anH unreason unreasonable able unreasonable penalties and disciplinary ac actions. tions. actions. These rights preserved and "uarantee-t to indivMus' rnnv brs are backed no bv the right of any agrivd membr to bring legal action o enforce the?e prov'siom for V" own Pro Protection tection Protection and also by the cr'minaj Torsions of rnj origin-' Keine-dy-Ervln bill. This would Impose a fine and iaf nnc v '" one violating the BUI of Rights by wilfully denvin? to or ore ore-venting venting ore-venting any member from exer exer-"sing "sing exer-"sing thoe guaranteed to him in this Title. The Hill of R!ght at now in the b'll was overwhelmingly a a-rWd rWd a-rWd by the P"ate by vote nf 7S to 14. with the sor-alled "friends of labor" in the Senate simnorting it. Until several we'c! offer tts adoption, the AFL-rio le'rVrshiD did not object to 't. In lct r r-presentative presentative r-presentative of the AFL CIO were consulted and artivelv nar nar-ticiDated ticiDated nar-ticiDated in drafting this revied ""nHmerit. As I recall. fhe AFL-CIO did no announce its dis dis-smWal smWal dis-smWal of the Bill nf Right un un-til til un-til after Hoffa made his attack en it. So, who is it that now wants to dnv thee bisic American con constitutional stitutional constitutional righ's to union .mem .members? bers? .members? It is their leaders. Why? Do they still want to dominate dominate-to to dominate-to exercie dictator! power snd deny to individual dues paying imion members those common, decent unalienAblei; right s to wMeh ever" citizen of this coun country try country Is entitled under the Consti Constitution tution Constitution of the United States? In this controversy I have giv given en given mv renth inflence, sup support port support and vote to the worv!--" mat and his familv rather than to labor bosses who Insist upon rUrVnff in him the., human rights and who want to continue dictatorial control and domination over him. Finally, if WP are to incliid nv Taft Hartley amendment, tnerp aro thrB-, mitter.t- e"wiM to labor reform that I believe should be included. These are: a provision that would effective effectively ly effectively eliminate the Jurisdictional no no-man's man's no-man's land in labor management relations by oermifting state courts or agencies to adjudicate thoae disputes which are essen essentially tially essentially local In character and by reftnrinff the National Lahor Re Re-lations lations Re-lations Board to act in all other intance : a provision that would eriecuveiy prevent top-down orgs orgs-nitron nitron orgs-nitron by placing reasonable H H-minations minations H-minations on recognitions and organizational picketing and a provision that would prevent cur rent abuses of secondary boy boycotts. cotts. boycotts. The real issue now in this pro pro-S?.fdJ,bor S?.fdJ,bor pro-S?.fdJ,bor reform legislation is. Will the Congress enact effective laws to deal with corruption and racketeering in labor organiza organizations tions organizations and to prevent the exploi exploitation tation exploitation of union members by dis dishonest, honest, dishonest, arrogant, dictatorial, and sometimes criminal, labor bosSea, and to restore to union memberi the right, authority and power to manage and control their union affairs by recognized and re re-fPected fPected re-fPected democratic processes? Will the Congress do its duty and measure up to this vital respons responsibility? ibility? responsibility? Needless to say, every racket racketeer eer racketeer ng, criminal and gangster la labor bor labor boss in the country in hoping the Congress will shirk its duty and either pass no bill at all or one that Is so weak that 't will be ineffectual to remedy the un unwholesome wholesome unwholesome conditions that, now prevail. Those elements, of course, are now doing everything in their power to obstruct and prevent the en"tmen' 0f laws adenuate to do tho Inh needed, In addition, ultima" oassaee has als been jeonardfzed by Ir Irresponsible responsible Irresponsible opposition of soma lder of th b'Hness commu community nity community who, apparently, would rath rather er rather h"-e r.r.vicl gtie thaa have the best labor reform ms ms-re re ms-re that can be sbuVed ,t this tfme. On the other hand, millions of rank-and-file union members and fr-ort c't?n evrvwhere, and in all walks of life, are hooing and onyin tha the Congress will have the intestinal fortitude "nd p'oVcnl roiirnpe to do its diity and pass laws to outlaw and prevent 'ne cwnpt on, anuses and exploitation thnt the Senate) Select Cowm'tfee has, exposed lsws that will help to restore de cency and integrity In labor-man agement relations. TUESDAY, 7CTY M. M5t .--THJ PANAMA AMERICAN AN. INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PACITHRir - lllPttllllj llililliliiiiiil GUSTON BRATHWAITE has completed 30 years of service with the US government. At present he is a heavy truck driver for the US Army, operating out of the Fort Davis Motor Pool. His first duties were the Panama Canal Company1, where he worked as a driver for four years. Brathwaite then transferred to the U.S. Army, where he has remained for 26 years. Presenting the Department of the Army's" 30 year honor pin is Col. Cecil H.f Davidson, USARCARIB transpor- tation officer. 1 (U.S. Army Photo) Jumbo Following Hannibal's Trail Has Sore Feel LA PLANEY," France (UPI) A harassed elephant with sore feet lqmbered up a steep Alpine slope today on the 1 trail of Hannibal's ghost. This was the day of the" big push for Jumbo, the two-ton prize of the Turin, Italy, zoo. The elephant was borrowed by Cambridge University Prof. J. M. Hoyte. 26, to prove his theory that Hannibal and his army of men, horses and elephants invaded Rome in 218 B.C. by way of the Clapier Pass. Historians do hot know exactly what route the one-eyed Cartha Carthaginian ginian Carthaginian general took, but most of them beliveve he used a lower, easier pass. Hoyte believes Han Hannibal nibal Hannibal took his army up to the 9-250-foot Clapier Pass and down to Rome from there.. Today's climb was the first stage of the final assault on the pass. The run' is only five miles from here to Le Grange de Sav Sav-ines, ines, Sav-ines, but Le Grange. iL nearly 2,300 feet higher. Today if all goes according to plan, Tumbo should reach the pass itself. Quote Unquote MOSCOW Soviet Premier Nh kita S. Khrushchev, speaking Ao Vice President Richard M. Nixon while the two posed for photogra photographers phers photographers outside Khrushchev's con concrete crete concrete mansion overlooking the Moscow River: "Keep smiling.otherwise they'll ay we just had a quarrel." WASHINGTON Rep. Richard M. Simpson R-Pa: discussing Vice President. Nixon's public de debate bate debate with Soviet Premier Khrush Khrushchev chev Khrushchev at the opening of the U.S. Exhibit in Moscow: "It Was exactly what a lot of ordinary Americans have been Itching to tell Khrushchev." HAVANA Cuban President Osvaldo Dorticos Torrados, telling a crowd of 500,000 cheering peas peasants ants peasants that Fidel Cestro was with withdrawing drawing withdrawing his resignation: "At this moment of maximum emotion, I am able to announce to, you that Fidel Castro, in the faceof your mandate, has agreed to- return? to the- task- of prime minister." HAVANA Frank Maduro, own- -r sit tna Havana n vr rviiiK baseball team, trying to prevent, the Rochester Red Wings from I walking out of a doubleheader aft-J er shortstop Frank Verdi was. wounded by a bullet fired by cele-1 brating rebels: ;, "One of our players was nicked j by a stray bullet in the previous innting, and we didn't complain," Capehart Suggests Congress Deal With Housing Agencies "A WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. rHomer E. Capehart (R-InU sug gested today that vongress start dealing directly with, the government's .-..various housing agencies is om outgrowth of President Eisenhower's housing bill veto. nn Capehart, sewor GOP member of the Senate housing subcommit subcommittee tee subcommittee proposed 'that Congress wipe out the big Housing and Home Finance Agency (HHFA). HHFA Nwirdinates the work of spe cialized agencies such as the Fed Federal eral Federal Housing Administration, the Public Housing Aaminisirauon, the Urban Renewal Administra tion and others. "We might get the facts and possibly have better administra administration tion administration by dealing directly with these agencies," the Indiana senator said. "We also could save many millions of dollars a year." ranphnrt advanced his plan as the housing subcommittee contin ued hearings on wnetner 10 ret- ommend that the Senate under pin, thp admittedly upniu cnore of trying to override tile nesi- At'e vain Democratic leaders Udl V O vvx . fear the House would support El- senhower. Senate Democratic taaaer wn-... ti.'iSsrSSLL''!it Held By Pamhoners low" the housing group's recom mendations. He noted that some Ql TgnnACCee f HUrCh Republicans already have an- VI ICIIIIUJJCC IIIUJU! nounced they would support an .ef .effort fort .effort to override the veto. WHITEHAVEN, Tenn. (UPI) -Subcommittee Chairman John The choir sang "Joy to the world, cnark-man fD-Ala.1 said last the Lord is come.' week's testimony "clearly demon-, It was Christmas in July Sun Sun-strated strated Sun-strated that the veto message is day at the Whitehaven Methodist . 1 ...n.nts rh,ir.r,h F.n,n. T, Q D thorn V.,,1 miSleaOLng lu SCVeiai icoyctw. vuuivii. uvcajuuc Tfaa uicic iui Sen. Prescott Bush (R-Conn.), a Santa Claus. momVur nf the siibrommittee. re- '"h fh.t npmnnratic attacks on' Outside "lens was a manger the veto were "misleading and at scene and the Three Wise Men betYMlf truths." v nhS ItXT But Sparkman insisted that11"" an. n .t.mas.tr.e.eJ "whoever told the Presided what That was just the idea behind s- in mocQaffP rtirl not the special Christmas services S'. Pr fttir-T SundayP, explained Dr. F. A. Flatt, PrMident sa d the housing rmi was "inflationary" and "extrava gant." Gov. David L. Lawrence ofi Pennsylvania and Mayor Frank a. eeaiva ot tsuiiaio, in. y., urged. tnat pe veto De overridden. Chicago Mayor Richard J. Da-, ley, president of the U.S. Confer Conference ence Conference of Mayors, criticized the veto, but did not specifically call for overriding. However, he said the President's complaint that ur urban ban urban renewal provisions of the bill would feed inflation and cost too much "implies a lack of under understanding." standing." understanding." Bush told Lawrence that "real "realistically" istically" "realistically" the chances of overrid overriding ing overriding the veto were poor. The gov governor ernor governor said he knew that Congress had never provided the two-thirds majorities needed in each house to override, but "now is the time to do so." "This is one of the most import important ant important pieces of domestic legislation which has come before the 86fli Congress," Lawrence said. "To PennsylVanians it is as important as foreign aid. Our own people need (he aid and they need it" now." V Christmas In July "Children are being indoctrin ated with reindeer instead of di di-ivine ivine di-ivine raiment," said Dr. Flatt, "and they are the ones who will suffer." Uberqce, Brother Together Again HOLLYWOOD (UPI)- The rift between Liberace and brother George was at an end today. They were reunited this week weekend end weekend when the oianist visited George at the Beverly Hills Hotel. Their mother. Mrs Frances Liberace, who had planned to be present at the meeting, stayed home with a cold. I she said. "But today "Mama tnougni since i was me ike Christmas." older broter I ought to stay with the act," said George discussing j "It was differenf," she confided the separatipn. "But no less meaning and all." "But the fact that I was the xhp church was decked with silent partner of the team wore wreaths and holly. Red poinsettas itself out. Our professional split decorated the altar. Air condition condition-was was condition-was amicable except in Mama's ers toiled to give the chill of win win-eyes." eyes." win-eyes." ter to the hot summer air. He said Sunday's services were "to remind people of the reil sig significance nificance significance of the birth of Christ," without all the commercial trim trimmings mings trimmings and the gift giving. The message got across to some. "It reached Tommy Seacat, a pretty brunette teen-ager who helped out up the manger scene. "I didn't begin to get the feel ing until this (Sunday) morning," did seem " MiwiiiMMiMiiii)iiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiii!Hniii mi ii mil, i hi ii iiim mil i mi m Tunn -m rim ' MAJ. GEN. CHARLES L. DASHER, commanding general of U.S. Army Caribbean, pins the Commendation Ribbon with Metal Pen Pendant dant Pendant on MSgt. William C. Frandsen, administrative assistant, Gen General eral General Staff Office, USARCARIB. Frandsen, who first assumed duties with the SGS in April 1958, served in the position normally occupied by a warrant'officer. A citation accompanying the award pointed out that in this capacity he distinguished himself by acquiring, within a short period of time, a complete understanding of all internal ad administrative ministrative administrative details, by mastering the rather intricate matters of protocol, and by exceptional efficiency in the coordination of all of office fice office affairs. He developed and installed several worthwhile improve improvements ments improvements in administration and office procedures during this time. Frandsen, who has 18 years service, left the command by MATS last week for Fort Dix and reassignment. (U.S. Army Photo) Holfa To Accept Challenge To Sue Jen. R. F. Kennedy WASHINGTON (UPI) Team-, ster President James R. Hoffa said yesterday he would accapt. the challenge of counsel Robert ,F. Kennedy of the Senate Ra:k Ra:k-ets ets Ra:k-ets Committee that he sue the congressional investigator for li libel. bel. libel. Hoffa told newsmen he had "every intention" of filing suit against Kenned for his public charges against the union leader on the "Meet the Press" national television program and the "Jack Paar Show" last Wednesday. He said he would also sue the National Broadcasting Company, which carried both programs. Hoffa said the suit would .be filed as soon as the necessary 1 gal documents were prepared. He said his attorneys would de decide cide decide where to lodge the action and other details A spokesman for Hdffa at Teain Teain-ster ster Teain-ster headquarters here said union attorneys were studying a tran transcript script transcript of the "Meet the Press" program to decide which of the charges to cite in their libel ac action. tion. action. He said it would take "a few days" for them to decide on details of the suit. On the program, Kennedy ac accused cused accused Hoffa of collusion with er ployers, of betraying the undon's membership, of putting gangsters and racketeers in important Teamster positions, and of mis misusing using misusing Union funds. He dared V fa to sue him so that a jury eould decide if the charges were true. If the charges were proven, Kennedy said, Hoffa should re resign sign resign as union president because he would not be "worthy" to hold the post. Hoffa told newsmen afterwards he monitored the Kennedy pro program, gram, program, which followed immediate immediately ly immediately after his own appearance on the Columbia Broadcasting Sys System's tem's System's TV panel show "Face the Nation." He said he thought young Kennedy "acted like a small kid again." He made It plain that Kennedy's challenge would not go unanswered. m L. S.'m ill 1 'm WM 1(11 1 sTal Da 01 A H "fl" S FRIDAY, JULY 31st. BARGAINS GALORE WORTH WAITING FOR! TO 'HOID FAIRS' BAGHDAD, Iran (UPI) The Iraqi government announced to today day today an international fair will be held m Baghdad hi the autumn of 1960 or the spring of 1861. J ' ' V (- r Vmmm&wmt'm '' iiiiiiiim 7775s JCaurd. (B urgos, LOOK FOR BIG SURPRISES! Tl. re i ne eyes ot Tasnion are on Dresses, Shoes, Lingerie, etc, at Sarah Fashion! SPECTACULAR SALE 4 Days Only From Thursday July 30th through Monday August 3rd. 1 I II I RCampo Aiegre Building Across El Panama Hilton I IN STEP WITH THE TIMES FUNCTIONAL Window Treatment (Beauty & Practicability) mmm U.,.'" illlfW':..:!;!!,!,!,.,. for the home and office as Gives difused light while permitting air.circulation Choice of colors Can be moved & reinstalled Lsbor Free CALL 2-0725 FOR A FREE ESTIMATE efhc dfurniture & (Home Sfurnlsthing Slort 4th of July Ave. & "H" St. Tel. 2.0725 WHERE YOU DOUBLE YOUR MONEY FREE Read Our Classifieds NAME: TYPE: OPEL (A General Motors product designed and manufactured in Germany) An automobile for all the family (with the performance and ease of handling of a sports model). 67" overall length (almost 4 feet shorter than the popular American makes... and very easy to park). special representative of will be with us from today through Saturday t August 1 SIZE: : SPACIOUSNESS: ENGINE: ECONOMY: NOW: Will seat 4 to 5 passengers comfortably. (The Opel is over 5 feet wide, yet 1 foot narrower than the majority of the American ears. 56 horse power. 