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AN INDEPENDENT CN DAILY NEWSPAPER S attama Jbmertcmi "Let the people know the truth and the country is safe' Abraham Lincoln more people buy than any other imported whisky yjj PANAMA t-697S COLON 778 J I I4TH YIAR Slides Slow Work On 4th Of July Ave. Mori than two weeks of furious activity at the Ancon Hill section of Fourth of July Avenue have come to an abrupt standstill, although widening and paving work con continues tinues continues unabated toward the Limits and in the J Street sec. tion. Th cessation of work at the Hill has threatened to plit the ranks of the local order of Honorable Sidewalk Superintendents, whose various factions have been debat debating ing debating the shutdown hotly at various pubs within shouting distance of the disappearing hill. Balboa Heights forestalled over.excited beer spilling in the speculation.rife ranks of the Sidewalk Superintendents today by explaining the shutdown has been caused by un. predicted earth and rock conditions which began causing arthslides a week ago. Ancon Hill, has always been no notorious torious notorious for," unpredictability, but by the time the widening contract had been awarded to local con contractor tractor contractor Bildon Inc. The Canal of officials ficials officials believed enough test dril drillings lings drillings had been done on the hill to accurately indicate conditions 60 or 70 feet below the surface. Th first slidt indicated more tost drillings wtrt in prder, and renewed ttst drillings indicated here was much unstable mate material rial material in the hill as far as 25 feet below anticipated street level. According to a Balboa Heights spokesman, the condition would have little or no effect on the foun foundation dation foundation for the new stretcn of roan below the hill. i The chief problem is to prevent the top part of the remaining hill from sliding, into traffic once that lection of road j; completed. Officials say experience has shown that a mere retaining wall will not hold Ancon Hill, once i: begins to give way. So earth removal has been tern 8 Machete Murderer; Captured At Pacora Machete murderer Tilcio Quin tero, whose escape from the Car Car-cel cel Car-cel Modelo ten days ago sull re remains mains remains unexplained, was returned to his cell yesterday afternoon tfter being captured at Pacora. Quintero, who was sentenced to 20 years in prison for the machete slaying of Justo Hernandez Esco Esco-bar bar Esco-bar in May 1957, was captured after being recognized by a little boy while he was taking a bath at Pacora with two companions. Nei Neither ther Neither the names of the boy or the two men were revealed. A radio patrol car, which went to Hie spot where Quintero was sighted by the boy, located him es'ly and made the capture wiin little resistance. Quintero, who was armed with a rifle and a knife, made no attempt to use tb-m on his captors. 1800 Striking JfeelworVers Get Vacation Paychecks CHICAGO, (-(UPI)- Eijflitee.j tmndred striking United Steer workers received paychecks r tnc Jouth Works of U.S. Steel yesterday their last until the steel strike ends. The. checks were lor accumum.- i vacation pay and cleaned up the company's books. Steelworkers gathered aroun 1 the company's main gate to re receive ceive receive the checks. Talk centered on when the strike now six weeks oldfiwould end. One striker said, after receiv receiving ing receiving Ms check, that he was a month behind in his rent. 'I ve got to pay," he said. "I lust tan't find another job to tide me over" Another striker withdrew sav savings ings savings from the credit union office at !he company. "My family sav saved ed saved what we called a strike fund, be said. There was some dissatisfaction with the progress of negotiations. "The President (Eisenhower) should get them company and union officials to do more," one striker said. Soldier's Body Flovn To States Formal Rites The body of Sp 4 William O. Brewer, left the Canal Zone by MATS plane yesterday for the U.S. where funeral services will be held. Bites Will take place in Marked tree,' Ark., with military honors to be accorded. Sp4 Joseph I,. Led better is serving as escort. Specialist Brewer, a member of A Company, 1st Battle Group, 20th Infantry, died Thursday aften laving been taken ill at Rio Hato. porarily halted to find some solu solution tion solution short of building a dam to keep back the new-made cliff be below low below Cable Heights. One proposed solution is that a 200 yard stretch of the new road roadway way roadway before and beyond Ancon Hill be built six to eight feet above the existing Fourth of Ju July ly July road, thus decreasing the sheer drop being cut into the hill and lessening the slide danger. V, J Whatever the final solution, will increase the lob cost by ajrun determined amount, sayefflcials. As walk for the lo;al--drder of Side Superintendents, temporary peace again rules the ranks. I Potter Urges To Take Pad Govy William E. Potter last nigttMrgedvPanamflia; citizens living, and working in the Canal Zone to participate in the coun country's try's country's political activity. But he used Hie occasion his regular, meeting with Latin American community Councils at Paraiso to point out that such political activity may not be carried on with the Canal Zone itself. Potter's remarks on Panaman Panamanian ian Panamanian political activity were the principal subject of discussion last night after the presentation cere ceremony mony ceremony honoring Paraiso High School principal Ellis FawceU, who leaves Sept. 9 for a year of advanced study in the United states. Fawcctt was lauded by the gov governor ernor governor for his dedication to com community munity community problems and was award award-cq cq award-cq a Panama Canal. Master, Key, thus entitling him to membership in the Esteemed Order of Bearers of the Mj-s'.c".' Key of the Panama (. anal. Potter also agreed to study complaints over Pacific side bus service and the apparent apparent-lack lack apparent-lack of sufficient warning to Paraiso residents before blast blasting ing blasting operations take place on the Cut-widening project. Paraiso is almost directly op opposite posite opposite the area undergoing widen widening ing widening on the Canal West Bank at Paraiso and Cucaracha Reaches. Potter introduced the subject of political activity noting a P nama presidential election is ap approaching. proaching. approaching. He wont to say that Panamanian employes are encour encouraged aged encouraged to exercise their citizenship rights, so long as this activity is not in the Zone. A lengthy discussion occupied the remainder of the meetinc. (luring which Potter read the full text of a Canal Zone Governor'; regulation of July 28, 1955 barring political all activity within the Panama Canal Zone. The detailed order forbids non- National Guard To Give Photogs Equal Facilities National Guard headquarters is issued sued issued a bulletin today nolilying its members that all press photogra photographers phers photographers must be given the same fa facilities cilities facilities in the carrying out of their missions. The bulletin was the result (il frequent complaints by press pho tographers that preference was being shown on police and murder eases tn one of their number who is affiliated with the National Guard. Takes Number LONDON (UPD An irate mo torist really meant it when he told the driver of a bus last nigh' "I'll take your number!" during an arsument over the righl-of-way. The bus driver said the mo motorists torists motorists wrenched the metal plate showing the bus's route number and the drver's number from the bus and drove away. Deaf Paraiso Man Walks On Tracks, Killed By Train A retired Panama Canal Co. employe was killed yesterday when he suddenly stepped before a Panama Railroad train near Paraiso. John Inocencio Murray, 69, Pa Panamanian, namanian, Panamanian, who lives on a land lease jiear Paraiso, was return returning ing returning home late yesterday after noon after picking up h's month monthly ly monthly retirement check at the Ancon Treasurer's office. According to engineer Charles Sammons, Murray was first not iced walking in high grass on the west side of the tracks about 200 feet north of the railroad cross ing on a road leading to Cerro Luisa. The road is opposite Pa raiso cemetery. Sammons said he blew he warning whistle several times and when Murray failed to ac acknowledge knowledge acknowledge the blasts the train's speed was reduced. When the engine was still a a-bout bout a-bout 50 feet from Murray, who was moving in the same direc direction tion direction as the train, he turned suddenly and began moving a a-cross cross a-cross the tracks into the path of the train. A Gorgas Hospital ambulance with Dr. P. L. Pierce was dis dispatched patched dispatched to the accident scene. Members of the family told po lice that Murray normally cross ed that area of the tracks going toa-rtd from his land license home and that he was almost totally deaf. Authorities believe he may have been unaware of the train or that he became momentarily confusec as he stepped on to the tracks. Local Raters In RP Politics Panamanian citizens employed by the Canal Con-roan v or Govern. ment to 'take ''My part "tot maman pontics. Panamanian citi zens may exercise their rights so long as such activity is not pursued during their working hours and so long as it is pursued Beyond Ca nal Zone limits. In answer to a question from the floor, Potter said the admi administration nistration administration regards dependents as being included within the term "employe" as set forth in the regulation. He also told his listeners he felt their rights gave them the free freedom dom freedom to join any political party of their choice, including the Com Communist munist Communist party, although he person personally ally personally doubted the wisdom of com communist munist communist affiliation. The comment was in answer to a question from the floor. 3PN Reported Near Registration Coal A spokesman for the Third Na Nationalist tionalist Nationalist Party (3PN) last nigh! reported that the party expects to complete the registering of its 5000 members by this weekend or earlv next week. Up to yesterday, the parly had some 4500 members registered, the spokesman said. Dr. Gilberto Arias, chairman of the 3PN, left Panama City this morning on another tour of the In Interior terior Interior aimed to winding up regis registration tration registration in remote districts of the Republic. All new parties must register at least 5000 members, and must have at least five in each of the 63 dis districts. tricts. districts. Secreta, Cuardia Brinq In Minors From Hangouts Eleven minors were picked up last night in a joint raid by the Secret Police and the National Guard in the Marafion aret of Panama City which is known to be the hangout of the "Sierra Maes Maes-Ira" Ira" Maes-Ira" hoodlum gang. In an earlier raid, the two insti tutions reported the capture of 20 hoodlums and marijuana smokers in the vicinity of Barraza Fill. Every Day By FRANK ELEAZER WASHINGTON, -(UPI) The Mouse Judiciary Committee has rcided that 90 weeks are enough for an average year and is forth forth-rightly rightly forth-rightly refusing to add any more. The committee also had count counted ed counted at least 31 months on the 1959 calendar and says we'll have to tighten our belts and try to get by with the same number next year. As for days, whoever said (here are never enough of these just hadn't counted. Neither has ti e Judiciary Committ?e. It would take too long. Bui the committee adamantly refused to add to the number, PANAMA, R. P., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER t, 1959 roias if G.I.S IN PANAMA JAIL Three VS soldiers (above) are in a PanamA City jail today awaiting a hearing on the alleged theft of a taxi and the beating of the taxi-driver on the Transisth Transisth-mian mian Transisth-mian Highway Monday night. The soldiers are identified as George Hill, Joseph Valko and Howard Tucker. They are sched scheduled uled scheduled ta be questioned thi ftftetnoon by District Attorney Cesar Seven Passenger On Saturdays, Sundays, Holidays A new Panama Railroad passenger train schedule, offering more frequent and Convenient service during Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays. 