4 cylinder valve in head engine handles a complete load without effort. American type 3 speed transmission. ren 10 to 35 miles per gallon Visit us and see for yourself the quality and workmanship of the Opel. Drive it and you will be convinced. sEZZZr U itaRsggRca fl E easssi Consult with her on beauty and skin care . The label Slfnlflei QUalitr IIASMO, S. A. Panama SMOOT & HUNNICUTT, S. A. Colon t ) 1 TUESDATi JUIT W, 19 PAGE FOUR THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NTWSPAPH f' r Social and OtkerwiA Box 134, p. anama . wclcll ana vyineruLje By Staffed MKS. SHANNON, MKS. BULLOCK HONORED AT CLAYTON SURPRISE PAREWELL PARTY Mrs Elmer L. Shannon and .Mrs. Johnnie nuilock were ' truest of honor last week at a surprise farewell party given ': by Mr. William E. Hull and Mrs. Reginald J. Truscott at the Fort Clayton Service Club. Assisting in serving refreshments were Mrs. Donald M. : Zeis and Mrs. Paul N. Hollingsworth. The Shannon family will lene the Isthmus soon for Norfolk, V , where Sfc. Shannon has been assigned. Mrs. Bullock ana her v are planning to travel to New Orleans to vist relatives. They will be joined later by M-Sgt. Bullock. . Attending the party were Mrs. : 1). H. Egan, Mrs. W. B. Freeze, Mrs. G. W. Flym, Mrs. G. U Hall, "Mrs. C. Jadick. Mrs. J. E. Scott, Mrs. C. P. Snee, Mrs. C. F. Wy Wy-rick, rick, Wy-rick, Mrs. W. E. Sullivan, Mrs. K. E. AdeloU, Mrs. A. L Cnam Cnam-.Ters, .Ters, Cnam-.Ters, Mrs. L. P. Cameron, Mrs. T. M. Dorsett, Mrs. R. E. Long, Mrs. J. J. Ryan. Mrs. R. L Wil Wilcox, cox, Wilcox, Mrs. D. H. Cameron, Mrs. Mrs. B. Fox and Mrs. R. H. Kinney Birth Announcement Announcement has been receiv received ed received on the Isthmus of the birth of a daughter to Lt. and Mrs.i Dan Daniel iel Daniel J. Lehane Jr. The baby, their ' first child, was born Saturday at Keesler Air Force Base, Biloi, Miss. Mrs lehane is the former "Sis" Brady. Her sister, Karen "Uo xile' Brady, is now visiting in Biloxi and plans to return to Balboa next week. The baby's maternal grandpa grandparents rents grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. rrcu .i. Brady of Balboa. The parrnal grandparents are Mr. ana Mi'J. Daniel J. Lehane Sr. of Indiana Indianapolis, polis, Indianapolis, Ind. Newcomers Club Members Meet At Breakers Club The Surf Room of the Breakers Club in Coco Solo was attractive attractively ly attractively decorated for the monthly meeting of the Atlantic Side .New .Newcomers comers .Newcomers Club. Co-hostesses wtre Mrs. Earle Van Buskirk and Mrs. David Eglinton. Mrs Roy Lindquist presided at the business session, during which gifts were presented to Mrs. Kicii Kicii-ard ard Kicii-ard McClean and Mrs. Carroll Chaphe, whose club membership was terminated at the meeting. The door prize was won by Mri. Douglss Youngblood. New guests who were introduc introduced ed introduced were Miss Jackie Metrejeun, Miss Janet Rovira, Mrs. Eleanor Kelly and Mrs. Lois Douglas. Mrs. Oren Irion and Mrs,. Howarth Rowe were welcomed as new members. Mrs. D J. Boniface and Mrs. D. R. Kloe of the program commr'i'e discussed possible tours for club members, and plans were an announced nounced announced to visit the coffee plant, ice iream plant and milj bottling works tomorrow morning. Other attending the meeting were Mrs. George Hennlng, Mrs Robert Garvin, Mrs. Joan D. Winne, Mrs. Jinx Lant, Mrs. Stel Stella la Stella Angeles, Mrs. Ruth Worgens, Mrs. Robert Wilcox, Mrs. James Thornton, Mrs Richard E. Pink Pink-ham, ham, Pink-ham, Mrs Sylvia Hedges, Mrs. T. W Gove. Mrs. Ronald E. Moo-v Mrs. Marvin Nolte, Mrs. Wil William liam William Pollard, Mrs. F. 0. Lesovsky Mr! J. R. Roane, Mrs. W E. Heck, Mrs. Jo Anne Wentworii, Mrs J. J. Bonanno, Mrs. James Frazier. Mrs. W. H. Vsntine. Afi. Clsvton L. Merrill and Mrs. W. R. Whitsell. , IFO ON PACE FIVE) Protection From The IRRITATION OF DIAPER RASH Mexana is the absorbent and refreshing powder whose effectiveness lasts ion?er because it tenderlv clings to bfby's r""-' soft skin. Does not rontain Ta'-" i. rJJ'rvwrT' -W ""7 -A r T ft S ?- MF?YA MA CtVc MEDICATED POWDER Mrs. Nixon Finds Russian Women Friendly At Market Como Visits Sck Mother PITTSBURGH (UPI) Sinser Perry Como visited his ailing mother todav in Mercey Hosoi Hosoi-tal tal Hosoi-tal here and reported later that "she was beginnin? to respond a little to treatment." The crooner said his mother. Lucia, 77, has been a diabetic for years Friday she underwent surgery for removal of diseased t!np. Como flew to New York after the "isi H" maris to re"rn to Pittsburoh about the middle of the week. By ALINE MOSBY jdOSCOW (UPI) Russian women discovered Mrs. ? Nixon today and formed about her, some smiling, some teanm with emotion, when she went shop shopping ping shopping is Moscow. The vice president's wife met Mrs. Moscow Housewife during a 90-minute visit to an open air food market and to Gum, the big de department partment department store. At the market, she walked through the crowd of shoppers al almost most almost unnoticed, until the manager, a motherly looking brunette named Larissa Valod'na, heard the wife of the United States vice president was looking at the radishes. Mrs. Valodina shook Mrs. Nix Nixon's on's Nixon's hand and presented her with five red and pink galdiolo. Within seconds a crowd of about forty Russian women formed. Some excitedly chatted in Rus Russian, sian, Russian, "I saw ber on television at the exhibition opening." When oth other er other women realized she was Gospozha (Mrs.) Nixon, they left the onions and lettuce and crowded around her. One aged woman wearing a red kerchief over her gifey hair, pres pressed sed pressed two roses into Mrs. Nixon's hand. A few moments later she rushed back with three more, her eyes filled with tears. "Greetings to our guest," she ex exclaimed claimed exclaimed in Russian. "They are reallv good people." Mrs. Nixon said to renorters ac accompanying companying accompanying her. "So friendly and kind." "Think of all the anti-American things they read, but they still are friendly," she added. Mrs. Nixon also was given a big sponge and two DaDer bscs to nut her purchases in. by the 3milin women operating the market stalk A Gun 'he shnnners in their cotlon summer dresses hurried about the:r errands itist as Amerf can women do. At first thev stared cnriouslv a Mrs. N'xon'i naw blue print dress, white organdy hat. and black nointed-toe shoes shoes-is is shoes-is they stare at most foreign worn en. When the news spread that this wss Mrs. Nixon, they gathered tr watch her shop in the souvenir and toy department at Americans would cluster around BngiUe Btrdot. She said she wanted to buy some cloisonne cups like a pair thit were given to her by deputy Pre Premier mier Premier Frol Kozlov when he visited the United States. But when she discovered they cost the equival equivalent ent equivalent of $20 each, she instead bough1. bought five small wood boxe painted gold, red and black, at Ti cents each. She also bought two dolls, at 20 rubles each, dressed in the style of Russian school children. Those she'll give to her daughters Julie, 11, and Patricia, 13, for their doll collection. Attention YOUR FAMILY'S HEALTH COMES FIRST! 7 Snake Preacher Dies From Bile Of 6-1!. Rattler BIRMINGHAM UPI) Funer Funer-al al Funer-al services were scheduled today for the Rev. David P. Henson, a 74-year-old snake-handling preach preacher er preacher who died Saturday after he was bitten by a six-foot rattler. Henson, who had handled snakes as a Free Holiness preacher for over 30 years, "must not have been right at the time," neigh neighbor bor neighbor Charlie Bryant said. Henson's widow said he had been bitten many times, but was. sick only once when a copper copperhead head copperhead bit hNim. Bryant, a 22 year veteran of snake handling, said he himself had been bitten as many as seve" times in one night but never suf suffered fered suffered any ill-effects. "He must of known it was going 'o happen,' Mrs. Henson said. "He bought a cemetery lot just Wednes day." The rattler bit Henson on the 'land as he put it away after show showing ing showing it to his grandson. His hand beean swe'lin? 15 minutes later and his family called an am ambulance bulance ambulance after he became incoherent. mm A !1 ul Pi FROM THE FIRST YEAR of life through School age. all children need the vitamins minerals, and pro protection tection protection of h eood milk. J DEVELOP STRONG BONES, healthy teeth and enjoy good health, everv child should drink one quart of milk daily tAdults Mr auarti DEAL EVAPORATED MILK, a guaranteed NESTLE product conserves Intact those precious elements Of health It Is elaborated with the best cow's milk. BECAUSE OF ITS ECONOMY. IDEAL EVAPORATED MILK solves the problems of milk in vour home GIVE YOUR FAMILY the high quality and valuable nutrition of IDEAL EVAPORATED MILK which is available at any erocerv store or pharmacy In J and 14 r cans. YOU WILL BE SATISFIEDwlth the quality of this product Memorial Services will be held for RICHARD E. BRUHN 4:30 p.m. Thursday July 30 u A&CON MASONIC TEMPLE All friends are invited It is requested that no flowers be sent DESTILADORA NACI0NAL, S. A. (Our plant will be closed Thursday) Br OSWALD JACOBY Written er NIA Itrvite W1T AKIOT 8 AAI3 XOBTH AAll! f 4 KQJ BAIT AQJO J107 Q 10 1 4 SOUTH D) AM VAQII A9I4I 4X6 No one vulnerable Seoth Wert North East ! IV Pass Pass Jv 3 Pass 3 NT. Pass Pate Put Opening lead V J When West bid two hearts he never dreamt that his opponents would suddenly reach a no no-trump trump no-trump game. All he knew at the time was that hfs hand was just too good to sell out to two diamonds. West opened the jack of oearts and after winning with the queen, South ran off five dia diamond mond diamond tricks. West discarded two hearts, one club and one saprle while dummy discarded the three of clubs and East let the fuur of clubs and six of spades go. South next play was the nine of spades at which point West came up with the winning de defensive fensive defensive play.- He went up with the king of spades. It wss well that he did. If he had simply played the ten-spot he would have been thrown in with that spade king. He could get out with the king of hearts only to be thrown right" baciv in in that same heart suit. Even Eventually tually Eventually he would have to play a club and South would make his ninth trick with the king. When West played the king of spades the while hand collapsed. South could do anything he wished except make his cont.-ad and West had justified his two heart bid. Q The bidding has been: East South Wert North 3 Double Pass JN.T. Pass ? You, South, hold: At VAQI7 A J 15 AKtli, What do you do? A Pass. You don't like H Mt you have no better plaee to fo. TODAY'S QUESTION' Instead of responding to your double with three no-trump North has bid tour hearts. What dp you do nowT Answer Tomorrow 1 THE VOICE OF BROADWAY by Dorothy Killgallen Nestle's Evaporated Milk TRADE A GT1ARANTFED NESTLE PRODUCT IDEA! HEALTHFUL, PURE AND SAFE MARK BALBOA Theater Big Stage Show! SUNDAY, AUG. 2 Show Time: 3:55 7:35 I , (mm VjlEVllE I rv '! Admission: .50, J. 00 j Featuring JACK BROOKS Comedian and Pantomime Artist MARILYN GUMIN Singing Star GROVER RUWE Ventriloquist and THE JOE GUMIN QUINTET ALSO On The Screen 4 JOHN WAYNE Maureen O'HARA - in "THE QUIET MAN" Show Time: 1:30 5:10 8:50 p.m. Psycholog&t Accused In Rape Of Young Brunette LEWES, England (UPI)-An at attractive tractive attractive young brunette told a court here this weekend she was raped by a London psychologist who, after a three hour acquaint acquaintance, ance, acquaintance, convinced her she was seri seriously ously seriously ill and needed immediate treatment. "He told me he was a specialist of a type of which there was only one in London and one in Birming Birmingham," ham," Birmingham," said 21 year-old Miss Anne Monika Pvdoll, a German na national tional national working as "mother's help" in Britain. The defendant in the case was Taj Bahadur Kankan a psycolo psycolo-gy gy psycolo-gy teacher in a London elementary school. He denied having inter intercourse course intercourse with Miss Podoll but con conceded ceded conceded to the court that he had found her "very affectionate." The girl said Kankan first spoke to her on London's Birdcage Walk where she had come to watch the changing of the guard at Bucking Buckingham ham Buckingham Palace. Tamala Churchill's- PU predicting a jnamaga to aa : merican tor tha BUrMiioni charmer whose magnetism nai bewitched tome oi tha most fa famous, mous, famous, talented and wealthy men 0i this ere. .The Sardj Set hears the script ot "The Gang All Here" ia the most polished political satire -the theatra's seen since "i'd Rather Be Right", Alfred Hitchcock it capable of colorful verbiage, but it's hard to believe he uttered the quotee at attributed tributed attributed to him on the occasion of Queen Eliiabeth'i recent visit to Chicago. It was said in ; the Windy City press that h wert wert-ed ed wert-ed to Her Majesty a pretty dull girl," and characterijed her as "a typical suburban., housewife with no interest, in .the arta or anything else cultural. The rocky romance of Jeenne Dru and Lew Ayres is in trouble again. .The former wife of one of New York's most prominent newspapermen, who's now mar married ried married to the other woman in their triangle, is consulting lawyers with a view to catapulting the respected editor into some per personal sonal personal headlines. She'll file papers asking to have his Las Vegas divorce set aside on the grounds that it was fraudulently obtained It's safe to predic) a fast movie buildup for 17-year-old ac actress tress actress Carol Lyney. She's being linked with a series of eligible bachelors ranging from Brandon de Wilde to Gary Crosby. .An .Anna na .Anna Maria Alberghettl isn't the only one with a brand new nose. Marie Winsor is- sporting an im improved proved improved schnozz, too. .Miles Da Davis vis Davis (one of the elite of jazzdom) and the Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco (one of the best hoi hoi-telries telries hoi-telries in the land) came to a rather spirited .parting. Eydie Gormer and Steve Law Lawrence rence Lawrence will be reunited on televi television sion television for the first time in more than a year when they star on "The Golden Circle" next Thanks Thanksgiving giving Thanksgiving eve. The Sacad Cow, a restaurant on W. 72d St., ob obviously viously obviously is intimidated by the beatnik trend. A sign in its en entrance trance entrance reads, "Male Patrons Re quested to Wear Neckties. Also Shoes." Of course they'll deny it, but the Kremlin is "screening" Rus Russians sians Russians who wants to attend the U.S. fair opening in Moscow. All those permitted to view our ex exhibition hibition exhibition will be brainwashed 'n advance so they won't believe what they see just as the Rus sians who visited the Yankee pa pavilion vilion pavilion at the Brussels World Fair were indoctrinated so success fully they refused to believe our voting booths were used to elect the President of the United States. They "knew" and could name- the 250 capitalists who chose our chief executive, and were con vinced the voting machines were used only to determine our favo favorite rite favorite movie stars and recording artists. I only 19, but he's casting her la roles that could lead to fan stardom. .Singer Ginny Simms and actor Phii Terry (one Joan Crawford husband) are a marital possibility. Spencer Tracy hasn't tripped much light fantastic in films. but be and Katharine Hepburn are beintuled as a dance team for Laurence Olivier'i favo rite charity, the "Night of 100 Stars," In London. They ought to be quite a draw, even if the other 98 stars don't show up. .Pia .Pianist nist .Pianist Billy Taylor, who just signed with Riverside Records, will try some new sounds on his first album for the firm four fluttei and percussion arranged for jazi classics and standards. The Congressional group con ducting survey of expenses in involved volved involved in maintaining overseas air bases is about to come up with headline-makings revolt tkns. .Bill Holden's court hassle with Paramount, due to coma bofore the judge in late Septem ber, could be rugged. .Flicker fans with acute memories will recognize Tony Interrante, cap tain of waiters at the Envoy. As Tony Romano, he was an ac actor tor actor in "K'ss of Death.." Jack Walker has glided from Faye Emerson to Beckie Batche Batche-lor.'a lor.'a Batche-lor.'a beauty contest winner on the staff at the Spindletop. She's a blonde from Winston Salem. N.C Steve Cochran is court courting ing courting a golden-haired a m a z o n named Carroll Jo Towers at the "Gypsy" company. .Rh n d a Jleraing's affections appear to have settled on wealthy Walter Trautman. .Bob Christenber Christenber-ry's ry's Christenber-ry's daughter Sally is being wooed by Tom Brannum, who appears in the movie "John Paul Jones." PHYSICIAN GIVES ADVICE EDINBURGH, Scotland (UPD- A London physician has told the British Medical Association that children might be better preoared for married life if they saw their parents fight occasionally. Dr. D. Stafford Clark of Guy's Hospital told the BMA convention. !'They would become immunized against it and know it was a normal kind of thing happening in marriage". Las Vegas gambling cas i n o s have a problem the owners would rather not discuss; several chaps have been, caught passing counterfeit chips and chips are as good as money anywhere In the gambling city. .Vivian Blaine is a grandma bv marriage Bridgroom Milton Rack m 1 l's daughter, Mrs. Martin Salkin, has just become the proud mana of a baby girl. .The besuty with cartoonist Charles Addams at Dick Ridgely'a in Southampton was model Mellsande Cogdon. Film producer Stanley Kramer has a new professional enthu enthusiasm siasm enthusiasm Donna Anderson. She's Italian Hairdresser Says Sophia Loren Is a Bigamist GENOA, Italy (UPI) An Italian hairdresser who was sen sentenced tenced sentenced to eight months in jail for bigamy today demanded that authorities also bring charges against actress Sophia Loren be because cause because of her controversial mar mar-riaee riaee mar-riaee with producer Carlo PontL Giuseppe Salamlda, 52, main maintaining taining maintaining he- was innocent of biga bigamy my bigamy charges said he went through a fictitious marriage with a Dutch woman in Indonesia during, the war to avoid imprisonment as an enemy alien. He later married heV daughter. Miss Loren, who returned t Italy last week for the first time in nearly three years, began a vacation at the Mediterranean seaside village of Castlglione Del Del-la la Del-la Pescaia. She refused to talk to newsmen. The bosomy film star orevious orevious-ly ly orevious-ly had avoided Italy following a legal controversy over her Mexi Mexican can Mexican marriage to Ponti. Before the marriage, Ponti ob obtained tained obtained a Mexican divorce from his first wife, also an Italian. Italy does not recognize divorce. DIES ON PLANE LONDON (UPI) A 87-year-old American woman, Sarah Prohow, died aboard an El-Al Israeli air airliner liner airliner 40 minutes out from London Friday on a flight to New York. Because next of kin the United States have not yet been Informed airline officials withheld her stateside address. SATINA CARRIES YOU SMOOTHLY THRU THE IRONING HOURI SofinQ... th BIO Inning 14 In he lffe box. V. arB!vo ipofrechodl In jj few jmr-'nf ir u war Optimistic... and happy Sff leave: PANAMA 7:30 a. m. Arrive: SAN JOSE 8:15 a. m. Arrive: SAN SALVADOR 10:35 a. m. Arrive: MEXICO 2:40 p. m. LUXURY SERVICE AT TOURIST FARES Pressure controlled, air conditioned cabin Only 2 seats abreast for your comfort e Panoramic windows e Delicious hot meals served in-flight SUPER CONVAIR 340 Consult your Travel Agent er coll our offices 3-7011 e Bl Ungual stewardesses give you personal I zed servi ce LINE AS AEREAS COSTARRI CENSES. S.A. AVE J. AROSEMENA No. 3140 w it nsrrxT n (Across from Olympic Swimming Pool) TUESDAY. JULY tt, 1951 THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPEB PA6I FfVI & yocia i and OlL crwi&e CntIuJ Dance jamboree HeW At Cristeoal YMCA 'Atlantic Side students of Harnett and Dunn participated in t danre jamboree Thursday eveninf, at the Cristobal YMCA .' . Winners ip the senior group jit jitterbug terbug jitterbug contest were Susan Wilted.- Wendell Taylor, Charlene Alexander and Kenny Karpiniki. Consolation prises went to Gayle Bruce and Luther Quinn. ' Junior eontest winners wera Laura Russon and David Cotfey. David also guessed the magic wprd, jamboree. .Mrs. Caleb Clement of Gatuo and her son Orrin were Judged best in. the mother-son walti- eontest, ajd C. DeLapp and Mrilyn Koto wotc the priie ln the father father-djughter djughter father-djughter fox trot contest. Winners i the limbo dance were Joyce Sieley and Ward Pari. ; ; Junior hostesses asfisting Mrs. Dunn were Teresa Aleman, Broo Broo-dita dita Broo-dita Barnhouse and Janis Brogie. Mrs. William Stanford, MriTW. r. Russon and, Mrs.. D. E. Bruce were the senior hostesses, ami Jimmy Duns waa master of cre cre-monies. monies. cre-monies. ? -s : ; v Plans were announced to begin dance classes for tfle inierrae inierrae-diate diate inierrae-diate group next Monday lfter lfter-noon noon lfter-noon at two a Coco 8oo. Voice Recerellnot At JWB Tenlaht VolunUer assistants will be on hand at the Balboa WB Service Center from si to eight this eve evening ning evening to interview servicemen wiio wish to hve their voices re recorded corded recorded on discs to send horn?. There is no harjgfor the service. JWB Bridge lessiorf Duplicate bridge-will be played thU evening gt"J:W.i,at the Bal Balboa boa Balboa USO-JWB Service Center. Servicemen an their wives and otber serious bridge players are invited to participate. PC Natural History Society To Hear Talk On Bat Rabies Common Quotes Anwr to Previous Puiile The Panama Canal Natural His History tory History Society will meet at the USO-JWB Armed" Forces Service Center in Balboa tomorrow at 8 p.m. to hear a lecture by an ex expert pert expert on rabies. The speaker of the evening, Dr. Thomas G. Murnane, Doctor of veterinary medicine, will peak on "Rabies in Bats. He has been recommended by Dr. R. K. Zim Zimmerman merman Zimmerman as an authority on tne subject. The lecture will treat ot Meetings Santa Croi Council The Santa Cruz Civic Council will hold a town meeting Wednes Wednes-day day Wednes-day evening at 7:30 at the feanta Cruz Service Center. A report from the recent exeiu exeiu-tive tive exeiu-tive conference will be heard, and other items of business will be discussed.' All residents of the community are urged to attend and partici participate pate participate Unity Temple 75 The Ways and Means committee of Unity Temple 759, Order of Elks, will meet Wednesday at the home of I. Price in Pajkiso, House 123-B. All member dre urged to attend. Paraiso Club The Paraiso Mutual Aid Club has called a meeting for Thursday at 6 p.m. atJJie regular meet meeting ing meeting place. MemBeri 'of the activi activities ties activities committee will announce club plans. Nixon, Khrushchev Spouses Want Peace For Children's Sake " LENINGRAD (UPI) Mrs. Pa Nixon said today that no matter how much their husband argue in public, she and Mrs. Nma Khrus.1 Khrus.1-chev chev Khrus.1-chev agreed they should "preserve the peace" of the world. In the midst of her whirlwind tour of Leningrad. Mrs. Nixon paused to tell journalists what it ws like to sit in on world-moulding political discussions between the vice resident and top Soviet lexHes. - ch listened to Nixon and Khrushchev talk politics for some six hours Sunday at Khrushchev's country dacha. Mrs. Nixon wife did not go into the content of the discussions among the men Instead he told from a woman's personal view viewpoint point viewpoint of how the ladies sat n ciianps women do th world over after lunch while their men-folk talked over affairs of the world. "After the dluMiKiion ended, we women agreed we hsd n preserve the neace for our cmioren wnom we loved so much," Mrs. Nixon said. the general trend of occurrence of bat rabies in Central and South America, Murnane. a graduate of Texas Agricultural and Mechanical Col College, lege, College, is now serving as veterina veterina-n n veterina-n lohnrotnrv advisor in the Pa nama Ministry of Agriculture. Prior to this assignment ne was aotivAlv ntacid In the studv Of rabies as found in insectivorous bats in certain sections of the United States. The meeting is open to the public. Long In Hoi Springs To Regain Strength For Coming Race HOT SPRINGS, Ark. (UPI) -Health - troubled Louisiana Gov. Earl K. Long soaked in Hot Springs' mineral water today in an effort to gain strength for his approaching re-election campaign. The governor, suffering from heart ailments and mental prob problems lems problems that have forced him in and out of three psychiatric wards in fhe cast two- month', said he plans to 'fire a ml opening gun" of his camnaign Saturday night in A'ex A'ex-andria, andria, A'ex-andria, La., after a day long stump tour of several parishes. , He also mad plans to open the campaign earlier with visits- and political conferences tomorrow at Monroe. Thursday at Alexandria, and either Lafayette or Lake Curies on Friday. The vacationing governor re refused fused refused to answer his ho'el telephone to. commen1 on a demand Jor hi resignation. The Louisiana Assn of Young Men's Business Clubs called for his resignation because Long has "brought unfavorable publicity to the state." The grouo adopted a resolution in an "emergency session" in Ba Baton ton Baton Rouge which said the people of Louisiana "are tired of being tre butt of Public ridicule." The group criticized Long's conduct during his western vacation. Long made his entry into Arkan Arkansas sas Arkansas through Little Rock, where he attemnted to meet Gov. Orval Faubus. But an aide got a "no "nobody body "nobody home" when he knocked at the executive mansion door while Long waited in his black Cadillac. QUESTION OP DEFINITION MARTINEZ, Calif. (UPI) .c was purely a "Juestion of defini definition tion definition when a former sheriffs aid denied that a stag show he allegedly promoted was lewd. "I particularly resent the impli implication cation implication that there was a nude show," said Raymond D. Van Tassel. 55. 'He absolutely right, replied nist Atty. John A. Jed Jed-edly. edly. Jed-edly. "They both had their shoes on." ACROSS I "Don't give up the . I "Love is to hate" 9 Crop 12 de camp 1J "Hold that 14 Guido't note 15 Dreamers 17 German article 18 Rent II Sodden with drink SI "The rsfged 21 Perched J4 Pixie ST CuV "In that 32 Baits 14 in-chief St Steep slope 17 Restrains t to the , rear" 39 Norwegian legend 41" r-the table- :t 42 Folding bed 44 Remove 46 Boxed '" 49 Relaxes 53 Rowing implement (4 Hypersensitiv Hypersensitivity ity Hypersensitivity doctor 58 Connective 57 Bearing 58 Otherwise 69 Legal matters 0," the expense account" 61 Fish eggs DOWN 1 the seven seas"-a-i and seek" a Notion 4 porridge hot' I Baba a "Stolen 7 Preposition Birds' homes Muses 10 and alack' 11 1 hgraw pi IdloMlx; e M ft: P QMgis. lAiglEl I 1 io 2 je Ml iTI slfeffl -42 a E gluW y & a Tig ft R A 3 Jjg I ID E A ARBO EEll 25- ve forget" 26 Picture playing cards 28" ShUly-rshaHy and iron 30 Painful 16 Account book SI Formerly JO Unspoken S3 Flavor -22 Pants 85 Distributer 24 French 40 Muddled .summers 43 March .45 "An beaver" 48 Fly 47 of glass" 48 Lamb's "Essays of t, 50 Storage pit 51 Essential being 52 Saintes (ab.) 55 Abstract being I I' P fl P' fc f lit f it b r U it 1 1 1 Z1 t Tl 121 13 rn Td ww rt wrtf 5T fr js mtt m UJ-c-C"'p "r ?7"-fl 1 SMILING SEND-OFF Navy SKI Robert L. Schmidt (right) col collects lects collects a handshake and a commendation from his commanding of officer, ficer, officer, Cdr. Charles F. Concannon, for "outstanding service" as se senior nior senior storekeeper at the Navy's Communication Station for the last two years. He left this week with his family for duty at the San Die Diego go Diego .Naval Station. French DesignersDrop Hems, Necklines In Fall Fashions SERVICE CENTER THEATERS TODAY BALBOA 6:15 7:50 AIR-CONDITIONED I nr hits fjr I with 4t ill 1 9lAHtM9 fii V Iruuyi V V I l-M I I I I IWITftaSTISTS ' '. S' Wed. "The Rerenge of Frankenstein" ; COCO SOLO 1:00 Alr-Conditloned Marl Blanchard t John Ireland "NO PLACE TO LAND" Wed. "The Fearroakers" DIABLO HTS. 7:0ft Gregory Peer Win Min Than ' "THE PURPLE PLAIN" Wed, "Nowhere, To Go" Margarita 7:0( "The Girl Can't Hejjjt" Wednesday! 'A Ufa of Stake" GAMBOA t:0C I WANT TO LIVE Wednesday! "Johnny Roeeo" hATUN 7:001 "A LIFE AT STAE" Thursday! Apache Woman' IPARAISO "FEMALE 7:001 JUNGLE" anta Crai 7:001 "ITVE GUNI WE8T'.'. 'v Camp Blerd 7:00 ltt itafe1ii Wet" "Women From HeadquMtm" MATINEES TOMORROW BALBOA ttOOl "SPOILERS OF THE PLAINS" and Serial COCO SOLO I :I0( "DESERT LEGION" Margarita S:lOl THE HAPPY TEARS" PARIS (UPI) French high high-fashion fashion high-fashion dictators created a sensa sensation tion sensation yesterday with a preview, of fall fashions including "Lolita"' and "Nymphet" dresses and eve evening ning evening gowns with deep plunging necklines. The Paris designers who try to get the fashion pace for the rest of the world, decided that the short, ballerina length evening gowns were out of date and brought back floor-length models. They made up for covering the legs by baring the bosom or as much of it as they dared. Designers said that skirts of daytime dresses would be longer this fall. Some of them lowered hems 2 inches, to 17 inches from the floor, but this is still shorter than the hemlines that have been in style in the United States this year. ; v. .. ', Broad, padded shoulders also were brought back. -Leading the trend toward youth youthful ful youthful styles was dressmaker Pierre Cardin, who launched his collec collection tion collection with "Suite 18" perfume. Michael Goma, 27-year-old dress dressmaker, maker, dressmaker, hit the high-fashion scene with "Lolita" and "Nymphet," names he borrowed from .the best-selling novel titled "LoUta.r "Lolita" turned out to be a dis discreet creet discreet lilac daytime dress with a belt below the waist in back and a skirt gathered in front under a bow to emphasize the hips. "Nymphet," the companion dres was equally demure and girlish. Jean Patou showed a full line of floor-length dinner and evening dresses. Some of them had such tight skirts the models were forced to hobble. The most dramatic and reveal ing dress was made of shimmer shimmering ing shimmering black jet with a neckline that dated back to the days of the 1 A T". 1. 1 iasi nencn Kings.. Gowns that were not cut low in front, plunged in the back. Even an otherwise dignified-looking em embroidered broidered embroidered satin cocktail suit was slit several inches down the back. Here are the highlights of the various collections: Pierre Cardin: This collection featured skirts that flared below the hip and the same broad shoulders that have cropped up at earlier showings. The hemlines Father Killed Savina Life Of 7.-YtvOld Son NORTH TAWTON. England (UPI) Two-year-old Richard VI VI-dean dean VI-dean wandered along the railroad tracks directly in the path of an oncoming trolley Sunday while hli father Denis. 33, looked on In horror. V i d e a n, the stationtnaster, dashed to the tracks to rescue his son as the driver of the trolley desperately applied on the brakes. The statlonmaster reached hi 6 son with seconds to spare, picked him up and threw him aside. Richard suffered a b a d 1 r bruised face but will survive. The father, however, wai struck by the trolley and died before he could be taken to the hospital Pri've-inI TODAY iOe, foe. 7:09 tOO ALAN LADD Diane FOSTER In "THE DEEP SIX" ''In TECHNICOLOR Ternprrow I I JEAN PIERRE AUMONT Susan PETERS in POPULAR NIGHTI 11.10 per CAR! reached mid-calf. Brown was the predominant color. Watou: Furs were featured here. A black satin jacket was trimmed with ermine and was worn over a black satin, bare backed sheath. The front of the bodice of the sheath also was white ermine. Jewels also were featured as cups and fasteners. All firai: An entire! v nw rrnn of tall mannequins was hired to display the Gres fashions. They ere sn lnne-Iecseri. their ltir were 17 Inches from the floor, 2 inches longer than Gres' styles last season. Gres emphasized vo voluminous luminous voluminous box-like sleeves and her models wore pale makeup. Amazing New Cigarette) Paper Discovery v NEV?-iYORK, U.S.A.-The R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, larg largest est largest manufacturer of cigarettes in the United States pf America, scooped the industry again when it announced today in full-page news newspaper paper newspaper advertisements, an impor tant break-through in Its research laboratories which brings smokers an -entirely new kind of cigarette paper. Reynolds' Research Laboratories claim that "this new HIGH POR POROSITY OSITY POROSITY paper 'air-softens' every puff of smoke as invisible porous openings blend just the right a a-mount mount a-mount of air with each puff to give smokers a softer, fresher, and even more Havorable smoKe. The announcement of this revolu tionary development took the ciga rette industry by suf prise as Rev nolds applied this new cigarette naDer to its SALEM 'mentholated filtertlp cigarette which is already the fastest growing cigarette in America today. It is, rumored that American Tobacco Company, Brown and Williamson and Philip Morris may introduce new menthol brand? during the year. Sooo Soothing V; vfw ?'''' f , v5r''"v' '4 $fy Xjf K? h hffK,l'' '"-"'& It I ',, ' ft??''' '' 4i w '.'J "''" vii t $ 4i '', i s A' ' a"', J : X EYE-6ENEy l Ui ay Uo that Motlm... w I 'tlMB w ntrnkat ane 1 1 bMnttnas tti ctm. A for- I y Jh i mula ot tw I ffljrJ .Soothea 1 x ' Vi Cleans 1 'rt mmmmmm ; 53 Beautifies Cleans mmmmmm Beautifies HOTEL PANAMONTE B o q u e t e Announces it will close, gtarting August 1, for the rainy season. The reopening date will be announced later. 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BROWNIE STAR CAMERAS re nphpt camera make eoear ; tool Just Imagine These remarkable cameras make all three kinds of pictures black-and-white snaps, Kodacolor snaps, and colour slides with new Kodak Ektachrome 127 Film. Easy, too 'turn a lever to the type of film you're using (colour or black-and-white) . then just aim and shoot. Lowest prices ever! HOM j j g Kodacolor Film eaaof 6f Mn aae eaf Now it is easier to get brilliant colour prints by using the dual-purpose Koda Kodacolor color Kodacolor Film. The ssme roll can be used indoors with clear flsshbulbs or out doors with daylight. Gives you colour negatives from which you can obtain beautiful enlargements. Kexlacolor Film comes in all popular sins, to fit even the simplest camera. See us for alt your Kodak Film need . . stop in again for fast, expert faith ing when your picture are taken. And tot lest of all: See your Kodak Dealer tomorrow. NOW!... YOUR KODACHROME FILM PROCESSED IN PANAMA! KODAK PANAMA, LTD. I "Assignment In Britain" j mm 'tmd 6ssn wml Assignment In Britain"! Always ask tor ETE-GENE PANAMA COLON at roar favorite drugstore i PAG I SIX TBS PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT -DAILY NKW&PAFfB ; TUESDAY JULY J68, 19J T f New Continental League Fife To w Braves Have New 'Cousins ; Anticipates Cooperation Swimmers, Parents, Frie Indians Now In 1st Place Tie Of Have Fun at pared Go Mlone If U JE3 BdlboaSwini Poo! Organized Baseball J i ::;:l.lll. tfV. tliMlW $ iiSSW SLUGGING IT OUT Two young warriors from the Teenage Club Jit Fort Gulick exchange punches during the recent bouts presented by the Ft. Gulick NCO Club, (left to right) Capt. Marvel (Ted Hol Holmes) mes) Holmes) and Superman (Jose Ortiz) both get in a blow to the head in this picture. (Photo by Peter Koconis) 2 cols Sports Martes Boxing at Ft. Gulick NCO Club Proves to be Whopping Success By Sgt. FELIPE L. OTERO The NCO Club at Fort UUUek has come up with the spectacu spectacular lar spectacular of the year, hwere or any anywhere. where. anywhere. They have appropriately billed the event as a "Boxing Smoker" which was presented last Wednesday night and after its terrific success, will continue as a regular feature scheduled twice monthly. Boxing talent from the Kepnh lie of Panama, military installa installations tions installations and the Canal Zone will be presented. Anyone wishing to par participate ticipate participate may send in his u;i'tm weight, class, etc., to SP-6 John J. Humble, Hq and Hq Compa ny, Fort Gulick, C.Z. Wednesday night: Kid Lightning (Gilbert Edler) age 8, 45 lbs met Zorro (Alex Guerrero) 8, 48 lbs. in a two round draw, to begin with the preliminaries followed by Capt. Marvel (Ted Holmes) age 13, 101 lbs vs. Superman (Jose Ortiz) 13, 110 lbs. also to a two round draw. From Colon, little Ruben Dario, 9, 85 lbs. met Hum Hum-berto berto Hum-berto Flores 9, 87 lbs. also a draw. Under the spotlight for the ama amateur teur amateur fights the fighting talent of up-and coming Enrique Brown from Colon was displayed as he i dropped Robert Trottman, from Colon, with a powerful right hand clip to the jaw in 1:15 of the first t round. This was Brown's second ' amateur bout and both were won by knockouts in the first round. ,! Pedro MuYillo, another amateur : star from Colon, with a well co co-i i co-i ordinated and effective boxing I technique put away Alberto San ta Maria In 2:45 of the second round to win by a TKO. Murillo, BALBOA Theater Dig stage Show! I J SUNDAY, AUG. 2 I j Show Time: 3:55 7:35 1 I I )': ODflTI IRIin l! m : I 1KB! 8' I I IWS VSMVIII I I 1 1 w i f ii feTsJ i f XnpCm WAYNE ) J "THE QUIET