'has been, announced by the Railroad Division. Only minor time Changes, have been made in the daily train services Mortdayj through Fridays. The new schedule will become feature midnight trains leaving Sunday and holiday Mights. The hew weekend and holiday schedule also changes by approxi approximately mately approximately an hour the departure of the morning tra'ns from Panama and Colon. It eliminates the mid- afternoon 3 o'clock train and adds a train leaving at 7 p.m. On Saturdays, Sundays, and hol idays, trains will leave Panama station for Colon at 8:10 am. n am, 1 pm, 5:10 pm, 7:10 pm, 10:10 pm, and 12:10 am. From Colon, trains will leave at 8 am, 10:50 am, 12:50 pm, 5 pm, 7 Dm, 10 pm, and 12:01 am. Mondays through Fridays, trains will leave the Panama station at 7:10 am, 10 am, 12:01 pm, 3:10 pm. 5:10 om, and 10:10 pm. From Colon on week dss, the trains will leave at 7 am, 9:50 am. 11:50 am, 3 pm, 5 pm, and 10 pm. Slight changes also were an announced nounced announced in the schedules of (he freight trains with accommoda accommodations tions accommodations for oasseneers which thp Panama Railroad runs on week days from Mount Hope to Pana Panama ma Panama and from Diablo to Mount Hope. All make stoos at Gamboa on signal to take on or 'discharge pasengers. The early morning freiqht pas passenger senger passenger train will leave Moun Hone en week days af 5 ;m and arrive In Panama at 6:35 am with a regular stoo at Pilboa. The train from Diablo will leave at 5 am and terminate at Moi.mt Hope at :25 am. On nisrht service durinc the week, the freight oassen"er tr 'i will leave Mount Hone .si 7:55 pr.i and terminate at Mount Hope a' 1:30 pm. There will be morning frei"ht nnd passenger service on S-'ur days except when it is a holiday, But Dog's Day Recommended For Recognition By This means we won't be able to celebrate grandmother's day, as proposed in a bill by Rep. Iris Bitch (D-Ga.). Children's d a y, sponsored by several lawmakers, also seems to be out. Rep. Georse Meader (R-Mich.) figured we ought to observe family days, but now I guess we can't. 5The com committee mittee committee didn't approve any of these bills. W(e can continue, to rejoice, of course, on mother's, fa t h e r's. mother-in-law, old maid's and old lady days. According to Chases' calendar of special days, w?eks and months, all of these already are scheduled. Rep. John E. Fogarty (D R I ) thought w might spend the cur Army Trains Each Way effective next Sunday and will Panama and Colon Saturday, with a train leaving Mount Hope at 6 am for Panama and am.Hier leaving Diablo at 5:55 am for Mt. Hope. Yearly Pass Book Becomes Extinct From Next July The 24-trip annual pass books is issued sued issued to employes of the Panam? Canal Company and Canal Zone Government for travel on the Pan Panama ama Panama Railroad, will bp discontin discontinued ued discontinued effective July 1. 1960, it was announced this week at Balboa Heights. The plan to discontinue the use of the pass books has been under consideration for some time and was discussed recently with Canal Zone Civic Council and Labor groups. The practice of issuing 24-trip railroad passes to employes each year was instituted as an em employe ploye employe perequisite when the rail railroad road railroad provided the only means of transportation across the Isth Isthmus. mus. Isthmus. The 24-trip annual pass books nermitted the employe or bis fam family ily family an average of one round-trip a a-cross cross a-cross the Isthmus by railroad each month. These passes were in addi addition tion addition to special passes which will continue to be issued to employes for official business trios. Special passes also will still be issued in connection with the Pan Panama ama Panama Line transportation and med medical ical medical treatment. rent 30-day period, from Aug. 15 to Sept. 15, sneezing and ponder pondering ing pondering ragweed The committee ruled l-owever we'd be better off trying lo think about pleasanter matters. It tabled Fogarty's bill to give of official ficial official sanction to what is already called allergy month. According to Chases' to calendar, we stand committed to memorial memorialize ize memorialize assorted events in the history of Argentina, Bermuda, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, and so forth up to and including Venezuela. General Generally ly Generally a day's jubilation is considered enough in each case. So Rep. Steven B. Derounian iR-N.Y.) figured we ought lo de devote vote devote a week, anyway, to extolling the United States. But judiciary Rebel Says 2 Shot In Tute WereUnarmed One of the men involved in the April uprising at Cerro Tute, Ve raguas, was quoted today as say saying ing saying today that the four men who died in clashes with the Nation National al National Guard were shot from ambusn. He claims that two were unarm unarmed. ed. unarmed. Jaime Padilla Beliz. who took refuge in the Chilean Embassy here shortly alter the uprising fizzled out and was given safe conduct to Chile some lime atler atler-wards, wards, atler-wards, told the tabloid La Mora that Rodrigo Pinzon and Eduar Eduar-do do Eduar-do Blanco were armed at the time of the first ambush. He add added ed added that the other two. Domingo Garcia and Jose Rogelio Giron, who were shot later were unarm unarmed ed unarmed at the time. He stated that Garcia and Gi Giron ron Giron were deliberately shot down. "Fortunately we have an eyewit eyewitness, ness, eyewitness, Polidoro Pinzon. who mi miraculously raculously miraculously escaped alive," Padilla declared. Padilla, who returned to Pana Panama ma Panama Sunday on a Chilean pass passport, port, passport, indicated that there was no connection between the Tute up uprising rising uprising and the landing of a Cuban invasion force at Piaya Colorada near Nombre de Dios which oc occurred curred occurred shortly after the Tute af affair. fair. affair. Two other exiles ;Ment ead. r FloviS fcritton nitMwimin. Mltiel Moreno Gongora, who re turned recently, were arrested at Tocumen airport and held for several days before they were re released, leased, released, but Padilla has not been picked up by the National Guard. Padilla said he had to return lo Panama on a Chilean passport, because Panamanian consular au authorities thorities authorities in Santiago, Chile, re fused to give him a Panamanian passport. Two others participants who had fled to Costa Rica have al also so also rc'urned to Panama, without being arrested. INFLATED HOPES Wear Wearing ing Wearing a paper kerchief to shield her from the sun, a balloon vender meditates while waiting for prospective customers in Moscow. But the temperature was in the high 80s in the Rus Russian sian Russian capital and the kids must have been away at the boich. turned down his bill. Accruing to Chases' we can use the period l.e had in mind, starting each Oct. 19. to signalize national fish and seafood week instead. The judiciary folks let 11 he known privately they have noth nothing ing nothing but the highest regard for the bough of Osceola Mills Pa. But Osceola's millers will have to whoop it up at their centennial party next month without a sin single gle single official kind word from Con Congress. gress. Congress. Rep. James E. Van Zandl (R Pa.), their congressman, did his best with HouSe concurrenl reso resolution lution resolution 341. ljad il not been irre irrevocably vocably irrevocably tabled, the resolution would h a v thanked Osceola's Chief Defense Crisis Eased, Nehru i Tells Parliament NEW DELHI, Sept. 2 Nehr ru told a tense cannntv that India s defense crisis had been eased by the with withdrawal drawal withdrawal of Lt. Gen. K. S. Thimayya's resignation as Aouv chief of staff. Nehru heaped praise on defense minister V. K. Krish Krishna na Krishna Menon making no mention of the fact that he too had offered to resign in the crisis touched off by his al alleged leged alleged playing politics with the armed forces. The premier also had nothing to say about the na nation's tion's nation's other chiefs of staff, Vice Adm. R. D. Katari and Air Marshal S. Mukerjee, who handed in their resignations along with Thimayya's. It appeared likely, however, that they would follow the general's example and continue in their posts. Nehru said there is no truth to reports that Menon had been al lowing favoritism or political fac factors tors factors to influence Army promotions. '1 , . ., myself have seen the files,", he aid. "There is no truth to the charge"." A. Merfolband the service chief re resigned signed resigned yesterday in an interserv- iee blow-up amid serious Com munist Chinese attacks on the bor ders. The resignations, coming at the Judge Behringer Refutes Critics Of Juvenile Court Juvenile Court Judge Clara Gonzalez Behringer yesterday lashed put at critics who she said are) hnplyins that her court is responsible for all crimes committed -by juvenile delin delinquents. quents. delinquents. ? Mrs. Behringer referred spe spe-ciiicaliy ciiicaliy spe-ciiicaliy to tnr cue of 17-year-oid Silvano Wind, who contes contes-sect sect contes-sect t'rat he kilted Paula Caba Caba-ilero ilero Caba-ilero a weeK ago last Saturday during a rubbery attempt Oi Oi-ficial ficial Oi-ficial reports indxated that Ward had had a police record since the agr ct 12. The Juvtnlle Judge question question-re. re. question-re. his police record by refer referring ring referring to the '(cords M;at indi indicate cate indicate he nf;cl 'rH befoi'2 her op nly five decisions and that the Secret Police i : d officii no notified tified notified her, on request, that they had no record against the young killer. Mrs. Gonzalez also question questioned ed questioned tne diligence of the Secret Police, until recently headed by Hector Valdes, now Minister of Oavernnirnt and Justice. She said t'.ey present.!. i-, only )2, c ir- of 6! 5 casK which were brought to the afe r.ioii of the rc. i ts M tween Ju v 1948 and July 1959. She also criticized the Na National tional National Guard for not taking ad advantage vantage advantage of two fellowships (or the study of juvenile delin quency which she had negotiRt-j ed with the University of South Southern ern Southern California In 1954 while on a vacation. She said the appointment of two National Guard officers to I the fellowships had been sug suggested gested suggested to Col Bolivar Vallarino by the late President Jose An Antonio tonio Antonio Remon. but nothing has oeen done nbout it sine. Mills for "splendid service" to the nation fnr the past 100 years. The committee also has tabled hills that would have enabled us lo exult together earn year dur during ing during national aircraft dispatchers' week, oil industry centennial day. national farm-city week, and pres president's ident's president's day. It laid to rest also a measure under which we could have made merry all year. Under this pro proposal, posal, proposal, we would have been ex expected pected expected to devote 1 !M!0 to appro appropriate priate appropriate ceremonies and activities in honor of the lale l'ony Express. The committee lei it be known that none of the bit's it did not 1 formally set aside are going 10 FIVE CENT? Back (UPI) Premier Jawaharlal rrnwrl in nnpim..i. ij time of the Chinese troop concen concentrations trations concentrations along India's northern frontiers and Red-led rieti in Calcutta, faced Nehru with an. -i i.m v -OTirn Lof 4he feat.trmerBenclei (eteit'emira.nel.i 1. pie carter. s Reports fremtlctltu in Wen Bengal aia police -tut night lost control ever the itotot Important sectors of the city after battlini daylong against hrick-tossinj mobi who defied tear gas and eluh charges. The reports said some 0 police officers had been injured ind thai the army may be called in lo re restore store restore order. The military chiefs resigned be cause they claimed Khrishna Men on was playing politics with Mil armed forces. They said promotions were mad! without consulting them, causinj demoralization among their offi cers and men. They also said they were dissat isfied with the treatment giver them by Krishna Menon. The controversial Krishna Men on followed up by offering his owt resignation. Press reports 'em Jorhat. in the border province of Assam, said yesterday a fresh wave ef Communist Chinese troops, back backed ed backed up by heavy weapons carried by mult, Is moving along the bor border der border between India and Cemmu-nist-dominated Tibet "where n incursion already has taken place." s It was an apparent refprr ncelt the Longju area, where a 200 t 300-man Red Chinese force seize' an Indian horder post last weel after overwhelming iits tiny Jar rison. r IT- Today's Transits (scheduled) Northbound II Southbound 11 TOTAL 15 (Clear Cut: 3) Congressmen get much of a day in court. I bet we can get by. Take this month. Thirty dayl hath September, as everybody knows. But the way Chases' cal calendar endar calendar counts it. September is good for 8 months, 5 weeks, and any number of days. September'!, events include both a sweatee week and a day devoted to the Cherokee strip. All 30 days we are expected 1 eat better breakfast, and to take, care of our feet. Starting Sept1. 