MAN" , I Show Time: '- Admission: .50 1.00 i:8o cio :o pm. ' 1 'I' 1 i I r 19 years-old, in the 126-lb class has had 3 wins, two by knockout. Last but not least in the ama teur class were' Alfredo McKay? vs Paolino Diaz in the 135 lb. class with Diaz taking a split decision. All the amateurs were from the Republic of Panama and by the performance on Wednesday they are on the road to Honor and Glory in the Boxing World. The main event featured pro fessional fighters from Colon. In the 112-lb class, Carlos Cruz tang tangled led tangled with Esteban Quiroz. Cruz who is 17 years old has had 23 fights with 21 wins, 16 by knockouts, and Quiroz, 18 years old, has had 11 fights with 9 wins, 6 by knock out, this bout being his fire; pro fight. The young men showed plenty of ring savvy, style .and stamina as they punched their way to a four round decision in favor of Quiroz. The events terminated with a great and enthusiastic ovation from the crowd which numbered, approximately, 200. Lt. Col Phi Philip lip Philip M. Judson, assistant com commandant mandant commandant of the USArCarib School and deputy post commander, Fort Gulick, were honorary guests, o o-pening pening o-pening the officially. This function may yet prove an a'sset in inter-American relations and judging by the comments and criticism of those present, it will undoubtedly, become an Isthmian Isthmian-wide wide Isthmian-wide activity. We hope that on future Wednes Wednesdays days Wednesdays the people on the Isthmus will accompany us on a night of clean-cut entertainment, and a a-bove bove a-bove all, to help boost the morale of these young athletes; for there is nothing more thrilling in the me of a young man than to' see his home crowd cheering him on r fM'"""' JACK BROOKS Comedian and Pantomime Artist MARILYN GUMIN flinging Star GROVER RUWE Yentiiloqulst JOE GUMIN QUINTET ALSO On The Screen By JOHN GRIFFIN NEW YORK, July 28 (UPI) The Cincinnati Reds are refusing to play dead for the Milwaukee Braves any more, but the Braves have found a brand new buacb of "cousins" the Pittsburgh Pirates. Remember how the Braves marched to the National League pennant in 1957 by rolling up an amazing 18-4 mark against the Reds in their season series? And repeated last year by beating the Reds 17 times against only five losses? Now tbty'rt doing the imi thing to the Pirates. A 51 Mil Mil-waukM waukM Mil-waukM triumph yesterday that boosted the Braves back into second place was their 10th in 13 game with Pittsburgh this year, the last five wins in a row. This win on Joey Jay's five hit pitching climaxed a four ga.ne series sweep that really saved the Braves' bacon. The champs stumbled into this series with eight losses in their last 10 games but a visit from the new "cousins" got them healthy agnin quick. Now they're only a gaine-and-a-half behind the league-lead ing San Francisco Giants. Ronnie Kline of the Pirates had the Braves blanked, 2-0, until Milwaukee scored all its five runs in the seventh inning in a rally that featured Bobby Avila's two-run triple. The loss was the seventh straight for the Pirates, who now have skidded into the second division. In the only other National League game yesterday, Cincin Cincinnati nati Cincinnati downed St. Louis, 8-3. In the American League, Boston blanked Cleveland, 4-0, to drop the In Indians dians Indians back into a first-place tie with idle Chicago; Gene Wood Wood-ling's ling's Wood-ling's slugging led Baltimore io a 5-2 win over, Detroit; and Kan Kansas sas Kansas City scored its eighth straight win, 7-6, over Washington. Johnny Temple's tree-run hom homer er homer led the Reds' 11-hit attack as they beat the Cards. Bob Purkey scattered nine Card hits to gam his ninth win. Rookie Jerry Casale pitched three-hitter for the Red Sox to beat the Indians, snapping the Red Sox' six-game losing streak and the Indians' five five-game game five-game -Winning streak. Jackie Jensen's 22nd homer and Frank Malzone's 12th led the Sox at bat as they handed Herb Score his ninth defeat. Weodling drove in all of tne O O-rioles' rioles' O-rioles' five runs with a single and the first grand slam ne's hit in 13 years in the majors. His bases-full blast off Jim Bunning of Detroit in the third inning was the 27th homer served up by Bunning this year. Skinny Brown was the winner with shut shutout out shutout relief held from Billy Loos. Roger Maris hit a grand-slam homer for the A's their win over the Senators, but actually Kan Kansas sas Kansas City's pair of winning runs in the eighth inning were un unearned, earned, unearned, thanks to an error by Ken Aspromonte. Harmon Killew Killew-brew's brew's Killew-brew's 33rd homer (tops in the majors) and a grand slam by Faye Throneberry couldn't save the Senators from their niath straight defeat. The White Sox and Yankees were not scheduled. Prize Winners Urged To Call VFW Teener League President Rain washed out the final game on the Isthmus for the V.F.W. Teeners, but the drawing for three U.S. Savings Bonds took place anyway. A little cutfe from Balboa, Wic Wic-ki ki Wic-ki Lynn Bennett, age 6, daugh daughter ter daughter of Doc Bennett from Gavilan Road, stepped forward at the in invitation vitation invitation of Earl Hight, senior vice commander of V.F.W. Post No. 3822, to draw the three lucky numbers from the box. The first number drawn was 1472, for a $100 savings bond. The second drawing went to lack Sutherland with number 2838. He won a $50 bond. Third prize was ticket number 1256 for a $25 bond. The prizes were donated to the V.F.W. Teener Baseball League by the Department of the Pana Panama ma Panama Canal Zone, Veterang of For Foreign eign Foreign Wars. The first and third prize win winners ners winners are urged to notify the league by calling the president, Fred Huddleston, Curundu 6213, as soon as possible. TODAYMEAirosEs T IV O L I 35c. 20c. Spanish Program! 3 LECCIONItS DE AMOR - Also: FLOR DE MAYO with Maria Felix And Will Not Back Out By FRED DOWN NEW YORK, July 28 (tJPI) William A. Shea, the man who did the job that couldn't be done, said today the new Continental League "is offering ma major jor major league baseball the greatest deal in its history" but is prepared to go it alone of the big leagues try to block formation of the third circuit. "We anticipate the cooperation of organized baseball," said the dynamic, 52-year -old New York City attorney who yesterday an announced nounced announced the formation of the new league with founding fran franchises chises franchises in New York. Houston, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Denver and Toronto. "But we are all in this to stav and we are not going to back out no matter what hap pens." Shea said the new league will take its next step when it meets with American and National League officials in New York, Aug. 18, ar proposes its solu solutions tions solutions to the problems of player distribution, territorial rights, in in-elusion elusion in-elusion in the pension plan tel television evision television policies and participation in the world series. "We expect then (Aug. 18) to join the structure of oraganized baseball." said Shea. "Once that's done, we'll proceed to the new problems." LEADING HITTERS (Based en 250 official at' bats) National League G AB R H Pet. Aaron. Mil 95 387 67 139 .359 White. St. L 93 343 53 117 .341 Cham. St. L 90 287 39 97 .338 Robinson, Oinci 97 359 73 119 .331 Temple. Cinci 98 397 70 130 .328 Logan, Mil 83 279 37 90 .323 97 390 65 125 .321 90 324 63 103 .318 Cepeda, SF Gilliam, LA Neal, LA Banks, Chi 98 399 73 122 .306 97 372 61 114 .306 American League SAB R H Pet, Woodling, Bait Maris, KC Kuenn. Det Fox, Chi Kaline, Det Runnels, Bos Power, Cleve Kubek, NY Jensen, Bos Skowron, NY 91 291 42 100 .344 67 259 47 89 .344 93 367 64 126 .343 96 396 51 132 .333 82 318 53 105 .330 92 361 57 115 .319 96 391 78 118 .302 76 290 40 87 .300 92 334 68 100 .299 74 282 39 84 .298 Runs Batted Tn NATIONAL LEAGUf Banks, Cubs Robinson. Reds Aaron, Braves Bell, Reds Mathews Braves 82 89 79 71 70 AMERICAN LEAGUE Killebrew, Senators Colavito. Indians Jensen, Red Sox Maxwell, Tigers Lemon, Senators Allison, Senators 81 74 73 68 63 63 Home Runs NATIONAL LEAGUE Mathews, Braves Banks, Cubs Aaron, Braves Robinson, Reds Hodges, Dodgers Cepeda, Giants 29 27 24 24 19 19 AMERICAN LEAGUI Killehre-w, Senators Colavito, Indians Allison, Senators Triandos, Orioles Maxwell, Tigers Lemon, Senators' Jensen, Red Sox 33 30 26 22 22 22 22 LEADING PITCHERS (Bated en T2 er more decisions) NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. Face, Pirates 14 0 1.000 Antonelli, Giants 14 5 .737 Drysdale, Dodgers 13 6 .684 Newcombe, Reds 10 5 Ml Law, Pirates 11 6 .647 Mizell, Cars 11 6 .647 AMERICAN LEAGUE McLish, Indians 13 S .813 Shaw, White Sox 9 3 .750 Pappas, Orioles 11 5 .688 Wynn, White Sox 13 .684 Mossi, Tigers 8 4 .667 CAPITOLIO t5o. 15c. BANK! $125.00 THE IRON GLOVE with Robert Stack - Also: -THE SINISTER MASK with Vincent Price VICTORIA lie. SANTA FE PASSAGE Also: A MAN ALONE Shea insisted the new league was "holding no club" over or organized ganized organized baseball, but Edwin C. Johnson, three times governor of Colorado who delivered an Im Impassioned passioned Impassioned plea for support of the new league yesterday, sounded a warning that obviously is a key factor in the circuit's formation. "I believe that tbe major leagues are sincere in their ex expressed pressed expressed wishes to help in the expansion of their' game," said Johnson, who served as presi president dent president of the Western League for seven years. "But T also know major league baseball fears two things the courts and the Con gress. We do not want to start a warbut we are not afraid of One. Branch Rickey, 78-year old elder-statesman of baseball, will will be offered the job as first president of the newly-formed league. "Branch Rickey is the most lo logical gical logical choice for the position," a source close to the situation told UPI. "I don't know whether he will accept the job but I am sure that he will be offered It." She has emphatically eliminat eliminated ed eliminated himself as a candidate. "I cannot and will not take the job if it is offered to me," he said. "When the third major league goes into operation in 1961, I will not be an official, I will not have One single cent in invested vested invested in the league and I will return to being just a lawyer lawyer-like like lawyer-like I ought to be." Rickey's name rarely is men mentioned tioned mentioned publicly by Continental League officials but it is known the man who created baseball's farm system and broke its color line, has been a key advisor be behind hind behind the scenes. GUN. CLUB NOTES CRISTOBAL Spectacular long runs lapped over from string to string appear in good abundance amongst Cns Cns-tobal tobal Cns-tobal Gun Club skeep specialists recent scores, but none quite reach the tally reuired for q"tp straight" jacket ornaments. Wal Walter ter Walter Johnston's run to 66 way oacis in May was the last such feat re recorded corded recorded on the Gold Coast. "Doc" Norris came close to the. goal last Wednesday, combin combining ing combining a prior 20-gauged 15 with a perfect 12-gauge "misery" round, plus five "follow-the leader" marks for a total of 45 without missing. Other skeet ers stayed within or below their average ranges, their best single rounds showing: Art mutton 23 F. Chollar 23 N. Keller 20 J. Kueter (.410) 19 J. Mitchell 17 G. Lopp (20 ga.) 5 The club offers more skect for this Wednesday afternoon, and those hungering for trap get all they ask for on Sunday morning at 10:30 Aug. 2. TROPICAL 0.60 TODAY! 0.40 0.30 0.25 GREAT FORTUNE NIGHT! $150.00 IN CASH PRIZES! Be One of The Lucky Winners of These Cash Prizes! 1st Prize $100.00 2nd 3rd 4th 25.00 13.00 10.00 THf, FORTUNE NIGHT PLAYS AT 9:0ft P.M. On the Screen: Double In Technicolor! Tony Curtis Janet Leigh In THE PERFECT FURLOUGH Audie Murphy Ola Scala - In RIDE A CROOKED TRAIL - TODAY RIO 25c. 15c. KILL HER GENTLY with M. COnnell - Also: CITY OF FEAR with v.. Edwards The Balboa Swimming Pool was the scene of many unusual iights for the swimmers of tbe Summer their parents and friends this past weekend The pool was filled with greas ed papayas, candles, money and even a few bathers from the Roaring '20's. The iortunate spec spectators tators spectators were favored with a dem onstration of superior divng skill by the one and only "Hairbreath McGill" who was to dive through a noop oi tire. After several attempts to Der- form this feat his only comment was "the marsh-mellows were de delicious." licious." delicious." The' connection between this statement and the actual ner- formance will only5 be understood by those lucky people who attend ed the party. It appeared that the exertion was too much for "Hairbreath" because after his comment he col collapsed lapsed collapsed into the pool. The ever ready life 'guards came immed immediately iately immediately to the rescue of "Hair breath." Mrs. Edna Wil make the attempt o rescue him ana was very ably assisted by the chief life guard. Mrs. Aloha Baum- bach who also made an attemnr. Poor "Hairbreath" he had life guards falling all over him. Ter- Iry Louis and Judy Kngelke' were iSlsn in thpra (Hnrlmn Kf ,). pite all their combiueu valiani ai tempts the diving profession is still minus one 'of their star (?) performers. Well, we believe him when he said he could do it and we tnought he could swim Mothers and daughters got to together gether together in a Wheel barrow race with Bonnie Crowell and her tamer, G. A. Doyle, 1 showed the spectators that they too were listed as being the best. The fun ot the evening was not luiumea siricuy to the older gen eration. The younger. set was di iueu mio two teams, bout and pink and the several bitter bat bat-ties ties bat-ties followed for the honor of be being ing being named the victors. The valiant blue team went down to a glori- uus umeai to tne cheers of the victorious pirik team. The hiehlieht of tho Pvomnrr time the presentation of trophies to the winners of the Summer Recrea- noii s weekly Swim Meets. V. F. arignt of Gamboa, president of me summer Hecreation Board made the presentations to the fol following: lowing: following: "6 year-old boys Charles Rat- ue, 10 points. 6 year-old girls Lisa Nail i points; Sheila Chsolm 9 points. 7 and 8 year-old boys David Bullock. 89 mints- Rni mi-i henny, 42 points; Dennis Holmes, 20 points. 7 and 8-year-old girls Gwinn Doyle, 6 1 points: Florence Thnmn son, 52 points, Jean Jensen, 26 9 and 10 vear-old bnva rtnnxon Summerford 90 points, Jody Sum Sum-merford merford Sum-merford 70 points. Jerrv 10 points. 9 and 10 vear-old pirls .Tnm Wilson 71 points. Marv Thom nenn 50 points, Katy Gibbins 31 points. 11 and 12 year-old boys, Roark Summerford 98 points. Duke Wil Wilson son Wilson 49 points, Gary Vaucher 23 points. 11 and .12 Year Old Girls Vi Vivian vian Vivian Kosan, 58 ponts; Bonnie Cro Crowell, well, Crowell, 50 points; Nancy Chadwick, 34 points. 13 and 14 Year Old boys Jim Dykes, 45 points; Martin Holmes, 43 points; Jim Wilson;, 38 points. 13 and 14 Year Old girls Nan Nancy cy Nancy Morency, 49 Doints, Jane Hearh, 41 points; Marilyn Camby, 11 points. 15 and 16 Year Old boys Har Harry ry Harry Van Loon, 95 points. 15 and 16 Year Old Girls Dan Danielle ielle Danielle Harned, 40 points. Trophies were presented to the first three winners in each age group. Bright expressed his thanks and those of the Summer Recrea Recreation tion Recreation Board to all those who had worked with the Summer Recrea Recreation's tion's Recreation's Weekly Swim Meets. Thanks were given to Rolando Linares, Bob Wallace, Danielle Harned. Terry Louis, Ed Dolan, and Charles Mire and special appre appreciation ciation appreciation was given to Mrs. Frances Summerford, for all she has con consistently sistently consistently don "to help make these meets for all the children. Coach Ross Anderson of Bal Balboa boa Balboa High School read the list of new Balboa Pool Records and New Canal Zone Records that have been broken in the last swimming meet. These new rec records ords records will be published this week. Coach Anderson also acted as an announcer nouncer announcer for the party and kept things lively for the entire group. All in all a wonderful time was had by each and every one spec spectators tators spectators and swimmers alike. Of course, Wilson, Baumbach and McGill blamed their poor swim swim-mine mine swim-mine on the fact they wre weight weighted ed weighted down with clothes and who knows we only have their word for it but we did notice that they all had their "B" badges. Well, maybe with a, little practice. TODAY-ENCANT025-15l WAHOOl $115.00 George Nader In "MONSOON" Robert Bray in "MY GUN IS QUICK" Etttor;, CONRADO SARGEANT National Leafu TEAMS San Francisco Milwaukee Los Angeles L Pet. GB 55 43 .561 52 43 .547 IVi 55 44 .545 imcago Pitttburoh 41 t .505 -;5V 50 .495 'A Sf. Lauii 47 51 .480 t Cincinnati 44 54 .449 11 40 54 ..417 14 Philadelphia Today's Games St. Louis at Cincinnati (N) Chicago at Milwaukee (N) Pittsburgh at Los Angeles (N) Philadelphia at San Francisco (N) Yesterday's Results Pittsburgh 001 001 0002 5 l Milwaukee 000 000 50x 5 7 i Kline (7-10), Haddix and Bur Burgess. gess. Burgess. Jay (4-7) and Crandall. (Night Game) St. Louis 000 030 0003 9 1 Cincinnati 200 320 Olx 8 11 0 Mizell (H-6), Bridges, Ricketts Jeffcoat and Smith, Porter. Purkey (9-10) and Dotterer. Only games scheduled. I HOOFBEATS By Conrndo Sargeant Five native thoroughbreds, three of them owned by the Haras San Miguel, were nominated for the $2,000 added one-mile Antonio An- guizola Classic which will be run on Aug. 16. The entries and their respec respective tive respective weights are as follows: Este Esteban ban Esteban 124, Nirvana 111, Kazan 102, Titita 111 and Lady Edna 121. Es teban, Nirvana and Kazan are all owned by Carlos and Fernan Fernando do Fernando Eleta, owners of the Haras San Miguel. oOo Wealthy turfman Louis Mar Martini tini Martini yesterday bought stout stout-hearted hearted stout-hearted As You Like Her for breeding purposes. This wt I I-brad brad I-brad daughter of Niccolo dell' Area will bo sent to Martini' Cerro Punt a brood farm in Chiriqui soon. oOo The fractious Chilean racer I- dem, a complete failure in all of his local starts, has been sold to a Mexican turfman and will be sent to the Hipodromo dt las Americas. The brown son of Es- so-Igualdad is scheduled to leave for Mexico tomorrow. oOo Herastico Pitty topped the list of suspended jockeys when he was set down indefinitely be because cause because of his dubious actions on Golazo before the running of the seventh race. Golazo ran away, with Pitty making feeble efforts to stop him, while going towards the starting line and had to scratch ed. There were witnesses who testified that they overheard that Pitty would attempt to do some thing to have the horse snatch ed. Behader won the sixth race The Behader-Golazo double paid $13. Established KfoEKIILaKI SCOTCH WHISKY HACOONALD A MUIR ITP American League TEAMS Chicago Cleveland Baltimore NowYork Kansas City Detroit Washington Boston Pet'. GB 54 40 583 54 40 .583 50 49 .505 48 49 .495 7v:J io 3 47 49 ,490 48 52 43 55 41 55 .480 .439 .427 Today's X5ames 2 New York at Chicago (N) Washington at Kansas City (N) Boston at Cleveland (T-N) Baltimore at Detroit (N) Yesterday's Results Baltimore 004 000 1005 9 'l Detroit 000 011 0002 r n Brown C7-fiV T .rmo am1 Tm.. - 1 i auu 1 lldlJ. -i dos. Bunninp rfl-A Unran t beret. (Nioht fiimil Boston Oil 101 0004 7 0 Cleveland 000 000 000 o 3 -fl t Casale (7-6) and White.. Score C9-01 rientta n9.;. -j Fitzgerald, Nixon. f Nioht Cam.) Washineton mo un onois t i Kansas City 005 000 02x 7 9 2 Romonosky, Stobbs, Woodeshick (0-3), Hyde- and Courtney. Garver. Dirk.wm a.n r.n j Chiti, House. Only games scheduled. Ari3tides Lorless was set dowtT four meets for crowding Licen- ciado with Cordial Immediately" after the start of Saturday's eighth race. Jockey Amado Credidio was bound over to the Humane Offi- cer, Panama Gov. Alberto Ale- man after mercilessly whippine : 4V Pilluelo because the latter lost"1'' the fourth race. Pilluelo entered- the final furlong two lengths, on'" top but bogged down almost to a" walk in the final sixteenth when Credidio guided him close to the rail where the going was heavy, losing by a neck to Zia, Mimi, Don Luis, Cristobalina" and Double Four were each sus'- pended for two weeks. Double Four bled from the nostrils while1 the others were lame. . Trainer Gabriel Cruz netted a 5 Tina fnr nnt neinrf .Kn colors on Don Smith in Sunday's third race. Don Smith and Tit'a later had to be scratched when" they injured themselves in the" starting gate before the start of" tn a rsia oOo Critica's ace selector, Damian Samudio, chalked up his third victory of the year by winning" tno monthly tipsters contest for' .' tho month of July. La Estrella's Donald Vincent. who entered tho final Hd ,; . - -" ,11111 a nine-point lead, "quit" badly but still finished an easy second. The Panama Tribune's Luis Rom1. er grabbed the short end oi the prize money. oOo Betting at the local track drop dropped ped dropped to only $121,377 over tl$ weekend. Saturday $55,421 wert wagered while a total of $65,95$ ,. were pushed through the mutuels windows on Sunday. 1893 j x. 1 ,-- a QuEEiiJ Pnflf, jth fM " 4 ft 1 f 1 i f 'I ..." PACI SEVKN TCESDAT, JTIT 18, 195 J WlHauseMdaMsl liiMunlfm Golf Tourney tit 1 AXAMA AMniCAK MS JSDMJVSVBFt DATJLT KZWSPjyg S - i, 5- X BREASTSTROKE WINNERS Roack Somerford flanked by Dirk Van Loon and Duke Wilson after winning the 25-yard breaststroke vent during tlie Elks Fourth of July Swim Meet at Gamboa. (Ernest SUva Photo) Gayer Five Defeats Dela mater In Overtime Thriller, 93-89 Good Turnout Despite Bad Weather Despite bad weather over the weekend, there was a food turn out for the Qualifying round of the Dunlop tournament At the Bra-.os Brook country uud. Don Hause was the medalist let the first flight with a gross score of 73. and therefore won six Dun- lep balls. Captain Finley Meehan led' the auawers in tne secona flighqt with a 79 and he received six Dunlop balls for his efforts. Dave Brown and George Down ins tied in the third flight, 'each having an 83 and winning three balls each. Young Tom Dronam shot a 90 in the fourth flight and got himself six balls. Messrs Swisher. Reif and Dem ers, each with a score of 100, tied in the fifth flight and received two bails. Ihe tournament committee found it necessary to change the flights as originally planned, and this is how the draw for the first round shapes up: First Flight (Handicap 0-t) D. Hause v. C. Lewis R. Morland v. M, Greene C. Maduro v. P. Hale E. Complpn v. B. Johnson Second Flight Handicap 7(-10) F. Meehan v. F. Huldlquisf P. Whitney v. R. Wikingstad F. Wainio v. L. Helmberg H. DeRaps v. H. Finnegan Third Flight (Handicap 11-H) D. Brown v. L. Dedeaux D. Brayton v. P. Tortoriei G. Downing vi P. Moser B. Nelson v. G. Simons Fourth Flight (Hdcap. 17 and over) J ':-. ... Coco Solo Gym Activities Standings Team Flynn Gayer Riley Delamater W L 8 5 7 7 6 7 6 8 Pet. .615 .500 .461 .428 Ih"(one oi the Canal Zone Gov Government ernment Government Basketball League's most thrilling games thus far this sra sra-soniiDiek soniiDiek sra-soniiDiek Gayer's Execs defeated BililDelamater's fighting Veter Veteran an Veteran Quintet in an overtime period by T score of 93-89 to. move the Exec hoopsfers into' undisputed aecond. place in the league stand standings. ings. standings. With the score tied 86-86, the Gayermen went on to score sev seven en seven points in the five minute over overtime time overtime period to hand The Veterans their eight loss. The exec's Roy Culbreth led his mates in the. vic victorious torious victorious encounter with 33 big nointa for the evening. He was aided by Dick Gayer's 13 points 'and Ed Murphy's 12 markers. The Delamater hoopsters were led in the scoring by their high scoring threesome of Bert. Joyce with 22 points, George Tochcrman with 20 points and Walter Trout wit!) 12 points. Whippet Ed Dens Dens-jnore jnore Dens-jnore added to this threesome's scoring punch with 18 markers. The Delamater Veterans won their first game of the week by dumping the league leading Flynn Vagabonds by a close 65-61 Score. Sh this hard fought affair, Walter Trout with 19 points, George Tocherman with 17 markers and Bert Joyce with 10 led the win winning ning winning Vets in the scoring column. The Vagabonds' Raymond Nesbitt led his mates with 24 points fol followed lowed followed by Oscar Kouraney with 13 points and Bill Joyce witii 11 markers. The second place Gayermen won their second game of the week by defeating Gary Riley's Genis by A 93-84 score as the Exec's Rcy Cultlteth pumped 36 points through the hoop to lead his highly im improved proved improved quintet in the scoring col column. umn. column. Culbreth was ably supported in the game's scoring by Tommy Cunningham's 18 points anil Ed Murphy's 15 markers. The Riley men were led bp their protuse acoer little Donny Alexander with .a lofty 38 points, and Bob Best witty 18 and Danny Winklosky 11 markers in their losing cause. The league's fourth game of the week was cancelled in order to al allow low allow most of the participating play players ers players time and. rest in which to play on a C.Z. Government Ail Ail-gtar gtar Ail-gtar uintet that was chosen to ..play four exhqibition games again teams from the Republic of Pa Panama. nama. Panama. This all-star quintet was u?c u?c-cessful cessful u?c-cessful in their first outing as they h defeated Muebleria. pf the fanu- jna Basketball League by a 59-53 acore-. This .Goyernment League AU-jffar quintet is coached by the very competent George MacAr MacAr-thuC thuC MacAr-thuC who is hoping for like success- in the team's next three exhibition encounters. Ifveems that. each team has. come up with' a high scoring "thwsome" as the inaiviuui scoring race approaches its end. Leading the.. top scoring tnree tnree-' ' tnree-' somes, is that high-scoring three fronTRiley's Gems, Don Alexand Alexander, er, Alexander, Dan Winklosky and Jack Per Per-ntifv ntifv Per-ntifv all three amassing a grand tottof 600 points between them thuOar this-season. Pressing these- "Riley Threa" ri'.delamater's scoring tnree- tome of .Bert Joyce, Walter Trout and George -locnerman wun a to total tal total of 595 points between them. Gayer's threesome of Roy Cul- total of 578 points among them. Surprisingly enough, the league leading Flynn Vagabond's three threesome some threesome of Moss Nesbitt, Oscar Kou Kouraney raney Kouraney and Bill Joyce arc in the last position with 481 marKers as their threesome total. The Exec's Roy Culbrelh has displaced The Gent's Donny Alex Alexander ander Alexander as the league's leading in individual dividual individual scoter. Culbreth pumped 69 points through the hoop to move .L. 4 Si! I IL. into uie ino. i position in uie in individual dividual individual scoring race. Four play' ers have now cracked the double century mark in the individual scoring with Culbreth's 267 points, Don Alexander's 255 points, Ray Nesbitt's 228 points, and Bert Joyce's 200 markers. Wally Trout's 199 points puts him just one point shy of the 200-point level. A grand total of twelve players have scored over 100 points thus far this season. This coming week a board of nine electors will se select lect select the 1959 All-Government Bas Basketball ketball Basketball Team, an acknowledge ment of the league's top ten play players ers players as the best in the league for this past season. With six games team has dominated the winnm column, as, the league s reulr season champ is no where settled or decided as only 2 1-2 games separating the top from the ceJ.ir dwellers. This week's schedule: Monday, Delamater V. Riley; Tuesday, v. Gayer: Wednesday, Riley v. Gayer, Thursday, Flynn v. Delamater. T. Drohan v. J. Ruoff R. Crump v. B. Sweringen L. Palumbo v. J. Haas D. Ingram v. J. Brayton Fifth Flight (Hdcp 17 and ever) C. Swisher v. R. Angermuller W. McKeown v. P. Beck G. Reif v. F. Sapp N. Demers v. R. Hull Junior Golfers Get Varmup Tourney Tomorrow Morning The Panama Golf Association wishes to remind all junior golfers nf final warm ur tournament to be played at Summit Hills golf course tomorrow. All golfers in the Junior class who have not reached their 18 birthday before August 15 will be eligible to participate. HE'S SAFE Umpire Ed Runge ays, "He's ba!e," ahd points out why In the seventh inning "Sunday'. pameVtween the White Sox -and Baltimore Orlolea Jlir f McAnany (3) ofi toe Sox teta credit for a stolen base as Chico Carrasquel fails to hold on to the ball. The White Sox won thi game, 4-1, but lost the second, 4-0.-(UPI Radiopohoto) Hearne Eliminates Doc Mitten In Cafe Duran Golf Tourney By TKP WILIER Webb Hearne of Balboa advanc ed to the final round in the championship flight of the Cafe Duran golf championship Sunday afternoon by defeating 'Doc' Herb Mitten by a score ot 6 ana s. In a surprising, out not toiaiiy unexpected victory, Webb shot a smooth 4over par 76 Saturday afternoon to lead Mitten 4 up. Mitten shot a 79, somewhat higher than his handicap of 1 would permit. In .addition to being down at the 18, Mitten was giving Hearne 2 strokes a aide on each 18, this being 3-4ths the ditfe ditfe-rence rence ditfe-rence in their handicaps of 1 and 6. Last month's junior winner, Bert Roeers. and all the rest of remaining on the schedule no one-f the hopefuls from 8 to 18 will be TOP SCORERS Name Culbreth, Roy (G) Alexander, Don (R) Nesbitt, Ray (F)' Joyce, Bert (D) Trout, Walter (D) Tocherman, G. (D) Winklowsky, Dan R)( Perantie, Jack (R) Gayer, Dick (G) Pajak, Doug (G) Kouraney, Oscar F)( Joyce, Bill (F) G Pis. 12 267 10 255 13 228 14 200 13 109 12196 13 131 11 11 11 11 13 164 163 148 137 116 their shooting for one of the many prizes. The 18 holes medal play will start at 9:15 a.m. which should give the boys from the At Atlantic lantic Atlantic side planty of time to get to the club from the morning train. This will be the last warm up tourney before the big Isthmian Junior Golf Tournament to be held at Panama Golf Club on Aug. 6, 7 and 8. All boys on the Isth Isthmus, mus, Isthmus, who are members or their parents are members of a re recognized cognized recognized club no matter what their age is, (not older than 18 be before fore before Aug. 15) are urged to play in this tournament. Prizes have been donated by several of the leading marcnants in Panama City, with the Canal Zone Elks No. 1414 donating beau beautiful tiful beautiful trophies to the winners of the individual age groups. The big thing for the older boys of course, is the all expense trip to the United States ofr the 4 On the aecond 18 played Sun day, Hearne picked up two move holes dispite the fact that Mitten was only 2 over par after is. Hearne closed out the match on the 31st hole with his accurate shooting. Mitten's putting was o.iute ragged throughout the' mate while Hearne was consistently .steady. Hisl tee hots were par ticularly good, and,more so since he was using a brassie off 'he tee. His distance off the tee was with such a lofty club. While Hearne lacked some oi Mitten's distance off the tee and on the fairways, his iron work and putting made up for the dif ference. Hearne will meet Moran in a 36-hole final next weekend MORAN DEFEATS JACKS Icommy Jacks, giving Paul Mn ran 1 stroke a side each IE caught himself a "tiger" and found -himself onthe short end of a 7 and 5 score Sunday after noon. Moran, shooting straight down tne center, wound up the first .18 on Saturday 2 up over Xa'cks. In Sunday's match, Moran started in a blaze of fine shootinp being two under par in the first five holes. He chipped in from about 10 yards off the green loria mra on No. l, tnen proceed ed to sink a 12-footer for another bird on No. 2, and then parred 3, 4, and 5. Jacks, in the middle of this snapshooting, lost Nos. 1 and and 5 with the stroke. Jacks had a paron S, but the stroke allow ance cost him the hole. Thus, losing 1, 2 and 5, with his being down 2 after 18, found himself 5 down after the 23rd hole, and 6 down after 27. Starting out the final 9, Jacks . . .-1 At.... won 10 wun a par, ana halved No. 11 with even par 3's. Moran won No. 12 with another par, and when he had a par on No. 13, he closed out the match on Jacks, who had another bogey. Moran's shooting was very goott throughout. As a compa r i s o n, Jacks had a 79 on the first 18, a 3 over par on the out 9 of the sec ond 18, and shot two pars and two bogeys on the final lour holes. Moran was very good around the greens, and he was consistent consistently ly consistently accurate with his fairway woods and putting. Jack's main trouble was off the tees, where he consistently was in trouble. next weekend, with the first 18 holes scheduled to be played Sa Saturday turday Saturday and the other 18 of the 36 to be played Sunday. The finals match between these two should be verv good in ns consistency, both off the tee the fairwav. and around the greens While Hearne had a slight ad advantage vantage advantage in distance, Moran is noted for his exceptional accura accuracy cy accuracy with both woods and irons: and the match should be well wort watching. LADIES' FINALS SUNDAY SCRIBNER AND ABAD WIN Jack Scribner (Better known as Mr. "HX") advanced to the final round in the first, flight, of the Cafe Duran- tourney when he' de feated Campagnan Jr. 2 up. Cam- pagnanK had Scnber 2 down going into No. 15 but dropped the final 4 holes and the match Both have handicaps of 12, and no stroke allowance was made. Pablo Abad also advanced to the final round in the first flight when he knocked out the popobr 'Kiki' de la Ossa 2 up. While both shot in the upper 80's. Kiki was very wild with his woo'te on the fairways. FINALS NEXT WEEKEND The final round in the cham championship pionship championship flight between Hearne and Moran will be played this The final round match in the ladies' bracket will also be played this coming weekend, featuring Lynn Jones and Nell Humphreys. This match will also be a 36 36-hole hole 36-hole thriller for the ladies. A table tennis tournament was held at tne Coco Solo Gym with the following results: Eight to twelve years group. first round matches were ua;e Scott over Debbie Wilder; Leme Sparling over Sherry Brandt and Rober Paris over Marty Pope. Roger Paris won the final rraich over Lettie Sparling. Twelve to sixteen years group, first round matches were Lwis McGoff over Alex Ramirez; Wil William liam William Nelson over Bill Strong by default: Kenny Karpinski over Stuart Bernstein; and TOaimy Drohan over Robert Matin. Wil William liam William Nelson taking final match over Kenny Karpinski. The first elimination tennis tournament was held Friday, Ju lv 24. in preparation for the fi nal tournament to be held at Dia Diablo. blo. Diablo. Charles McClelland won an easy victory over Ralph DeBoy- rie for the boys (8-1 6-2). Jackie Met'reiean won a close decision over Judy Palumbo for the girls (6-1 8-6). Following participated in a 'oul shooting contest: Larry Quinn won for the "E" League making 20 for 25 tree throws. Others shooting for "E" League were James Hotsko, Tim Tim-my my Tim-my Carter, Vernon MacNamee and Norbert Hammond. Luwr Quinn won for the ,Jje" Lea put making 13 for 25 free throws. 0't- ers shooting were Douglas Buii Buii-son, son, Buii-son, John Hotskp Robert Thomp Thompson son Thompson and Aex Ramirez. Eddie Eilder won over Robert Martin for "B" League making 13 for 25 free throws. COCO SOLO BASKETBALL NEWS Coco Solo "C" League scored their first victory this summer with a 25 to 18 score over Mar Margarita garita Margarita "C" League. Alex Rami Ramirez rez Ramirez showed the way with U points, and seven of these were from the foul line. Margarita ind three players in the scoring, r.i' r.i'-umn umn r.i'-umn when Brooks, Fields and Ilnu Ilnu-ser ser Ilnu-ser scored 6,5 and 7 points, re respectively. spectively. respectively. In the "B" League Margarita "B" team scored a 45 to 42 vic lory over Coco Solo team bv taking advantage of several mental errors in the last 30 sec seconds. onds. seconds. Coco Solo led the gam eun til the last 40 seconds and a few bad passes, plus loose, defense, i put John Cronan under the bar ket for two easy field goals. Louis Davis, Coco So.o's high point man scored 22 points which was nigh for tne aay. tjjnan. Margarita Captain led the Big Green with 17 points. The box scores: Cece Sole "C" League P H Hotsko 0 Ramirez 11 Quinn 3 Billisoo 1 Karpinski 8 Mcuoti 2 Totals 25 Margarita "C" Leagu P Brooks H Wynne 10 Conley 0 Camposll 0 Fields 5 Smith 0 Highley 0 Hauser 7 Totals 18 Coco Solo "B" Ltagu P Davis, L. 22 Davis 5 Martin 0 Baranick 9 Canamas 'J Totals 42 Margarita "B" League P Brayton, J. 2 Brayton, R. VI Walker 2 Cronan 17 Tompkins 12 Hutchinson 0 Christoph 2 Totals 45 (HEUMATSM 'henever tha Dalm of Rheumitlam. jirinriin, neuritis, ijiiniDago, sci sciatica, atica, sciatica, (tiff mmct and iwolUa iointi make you mtaerahlp, gat' IOMIND from your drugglat at once. ROM! NO quickly hrlnga fan tfiitle rallaf ao you can lp, work and live In comfort. Don't auKta? Mdlaaiir. Oat ROMINO todajr. Destroys germs .. fast low scores to the Tournament. A full discription of the tournament will be in the local papers in the future. Remember no matter how small or how bad you play golf, ome out for the tournament and -you will probably win a prize. 