28, for a week anyway, right-thinking men will wear ties. As for the tail end of August August-l l August-l bet some folks clean missed out on celebration. August 30 was th i birthday U afaMV P. Uf TRS FAN AMI AMIR1CAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPArtB WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1951 i HE PANAMA AMERICAN r, n uiuihid IT THf PANAMA AMERICAN PIUI. INC. fOJNDID mi NILMN OUNIIVIU IN HAKMOOIO ARIAS. IDITOK 11 ST M Trn P O Bo 134 Panama. R. P. TritxONl 2-O2-0 Llt Cl I AOORtM PANAMIHICAH. PANAMA Orncf 12 170 Ccntrai AvfKuf iFTwrtN 12th ano ISth ITRICTI Fo-iign ffrpwcsrNTATtvrs JOSHUA B POWER INC J4S Mamsm Avi Nrw YOUR 117 1 N. Y. LCAl Wt MAIL -M IN AJVANCI J I 78 $ 1 SO font in ApvANcr 80 13 OO VfAH IN AOVANCC 18 90 14 OO THIS IS YOUR FORUM THI MADERS OWN COLUMN The M.il Son it an open forum tor readers ot The faneme American Lrrtci arc received gratefully and an handled lit a wholly confidential nr i ,t roil contribute a letter don't bt impatient it It doem't appear the at -ay Letteri are published in the order received. Plena try to keep tne letter limited to one paae length. Identity of letter writer ii held in strictest confidence. This newspaper assumes no responsibility for ttatementi or opinions expressed in letters from readers. THE MAIL BOX FLOOD'S Sir: Con-roman Flood has now really "put his foot in his mouth" the fat fs in the fire and if Aquihno Boyd does not march Nav. 3 he J f0o,.vimislv Flood was gagged on the floor of the House of Rep Representatives resentatives Representatives 'for he found his only audience in the persons of Ihe Pa Patriotic triotic Patriotic Sons of America la vanishing society). This was the obvious r tip-off that ihe" gutless wonder, who occupy some high positions in our Government choose to run nri hide from the Boyd Legions. I A for the local talent on the Zone, word has already been hand- ed down that if Boyd marches the minions of the law will observe a ! "smiling hands-off" policy while the 20th Infantry will be crashing about the Pina boondocks and the valiant MP's frisking errant chiva 5 drivers. Oh, what an abominable farce. ( fi One cannot blame Senor Boyd. He is only doing what many oth- 3 ers have done and successfully. Why Dot Panama' Puerto. Ri- cans who have less claim to American interests a. .lui .r sent pistol-packing emissanes to the Congress and shot the place up a oil Of course, this was not representative of the ineumben party, but then neither is Aquilino representing off.caldom of P,nThe tune to which Americans now dance was scored long ago when thf milk-sopping Congress passed the Status of Forces Act which in effect, admitted our inahility to discipline our Armed Forres and our reluctance to assist our sovereign posilion as re SrTour men in uniform, not to mention haoless citizens in mufti TWS established the spineless policy which the fancy-pants of the !titP Teoarlment have so energetically pursued. WhaWthe average Canal Zone citizen? Will he feel the stirring ofpstriolism and resist such a "peaceful" invasion against his ; flag. Not on ymii tintvpe! These sterling characters will be ion bt.sy fig fig-uring uring fig-uring inrome tax rebates or hiring lawyers to do their sobbing for them before an unsympathetic Congress. The only positive reaction these days is encountered -vhen Uncle Sam fails to drop into the outstretched hand the com of the realm Such trite motives as duty, honor, loyally and love of Hag are too provincial The entertained bv Ihese intellectual, -W at is coun coun-trv trv coun-trv needs is not a five-cent cigar but a king sized kick in the ie.,i ie.,i-erid. erid. ie.,i-erid. Go to it, Boyd.! Bjmp OFFICERS' FAVORITES Sir: The single wag and merit system is probably the most embar embarrassing rassing embarrassing problem ever to confront Canal Zone employes, and espe espe-"allv "allv espe-"allv the civilian employes of the Armed Forces. The nrst thing the new nftem has achieved is to convert certain boss s pets or itooges into indispensable employes, thus going far towards destroy destroying ing destroying fair employment practices. Formerly bumping was strictly on grounds of soni'inty How However ever However manv guys with less than 15 years service who were slated to be b'jn.ped are being protected by some officers, while 20-year men haVThese men all have more or less the same qualifications, with no matters or of college educations or special technical training in- 'Ttnmk bumping should be done as before, with length of service the only factor. In this way, every employe in the Zone, when his or her turn comes, will take their bumping with a smile. And U they are re-hired also in strict order of seniority, they will return ''Vhope'tlie dav will soon be here when the military officers will cease protecting some civilian employes, and leaving the -others out In the rain The Armv should put out a ruling on this simple enough to be t.ndorstood by officers and employes alike. As things stand, the merit system is being abused and the single wage is lust anoth another er another puwle to employes. II has brought to the surface snobbery, en en-mitv. mitv. en-mitv. and all kinds of ugly feelings. We should have good, clean bumping, or nothing. If bunrfping is to be purt of the merit system, it should be free from smear. Bumped Jot COROZAL MOTOR POOL Sir: I don't think "Interested Citizen" (Mail Box. Aug. 2!)) knew what he was writing about. I use bolh VIP and radio taxi service out of Corozal motor pool, and have had excellent service out of noth sec sections. tions. sections. ,, I have never called for a VIP sedan that T haven t got it on tim with the driver alwavs neat and courteous. I use these se sedans' dans' sedans' at all hours of the day and night. In talking to some of the drivers and NCOs I have learned that thev put in a lof of hours be be-twefn twefn be-twefn 4 pm and 6 am. and also over weekends and holidavs So if they lake a little rest as "Interested Citizen" asserts, I don't blame th"cnuld If be that "Interested Citizen" was mad because lie had to drive for himself, Instead of having a GI to do it for him? Satisfied Citizen SMOKING STEVEDORES Sir: I was pleased to read of a co worker Jos .lustiria (Mail Box. Aug. 261 importing the bold actions of a stevedore caught smoking In Piei 8 ;bout two weeks ago. This vedore openly defies anybody to do anything about his smoking inside the piers," despite big signs "No Smoking" posted all around and marked "By Order of the Governor." 1 tan sav truthfully though, that he is not the only stevedore who regard the Governor's order a ssomething written only for the low lowly ly lowly dock winker like my humble self. Marcus A. Injustice FEATHERED Blr: I pe in the latest, ropy of the Time magazine that, some Inker In the States ran rid anv location of feathered pests. It Is entire entirely ly entirely probably that, the businessmen of Cathedral Plaza (Including (Including-the the (Including-the Bishop) may furnish the necessary dough to get him down here Now a few swallow greetings on the head doesn't worry me at all. That will all come out In the wash. What I say Is, In Cathe Cathedra dra Cathedra Plaza one Is lucky to still have a head on one's shoulders with all these kids batting sticks every direction. Ex-Bench Warmer. EMERGENCIES Sir: It seems, incredible that In less than one month two nersons have died In or near the admitting office of Gorgas Hospital apparently for lark of first aid attention. I understand that any emergency rase that arrives at a hos hospital pital hospital must be given prompt medical attention. This Is not the case at Gorgas. If patients do not have privileges the processes are sn cumbrous parsons have died before nil the red tape Is rut. The system of probing Into the life history of a sick person Is much too antiquated for this modern age. Instead of a nill or an Injection to help hold life together before the questioning bealns, I have seen the doctor lazllv arrive, clearing his throat and acting like a person of much lmnortanre. When I .ee this performance It's all I can do to keep from scratching and kick kicking; ing; kicking; the doctor and those nurses who art like know-it-alls to see If they would hurry up with some attention for patients who are apparently breathing their last breath I would like to know If they art Ihe same wav when some big-shot Zonian romes In or do they let them die like the two I w who I believe could have been saved with faster medical at attention. tention. attention. -Eyewitness. FOOT FRIENDS AT GORGAS Ruarkous Comments By ROBERT C. RUARK I hope you will excuse a very personal column, but toaay 1 am 4 happy man. It has been a little belter than seven years since I had a lormal vacation, and 1 managed to work through most oi that out. This effort i the last of me that you'll see lor a couple of weeks, and, man, 1 expect we can all oi us use a rest. That last vacation I mentioned followed another, long spate of daily appearance in tne paper ex except cept except lime olf lor an occasional at attack tack attack ol leprosy or conscience. Un tnat one 1 got mixed up with the overthrow ol Egypt, lived a wt-'ek with Mohammed Naguib, discovered a new pyramid and and became involved with the Mau Mau. By the time I had fin finished ished finished dusting off Mau Mau and other aspects of Africa, my vaca vacation tion vacation time was over. This time, I think, I ain't goin; to do any work at all. 1 will be sitting on a ranch in Texas, re garding the sunset and the bour bourbon, bon, bourbon, and hearing the quail cal sweetly. There will be no telephones out there in the sagebrush, and you folks will just have to make it with international visitors and La Labor bor Labor Day on your own time. 1 will feel a little lost, of course, with no carbon smudges on my fingers, no copy to read, no gal galley ley galley proofs to correct, no editor;', no agents, no secretaries, no cor respondence to answer, no parties to go to, no clips to read. But, on the other hand, 1 ima imagine gine imagine my cigarette consumption will drop, my sleeping habits will lengthen, and I shall get voelully fat, which is all right with me. I may even read something without a pencil in my hand. I hear there's a best seller around, called "Gone With the Wind," and I been meaning to calch up with it. Also, 1 hear they have invented the talking picture, and I don'l think it will last, but I'm willing to give it a Whirl, since about (he last one I saw was "Our Danc Dancing ing Dancing Daughters" with Joan Craw ford and Anita Page. I'nlcss you want to count "Birlh of a Nation" with Henry 11. Walthall. They tell nie there is a thing called television, too, but 1 don't believe it. Ridiculous, (he idea that you can shoot pictures and noise right info people's homes. But I'll give it a try, if only tor the ball games. It would be nice to see Home-Run Baker, Walter Johnson and Christy Mathewson again. As soon as I can trade in my roach and four, I am to try one of these newfangled aeroplanes. I come from North Carolina, in Ihe vicinity of Kitty Hawk, and used to pal around with the Wright boys. Pa said thev never would amount to much with that contraption thev were buildine in the barn. But you know Pa. Al Always ways Always sour on something. That's about all I can tlhink of that I'll be doing on mv vacation, except maybe, a short irip to Eu Europe. rope. Europe. There's a big boat that eve everybody's rybody's everybody's talking about, the safest thing that ever went to sea. I'm going to give it a whirl, a! though I'm afraid of the water Her name's the Titanic. If she doesn't sink, I'll be back at the plow in a couple of weeks, and you-all take care of yourselves over the holidays, because I'll be loo busy to free my head about your problems. Adios! Red China Claims Finding Lower Jaw Of Peiping Man LONDON (UPl) Communist China claimed to.jav to have found the half million year old lower jaw of another "missing link" known as the Peiping man" A Peiping radio broadcast mon monitored itored monitored here said the lower jaw of "an old female" had been dis' covered