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No wonder LISTERINE is the most efficient home antiseptic lajlX I iStaaJl 1 fpi' Dont be caught without USTERINE! Buy enough bottles to today day today at your favorite drugstore And for your tetth, USTERINE tooth pi. Helps prevent decay an keep$ your mouth fresh and clean. i i -. ' 4- i t L t n n !!- H It 1 4k are in the third slot with a r- J. f ;Wf,. TBI PANAMA AMERICAN All DfDEFINDEFT DAILY KTWITAK TUESDAY, JtJIT 9tjJ?B Classified Ads Classified Ads Classified Ads Classified Ad. AGENTS: Phone Panama 2-6740 for information about Clas Classifieds. sifieds. Classifieds. Charre roar ad if th have a commercial Classified Pat closet 11:21 bjb. Mob. fte Fit, 11 a-in. Sat t pja. Sat for Son. Of fie open t-5 weekdays. LEAVE YOCB AD WITH ONE OF OUB AGENTS OB OUK OFTICES AT 1J-ST "H" BMtFET. PANAMA UBREUA PRECIADO T Strwt i All D E PL' BLICA CIO N FAA n 1 &tun Mass CA8A ZALDO-Cralnl A. 45 LOURDES PHARMACY 1S1 U Caiiasaatlla ) FAJtMA 5 St MoTwSOth nf J.!Ta?.. J St LEWIS "V1-A.. TivoU No. PAKMACU EOTADOID58-l C. AGENOAS INTERNAL. kCIA LftM- n nn 'n CeBcnl At . i dw i a mi rc rwi i Bmnarura n rxmANGE J Fe. la AT. Ma. 41 FOTO DOM y Just Atmihii in. mid 31 St FOTO DOMy Just Ahnmm At. ua4 M tt FAS. contract . a t ir.u K K nc u mf lAV.lrii ur, .u. r...,; mint, AnAr. .i.i. J A J . Beside Bella Vista Theatr and Branca at Minima super manwi on ... w ...,. Tel. 4U. pie i iicht Resorts Foster's Cotfaaas, near Santa Clara. Phone Balboa 2830 be between tween between ? a m. and noon, weekday.. PHILLIPS OccamM Cattat Santa Clara 4s P. Pfconj Pe- ema MITT Crttrobal 1.167s. Houses FOR RENT: Completely furnish furnish-ed ed furnish-ed three bedreemi heme, dining dining-room, room, dining-room, kitchen, bar, air-conditioned, yard, in Cangrejo "f" Sr. No 10. For information call Tel. J-4619. FOR RENT: House. Three bed bedrooms, rooms, bedrooms, with or without furnlti. 311 3rd Street, La Cumbres. Tel. 2332. FOR RENT: Modern unfurnish unfurnished. ed. unfurnished. 4 bedroom house In Loma Alegre. large kitchen, fenced yard and hot water. Phone 3 3-2247 2247 3-2247 or 4-0196 Wanted Position WANTED: Documentation clerk to work for American firm. Write to: P. 0. Box 536, Colon. Secretary-stenographer or clerk clerk-typist, typist, clerk-typist, British, open for imme immediate diate immediate engagement. Box S-134. Lost Articles STRAYED: Young female brown dog, part hound, very thin. Balboa 6-342. Marlboro Climaxes Successful Season With Panama Title By HERBERT MOISE Marlboro 2 0 1.000 Cerveza Balboa 0 2 .000 Fifi Tom's Marlboro climaxed a brilliant 1959 basketball season by clinching the championship in Panama City last Saturday night, completely routing the Cerveza Balhoa team, 94 to 64, before a gonti crwod. This hrought to a close the fi final nal final series between the two arch rivals. The red-and-white Smokers finished as champions in both Panama and Colon. In Colon where a straight season was played,' they clinched the title with an unblemished state of 8 wins and no losses. In winning, Tom has made It two in tl-e past three years since acouiring the Marlboro sponsor sponsor-sV". sV". sponsor-sV". The win nlaces the Colon Colon-itrs itrs Colon-itrs in the position of represent representee ee representee Panama in the second Carib Caribbean bean Caribbean Baskethall Serips which will be held in Mexico City in Sep September. tember. September. The Colon victory also carried along a probable visit to Costa Rica in early August. Saturday night, Marlboro started out fast as in the past six games with the Brewers and opened a lead that was never to be threat threatened ened threatened From the opening bell, there was no question of the Marlboro superiority. The cham champions' pions' champions' offense was such that through out mos; of the contest the lead over Balboa was never less than 20 points. The game ended with a 31-point difference between these teams. Individual stars were Ramon Reyes with 21 points. Arturo A A-Card, Card, A-Card, 20. Robert Tayl ir 15, Julio No"! 10 and Rogelio "Papsy" Aikman, 13. These, coupled wit the fine and inmpercable defend o' Othway Massiah Franc'sc Checa, Reyes and Acar irnverl too much for Cerveza Balboa.. A proposed scries between the champions of Colon and Panama had to be cancelled. This is. in tie consensus or sevrral oldtim oldtim-ers. ers. oldtim-ers. precedent which will long live in the history of the local sport. r7 Commercial Guide ADVERTISE IN Arle Ahlu A a a Lr. wsi fv.oa per coi. inch FOR INFORMATION CALL 20740 LIFE INSURANCE mil JIM RIDGE General Agent Gibraltar Llf Ins. Co. tor rate and Information Tel. Panama 2-05K2 Monday thru Friday tM a.m. to 12:1X1 2:M p.m. to 5:0 Saturday? tM a.m. to It: Listen To The OAS (Panamencan (Record Show 1230 p.m. . HOG-YCN Every Sunday Apartments FOR RENT! One bedroom apartment, new apartment, house located on the Transiith Transiith-mian mian Transiith-mian highway, modern, well ven ventilated tilated ventilated with private bathroom and kitchen, completely furnished with new furniture specially de designed signed designed for the apartments, rea reasonably sonably reasonably priced. Call Panama 2 2-2766 2766 2-2766 from I to 12 and from 2 to 5:30. FOR RENT: Furnished and un unfurnished furnished unfurnished apartments. Alhambra Apartments. 1 0th Street 8061. Telephone 1386, Colon. FOR RENT: Furnished I bed bedroom room bedroom apartment, livinoroom, bal balcony cony balcony and garage, close to The Panama Hilfon Hotel, phone 3-4567. FOR RENT: Best located small furnished apartment or room, clean and independent. 43rd Street No. 13. FOR RENT: 1 bedroom apart apartment ment apartment comfortably furnished, San Francisco. Phone 3-5024. FOR RENT: In the luxurious and modern, recently constructed "Alina" building, two-bedroom apartments, living-dining room, airrconditioned, hot water instal installation, lation, installation, maid's room, independent wash tubs, elevator, penthouse for parties, etc. On the ground floor: two air-conditioned com commercial mercial commercial sites. Inquire Marichal Boyd, Office: Peru Ave. No. 57 Tels. 3-6710 and 3-7926. FOR RENT: Brand new build building, ing, building, El Cangrejo, one and two bedroom apartments, hot water. Cucalon and Cia. "Realtor" Phone 3-3330. FOR RENT: Nice apartment, apply in Perejil Ave., house No. 7. or phone Tel. 3-4812. FOR HINT: In t h e modern "ALINA" skyscraper af Panama, two bedroom apartments, living living-diningroom, diningroom, living-diningroom, air conditioner, hot water installation, maid's room, independent wash tubs, elevator, garage, pent-house for parties, etc. Price $135.00 to $160.00. Ground floor: Two commercial sites with air conditioner, $195 and $225 respectively. APPLY: "Marichal Boyd" office: Peru Ave. No. 57. Phones: 3-6710 and 1-7926. FOR RENT: Apartment, liv living ing living room diningroom, bedroom, kitchen and service. 6 Street No. 3, Vista Hermosa. FOR RENT: Magnificent view in La Cresta, two bedroom apart apartment, ment, apartment, den, big porch, hot water, garage, call 3-3421. FOR RENT: Army Inspected, furnished apartment Vie Porrai No. 82, phone 3-7258. FOR RENT: Cool and comfort comfortable able comfortable one bedroom apartment suitable for couple or small fa family mily family in Calle Darien. For infor information mation information please call 2-1455 dur during ing during office hours or 3-1988 after FOR RENT;. One bedroom apartment, living-dining room, kitchen, balcony. 50 Street No. 15, (near El Baturro). $73.00. Phone 3 4994 FOR RENT: Modern 2 bedroom apartment living room, dining room, hot water, curtains, maid's room, garage, etc. 49 Street. Phone 3-4994 TRABERT WHIPS ROSE BAASTAD, Sweden (UPI) Tony Trabert of Cincinnati, de defeated feated defeated Mervyn Rose of Australia, 6-3, 6-1, and Pancho Segura of Ecuador defeated Ashlev Cooper of Australia, fi-3, 3-6, 7-5, in pro professional fessional professional tennis matches here ""nday. FOR RENT ''" l" 2200 Sq. Ft. of modern office space on second floor of new "F.LC.A" Building Large private parking: area in rear Janitor and night watchman services Air Conditioning optional Via Espana on 46th block -ELGA. S.A. THIS SECTION ear AUTOMOBILE FINANCE Government Emplovea Service Personnel Finance Your New Or I'sed Car GOVERNMENT EMPLOYES FINANCE Co. LOW RATES UP TO 36 Mo on new ears AGENCY DEHLINGER No. 43 Automobile Row Phone 3-4984 3-4985 All Types of Auto Insurance We dye all kinds of clothes, drapes, rugs, coats, dresses, suits. Two Hour Dry Cleaning TROPICAL LAUNDRY (10 minutes from town) Vis Fspana No. 830, Paroue Leferre Tel. 4-1277 Automobiles FOR SALE: 1958 Cadillac Coupe De Villa Pink and Black. Fully Ex. Colon 1369. FOR SALE: 1949 Buick oood running condition. Apply A. F. Birr 0273-0, Gamboa. FOR SALE: 1956 English Nash Metropolitan convertible. White with black top. New matching upholstery, tires, etc. Must see to appreciate, Balboa 2676. FOR SALE: 1956 Lincoln hard hardtop, top, hardtop, excellent buy. Call 3-3909; FOR SALE: PLYMOUTH BEL BELVEDERE, VEDERE, BELVEDERE, 1957, 4-door, air-conditioned; power brakes and steer steering; ing; steering; automatic seat; underrat underrated; ed; underrated; radio 19,000 actual miles, one owner 4 new W. W. tires, two etrat EXCELLENT CONDITION, new muffler, brake linings 8 cylinder automatie transmission, etc. $1825 or best cash offer. CALL Panami 3-6153 from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. Panama 3-0117 at other hours FOR SALE: 1955 Fettd Thun Thun-derbird. derbird. Thun-derbird. A-1 condition. Balboa 2-4280. FOR SALE: Ford 53-V 8, 4 door duty paid, good tires, motor ex excellent, cellent, excellent, radio can see at 21-42 Ave "B" or phone 2-5474. FOR SALE: 1957 Ford perfect condition. Information 4-0964, cash. FOR SALE: 56 Austin-Healy. 14.000 miles, radio, heater, over overdrive, drive, overdrive, turn signals, mirror, wire wheels, new tires and batteries. $1850.00. Phone 86-3143. Boats & Motors FOR SALE: Gasoline driven electric plant 9 kw, 110220 volts. 1 phase. $225.00. Tel. Balboa 2-3630. 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. U.S. Television Means reliability better service, and lasting repairs. Phone 3-7607 Panama. 9 A.M. to 10 P.M. Prefect your home and proper property ty property against Insect damage. Prompt scientific treatment eve) emergency or monthly budget basis. Telephone Pronto Service, Panama 3-7977 or Colon 1777. Wanted to Buy WANT TO PURCHASE: 1959 Model, used, small car. Panama 3-6121 or 3-6943. You Can Invest in Slocks & Bonds This Registered Licensed Bonded Serves Inquiries solicited from serious investors. Send coupon by Air Mail without obligation. We do not offer or recommend unseasoned or speculative securities. Griffin McCarthy INVESTMENT SECURITIES 8340 N.E. 2nd Avenue, Miami 88, Florida PL 4-4626 Investment QUALITY is our first consideration Please Send Information by Air Mail About Investing in Sound U.S. Securities for n Growth of Capital n Liberal Income Now Outright Purchases Installment Investment Plans n NAME (plae print plainly) ADDRESS Home Articles, . FOR SALE) Laundromat wash washer er washer Westinghouse, 9 months old, $185.00, available August 10, 9 cu. ft. refrigerators. Unit 9 month eld, $60.00. Call 2 3444. FOR SALE: Frigidaire automa automatic tic automatic washer. Excellent working condition. $100.00. Call Pana Panama, ma, Panama, Tel. 1-7856. FOR SALE: Household goods, leaving-the Isthmus. House 6441 Los Ribs, Balboa Tel. 2-2672. FOR SALE: 4 burner gas stove with even and broiler, practically new. $75.00. Calle "H" No. 1 126. first floor. Apt. 3. FOR SALE: American kitchen dishwater. Perfect condition. Beat offer. 86-2217. PERSONALS ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS DRAWER "A" DIABLO BOX 1211. CRISTOBAL, CI. PHONE BALBOA 3709. Lessons Learn Spanish with Mr. Rome Romero's. ro's. Romero's. Practical eonversation 4th of July Avenue. Ti-352, apart apartment ment apartment No. 10. Phone 2-3021. Veteran Film Queen Denies Dahl Talk Of Verbal Feuding NEW YORK, July 28 (UPI) -Film queen Joan Crawford accus accused ed accused actress Arlene Dahl today of "keeping alive a feud that doesn't even exist for reasons that I can't understand." Miss Crawford said at her home here that she was una unaware ware unaware of statements made by Miss Dahl in Hollywood yester yesterday day yesterday which indicated their "feud" was very much alive. Miss Dahl said Miss Crawford had insinuat insinuated ed insinuated that she had bat In her bel belfry. fry. belfry. "It's all too ridiculous, said Miss Crawford. "I never said such a thing Mid I've never feud feuded ed feuded with her in, my-life. It stakes two to feud nd if she keeps this up she'll just be talking to her herself." self." herself." Miss Dahl told newsmen that Miss Crawford had ignored her since 1947 when Miss Dahl told her "you've always been a great favorite of mine and my moth mother's, er's, mother's, too." She said Miss Craw ford avoided her when they had adjoining dressing rooms at the 20th Century Fox studio last month. "I really don't know Miss Dahl except to say 'hello' and "good "goodbye,' bye,' "goodbye,' said Miss Crawford. "I've met her at parties, but I've nev never er never seen her to sit down and talk to her. I think she is a very beautiful lady." Safely by Mail of Ul Companies firm is WITH THE U.S.A. SECURITIES ft EXCHANGE COMMISSION BY THE STATE OF FLORIDA SECURITIES COMMISSION BY THE FIDELITY & CASUALTY CO. OF NEW YORK AIR MAIL CLIENTS IN CUBA. PUERTO RICO. CANADA. ITALY (T2) Miscellaneous FOR SALE) Aged eetural nure at give-away price by the truckload. Call 2-2641. Automebjl and household goods for sale. H-790-X Tavernilla St. Balbea. Phone 2-1521. NURSERY SCHOOL Transportation provided, con constant stant constant supervision, age ?Vi re 5. Fenced in yard, call Balbea 1214. FOR SALE: Lullabye 6 year eld crib with mattress, $25.00 and Lullabye chifforobe, $25.00. Phone 3-2247 or 4-0196. FOR SALE: 100 ft. white picket fence, 36 Ins, high, three gayes, 14 .Venetian blind 11 need painting and new tape. Very cheap. Call Balboa 2194. FOR SALE: Zenith Victrola shortwave r a d I e Combination, 8'j' G.E. refrigerator, water heater, eall 3-4304. FOR SALE: Maternity and baby clothe store Stock, owner unable to give ft personal attention. For information apply en premises. usto Arosemen Ave. In front of Royal Crown Cols. FOR SALE: Portable ROYAL typewriter, $25. House 5426, Diablo Height. Phone 2-2674. FOR SALE: Telefunken taps recorder, practically new. $225. 7th street, house 2523, Rie A A-bajo. bajo. A-bajo. FOR SALE: B tr W Amateur Radio Transmitter 135 Watt Input. Excellent condition. $225. KZ5FL, phone Balbea 1694. Animals FOR SALE: Large, thorough thoroughbred bred thoroughbred mar. Gentle, ride well, $50 00. Call Balbea 1772. Car Rentals Househunting Follow up all your leads with a new rental car from Fiesta (Herts Licensee) Tel. 3-4568. Lobby El Panami Hilton. Rooms FOR RENT: Confortable tor students. Uruguay Street and 48th. Tel. 3-6506. Putt Putt Loop Annual Tourney Begins Aug. 17 The Putt Putt golf course will hold its first annual tournament on August 17th and 18th, winner of which will be sent, expenses paid to Jacksonville, Florida to compete in the regional Putt Putt Tournament. Four winners of the Florida tournament will then be sent to Fayetteville, North Carolina to play in the Putt Putt Tournament of Champions. Names of 119 players for the local tournament will be drawn Monday night August 3rd at the Putt Putt course. These names will be drawn out of the box in which players have been putting their names since March. In addition the following seven winners of the Putt Putt League automatically have a place in the tournament: Jorge Paz Rodriguez, L. Bloompquist, L. Gutierrez, Billy Cardoze, Augusto Lindo, J. A. Va Va-llarino llarino Va-llarino and Fend Humbert, also G. de la Ossa who holds the course record, and Gabriel Zarak for making the most consecutive hole in-ones (7). In all 128 players will comete in the local tournament for a chance to play in the United States. After the drawing is held tor tha names nf the nlavers their nnmoi will he nut hflflr intn the box and 50 more names will be drawn to be sent to Fayetteville, North Carolina to enter a raff'e for"' three prizes : an all exDense- Mrin in Lnndnn and Paris (1st Uprfze), to Mexico (2nd prize), to Bermuda (dra prize;. Anvnne nlii vino a round at Putt Tutt before August 3rd. is entitled to put his name in tne box. mere io nn limit tn the number of times one's name may be entered. Prizes at tne Tournament oi rhamninnK" in the United Satates are cash prizes, ranging from $2,000 to $1,000. 1 Drowns In Leap from Blazing Rig nn Mexico Gulf NEW ORLEANS (UPI) Fire kfcroke out on an oil rig 35 miles off the coast last night and (rfche dozen men on it leaped into lathe Gulf of Mexico. One of them kdrowned. The Coast Guard said the 11 tsurvivors were badly burned and taken to a hospital in Lees- ville, La. The Coast Guard said the Hire, still burning today, broke out shortly before midnight and was Hollowed by two explosions. A eut eut-ter ter eut-ter today was standing by the burning rig 35 miles south of Real Estate FOR SALI Let $00 and 1.000 meter. In the Naeve Hipidrem Urbaahtatio acre Mm Reese Racetrack. AH lets wftb street fronts, sewage, water aula ant) electricity. CaM W. McBanteH. Tel. 4-097$. FOR SALE: Beautiful residence. 4 beoVoom, livingroom, dining dining-room, room, dining-room, library, recreation room, large kitchen, pantry, maid's room with service, bet water, ter terrace, race, terrace, garden, garage, land 1,800 m. 9th. Street Ne. 28, San San-Francisco. Francisco. San-Francisco. FOR SALE: House at Santa Clara, ejuick sale, best offer ever $3,000.00. 4,500 square meter, 4 lots. Leaving the Isthmus. Bal Bal-boa. boa. Bal-boa. Tel. 2-2672, Commercial Sites FOR RENT: 316.80 square meter, suitable tor e warehouse workshop, garage, S Street, be between tween between Automobile Row and Frn Frn-gipani gipani Frn-gipani Street, close to Auto Ser Ser-vicio, vicio, Ser-vicio, $235.00. Phen 2-0481 WANTED WANTED: Bilingual cashier with typing experience. Call Cu Cu-rundu rundu Cu-rundu 2118. YMCA's Beginners (lass In Russian Ends July 31 The first beginners elass In Russian at the Balboa Armed Services Y.M.C.A. will complete its sessions at the end of July and will resume in August as an intermediate Russian class. A new beginners class will be begin gin begin on Aug. 4, meeting twice each week, on Tuesdays and Fri days at 7 p.m. Mr. Plotnikoff, a White Russian, who has lived in Harbin, Shan Shanghai ghai Shanghai and Hong Kong and is now a resident of Panama, taught the first class at the Y.M.C.A. and will continue as instructor. Information about the new class may be obtained at the Bal Balboa boa Balboa Y.M.C.A. The telephone is Balboa 3839 or 8759. For Any Budget This is YOUR CHANCE TO BECOME A BUICK OWNER BUICK 1952 4 Door Sedan $375.00 BUICK 1954 4 Door Sedan $775.00 BUICK 1955 4 Door Riviera $985.00 BUICK 1955 4 Door Sedan $1050.00 BUICK 1956 4 Door Riviera $1285.00 BUICK 1956 Century Coupe $1250.00 BUICK 1957 2 Door Sedan $1875.00 AND MANY OTHER BARGAINS SMOOT i PAREDES Automobile Row r'anama City I INVESTOR'S? GUIDE By SAM SHULSKY Q. I am a widow- with about 1,200 a year coming in from stocks. I will not be eligible tor k social lecurity for a few years. Meanwhile, am drawing on $12,- BOOO savings to help meet living bexpensei. Live alone in a 840,000 bhome. Should I rent it for $300 a month, or sell ana invest the pro proceeds? ceeds? proceeds? I feel the property would Ibe a better hedge against infla- rtion than to have everything in f stocks. A. Your stocks are all fine qua quality lity quality except that some of your mu mu-tuals tuals mu-tuals funds and your insurance stocks wobably don't yield very much. I am sending you a list of f issues yielding about 4 1-2 to five per cent. The house is, of course, an ex- kpensive luxury. If you eould real real-Size Size real-Size $40,000 on it. you could get at Weast $2,CO0 a year or about $160 a month in income from the s urities purchased. Renting it would provide more gross, out pernaps not much more net after taxes, repairs, etc. I agree the house is a hedge a gainst inflation, but so would good stocks be. And you've got to a tisfy yourself that the house's va lue could go much higher and still retain a fair market. Houses selling for $50,000, $60,000 and up ido not command too wide a mar market. ket. market. Yon are still too young a wom woman an woman to use savings for current ex penses. I think that makes an early decision on the house im imperative. perative. imperative. Q. Can you teU me anything a a-bout bout a-bout the value of Lexa Oil? A. I can't tell you anything a a-bout bout a-bout its value. Its price is three cents bid last I (could find.) Q. What is the significance of the figure? Has it any relation relationship ship relationship to the price? A. The volume figure carried after the name of a, stock in the table listings shows, generally in hundreds, the number of shares sold during the day. Thus: GCn Dynamics 2 115. This means that 11,500 shares of General Dynamics, which pays a dividend of $2, were transferred that day. There Is no real elationshrp be between tween between activity in a stock and its value. However, a professional tape watcher and charnat will put a good deal of store by the trad trading ing trading volume in the stock, especial especially ly especially if he is watching its price changes over a period of time. Q. We are m our late 70s, re receiving ceiving receiving social security and a small amounts of common stock stock-General General stock-General Motors, Standard Oil of N.J. and 40 duPont. Should I fell the duPont; it doesn't pay much? Should I buy bonds, preferreds? A. I think this is one of the rare cases where a sale of duPont is indicated. The $10,000 you now have invested in the 40 shares of duPont yield $240 a year. If you switched that money into shares of some good railroad, retail store chain, shoe company, you' could raise that income to $500 and you could get even $600 from some straight preferreds or bonds. You evidently have had a very sound broker. I am sending along a list of some top grade invest investment ment investment stocks, but I think you ought to talk over the situation with him. In your case I think pre preferreds ferreds preferreds or bonds would make good sense. Jim Riley On TV Tomorrow Evening Jim Riley, president of the Junior Golf Tournament Com Committee, mittee, Committee, will appear en CFN CFN-TV's TV's CFN-TV's program "Panorama" To Tomorrow morrow Tomorrow at 4:30 p.m. Willard H. Beeson and James DesLondss Jr., who are also members of the Junior Golf Tournament Committee, will be cm the program wMi Riley. SOMETHING WRONG4 ) JACKSONVILLE, Fh: (UPI) Directors of the Jacksonville Po Police lice Police Credit Union Friday ordered an investigation of possible check forgeries after they reported shortages of more than $150,000. The Pacific Steam Navigation Company (INCORPORATED BY ROYAL CHARTER 1840) FAST FREIGHT AND PASSENGER SERVICES TO COLOMBIA, ECUADOR, PERU AND CHILE S.S. "PIZARRO" S.S. "POTOSI" TO f NJTED KINGDOM VTA CARTAGENA, LA GCAIRA, KINGSTON. HAVANA. NASSAU. BERMUDA. SPAIN AND FRANCE S.S. "REINA DEL MAR" (20,225 Tons) ........... .Sept. (Alr-condjtloned) to HN.TED KINGDOM DIRECT M.V. "SANTANDER" Aug. 1 M.V. "SAUNAS" ..,.f....tJAuf. 12 ROYAL MAIL LINES LTD.HOLLAND AMERICA LINE TO NORTH PACIFIC PORT! M.V. "PARIMA" S.S. "DINTELDYK TO UKCONTINENT S.S. "DALERDYK" ......Jury M M.V. "DONGEDYK" Aug. t MX "SAILINGS SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE TELEPHONES: Cristobal 1-16545 Panama 8-12571 Balbea l-im s Opening STOCK PRICES 4 NEW YORK Jnlv w cTTOTax Stocks advanced irroii1jrJ . moderately active opening today. juicvu-wuva issues registered gain that ran to more than point American Tobacco and la ternational Nickel rose a point each in their rvsrxwriv Aimamm A long list of others io ailcC (wtviuwta iuviw up iracuoos. Cerre de Pasco as? Chicago Great West 46b Chrysler 74 Cities Service 144 Coastal Caribe j Colgate Paimolive 4314 Du Pont 1 6i)4 El Paso Natural &as 3214- Fairchild Engine avib Fargo Oil i$-16b; Femont Pet General Dynamics IH4 4 General Electric $14 General Motors 57V& General Plywood aoH Gulf Oil iifWi Harsco Steel 42b Howe Sound 14S4 ; Imperial Oil. 44 Intl Pet 4b Lockheed 2934 Magellan Pet ib Montrose Chem 14b 1 New Eng. Tel end TeJ 195 Northrop Air 3514 Olin Mathieson 1714 Pancoastal Phillips Pet 4T Pu re Odl RCA Reynolds Metal 120 '4 Royal Dutch flheH 4136 San Jacinto tb Servo Corp sob Shell Trarisp 19 Signal Oil voA fta $3 Sinclair Oil m. Socony Mobile 434 sperry Rand & Standard Oil N7 5114 StudebaktavPaekepd 13 Superior Oil I815 Texas Gulf Prodi 36)4 Textron 29 Underwood 27 United Canso Ofl 7-irj US Rubber t US Steel s I03Tft Westinghouse met 954 Wheeling Steel; 4H Man Profccfj Sfrlppir Wiitf Vilii An Axe MENOMONJU, Wis. (UPI A burlesque show manager goes to eourt today because he took an ax to a man who allegedly ripped the clothing off the manager's strip strip-teaser teaser strip-teaser wife. Eugene Mc Williams, a carnival worker from Jackson, Miss., faced a charge of aggravated battery, a felony, in Dunn County court.; He- whacked James Score, 37r i Menomonie, on the head I times with the broad side of ax after Score ripped clothing- j McWilliams wife, Candy, pp said. Cndy is the burled show's top stripper. i Pnlipsi said iht vii tiif tafuita? her act before about 40 patrons j yesterday when score rushed ffnm .. his seat In an effort to speed up the proceedings at the Dunn Coun County ty County Fair. His unscheduled unwrapping el Candy was not quite complete complete-when when complete-when Mc Williams arrived on the scene, police said. Score needed eight stitches to dose the wound on his head. Dist. Atty. C. M. Meneiner said said-that that said-that while Mc Williams was only defending his wife, he viewed the defense. He said an investigation-d appeared to warrant the charge. Mensiner said Score also will an answer swer answer criminal charges. "GAMBLf R" LOSIS LONDON. (UPI) Member of Parliament William Rees-Daviea took along two wedding rings for Mb KfMa urhn kajjn't hall tim. in go to a jeweler. He hoped one of the rings would fit. He lost One was too big, the other soo small. f r our nours earner, nees-uavics had introduced a bill in Parlia Parliament ment Parliament to revise (ambling laws. An. M M ..Aug. SO M....Aar, 11 'UU'U ,ttAf. 12 ;5 Grrand Isle. PAGI NINB TCESDAT. JULY 28. lt TrHrj klWH '.. .i..iA WAYNE life r RISCILLA'S POP Slow But Steady By AL VERMEII Next, houkof vwrwg-AWPffBwgcAfgFU.. "iwtii; finally.! p"" TH LEAVE IT AT Ttf POOPIE. gl"i-EXCBlg'X MI5TTK MINIS -j -j.TEK,IKNCWICOU.PPPTNP ) 71 Folly mi Win on our co-operation, 2T HIS TURKISH H j "J i" 'nUTOOEStrt QUITE AWSWKAW)- . "Wm i in in n-mr- UY, YOU HAVEUT ME. OOJ WOT, UMAZ OU SmLOVS MARTHA WfcYUE? Too sou ewav"w sows to ww yoii .7? ALLEY OOP IN EASY at jyibRTY MEEKLI - f HECKLES AND Hffi FRIENDS Bonus for Mom BY MERRILL BLOSSL'R Mom! oadItas Im back from the DUDC RANCH 'AN XMlctl'LOVE AOM "THIS injun corn" indian is forvtou, Tommy- OOAVjeweliwa. too fM 7 DOMT BE.' JEALOUS' J 1 CAN -v GUESS ME, WHAT TUB I) WAVE A i 1 NICE TIME L L-I I L-I AT JOAN'S )(S'CS fs- IPART'T .P i "-11 i 1 1 1 AND, PLEASE, PRISCILLA. DON'T GULP TOUK CAKE AND ICE CREAM.1 7 AND ICE i y VCREAMJ DON'T WORRY MOM. I NEVER FORGET MY MANNERS ATt-ATj- fl ( TM AT S WHYk an P I'M ALWAYS V 1 (THE LAST ONE J .7 -7TO GET r Company Coming BY V. T. HAMLIN lw. rjkLM down! I'll SET THIS MACHINE YEH..MSANWHILS TUPrl 1 RaJHABLY SET HI JACKED AW WE WON'T SET A RED SOU! P"i iiii aw. rjkLM down! I'll I I"StT A MILLION WORKING AGAIN dollars GOLD IN PRETTY SOON... I TUAT WAGON AND V. ...AND LOOKIT THAT Tl THAT'S PROBABLY I WHAT'S FIXIKJQ TO I HAPPEN RIGHT Jf .i-1 . 1 -YSS.aUT LEAVE THBM TDUSr- 10 ME- ru- S1 US 7 Jf LOOKIN' OUT- THROUGH ALL RI6HT J L FIT, JACK hy iiOOTS AND HIR BUDOIII His Dream Girl UCS BUNNY Carry-All -- TM uV At. 9 J (t)Air)rsite True Life Adventures by EDGAR martin MIGHT ahd MITES (Pi Wfill-' P').-!- R" Rising Temper BY LESLIE TURNER fl KNOW! WU FA5CIWATE W6,TOa tf7 UUI HARP TO ULK WITH NO PRIVACY! I CAN fCEL PON ANTONIO'S GROWINtt unTII ITV. MO TBLLINfi WHAT LIES 5HE' TOLD HUM MAYRE A FRANK WOULD COUNTER v" COULO -t-i ACT 'EIA...' COULP WE K5i- f STEP OUTSIDE POWT DO IT, TONY! Y I CAN PEFENP y"-11 VO WEWSR FORfilV BUT I HAVE NOTHWft TO WY56LF IF I WERE PIS CUSS Ben in 1 mmr? THE CAUSE Of m 1 6aCK1 WAMKLY, 5EN0R, nilVllitl' VJrtltl V Wmi BBHRU NU p IW Kit .r,iM. In.. T.t, H.i. fit yifct Spoil Sports BY DICK CAVALLI (MORTYI I COMP06ED A50NO-IT!5 60INGTO J MAIE ME R CATCHY MELODY ISN'T IT? TART A YOUR FEET TAPPINQ. J DOKN'TIT? y INTERE6Tir4G. I NEVER KNPW KATCHATUKlAN-a "feABtK OANCE"COULD BE PLAVCO ON A BANJO. ARE YOU OOMG TO TAKE cams: v-opiMrpe SMORD OVER YOUR BEST FRIEND'S? .S J., I 6111 nt- 3- V iiuat BOARDINO HOUSE with MAJOR HOOPLB OUT OUR WAY BY J. R. WILLIAMS r 1 ..r. L ie&An MUPFY. I'M cowr4 Mamazeo that a gentle- i THE A. T AAN OF Y--UK KEf-INtu ljior ct iir MfMcciDATP Ut-i HOURS IN w -'r -r,i''rLvr . '.,. MA-?- .Ae."5r JA'SurN DOES . YDUR HARMONY l-T"5 CNI5 JJIU' vliTH iOMEOtiZ I A 71: Jto kP THIS ART?DKAT ? Li2ir--"--i -siiiK& a wot- tac--B-a RODIN A kir-f ' 1 CMCI' I nrlih-;iC- 1 '''"VS?;''.,";1 HEROES AR M. 06 -MOT BO4 .yow.i 1 iw N THE BATTLEFIELPS OF HIS OWN OOSINS, THE AjrRkAKI BUFF-AUO 16 VIRTUAUV 1RRESI6TISL.E. RARE IS THE BEAST THAT CAN WITHSTAND WIS MkSHTV CHAR6E. BUT TINV MICROBES, TOO SMALL TO EE SEEN, HAVE ALMOST WPEJ? OUT THE HERDS OP THESE POWERFUL ANIMALS, i T M. .( U I. PH. Off. "V --J?3" SIDE GLANCES Bv Calbraith XX': nil. U t. r. Qn. "That movie't dull! You ought to' see the love scene in the car next to us!" Cd lie IIK.-il 7-2S- T M. H U.I. Pit. Off. IMt by MA UrA-. M "We'll have to postpone the launching! None of us can count 'up' to ten much less 'count down "I wonder if he's fussy about his meals!' AePOVAS PANAMA AfWA Kf MIAMI-BOSTON 40.90 PANAMA-MIAMI 55.00 PANAMA BOSTON J:0fi CFN NEWS 3:15 Dlnnh Short 3 :.?n Yon Akerl For It 4:0" Mr. WlMrd 4 :S Fllfjh' 5 (Ml Hihln HfwvJ 5:S0 PANORAMA 7:00 Scienr rictlon Thlrt 9 90 III M 1 1 on 11 15 .Tlmmy Rodlrj Ozzle Harriet Dewy 'Vrrt'-hnlt Theatre rkrmirH To Danger AmMettr Hni Hni-CFN CFN Hni-CFN NF.WS Fnc: Stev Allen Today's TV Program Courtesy of Aerovla Panama Alrwa PHONES: PANAMA: 3-10573-16983-1699 OFFICE HOURS: from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. 830 Jk&. Panama 1090 Jk&. Cn HE'5 LICKED v Ids! Hearae, Moran Caf oo mam ma Diiran mi 1 Seeking Berlin Status Quo Until 1961 West Working On Compromise To Salvage Geneva Conference GENEVA, July 28 ( UPI ) The West is working on a compromise plan to ave the deadlocked Big Four foreign ministers talks by offering Russia a proposal to keep the Berlin situation as it is until Christmas 1961f conference sources reported today. The plan repotredly will propose that: Western rights in Berlin should remain unchanged until an all. German settlement, unless modified previously by Big Four agreement. ( At the end of two and a half years that is, around Christmas 1961 the Big Four foreign ministers should meet again to reconsider the Berlin situation. The new Western Plan would mean putting the Berlin issue on ice at least until after the lu US. presidential election, the Brit British ish British parliamentary election which must be held before May IMO, and the West German 1 arlia arlia-mentary mentary arlia-mentary election scheduled for the fall of 1961. It rtportedly was studied by U S., British Franch and Wast Garman officials this morning and submitted by them to a meet ing of the Western Big Four for foreign eign foreign ministers this afternoon. The Western ministers met just after 3 p.m. at French delegation headquarters. They got together to draw up a list of proposals for a Berlin truce settlement for submission tomor tomorrow row tomorrow to Russia's Andrei A. (.ro- xnvko. ... The Soviet Foreign minister and his aides presumably were prepar preparing ing preparing a similar list of Russia s terms. Tha Western foreign ministers and Gromyko agreed last night to trade written proposals on Ber Berlin lin Berlin in an effort to speed us the work of the flagging Geneva con conference ference conference and, if possible, work out truce agreement that still might let the west go to a summit ses session sion session in September. The Western list was based on proposals handed to Gromyko June 16. But Western conference source disclosed that it was likely Weather Or Not This weather report for the 24 hours ending 8 a.m. today is prepared by the Meteorological and Hydrographic Branch of the Panami Canal Company: Balboa Cristobal TEMPERATURE: High 81 80 Low 72 74 HUMIDITY l High 98 95 Low 87 91 WIND: (max. mph) W-ll NW-17 RAIN (inches .41 .74 WATER TEMP: (inner harbor) 80 82 LAKE ELEVATIONS: Gatun Lake 83.53 Maden Dam 213.12 BALBOA TIDES WEDNESDAY, JULY 29 High Time 10:35 a.m. 11:20 p.m. m. 12.8 ft. 11.8 ft. Low Time 4:24 a.m. 5:04 p.m. Ht. 4.2 ft. 4.1 ft. Gianna Maria CANALE Ettore MANNI Aara CRUZ Georges MARSHAL Aim! a Cast f Thousands! "THE REVOLT of In SUPERCINESCOPE to contain significant changes which the Russians might accent as a compromise. M The decision, to pen the drafts reached at a Big Four "working tea party," indicated the possible development of some new hope that a Berlin truce accord might yet emerge from the deadlocked Geneva talks. The Big Three Western foreign ministers met for two hours with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko in their so called working-tea session at the villa of Brit Britain's ain's Britain's Selwyn Lloyd. They agreed to meet again as soon as East and West Berlin pro proposal posal proposal lists were completed prob probably ably probably tomorrow. Western delegates were even more cautious th'n usual in pre predicting dicting predicting whether this meant the Geneva talks might have got off dead-center. But some sources thought "some headway" had been made in view of the fact that after eight weeks of fruitless talking in circles, East and West had finally gotten down to businesslike methods of trying to work out an accord on paper. "This could be an important slep," one Western source said. "The next few days will show whe whether ther whether it really is." Earlier Gromyko had demanded a new, in a lunch meeting with Lloyd, that the Western powers slash their Berlin troop strength in isolated West Berlin by about two thirds. Reliable conference sources said that Gromyko repeatedly made the demand during the two-hour lunch conference in Lloyd's villa. The sources said that the Grom Gromyko yko Gromyko Lloyd session had failed to: produce a hoped-for peace move that might break the Geneva deadlock and pave th way for summit session. Gromyko was said to have given no indication that Russia was ready to agree to a Berlin truce except en its own terms. Instead the sources disclosed, the Soviet foreign minister insist insisted ed insisted in his meeting with Lloyd that the United States, Britain and France cut their 11,000-man Wesl Berlin garrison to around 3,000 or 4,000. The West thus far has agreed not to increase its Berlin garrison strength beyond the 11,000 man figure but has refused any slash in the garrison. PanamaThk Month Moves Offices The Magazine Panama-T h y Month has moved its office to the Ford Building on 35th St and Jus Jus-to to Jus-to Arosemena, over the First Na National tional National City Bank, Room 24. The telephone remains the same, Pa Panama nama Panama 3 -OH72. OPENS TOMORROW! A DAZLING SPECTACLE! Thrills galore... Danger and power in the bloody arena of the circus!... The fight for liberty of thou thousands sands thousands under the boot of the conquering Romans! the GLADIATORS" EASTMAN COLOR . . Disarmament Talks Resumption Seen As Possibility Of New Western Move CENEVA, July 28 (UPI) Top level Western diplomatic moves to today day today set off fresh hopes for a pos possible sible possible revival under United Nations tutelage of the dead-locked disar disarmament mament disarmament negotiations with the So Soviet viet Soviet Union. The Western Big Three foreign ministers took time off from their Berlin crisis talks to discuss the prospects of a resumption of the global arms cut discussions Secretary of Stale Christian Her Her-ter, ter, Her-ter, British Foreign Secretary Sel Selwyn wyn Selwyn Lloyd and French Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Mur Mur-ville ville Mur-ville understood to be examining what "forum" could be deyised to get the negotiations going again when the United Nations assembly meets in New York in mid-September. The Western move was prompt prompted ed prompted by Soviet hints in off-stage meetings with Western leaders in Geneva that Russia might be In Interested terested Interested in taking up again the disarmament negotiations which were broken off in London tome two years ago. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyke gave these indications first at a meeting with British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd before the Geneva conference rec recessed essed recessed last June. Lady Baden-Powell Thanks Seoul Head For Kindness Here Lady Olave Baden Powell, personable widow of the found founder er founder of the Scouting moxement, recently wrote the President of the Canal Zone Boy Scout Council thanking him for the Council's Lrti't in making her recent visit to Ihe Isthmus so enjoyable. Lady Baden-Powell, who de dedicated dicated dedicated the Council's ew wa wa-terLont terLont wa-terLont camp, Camp Chagres, during her visit earlier this month, wrote Brig. Gen. George F. Schlatter: "...How very good It was of you to plan to take me out to Camp Chagres; and how very glad I am to have seen that unique place, wliere no doubt, in years to come, relays of boys will learn crap craft and skill, and enjoy all the many varied Sv'cuting activities.- to help fit I'lHiifelvea of their adult lite... "...t shall never ?Oi"g?t the! erjovable l nlf nour spent with you all there; and I do offer to you yourself, and to an me other men associated with you !n welcoming me there, my very real thanks for that so pleas pleasant ant pleasant time, and also for the very generous gift of that 'address of welcome,' (and the tie and woggle!) which I shall value and cherish for always..." in .. TODAY 3:15 5:10 - 60c. -7:05 9: 30c. p.m. SEVER BEFORE IN POLICE V j u hi ft i Filmed as ;t WlTttWIS ilviini steve mcqueen IV I X ftappe)e( Tfi w o The Soviet diplomat discreetly and informally then indicated an "interest" in this possibility. Earlier this week Gromyko a a-gain gain a-gain displayed interest in a pos possible sible possible revival of the disarmament negotiations with the West at a dinner conference with West Ger German man German Foreign Minister Heinrich Von Brent a no. . Gromyko did not go beyond his casual hints and has made no formal proposal thus far. The West may, however; try to sound him out before departing from the Geneva conference on just what forum the Kremlin has in mind as a practical negotiating body for a disarmament accord. Since the disarmament talks col collapsed lapsed collapsed after more than five months of negotiations in London two years ago the issue has remained totally deadlocked. Dalai Lama To Send 3 Representatives To Red-Run Festival VIENNA (UPI)-Angry Ameri Americans cans Americans attending tin Communist-run World Youth Festival prepared today to fight Red efforts 'to ex exclude clude exclude anti-Communist members of the U.S. delegation. At the same time, Austrian anti-Reds announced that tre Dalai Lama will send three rep representatives resentatives representatives to the festival to tell the truth about Communist-conquered Tibet. These were. ft latest develop developments ments developments in a determined eampaign which probably has made the Reds regret that they decided for the firs! time to risk staging one of their youth conventions outside the Iron Curtain. Organizers of h festival used strong-arm tactics against Ma' Ma'-colm colm Ma'-colm Rivkin, of Cambridge. Mass., who was hauled bodily off a stage Sunday after he had been elected chairman of the U.S. del delegation. egation. delegation. The Rerl insisted that Commu Communist nist Communist and artyi-Communist factions among about 400 Americans here seek accreditation separately. wilh separate slates of officers and lhat the officers be appointed, not elecled. One delegate said they tried to exclude many Americans by tak ing up the accreditation cards of the delegation on the pretext that 150 cards had been stolen. But lliey oaVe new cards only to a hand-picked crew. Court- Affirms KasDer's Term NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI)-The Tennessee Supreme Court today affirmed the inciting to riot con conviction viction conviction of segregationist John Kas Kasper per Kasper in connection with 1957 school integration troubles here. The rulin upheld a six-month jail sentencSand $500 fine against Kasper who last week entered a federal reformatory at Tallahas Tallahassee, see, Tallahassee, Fla., to serve- a six-month contempt of federal court sen sentence tence sentence imposed at Knoxville, Tenn. Attorneys indicated they would appeal the Kasper case to the U.S. Supreme Court. US 21 TIKHyiCSSE) AY Wpt UIGHTON The Passionate Stronger Patvtcut MINTOM Ccwls JUSTIN I Metal Industry FacesNewUSW Strike Threats NEW YORK. July 28 (UPD (UPD-The The (UPD-The United Steelworkers of America (USW) scheduled con contract tract contract talks with the big three aluminum producers today un under der under new threat of a strike which would shut down the nation's production of a second basic metal at midnight Friday. In the two week old steel strike, federal mediation chiei Joseph F. Finnegan reported "no substantial change of posi position tion position by either party in any re respect" spect" respect" after a two-hour joint meeting yesterday, the first since the strike began. No fur further ther further meeting was scheduled. The eSpper industry also was under strike threat, from the mine, mill and smelter workers union, which has been continu continuing ing continuing talks under contracts ex extended tended extended since June 30. Steel companies continued meanwhile to show record sales and profits in newly-released six month reports. The strike threatened Aluminum Company of America also showed a sharp increase in sales and earnings, for the half-year period. The giant United States Steel Corp. was to release today a financial report expected to show record or near-record sales and earnings. On the other side of the pic picture, ture, picture, however, it was reported by the American Iron and Steel Institute that the strikebound steel industry turned out only 365,000 tons of ingots and steel for casting last week while op operating erating operating at 12.9 percent of its 1939 rated capacity. This was the lowest produc production tion production figure since the strike strike-riddled riddled strike-riddled month of July, 1956. Output this week is expected to slip even further. Steel magazine, an industry trade weekly, reported that the 500,000 steel strikers in 24 states had lost wages totaling $135, $135,-200 200 $135,-200 000 and the industry had lost sales totaling 378 million dollars from midnight July 14 through Monday. In Washington, Labor Sec Secretary retary Secretary James P. Mitchell said President Eisen hewer was "particularly pleased" that negotiations had resumed in the 13-day-old steel strike. Mitchell gave the President a first-hand report of progress toward ending the tieup in an unscheduled visit to the White House. He said the President "hopes they will continue to negotiate constantly In an effort to gel a settlement." French Troops Move For Killing Blow At Algerian Rebels ALGIERS (UPI) Thirty thou: sand French troops moved into position today for a sledgehammer blow at 5,000 Algerian rebels holed up in the Grand JKabyllia Moun Mountains. tains. Mountains. r The troops were part of a ma major jor major offensive designed to break the hack of the rebels' resistance in their toughest mountain strong stronghold hold stronghold and speed the end of the long civil war. The soldiers have been man maneuvering euvering maneuvering for position since the op operation eration operation began last Wednesday with parachute drops and am amphibious phibious amphibious landings in this rugged area some 60 miles east of Al Algiers. giers. Algiers. Almost no information was being released by French headquarters here,, but a spokesman said a communique would probably be is issued sued issued tonight. Informed sources said there had been several unexpected snags in the operation,, forcing postpone postponement ment postponement until today of thi climax of the campaign. Unofficial reports filtering back to Algiers said that only light con contact tact contact had been made thus far with the rebels, who were well dis dispersed persed dispersed and hidden deep in the mountains. iaUICHARDSON Unusual One Now On Exhibit At Panama University. I An unusual art exhibit by a young worm American eeo sal sal-zer zer sal-zer of Ohio-was hung yesterday in the Library and Administra Administration tion Administration Building at Panama Univer University sity University where it will remain lor the next two weeks. The artist is spending ihe sum summer mer summer in Panama as an assistant in a Department of State cultural exchange mission directed toward the formation of a modern dra- m a group at the university, Panama architect Demetrio To- rai uuroaucea saizer to the group of artists, theater people professors and students who at attended tended attended the opening. Every water color and drawing of the 37 on display shows fresh talent, and each has emotional content effectively set forth. Soft color tones with many va variations riations variations of grey predominate in many of the landscapes with such titles as "Arizona Storm" and in including cluding including impressions of mountains presented with a strongly Orien Oriental tal Oriental technique. Particularly popular with yes yesterday's terday's yesterday's group were "Clouds in the Andes" and "Desert Winds." The latttr has an in interesting teresting interesting semi calligraphic treatment. Painted in a wholly different style are three colorful street scenes of Election Year in Chile, where Saizer spent a season on a drama assignment with Catho Catholic lic Catholic University. Black and strong US Railroad Workers Said 'Angry, Ready For Strike ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI) The head of an association represent representing ing representing 23 railroad labor organizations said yesterday the nation's ra:l ra:l-road road ra:l-road workers are "angry and ready for a strike" to keep loco locomotive motive locomotive firemen on diesel engines. G.E. Leighty, chairman of the Railway Labor Executives' Asso Association, ciation, Association, warned the railroads that their campaign to discredit the use of firemen as "featherbed "featherbed-ding" ding" "featherbed-ding" would not succeed. He said one million railroad workers were ready to strike to back up demands for maintaining firemen as a safety measure on diesel locomotives. Leighty spoke at the 37th con convention vention convention of the Brotherhood of Lo Locomotive comotive Locomotive Firemen and Engine Engine-men. men. Engine-men. "I say, frankly, that in all my years of railroading, I have never known a time when the great body of railroad workers is as angry and ready for a strike as they are at present," Leighty Former CZer Now Heads Walter Reed Army Hospital A former member of the Ca Canal nal Canal Zone Health Bureau is the new head of Walter Reed Hospi Hospital tal Hospital in Washington, according to reports recently received on the Isthmus. He is Brig. Gen. Clement F. St. John, who served on the med medical ical medical staff of the Canal Zone hos hospitals pitals hospitals from July, 1935, to Novem November, ber, November, 1937. During the war, St. John serv served ed served in the European Theater. Pri Prior or Prior to his appointment to Walter Reed he headed Brooke Army Hospital in San Antonio. At Wal Walter ter Walter Reed he succeeds Maj. Gen. Leonard Heaton who has been made Surgeon General for the Army. . ENTRABa D Av JLZ1R E L THE STORY OF A HIRED KILLER,.. A TOWN WITH A GUILTY SECRET ...A BULLET WITHOUT A NAME! CHARLES ; iterfK DRAKE JSPaS- ?eac story on page 65! - Mali Ar Show By Salzepj reds predominate in Uib; render- ing of crowds and banners. In still another palette and manner are two pictures domi dominated nated dominated by yellow one a painting of the City of Florence and anoth another er another titled simply 'Trees and Sun.-' There are also some ghosts, a haunted Mexican girl and a be believable lievable believable London fog. Seven of the pictures 'ire de designs signs designs for theater settings Sal Sal-ler ler Sal-ler made for a production of King Lear. Three popular works are dark scenes in which pur purple ple purple accents are used to set the dramatic mood for "Macbeth.'' The artist is Clarence M. Sai Saizer zer Saizer Jr., born in Cincinnati in 1933. Besides studying at Yale, he has worked under the direc direction tion direction of painter Josef Albers and scene-designer Donald Oenslager. He has also designed productions for Judith Anderson, Joan Blon Blon-dell dell Blon-dell and Signe Hasso. His paintings have been shown in New Haven, Conn.; Cincinna Cincinnati; ti; Cincinnati; Tucson, Ariz., and in Valpa Valparaiso raiso Valparaiso and Santiago, Chile. Saizer is here as assistant to Frank McMulllan, visiting profes professor sor professor of drama at the University of Panama at the invitation of the university through the inter international national international educational and exchange program of. the US State Depart Department. ment. Department. McMullan is associate professor of play production in charge of said. "If a strike is forced upon, the workers by railroad majiageN ment, the carriers will soon find that the propaganda package that has been sold them by their pub public lic public relations advisers is literally a Pandora's box of troubles that will come home to roost in many unforeseen ways." Leighty also warned the rail railroads roads railroads that any attempt at "strike insurance" was doomed to failure "This is because, far more damaging to the future of rail railroading roading railroading than the temporary loss of business through a shift to other forms of transport than a prolonged strike would entail," he said. Leighty urged support of bills in Congress to "protect the inter interests ests interests of the public and the em employes ployes employes in passenger train aban abandonment donment abandonment proceedings." He said unless these bills are passed the railroads will "skele tonize the passenger system in a few monlhs and the "pas "passenger senger "passenger train will be dealt a death blow from which it may never be able to recover." Inter-American Bank Bill Sent To Eisenhower WASHINGTON, Julv 28 (UPI) T) e Home passed and sent to President Eisenhower yesterday a bill to authorize US participa participation tion participation in the new Inter-Anierican Developed Bank. The vote was 230 to 87. Chairman Brent Spence (D (D-Ky.) Ky.) (D-Ky.) of the House banking com committee mittee committee said the bank was de designed signed designed to expand the economic growth of the hemisphere. He said it would meet the needs of Latin American countries for expanded foreign financing. The bill would authorize a US subscription of $450,000,000. E A S Eiil A directing at the Ya'4 GraduatW ISchooLof Drama, -! Now production at the nivrity undar McMulltn'a .. rTion, with t a itudant Caf n production : ifaff. U mi Caamrrftra," which hat Vtmi translated into Spanish f m "2 Wiehmakr? Thornton J Wildtr's hit comadvi Aft.r lona Broadway run It was film-J J -iv. lire ;iaiiTlon II mo me as that used uceefully v in Chile last year. "La Casamentera"' will be gIV en on the nights of Aug. 16, m and 18 in the auditorium of the. Law School at the University." Salzer's one-man show is opei from Monday through Fridaf from 9 to 12 noon "and 3 tol p.m., from 9 to 1Z only on SaC urdays. There is no admission and the general public of the Ca nal Zone and Panama are invife ed to drop in. O.B. ;. 2 Discrimination' -i Aqainst Jews Denied Bv Reds i LONDON (UPI)-Moscow Radi? today aeain denied that the .Twt of the Soviet Union are discrtm 4 iiirtieu against ln anv way The denials, directed at "U.-SJ press allegations singled out thl New York Times and the wislr Daily Forward of New York a papers carrying the ralse report on the status of Jews in the) U.S.S.R. t. The Moscow Radio broadcast-? in the North American Servici-i was delivered by a "Soviet joffrn alist of Jewish origin.' His nSrii was indistinct but monitors id it was apparently So'omon DJnowitz. I His denials, after Vamifii!vf J S reading "the New York Times in other U. S. magazines," were said to be based on a lour of townl and villages in the Kiev, Zhitomir Vinnitsa, Lvov and Odessa regions; "I find,'-' he said.V'that there i no truth in Oie charge of JewisS persecution." D 0.75 0.40 Ay Shows 1:00, 4:24, I t, 6:41, 8:58 p.mf THEY CAUED HIM TJARUJITA" t I M,WIlHMe' BUT IN HER ARMS HE WAS A MAN J CINEMASCOPE and METROCOIOR! TEA AND SYMPATHY Starring: Deborah John Kerr Kerr La a ea c !BY NUMEROUS! I I REQUESTS! J Beginning. III V m U K K U VY I 1 1 at the tl J central!' Shown: iE2M til I Conrtesya Passes 1 AS I i..;ei ,',. II frkr.-flkit ?:su I ' l suspend- immiih CHARLTON YOl ' AN '. HE5T0N BRYN N ER BAXTEi?. tDWAROO YVONMt R0BIN50N DE CARLO owka PAGET jo DEREK In TECHNICOLOR! I' i . UNITED ARTISTS 1 "jaj v:-i, .''',' Wm'-C4 i -.!..'" 'fw" -iim |