in Choukowtien, about 30 miles from Peiping. It was the 15th lower jaw of a "Peiping man" found since the first age age-old old age-old fragments of the near-human rare were discovered in 1929. Today's broadcast said this latest find was better preserved than any of the 14 lower jaws so tar discovered. Scientists class the "Peiping man" as a "humannid" fibure, a remnant of the Jwilight zona be fween animal and human in the evolution of the race. matter of FACT life V'Y', mm The ukelele, a small instru instrument ment instrument of the guitar family, seems as much a part of the Hawaiian Islands as the hula. Actually, Hawailans didn't know about the instrument until It was imported by Por Portugese tugese Portugese Immigrants around 1877. "Ukelele" is a Hawaiian word meaning "jumping in insect" sect" insect" or "flea" and was prob probably ably probably given to the Instrument because ot the movements of the fingeri when a person plays it, C Encyclopedia Brltinnlre NEW YORK CONFIDENTIAL By LEE MORTIMER MY HEART MURMURS (Is that good?): Helen Rowan Down Downey, ey, Downey, beautiful ex of Morton Down Down-ev ev Down-ev Jr.. and film star Richard "Compulsion'' Anderson huddling over an acting assignment at Ed Wynne's happy Harwyn. Happy work. ..Hard o believe that Jule Styne and Church are cooling. Didn't look it at Quo Vad Mil Millionairess lionairess Millionairess Mollie Netcher Bragno's latest suitor is millionaire Frank Hale. (And for the rich you sing.) ...Quiz for Press Agents: Isn't it against the law to provide news newspapers papers newspapers with false information? Anyone can be a press agent now nowadays. adays. nowadays. All you got to do is boivow a typewriter, get a list of promi prominent nent prominent playboys and playgals, and pair them at your client's bbtro on a musical chair basis, even if in question. Many of those whose names are used like it of course. Such as TV's George DeWitt, disc ck An Ford, Hugh (Wvatt Earp) O'Brian and Tom Corbal Corbal-ly ly Corbal-ly and others who try to build up reps as men-about-town. AIN'T IT THE TRUTH? The crime and political unorfhodoxy which grip the nation stem from the same roots of frustration and egotism. Until he wins the revolu revolution, tion, revolution, the rebel is a criminal. Or Organized ganized Organized revolutionary under undergrounds grounds undergrounds are criminal in the be beginning, ginning, beginning, with no marked dividing line. Hunted scum. lik Lenin id Trotsky, gather into gangs and live by theft, blackmail and murd murder. er. murder. Few rebel for the good of humanity. The Washingtons and ,Teffer;ons do not go underground. Those that go underground are those of the Hitler, Stalin, Musso Mussolini. lini. Mussolini. Castro type who wan' sou southing thing southing someone else has, Al Ca Ca-pone. pone. Ca-pone. Frank Coslello and I.uckv Luciano were more forthright a a-bout bout a-bout it. LOTSA ABOUT LITTLE: Duke and Duchess of Manchester invit inviting ing inviting John Pcrona to visit their Ken Ken-va va Ken-va es'ate and hut for 7V- for the seats in the new El Mo Morocco. rocco. Morocco. .. Bob TaplinPer, Tvb';cit-,'s gift to women just landed the Millinerv Institute accotmt, so from now on all his cuties go fo wear bonnets ... Rirbara TJn-vt, singing star of the House of Vien Vienna na Vienna rioec it in 5 lingofs.. Harvev (The TVemanl Posen tells me that Rillio Holiday's ev-h"nd is the doorman at his EI Borrachn now. so if nnvon" ""nl: to '-i''-ahotit rnvlties, that's the nlace Vera Mile; who n,tvs Stewart's wife In '"Hrn FBI Sto Sto-rv" rv" Sto-rv" "ti ; fo muke a ""icinn nhii't " t -it-" n n -' n n' c Scott's wife In real life. Whoever vvvn ("'! i""-ifimi'i'5 sinnin" ,u ,u-name name ,u-name "Ed 'ynnc" hud beHr' beHr'-watch watch beHr'-watch out. Ed it calling In the If '4- Jf V MX 1 a - UV1 Nikita, Old and New postal inspectors and they al always ways always get their man. (It's t-n years in the can, buu.) ... Claire Kelly and Perry Lopez are too, two divine ... If it's lor a m.nk you're cryin' with a guy start iryin'. LABOR THE ONLY LEGAL MONOPOLY: Some unions arc now open.y waging war lor then then-rights rights then-rights to rule employers, rob work ers and regulate society. They have long since passed their pri primary mary primary purpose of righting the wrongs of workers. All combina combinations tions combinations set up for sp-scial privileges of any group, unobtainable by in in-u. u. in-u. Vidua... .ie irusis, uiougn su supine pine supine Congresses continue to ex exempt empt exempt ia.A.i' unions uy ai'o.iC.ry le legislation gislation legislation from penalties for re restraint straint restraint of trade, restraint of com petition and restraint of liberty and me pursuit ol uapp ness. . i is against all our rules of law that two or more men sho ild be en entitled titled entitled to do what one may not. More of the Ditto: Yet such pre preferred ferred preferred bodies, armored with extra-legal rights because they have rich, can nlnience mass votes and influence venal leaders who become captives. Bosses oi u u-nions, nions, u-nions, unaccountable to anyone, overrule ihe President, dci.v the courts, control our national de defense fense defense -anc; in some instances even beHra us to our enemies. I COULD CO ON AND ON: Jo- seoh ne Bake- reported mak ng a comeback (Not around here she ain't.). Singer Tobi Reynolds, now on Errol Flynn's ex list, dated Vik" ende' r' f'- s rrl'ig--'!v-er gold at Beau Brummel...Non-n-ir r deo ()np n "V '-'m'-in de Sapio and me at Harwyn's t-Hp -e V -i i:h' O r State Attorney General Lefkow'tz ,ml r"" '' ''wyr's T-ble One... Bob Faro. Palm Beach's "socio- (' flipr ,i .,,.-prt ,: I, ), .i Oriental society at Perona's El "nrne-i: ' i ---.ii Hawaiian Room's Mariko Harada ...Some girls talk a male-a-min-ute. CONSPIRACY CONFIDENTIAL: talk about Ihe alliance between ' 1U" "II- TV- ...;,S confirmee! this week when Com- '"-'-' '-' "' '- V'..,7, re-elected as chief of thP Sicily fv-o i, MiPr campiign from Sir lian-Americans 31- I '' f- r I'.-, rlijirn'i ...Lucky Luciano, Joe Adonis and ,,i'., i,'"' 1 ., ,, i i Ilaly threw immense sums into tl local narliamenl. which itself .1 Mafia that has terrorized the is v 1 (333 S33tf& LTD Q:m$f land's honest citizens for ages.1. American hoods, too, were taxed; 1 . .... 1 ji, proving the contention of US. .i. l. CS .-I'lli'l..- .i.K 1 v isl'il .IT j that the Mafia and Communists! .oik :u,-,.i-iianu in the odonler-! ous junk racket. I THIS'LL MAKE YOUR HEART STOri roday's Manna i've .-em: em: .-em: Glamor-guy George Nader... ,-ec 't vellm n n?xi is "The S.O.B.'s"...if it passes the '"lso''; g Kennedy w 11 lo his campaigning in a $500,000 1 tc. 1 rom iaopy... Harry. Hershfield (on a European tour) writes irom Sweden: "Very frus frustrating trating frustrating to hear the same joke in 18 l:ing";gPs."...Wasn" :t "uy named Castro who called Batis-,-' 1' c 1 o"'.' 1 T'lo e Drom.''d elections have been held up for j i;ve '-e-irs. )...Kevno' sne'ker it! the Toronto convention of the Fra-i lr,,.' nr'er 0' igles (which) contributed more than $950,000 to: :" "un'-o" Fund) will b" my; friend, Philippines' great Gener--I Cirlp- Pn --.! Klava.n ndi Finch discovered what makes' cute kittens piirr: Fur. ADViC TO YOUNG GIRLS Th opposite sex Makes mit the chex Mutual Officials FeiM To Reofoler As Truiillo Agents WASHINGTON, Sept. l-(UPI) A federal grand jury today accus accused ed accused three former officials of Mutual Broadcasting Co. of failing to re register gister register as agents of the Dominican Republic. The indictment was returned a a-"ainst "ainst a-"ainst Alexander Gu'erma. Hal ""'"'' Jr., and Garland L. Culpep Culpepper per Culpepper Jr. It named as co-conspirators, but not as defendants, the Mutual Rroadcasting Sys'em, Inc.. Radio News Service Corn,, and Ofto Ve Ve-Dominican Dominican Ve-Dominican government offi official. cial. official. The indictment plso pmcl a' "'orein nrinC'oals rnmir""an i"t?'er Gen. Rafael I-enn'Has Tni Tni-ii'lo ii'lo Tni-ii'lo Molina, olayboy Porfirio TUi TUi-Mrosa. Mrosa. TUi-Mrosa. and the "nvernmcnt of the P""iin'e?n Renublic. The indictment charted that Gu Gu'erma. 'erma. Gu'erma. Roa"h and C'dnoi'ier ob ob-ain ain ob-ain $70.000 from Tr"i;Ho's pov pov-"rnment "rnment pov-"rnment on rr about Feb. P 195 on tbp, nnder'tapdino ti-mt Mutual would rl'seminat" "no'itic' nron nron-TTar'V' TTar'V' nron-TTar'V' f""orable to the Domini Dominican can Dominican Republic. 9 r 9 GOOD K? 033 vrrv)n fl rie Washington y J Merry-Go -Round iLVLI ty DWW P1AW1QN WASHINGTON -The big factor beaina President Eisennower s taiks as he sits down witu ae Laoers of 'estem Europe resulis from essentially the same proo proo-eiii eiii proo-eiii as that which confronted Frankun hooseveit at Yana wuea ae down witn Siabn. S.a m ai that time was ready to make a deal which virtually a a-ruoiuueu ruoiuueu a-ruoiuueu to dividing up the world into three spaheres of influence among the tuen three great pow powers. ers. powers. 'Ihe British were to be supreme in wesiern Europe and Airica; tne United S.ates in the West Western ern Western Hemisphere and the western Orient including Japan, tie Phi Philippines. lippines. Philippines. Russia was to be supreme in central Europe and the rest of Asia. Roosevelt vetoed the ieea, though a modilied deal was made between Winston Churchih and Stalin to divide up tiio Balkans under spheres of influence, the British taking jurisdiction over Yugoslavia and Greece; the Rus Rus-sir.s sir.s Rus-sir.s over Rumania, Bulgaria and Albania. Stalin, it should be noted, carried out his part of the agreement to the letter, acord acord-ing ing acord-ing to Churchill's memoirs. During the years that have passed, the French, British and other West Europeans have nurs nurs-:j :j nurs-:j a lurking worry that the worid's two greatest powers, the USA and USSR, might form a loose alliance which would divide ihe world into two general spneres of influence. U.S.A.-U.S.S.R. DEAL Basically this is what worries de Gaulle and Adenauer and Pre Premier mier Premier Segni of Italy right now. It worries the British much less. The British, fearful of being caught in the middle of an a a-tomic tomic a-tomic war between the USA and USSR, have reversed their posi position tion position completely. Once worried sick over the idea of American American-Russian Russian American-Russian partnership, tney are now encouraging it. But Adenauer knows that close cooperation between the USA and USSR means that his ideas for the unity of Germany will go glimmering. He also knows that German ambitions for regaining the pro provinces vinces provinces of East Germany now held by Poland will never be fulfilled. He also knows that Germany's best role is to be the balance of power between Russia and the United States. De Gaulle also sees Russian-American friendship as blocking his grandiose ambition for a French comeback. T.' idea of Khrushchev and Eisenhower sit sitting ting sitting down together infuriates him, chiefly; because it fr tacit recog recognition nition recognition that they represent the world's two great powers. And France is not included. De Gaulle has been spurring his diplomats to organize the U U-nited nited U-nited States of Europe so that in tine future there will not be two but three world powers the USA, the USSR, and the US of Eu Europewith ropewith Europewith Charles de Gaulle re representing presenting representing the latter. It's this personal jealousy ( s balance-of-power politics that .i senhower has to cope with dur during ing during his conferences in Europe. POLITICS VS. TAXES High-up in the Justice Depart Department ment Department once again are dragging their feet on the Alabama in income come income tax case involving three po political litical political henchmen of Gen. Wilton B. Persons' brother, the ex-Governor of Alabama. The case appears on the way to becoming one of the most politically-influenced in the Justice Department. On Jan. 12 this column exposed the fact that the Treasury De Department partment Department had recomm?"'cd cri criminal minal criminal prosecution of three Ala Alabama bama Alabama politicians who had raised money for cx-Governor Persons when he was Governor of A'aba A'aba-ma. ma. A'aba-ma. Persons is the brother of Gen. DOWN 1 Ocean current 2 Heavy blows 3 Moral obligations 4 Exist 5 Affirmative reply 6 Charge for services 1 is Memorial Day 8 are displayed throughout the land 11 Hardens 13 Plant (var.) 14 Abhor 15 Hunting dog 18 Assam silkworm 17 Narrow inlet 19 Mariner's direction 20 Stitch 22 Organ of hearing 23 Pairs (ab.) 24 Demon 26 Cooking utensil 27 Name (Fr.) 28 Footlike part 29 Doctors (ab.) 30 Craft 31 Homsn bronze 32 Hav ing less moisture 34 Stray 35 By way of 38 Limb 38 Organized (ab.) 89 Too 40 Cornish town (rreflx) 7 Pillar 8 Nautical term 9 Secluded valleys 10 Withered 12 Rivers 13 Former Russian ruler lR.Tnhn (Gaelic) 21 Ramble 42- of our war dead are Holiday j ACROSS decorated this day 45 More facile 48 Tell 49 Fixed looks 50 Roman maglitrata II Emissary o "Slick" Persons who replaced w iaji .tLj a .o. 1 i.mta house assistant. 11 was reveaied on Jan. u and in suostqueni commns iiiat tne 'ireasury recommended auninal prosecution on iJec u, l, out we justice D?paruneni in a let letter ter letter oatea Aiara 10, 1958 refus refused ed refused to prosecute. Usuaiiy tax recommendations by the Treasury's iniernai Kevenue Service are. considered almost mandatory upon the Justice ue partment. If ue Jualice Depart Department ment Department does not prosecute, it usual usually ly usually develops that po.itical infllu infllu-ence ence infllu-ence has oeen exerted. One day after publication ot the Jan. 12 1959 column, the Jus Jus-t.ce t.ce Jus-t.ce Detriment hastily ren-ien. ed the Alabama tax case, and. jiiei a .uy u. acliv.ty, arrest arrested ed arrested the three men named by thia column. They are: Jimmy Thrower, ex ex-Mayor Mayor ex-Mayor of Dolhan, formeer mem member ber member of the Alabama ABC Liquor uoaro; S. E. Gellerstedt, who waa on the payroll of Berke Brothera Disti lcry and Taylor Wines; Don Donald ald Donald D. Solomon, in whose Head Headland land Headland National Bank some .of tha Liquor-political money wa depo deposited. sited. deposited. Finally on March 9 the threa men were formally charged with tax evasion. The charge was made just a few days before tha statu. e of limitations would havt expird. This, however, was five and a half months ago. Since then nothing has happened. A Federal grand jury has been called in Birmingham for Aug. 31 to con consider sider consider various Federal ease, but the Justice Department in Wash Washington, ington, Washington, as of this writing, has not sent the three cases to Ala Alabama bama Alabama for prosecution. Officials in the US Attorney'i office in Birmingham say they can't prosecute without the facta and files, and the files are care carefully fully carefully secreted in Washington. DAILY MEDITATION (Presented by th Department of Christian Education ot tha Eposcopal Church In tha Mis Missionary sionary Missionary Diocese of Panama Canal Zona.) St. John 14:4 CROOKED ROADS ''I am tha way, rha truth, and tha lift." Have you ever lived in or vi visited sited visited an area where there hai been no planning and the streets go "every which way"? Last week we drove to a town nearby and became so entangled in tha rabbit's warren of curving streets that we wound up going in exactly the opposite direction we intended. It might be said of that town, "They have made their roadi crooked. No one who goes in them knows peace." We finally arrived home. But this is not always th case in life. There are lost souli who remain separated from God who never know the way of psace. "Perhaps it was our fault wt got lost. If we had driven mora slowly we might have made .thl right turn. So with all men, "Their feet run to evil, and they make haste. ." If we had studied our road map. .If modern man would turn to God and learn of Hii ways. .It is not God's fauli that we go astray. In Christ HI 'as p ven us the great freeway but we prefer the crooked patl ot our own contriving. Answer to Previoua Punta 23 Light color 25 Pinnacles 34 Made mistakes 35 Flower noldari 37 Color I 38 Monster 41 Formerly 43 Value (ab.) 44 Summer (Fr.) 46 Indonesian oi Mindanao 47 Droop 26 Persian ialry IS are common In many communities 31 Asiatic wild sheep 32 Noise 33 Withdraw sUWB pMvi 3 f p 8 P '0 r rr R T C TTiTrt TIT r-u Z-Z Hn f-f 1 D f S rf T r Titfs WZZT. m irti Tfr rZZZ ST 1111 N 1 j I 3 1 ' ... TEDICESDAT, SEPTEMBER 2. I95f THE PANAMA AMERICA!! Aft INDEPENDENT DAILY KZWSPAPC Sparkman Aims To Continue Battle Against Civil Rights Indefinitely PERUVIAN STUDENTS attending the US Army Caribbean School, Fort Gulick, demonstrate their skill for Lt. Col. Oats A. Pynes, chief of the US Army Mission to Peru, during a visit. Pynes observes top NCO's from Peru as they dismount a 2'2-ton truck motor, par.t of the training given by the school's armament and automotive department. From left are 1st Sgts. Santia Santiago go Santiago Serna Mantilla, Mariano Padilla S., and Ellas Llontop Morante, Pynes, and 1st Sgts. Francisco Burga Cisneros Arevalo and Epifanio Huarachi Palomino. (US Army Photo) Nixon Warns Sweetness, Light Won t Follow Ike-K Meeting LOS ANGELES (UPI) Vice Pre President sident President Richard M. Nixon, yester yesterday day yesterday warned the nation not to expect a new era of sweetness and light to result from President Eisenhower's exchange, o visits with, Soviet Premier Nikita Khru Khrushchev. shchev. Khrushchev. "Ike will have his guard up it? the conversations with Khru Khrushchev," shchev," Khrushchev," said Nixon. 'They can't talk one way in one part of the world and have the Communist forces act another way (as in In India) dia) India) in another part of the world. "It is a warning to us that you can't count too highly on this being a new era of sweetness and light, the Communists are still on their aggressive course." Nixon made his remarks at a press conference on his arrival here to address the 60th national convention of the Veterans of For Foreign eign Foreign Wars. He said he believed Eisenhower's tremendous recep reception tion reception during his current European tour would give him a psycho psychological logical psychological edge when he meets with Khrushchev. "The President's tour has ex exceeded ceeded exceeded expectations. It indicates go far that his prestige and the prestige of the U.S. is higher than at any time since the war. It has demonstrated the unity and will f the free nations." National Commander John W. Mahan, Helena, Mont., said one f the proposals to be made at the convention was the formation Of a new American 'Indian Ocean Girl Raped, Jammed In Refrigerator Found By Father CINCINNATI, Ohio (UPI) A 6-year-old girl who was raped and crammed into a refrigerator for 12 hours was reported in "good condition" today in General Hos Hospital. pital. Hospital. Charles Crawford, 21, was ar arrested rested arrested as her alleged attacker and was to be charged later to today day today with assault to kill and rape of a child under 12. Police said Crawford had a long record of gex offenses. The girl, Debbie Tucker, was found in the refrigerator in the apartment next to that of her par parents ents parents early Sunday by her step stepfather, father, stepfather, Kenneth Spangler, after a frantic all-night search. Debbie told police she was play playing ing playing outside her parents' apart apartment ment apartment when a strange young man came up and grabbed her. .fter she was assaulted, the attacker crammed the child into the re refrigerator, frigerator, refrigerator, but she was jammed In so tightly she could neither move nor call out. The child was reported missing Saturday evening and an inten intensive sive intensive all-nijht search began. "I was just about to give up," her mother said, "when I went past the apartment next door and neard someone moaning." This was about 5:30 Sunday morning. "I was afraid to go in so I got my husband and he found Deb Debbie." bie." Debbie." Doctors at the hospital said the child escaped suffocation because a leaky gasket around the refrig refrigerator erator refrigerator door allowed air to seep in. They said the tempera temperature ture temperature In the refrigrator was about 38 degrees and this helped to kcp her metabolism low so she did not require much oxygen. When police asked Crawford if he realized the child might die in the refrigerator, Crawford re replied: plied: replied: "I wasn't thinking about it. She was hollering too much." BAR POLITICS TO STUDENTS BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI)-Iraql teachers and students were told today to keep out of politics. A proclamation calling on teaching Staffs and students to shun politi political cal political activity and other "matters which do not concern them" was Issued by Iraqi Premier Abdel Karim Kassem. fleet" by taking some ships out of moth balls. "There is a tremendous power vacuum in India and Southeast Asia," Mahan said. "It is obvious by recent events that the Commu Communist nist Communist world now intends to start agitating in this area." He urged the U.S. immediate immediately ly immediately make up a fleet to be known as the Indian Ocean fleet, from ships presently in moth balls." Some 25,000 delegates were here for the five-day convention which officially opened today in joint session with the ladies auxiliary. George Meany, AFL-CIO presi dent, and James Douglas, Air Force secretary will receive spe special cial special awards tonight at the distin guished guests banquet. New Tax Bill Aimed At Solving (ash Crisis In Michigan LANSING (UPI)-Gov. G. Men Men-nen nen Men-nen Williams is expected to sign a bill today slapping an extra penny tax on a dollar's purchase and officially ending Michigan's cash crisis. The hike in the state's use tax will begin pouring cash into the state's coffers when it becomes effective Tuesday. The Revenue Department esti estimated mated estimated the tax boost from three to four cents per dollar would aver average age average out to an annual cost of $50 to $52 for a four-member family or about $12.67 per person. If the letter of the unique law is observed, a person could go to jail for a year for failing to report the purchase of an ice cream cone or candy bar. This provision was expected to be winked at by the law but there was a danger that a taxpayer's suit could upset the new tax. The four-tent tax, heart of a $128,500,000 tax package designed to end the state's eight-month fis fiscal cal fiscal crisis, was adopted by the Legislature Saturday along with a token tax on business. Williams earlier said there were "serious questions of constitution constitutionality ality constitutionality which have been raised in connection with the use tax as a dice to get around the constitu constitutional tional constitutional three-cent sales tax limita limitation." tion." limitation." He predicted there would be a court test. Kitten's Purr Lulls Accused Kidnapper Into Cops' Hands LOS ANGELES (UPI) Nothing helps you relax and take a little nap like a purring kitten in your lap accused kidnapper Victory Savoy can tell you. Savoy, according to police, jumped into James A. Bentley's car late Saturday night, pulled a butcher knife and ordered the 47-year-old engineer to start driving. In the car with Bcntlcy was the family cat, Goldie. Bentley said Savoy mumbled to him that he needed a gun to pull some robberies. "I need a gun," said Savoy. "We'll have to get one from a sheriff or policeman." While Savoy mulled over his problem, Bentley drove. First up the coast to Oxnard, about 80 miles north, and then back to Los Angeles and slowly around the streets. After nearly eight hours, Bent ley noticed that Goldie the cat had curled up on Savoy's lap, purring loudy to occasional ca caresses resses caresses from the man. Finally, Savoy began nodding off and soon was sound asleep. Bentley drove until he saw Po Policemen licemen Policemen Joseph J. Balog and Don Noeth in a patrol car. He cau cautiously tiously cautiously edged his car over and whispered his troubles. The officers woke Savoy, took the butcher knife and another knife he had strapped to his leg and hauled him off to jail on charges of kidnaping. Bp, gMEpr; 1 Ift It) r i WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. John J. Sparkman said today he was "prepared to stay in session until Christmas if necessary" to help defeat civil rights legislation. The Alabama Democrat said in a statement that "measures of this iifnd tend to increase racial tensions which have mounted Steadily since the ill-advised Su preme Court school integration de decision cision decision of 1954. "Recognizing through the years the serious effect such agitation has on racial relations, I have op opposed posed opposed all such measures in the past and will continue to oppose them in the future," h said Sen. Hiram L. Fong, the first U.S. senator of Chinese ancestry, said Sunday night that Congress should be careful abut "rushing" civil rights legislation. The. new Republican senator from Hawaii's racial melting pot expressed his views in a filmed TV interview with Sen. Kenneth B. Keating (R-N.Y. ). Keating, an active proponent of civil rights legislation, asked Fong how he felt about the issue, which is expected to come to a head in the Senat? before adjournment. Fong said Hawaii has adhered to the principle "that men should be equal in the eyes of the law and of society." "However," he added, "I do understand that there has been a way of living in the South that has not been along those lines for a long, long time. It is difficult to legislate along such lines and I think that we should be very care ful in rushing legislation through. "It is difficult to legislate a mode of life. I think this is sn emotional problem that will be cured by time.'1 On another TV panel, Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R-N.Y.) said he would like Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev to hear a "good, hot civil rights debate" during his forthcoming U.S. visit. He said this would show the Russian leader "that we don't send our minorities to Siberia we fight about what's justice for them and do our best to get jus justice tice justice for them," Javits said. NO RIGHTS FOR HEEL CHICAGO (L'PI)-A thief was left holding the hag today. Police said the bag which the culprit snatched from a salesman's car contained 400 shoes all for the left foot. Q enmne St ones IN RINGS IN EARRINGS IN BRACELETS IN PENDANTS Amethysts Aquamarines Topaz Tourmalin Garnets Read Our Classifieds Marlene Dietrich Liked Responsive LatAm Audiences NEW YORK (UPI) Marlene Dietrich returned Sundav from a five-week night club tour of South America bearing 34 pieces of luggage and nice words about Latins. "Latin audiences are alwavs much more enthusiastic and warmer," she said on her arrival at Idlewild Airnort "Tn T.ns Veeas thev are a diffprent hrepri When the reviewers wrote about my act in Latin America, they did it from a much more artistic point of view than is done here. They didn't dwell nearly as much on the brevity of some of my costumes. 'Furthermore, as I completed my act, the stages were so full of flowers thrown by the audi audience ence audience that I couldn't move. In Las Vegas, they don't even have flow flowers ers flowers on the table." ATLANTIC AREA REENLISTMENT Sp4 Fred Brown III takes the oath of enlistment as he is sworn into the Army by Capt. Ovid Robert III, commanding officer of the 549th Military Po Police lice Police Company (Service). Brown, a Military Policeman, has been in the Canal Zone since September 1956 and has extended his overseas tour of duty a nadditional year. An all-around athlete, he played first base with the Atlantic Area baseball team and presently Is participating- in volleyball competition on the At Atlantic lantic Atlantic side. Brown entered service in July 1953 as a member of the 2nd Marine Division and took basic at Parris Island, S.C. Discharged from the Marine Corps two years later, he joined the Army in August 1955. (U.S. Army Photo) Teenage Smokers Pick Up Habit From Parents, Survey Reveals NEW YORK (UPI) Most teen teen-aged aged teen-aged cigarette smokers picked up the habit from parents who smoke, a study by the American Cancer Society indicated yester yesterday. day. yesterday. The survey of the smoking hab habits its habits of 21,980 high school students in the Portland, Ore., area showed that the percentage of smokers was highest among children of families in which both parents smoked cigarettes. The numbr. of teen-aged smok smokers ers smokers was lowest in families in which neither parent has been a smoker, according to the study, and intermediate in families in which only one parent smokes cigarettes. ' The one-year study showed that of 11,060 boys and 10,920 girls, about one-fourth of the boys and more than one-eighth of the girls smoked regularly each week, and mosj smoked each day. The survey included students in 11 Portland public schools, 5 Catholic parochial schools and 5 suburban public high schools In Multnomah and Clackamas coun counties. ties. counties. The study also showed: The smoking behavior of boys tended to conform more closely to that of the father, while smoking behavior of girls followed more closely that of the mother. The percentage of smokers among children from families in which one or .both parents conti continued nued continued to smoke was significantly higher than the percentage in which one or both parents gave up smoking. Each successive school grade had a higher percentage of smok smokers. ers. smokers. The percentage of smokers was higher among students in Catholic parochial schools than among students in the city public schools. It Was lowest among students in the suburban public high schools. The percentage of smokers among boys who do not partici participate pate participate in athletics was substantial substantially ly substantially higher than those who did and had a coach. The percentage was higher among students who did not participate in any school acti activities. vities. activities. y The report also showed that one-fourth of the hov. and one- half of the girls said they had not even experimented with cigarette smoking. Among boys, 35 per cent were regular smokers in the senior year. The percentage of senior smokers among girls was 26. The study was conducted by s group of researchers headed by Dr. Daniel Horn, of the cancer society. They included Dr. Fred Frederick erick Frederick A. Courts, professor of Psy Psychology chology Psychology at Reed College, Portland. f ak'ic fiesta More than 50 off on all yard goods It's a fiesta of savings for you! You've never een so many fasci fascinating nating fascinating and gorgeous fabrics. Beau Beautiful tiful Beautiful textures, rich colors, striking patterns... all reduced. Setv for economy! Buy now and Just say, "Charge I" Central Ave. At the "J" St. Traffic Signal. Mam Doctor, Girlfriend Arraigned On Charge Of Killing Wife POMONA, Calif. (UPI) A wealthy doctor and his red haired mistress, not speaking or looking at each other, were arraigned on charges of slaying his estranged socialite wife to avoid a split of $750,000 in community property. Dr. R. Bernard Finch, 41, ap ap-peared peared ap-peared cheerful as he entered the court of Superior Judge James G. Whyte chained to two other pris prisoners. oners. prisoners. He pleaded innocent and his trial was set for Nov. 24. His 22-year-old girlfriend, pretty Carole Tregoff, wore a pale pow powder der powder blue dress. She appeared calm and did not enter a plea Instead, her attorney, Robert Neeb Jr., moved for dismissal of the charge and entered a second motion to quash the accusation. The state is pressing to have the two tried together on the mur murder der murder charges, but Neeb argued that Carole's testimony against herself in the doctor's preliminary hearing must be studied by the court before the two cases can be joined for the trial. Miss Tregoff is accused of be being ing being partner to a conspiracy to kill the surgeon's wife although authorities said they did not be believe lieve believe she was involved in the ac tual slaying. Mrs. Barbara Jean Finch, 33, was fatatlv Shot in the ririvrwav of their $65,000 home in West Co- vina last July 18. ? DRESSES SPORTSWEAR SUITS SKIRTS COATS BATHING SUITS LINGERIE HOSIERY HATS HANDBAGS SCARVES JEWELRY ACCESORIES and many more exciting items TTkn ChticOuut SPORTS SHIRTS DRESSES DRESS SHIRTS SPORTSWEAR SUITS SWIM SUITS SPORTS COATS SLACKS CAN-CAN SUPS SWEATERS PETTICOATS BATHING SUITS SOCKS CABANA SETS SHOES OVERCOATS gpoRTS SHIRTS TOPCOATS PANTS HOSE SLIPPER, SWIM SUITS PAJAMAS CABANA SETS TIES JEWELRY PAJAMAS and manv more SOCKS fine items SHOES MORE ITEMS ADDED! Hurry down for clothes and gifts that are absolutely pocketbook perfect! Take advantage of wonderful bargains. A fabulous selection of top-quality merchandise, priced to save you money! OPEN 9 a.m. 6 p.m. Also At Noon Sorry, No Returns, Alternations or Chargeg CHINA CRYSTAL CERAMICS TABLE LINEN SHEETS UMBRELLAS WALLETS SUNGLASSES LUGGAGE PERFUMES piTh Labd Signifies Quality- Central Ave., in front of Banco Nacional, Panama "1 TH1 PANAMA AMUUCAN - AN INBCTKNDINT DAILY KEWSPAPEI WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER I, IISI Be I and Otli 134, THE VOICE OF BROADWAY by Dorothy Killgallen ) foci a lenvide ana ma NEWS OF ENGAGEMENTS, MARRIAGES, BIRTHS, PARTIES AND TRAVEL SHOULD BtL MA'LEO FROMPTLY TO BOX-NUMBER SHOWN. IT WILL EE RECEIVED BY TELEPHONE OVER PAJmAMA 2-0740 OR 2-0741 BETWEEN 8:00 AND 10 A.M. ONLY. --' -, j 1 fACI FOUR A sr :..?.!. v t. 4;$Lf. ... MR. AND MRS. ARTHUR MARTIN BOGUE FORMER ZONIAN MISS ANDREA LI REE ARMSTRONG WEDS ARTHUR BOGUE IN FERGUSON, MO., NUPTIALS Miss Andrea Luree. Armstrong, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Reginald D. Armstrong-, formerly of the Canal Zone, became the bride of Mr. Arthur Martin Bogue, son of Mr. and Mrs. Francis Bogue of Ferguson, Mo., in a double ring ceremony at St. Ste Stephen's phen's Stephen's Episcopal Church in Ferguson. The bride is a niece of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan D. Billiard of Los Bi-.i. 1 Given in marriage by her takier, Charles A. Kadets has been appointed Sales Manager of the Panama office of ASA Inter Inter-rrlional rrlional Inter-rrlional Airlines. He succeeds former Sales Manager Napoleon Martinez A. Mho has heen transferred to th" airline's Guatemala office. Kadcls, h ell-exoerirnced in air transportation, will he in charge of both air-cargo anc passenger services. i NOTICE fB.P.O. ELKS 1542 Annual Fish Fry Cancelled Reason: No fish available. 'Tickets refunded on request. DOROTHY CHASE'S STUDIO 01" DANCE Iteigslration open. Now located in the Knights of Columbus Hall. Balboa. ll classes will be resumed October 1. W. ALEXANDER Masseur Reducing Treatments, Elastic Stocking, Special rv,. tevy Machines for Spot Reducing, Men and Women Operators, Beauty Parlor under the supervision of "Diana," formerly of the Tivoli Guest Hoive. NEW MODERN OFFICE 35-25 Peru Ave Ne( to l ux Theater Phone l'rolrclion Krom Flip VjS STARCH Miss Armstrong wore, a floor floor-length length floor-length gown of Chantiliy lace and tulle. A Swedish crown of sequins and seed pearls held her fingertip veil of French silk illusion, and she carried a cascade bouquet of white carnations and stephanotis centered with a white orchid. 5 She was attended by her sister. Mi., .u.ix v.eicn, the lormer Ausl Arden Armstrong. Mr. Armstrong retired in June, 957, after 32 years with the Ter Terminals minals Terminals Division in Cristobal. He was employed a.s a claims inves investigator, tigator, investigator, aim previously had held the position ol chief cnecker in the Receiving and Forwardinc Agen Agency. cy. Agency. The newly weds plan ,to make their home in Fergusog'. Miss Van Hoord Weds tns. Bartley Smiln At Amador Chpl Today "icial interest today is the. marriage of Miss Maritza van ..... Uii ,!.-,llt.t l' Ol !ll, ullU Ml. ( arios van Hoorde 01 Panama Li Lily, ly, Lily, to Ensign Bartley Paul Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bartley Smith ol Diablo. The nuptial service was planne; for 5:30 this afternoon a', the Koi .A.aaoor inapel, and the recep reception tion reception to fohow at the Koi A, O.ncers Club. .Miss Van Hoorde has been u.ue ly leied at pre-bridal showers in both Panama and the tnai .one during t.ie past two weeks. Silver Dollar Dpdida Hor.ors Mrs. Thompson, Mrs. Agns Rankin Mrs. Anita Thompson and her mother, Mrs. Agnes Rankin, were guests of. honor at a snver doiuir desperiida Jast week at St. Mary's Hall. 111 Ba'boa. event was at attended tended attended by 60 friends. Mrs. Thompson an.i her husband Chiropodist IKMTATIOiN OF DIAI'EH HASH Mcxaii;) is the absorbent and refreshing powder whose effectiveness lasts longer because it tenderly clings baby's delicate soft vkln. Does not rontain Talcum. MEXANA ,1'ILDICATED POWDER Sgi Paul Thompson, with Mrs. Kankin are soon to leave ihc lslh.us was born and reared on the Zone. Hostesses for the party were Mrs. Mary Joyce, Mrs. Oorothy hose, Mrs. Eiga Mae Duss, Mrs. Vivian Haydel, Mrs. (Jelia S at uon, Mrs. Phyllis Best, Mrs. May May-beilt beilt May-beilt Ciemmons, Mrs. Blancne Maclntyre, Mrs. Ruth Mummaw, Mrs. iklen Barrett and Mrs. Ann Maloney. Hie y ills were presented to the honored guests by Rev. James J. Murptn, pastor o! St. Mary's. Isthmian Toaitmasttri Induct New Mombtrs yle Pox, Fred Morton and Bill Beeson were inducted as new memoers ol the isthmian "oast "oast-masters masters "oast-masters Club ounng the meeting last evening at the Tivoli Guest house. Nominees ior election, presented by the nominating committee, are .Miles Genm, president, Al Prance, Harvey Meagner and Allied O' O'-Leary, Leary, O'-Leary, vice president; Vai Lynch and Allred i'errazas, secretary; Gordon Ward and Ed Michaelis, sergeant at arms. Tne next meeting of the club will be held jointly with other Toastmasters Clubs in this area on Tuesday, September 15, at the TivOii. Purtncr information eon cerning Toastmasters may be ob obtained tained obtained trom Cdr. S. E. Taylor, Navy 2434. Mitt McComai Visits At Gaithtr Quarters Miss Matilda V. McComas, cousin of Lt. Gen. Kidgely Gaither, Commander in Chief, Caribbean, has arrived from Washington, DC, lor a short visit here. She will be the house guest of General and Mrs. Gaither at their residence at Quarry Heights. Lunchoon To Honor Miss I ol a Arnold Friends of Miss Iola Arnol(1 Girl Scout Executive who is soon to leave the Isthmus to continue schooling, are invited to a no-host luncheon at noon Friday at the Ti Tivoli voli Tivoli Guest House. Reservations should be made be before fore before 4 o.m. tomorrow with Mrs. II. F. Spinney, Balboa 2490. Nowcomcrs Club Moets At Ft. Davis Mrs. Betty Lindquist, president of the Newcomers Club, was in charge of the regular monthly at the Fort Davis Country Club Hostesses were Mrs. Cecil Himes and Mrs. William Pollard. A discussion on dinner ware, was given by A. R. Serany, anrTseveral samples were displayed. Guests were Mrs. Elroy Lipsey, Mrs. Ellen O'Brien, Mrs. J. Sakas, Mrs. Gary Maxwell, Mrs. T. S. Clark, Mrs. Russell Norriss and Mrs. William Heidenreich. New members who were introduced are Mrs. A. I. Kelley, Mrs. Erin Jones and Mrs. William Fedak. Members attending the meet ing were Mrs. George Henning, Mrs. Simon Woegens, Mrs. James Hedges, Mr. .lame Roane, Mrs. W. R. Kloe, Mrs Charles Wil Williams, liams, Williams, Mrs. E. J Berger, Mrs. Fernando Ramirez Mrs. Jim Fant, Mrs.. Lindquisf, Mrs. Denis Boniface, Mr. Gene ltuba Mrs. W. A. Reinheimer. Mrs. W. II. Vantine, Mrs. Ro Robert bert Robert Wilcox, Mrs. Ben Duree, Mrs. Gail Heck, Mrs. Betty Judson, Mrs: Clayton Merrill, Mrs. James Tiornton, Mrs. W. Whitsell, Mrs. E. K. Van Gtiskirk, Mrs. D. Eglin Eglin-ton, ton, Eglin-ton, Mrs. Robert Garvin, Mrs. Ju Judith dith Judith Bonanno, Mrs. M. Nolte, Mrs. Ronald Moore, Mrs. Q. Lehmann, Mrs. T. W. Gove, Mrs. Audrey Barsi, Mrs. Larry Clark, Mrs. F. Jones, Mrs. W. Fedak and Mrs. A 1. Kelley. Squara Dance Party At Balboa YMCA A squaie dance party is planned for this evening from 8 to 10 at the Balboa YMCA. Ross Cunning Cunningham, ham, Cunningham, the "Canal Zone Cowboy", will call for the dancing. All interested persons are invit invited ed invited to attend. Albrook Toastmasters Name Contest Speakers Albrook Air Force Base masters had a special meeting Sund.iv evening Toast dinner at the Albrook NCO Club. The ororam was highlighted by the selection of Richard Ortega ind Henry L. Canlu as the Al brook club's representatives in the forthcoming Panama-Canal Zone Toastmasters speech contest. Felix Hodge served as Toast Toast-master master Toast-master of the Day and Mrs. E. .. Stevens was in charge of the ladies' table topics. Guests at attending tending attending the meeting Were LI. Col. and Mrs. C. A. Babb, Lt, and Mrs. R. G. Nelson, Capt. and Mrs. V. T. Gannon, Capt. and Mrs. A. Henson. M-Sgl. and Mrs. W. F. Ensey. Harmonett Entertain At Gorges Hospital The Harmonctls of Gamboa en entertained tertained entertained for patients in Wards 10 ?.. 13, 14, 22 and 23 of Gorgas Hos Hospital. pital. Hospital. Members of the group are Mel Mel-vin vin Mel-vin Allen, Carlos Alleyne, Luis Brownie and Ward Russell Thev were escorted by Mrs. Dor Dorcas cas Dorcas Burns, Red Cross Gray Lady. Altar Rosary Society Communion Sunday The monthly corporate commun communion ion communion of members of the Altar Ro Rosary sary Rosary Society will be held at the 8 a m. mass Sunday at St. Mary's Church. USO-JWB Art Class The regular US0-.IWB art class will meet this evening at the Ai Aimed med Aimed Forces Service Center. Al! - m- I is wmmmmwmmmmmiL CAKE CUTTING Mr. and Mrs. Burton Frederick Mead prepare to cut the first slice of their wedding cake during their reception at the Fort Amador Officers Club Saturday. The marriage ceremony was performed at St. Mary's Church In Balboa. The bride Is the former Miss Gladys Elsa Miller of Balboa. - BOUND FOR MEDELLIN Isthmian golfers get ready to board AVIANCA'S "F.I Fanameno" at Tocumen airport bound for Me Me-dellin dellin Me-dellin to take part in the Golf OpeiA which will be played there Sept. 3, 4, 5 and 6. With the group is Stanley Fidanque. of the Fidanque Travel Agency which arranged the tour, and Theodore Melanson, tour director. HOLD MANEUVERS STUTTGART, West Germany (UPI) Troops and planes par participated ticipated participated today in West Germa ny's biggest' military maneuvers of the year. "OperaUonyUlmer I Spatz" gfttijjnd i way yrttejayl with a -mock battle involving more than 18,000 men. registered students are reminded that starting time is 7 p.m. Isthmian Nurses Assn. The Isthmian Nurses Associa Association tion Association will meet at 7 this evening in the new conference room t Gorgas Hospital. Dr. Filos Diaz will be the guest speaker. All nurses of the Canal Zone and Panama are invited to attend. MARRIES COED HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Alan Ladd 43r., 21-year-old son of the movie actor, and coed Patricia Ann Beayley, 23, were married yesterday at the First Presbyter Presbyterian ian Presbyterian Church. Ladd is an actor's agent in Hollywood. ' i l&UK""!'1""""11 1 1. M aMHH-u. 7 r I fT .... '-HHBo f ,-,v ill- ' "Vawlf lb r Vv3 COOKIE-STACKING Stackinu cart like cookies in a baker'i tray: car on rack, top, is brought parallel to a previously tilt tilt-parked parked tilt-parked auto. Attendant, center, uses hvdraulic jack to tilt car at 30-detrree angle. Car is then rolled UNDER back end of previously parked auto, bottom. System is said to double? capacity of a lot, and is a development Of Wilmington Del Miffineerinc firm ..fx. J. a.. ....... ill Meetings Special Education Assn The Special Education Associa Association tion Association will have its first meeting of the school year this evening at 7:30 'at the Balboa WSO-JWB. All parents of handieaped children and other interested persons are invit invited ed invited to attend. AUTHORIZE LOANS LISBON (UPI) The govern government ment government has authorized loans total totalling ling totalling more than 30 million dollars for the modernization of Portu Portugal's gal's Portugal's merchant fleet and fishing industry, spokesmen for the Na Na-.ional .ional Na-.ional Development Plan said to today. day. today. ACCUSES ISRAEL MOSCOW (UPI) Izvestia ac accused cused accused Israel's government yester yesterday day yesterday of 'dragging the country into a military conflagration." By its irresponsible actions, Tel Aviv is making itself look more and more like Bonn," the Soviet govern government ment government newspaper said. f . ...... if t 1 '. t, i .',. 1 . .. . . .v.X.;,;.;W.:.:.vS;: X ." V. if By OSWALD JACOBY Written for NEA Service NORTH i Q52 V A 10 9 7 8 J74 10 5 WEST (D) EAST 4AJ10S87 K64 VK53 f4 2 Q1098 842 4KJ973 SOUTH 43 V QJ8 2 AK853 AQ8 No one vulnerable Weet North East South Pass Pass Pass 1 4 1 4 1 N T. 2 4 3 3 a Pass Pass 4 4 Pass Pass Double Pass Pass Pass Opening lead V 3 Most North-South pairs arrived at four hearts at the Spring Na Nationals tionals Nationals and made either four or five odd. depending on how well de- larer handled the cards. A couple let themselves get shut out of the heart suit and played diamond part scores making four odd. One South got doubled al four daimonds and could have made a top score by simply making his contract but actually managed to go down three tricks by guessing everything wrong. West made the surprise opening lead of the three of hearts. South decided it was a singleton and went up with dummv's ace. He cashed the ace and king of dia monds next and led the queen of hearts. West took his king thankfully and played the jack of snaries which was allowed to hold the trick. South ruffed the spade continua tion and led the jack of hearts. East discarded a club but rvfferi the next heart, took his queen of trumps for the setting trick and led a spade. South ruffed with his last liump and made his final mistake. He played the ace of clubs and new East made both his king and jack. Q The bidding has been: West North East South 1 Pass Pass ? You, South, hold: 44 VAKQJS7 6 A654 44 What do you do? A Bid four hearts. You ought to have a, food play for lt. TODAY'S QUESTION West bids four spades .id North doubles. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow WCE MORE TO- ROAM lefore he retires from adven adven-urini?, urini?, adven-urini?, New Zealand's Sir Ed Ed-nund nund Ed-nund Hillary wants to make a y at solving the mystery of le Abominable Snowman, the icar-legendary creature of the limalayas. Hillary is famous as onqueror of Mt. Everest. f tJ'Tew -V Rosalind Russell has a big hasale coming up with the internal ne ..,, mn Thv dixacree will some deductions she made when she starred in "Wonderful Town DAn,.,a u ns1 if thv win that Uil djuiukk; mt J difference of opinion she's bound to be slapped wun an aauiuuuai tho vnsnui she incurred IQA lUi luv during the New York run of "Auntie Mame.". .L,arry reucu, the former baseball star who turn- .,!. tnr "Th FRI Storv." will cu w waltz down the aisle with Paul Throop, a beautiful show-girl at Sands in Las Vegas. Debbie Reynolds' seven-picture deal at Paramount is apt to ca catapult tapult catapult her into the ranks of the top box office actresses. Perlberg nH satnn who'll Droduce her films, plan to offer her the best possible scripts. Dick Roman, rushed into trio Rnvv nn one hour's notice tO replace the ailing Tommy Leonetti, was called in by the management after the very first show and told ho mi: uantoit as the sinpin? head- liner for three weeks in October. For almost a year, he hasn t been able to get an audition there. . Dno Fast SiHe nipht snot strug gling on its last legs, is said 'o have lost over Ji60,uuo in tne last few months. The recently-divorced Billy Rose has been seen about town with a svelte young blonde who ought to be capable of alleviating any heartaches. .Dean Martin may may-get get may-get an Oscar nomination for his performance in the forthcoming "Career"; if not, he's sure to win a multi million dollar contract from Parmount, which is interest interested ed interested in offering him a deal stretching over the next 10 years. .Chums vow that no matter what you read. France Nuyen's real love is an old flame, French actor Christian Marquand, long-time buddy of Marlon Brsndo. Eli Oberstein, just back from three months in Europe, predicts that because of the reasonable costs over there, ultimately 90 per cent of all popular record albums will be made across the Atlantic . ."Method" actors take all kinds of jobs to carry them through the lean seasons. Example: Bob Mon Monroe, roe, Monroe, a student of Lee Strasberg, currently is toiling as emcee at the Metronome a 52d St. strip joint. Fay Emerson s chums feel she 5 iving dangersously with her new romance. He's an interesting type, Better Art For Is Aim Of Dept. Store Plan new YORK (UPI) Soon we'll be able to buy original paintings s we do dresses at department stores. Prnmntpd hv the tremendous in terest in art, a firm which owns tores in New York City, iNewanc, N.J., and Los Angeles will add rt galleries to its New York and California stores about Nov. 10. If the idea goes over, the third store probably will get a gallery, too. The store is the first to sell shiohio naintinps on a cash-and- carry basis. The paintings will be valued up to Ji.uuu or moie, nm rr-ioo ujiil ho ketit to a minimum because of the low mark-up polio polio-followed followed polio-followed throughout the stores. "We will sell paintings, not for what we think they're worth, but for a small amount of profit." said Jerome Ohrbach, store presi president dent president and an art collector. For example, if the store pays $95 for a paintuig, it will sell the picture for all $115. Prices will range from about $85 to $1000, ,..;iu iki, on from SR5 to $250 ! Willi IHC uv.-t,- '- ! still lower thsn most paintings purchased from an gauenes. There, the average cost is $500 to $600, Ohrbach said. 'Not that we're trying to take away from the galleries," he added. "This is a new approach to art and believe me, it's art. The prices will be in the reach of the average person because we don't have to have the mark-up of galleries. "Our perfect customer is the school teacher, or girl just out of college," he continued. "She wants quality but can't spend much money. We think this will bring her better art for the mon money" ey" money" The stores have sold paintings for some time, but they were of "lower quality," Ohrbach ex explained. plained. explained. Most were purchased merely for the attractive frame. Ohrbach hopes to include some Mt. Olive Society Complete Plans For Picnic Monday The Mount Olive Friendly and Benevolent Society of Colon has completed arrangements for a gay outing atyd dance on Labor Day, at Jardui San Juan, at Nue Nue-vo vo Nue-vo San Juan. Tickets are going fast but are still available at Markland's fur furniture niture furniture store, the Crown drug store; from Alloric Earle and Al Albert bert Albert E. Prince of Rainbow City and other members of the com committee. mittee. committee. Refreshments will be on sale. Buses will leave fron 12th Street and Central Avenue from 8 to 11. but frightfully tough to make an appealing beau. .Polly Bergen telle intimates that Leonard Spiegelgliss, of "Majority of One" fame, wants her to star in hit newest play for Broadway. Reconciliation attempts between Andre Previn and hli ex-wife, Bet Betty ty Betty Bennett, can be written up ai history; Andre cancelled a Chicago cafe engagement when he learn learned ed learned that she was booked to sing nearby, and anyway the seems to adore Hooper Fowler, of the Look Magazine. .Parlor games are enjoying a new vogue. The newest to catch on in Gotham it called "Concentration". .Trip to out-of-towners: you can get free post post-cards cards post-cards at the Times Square Infor Information mation Information Center. There's some talk in official circles that Mamie Eisenhower might accompany the President when he visits Russia. (Please re register gister register this department as not caring what sights Khrushchev sees when he's here, what records he hears the disc jockeys play, or what newscastwrs pontificate on his trip. Have they all forgotten that he has plenty of spies over here, and they know very well not only the highlights of our military installations but what capitalistic jazz is popular with our decadent public?) The original Mario's, a restaur ant in Greenwich Village, wants Walter Chiari the Italian come comedian dian comedian best known for his romance with Ava Gardner to act as host for a disc jockey program eman ating from the eatery..A Cleve Cleveland land Cleveland born clarinetist is making an impression on the crowd at Charlie's. He tootles to the nam of Hub Bub. Latin Quarter showgirl Nancy Wachtel is being wooed by Anna Magnani'g protegee, Lenny Gar-, teen. .Montgomery Gift's reeent quotes on the subject of autograph seekers suggest that he's be hap happier pier happier if he could quit show bus iness and get away from those offensive fans. Even Washington is gabbing a- bout the feud between Chicago'i Mayor Daly and Jake Arvey. The mayor, supported by Harry Tru Truman, man, Truman, is pushing Stu Symington for the Democratic presidential nomi nation, but Jake, the powerhouse in the Windy City, won't give up on Adlai Stevenson. The high-level betting is still in Adlai. Less Money "name" paintings m the gallery, but every painting will be a "good example of an artist's work, not just an excuse to us names." "We think the average person would rather have a good selec selection tion selection of unknowns than fragments of 'name' artists' works," he added. So far, all paintings have been done within the past few years. But all types are included, from abstracts to romantic styles. "Everything is original, and most pictures will be oils because "that's what people want in their homes, what will do something for a living room. The first collection will number about 200 pictures, and stock will be replenished when necessary. House Voles Partial Amends To Dr. Mudd Who Treated Booth WASHINGTON, Sept. 2 (UPI) The House voted yesterday to make at least partial amends to Dr. Samuel Alexander Mudd, the physician who gave medical aid to Lincoln's assassin. It appruved legislation for the erection of a memorial table to Mudd, honoring his service to yel yellow low yellow fever victims in an 1867 epi epidemic demic epidemic at Ft. Jefferson, Fla. But it shied away from a stand on whether Mudd was really inno. cent of conspiracy in connection with Lincoln's murder. Mudd was imprisoned at Ft. Jefferson for having given medi medical cal medical aid and a night's lodging to John Wilkes Booth, who shot Lin Lin-coin coin Lin-coin to death as he watched a play at Ford's Theater in Wash Washington. ington. Washington. Mudd was granted an uncondi uncondi-tional tional uncondi-tional pardon by President An Andrew drew Andrew Johnson in 1869, and ac according cording according to Rep. Alvin M. Btntley (R-Mich.), historians have since agreed almost unanimously that the doctor did not know of Lin Lincoln's coln's Lincoln's assassination when he aid aided ed aided Booth. Bentlcy, who got interested In the case because a Mudd relative is a constituent of his in Michi Michigan, gan, Michigan, introduced the bill authoriz authorizing ing authorizing the memorial tablet. It origin, ally stated that Mudd was impris imprisoned oned imprisoned for a crime he did not com mit. Hut the House Interior Commit Committee tee Committee struck out the declaration of Mudd's innocence, because it did not want to pass judgement on the historical controversy. In acting yesterday, the House went along with the committee and approved the tablet at the site of the Ft. Jefferson ruins al Garden Key, Fla. The bill now goes to the Senate. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER I, 195J THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PAG I FIVi - House Public yorks : 'r'--f Cent-a-Galjoh Hike ' WASHINGTON (UPI) The House Public J Works Committee voted 25-6 yesterday iOr an imme immediate diate immediate penny gallon increase La federal gasoline taxes to leep the financially embarrassed super highway program from coming to a halt. The hike,', which would run for 22 months, would boost the na nation's tion's nation's motorists and truck opera operators tors operators nearly a billion dollars over that period, ; It would boost the federal levey from three to four cents a galWn. The committee action was a half:Vicrory for President Eisen Eisenhower hower Eisenhower who Originally asked that the tax be raised to 4V4 cents but who, characterized the pending le legislation gislation legislation as a step in the right di direction. rection. direction. He said it would keep the Committee Chairman Charles A. Buckley (D-N.Y.) said he would ask the House Rules Committee Wednesday to dear the tax bill for House actios, now scheduled for Thursday. Backers predicted the measure would lear the House easily but said it may face rougher going in the Senate. The committee action came as the House approved by an over overwhelming whelming overwhelming 209-4 vote an adminis tration opposed bill to cut in Soviet Officials Bargain Hunting At US Show's End MOSCOW (UPI) Soviet offi officials cials officials have been checking the U.S. exhibition to see what bargains their government can pick' up when the show closes nexi rn day, exhibition guides said yes yesterday. terday. yesterday. Some 2,500 tons oi Amencan Amencan-made made Amencan-made goods will be offered for sale. The 900 American manufac manufacturers turers manufacturers who contributed 3,000 tons of goods, from sewing machines to motor boats, want only 500 tons returned'; including clothing from the fashion show, an electronic brain and voting machines. "According to our agreement with the Soviets, they will .get first choice on what will not be sent back," said Maurice King, the exhibition official in charge of dismantling the fair. Next in line after the Soviet government will be the U.S. Em Embassy. bassy. Embassy. American residents also are hopeful of getting some bar bargains. gains. bargains. Kine nointed out that items not approved for export w the Soviet Union COU1Q noi De sum. ne siu also that individual sales would be subject to the customs regula regulations tions regulations on imoorts. .., SomeSi h, teibitio 4i4es said that the Russians had been "comparison shopping," examin examining ing examining items carefully as if they were housewives in a bargain basement. The United States and the So viet government will negotiate on items taken from the exhibition by "souvenir-hunters" during the show. A similar settlement was made after the Soviet Exhibition in New York on Russian-made goods taken away by Americans. To keep such "collections" down, most of the exhibits here have been wired or nailed down 19 Enlisted Men Get Promotions In 20th Infantry Col. John R. Wright Jr., com manding officer, 1st Battle Group, 20th Infantry, Fort Koobe, an announced nounced announced the appointment of 19 en enlisted listed enlisted members of the battle group and attached units to per permanent manent permanent grades ranging from specialist fpur to platoon, sergeant (E-7). Heading the list is M-Sgt. George K. Bowen of the 518th En Engineer gineer Engineer Company (Combat). Bow Bow-en en Bow-en was appointed to the perma permanent nent permanent grade of platoon sergeant under the new career incentive program. Three members of the battle group appointed to permanent staff sergeant (E-6) were M-Sgt. Leopoldo Urrutia and Sfc. Martin P. Pestana Jr. of Headquarters and Headquarters Company and Sfc. William H. Beebe of D. Com Company, pany, Company, 34th Armor. Appointed to the permanent grade of sergeant (E-5) were Sfcs Anthony S. Volpe of Headquarters and Headquarters Company, Se Se-wev wev Se-wev W. Pender of A Company, and Sgt. Luis A., Laboy -Torres of the 518th Engineers. Named -to the permanent grade of specialist four were: Sp5 Felix Ocasio-Sanchez of B Company, Sgt. Fred Biddle of the 518th En gineers; Sp4s Emilio Garcia, Eu eene L. Gillihand, Ch a r 1 e s P Seansa and William R. Cromartie of Headquarters and Headquart Headquarters ers Headquarters Company, Robert Clanahan of C Company, and Thomas G. Cole of Mortar Battery, and Isiah Relf Relf-ord ord Relf-ord and William E. Middleton of B Company. Sgt. James R. Davis of D Com Company pany Company and Cpl. Tommy H. Reyn olds were appointed to the per manent grade of corporal, LENIN TO EMBARK TOKYO (UPI) Radio Moscow, in a broadcast beamed toward Japan, said today that the Russian atomic icebreaker Lenin would embark soon on its maiden voyage, The Lenin, equipped with three atomic-powered engine and a total of 44,000 horsepower, can cruise for a year and circumnavi circumnavigate gate circumnavigate .the world several times without making port, Moscow said. The 16,000-ton kt breaker was described as having a cruis cruising ing cruising speed of 18 knots. Group Approves " ,VX-. . In Gasoline Tax half the 20 per cent federal tax on night clubs. The bill now goes to the Senate wnere it taces an un uncertain certain uncertain fate. The Bill, approved by the House two years ago but killed in the Senate, would slash the tax on ad admission mission admission charges and on food and drink consumed in establishments which provide entertainment or live music. Eisenhower has warned repeat repeatedly edly repeatedly that the multi-billion dollar highway program must halt un unless less unless Congress pumps new funds into the special trust fund set up to finance it. In addition to the 22-months in increase crease increase in gas taxes, the Commit Committee tee Committee bill would provide for the transfer of certain ..automotive ex. ex.-cise cise ex.-cise taxes from general treasury revenues into -the highway fund. But this would be delayed until the 22'months period runs out. The committee vote apparently ended weeks of jockeying between the White House and the Democratic-controlled Congress as well as between the public works group and the House Ways it Means Committee. The Ways & Means Committee, which originates tax legislation, proposed the 22-months plan but the public works group balked. Speaker Sam Rayburn then worked out a compromise calling for a penny-a-gallon increase for 12 months. But the Ways ft Means Commit Committee tee Committee rejected the compromise, handing Rayburn one of his rare setbacks, and voted 13-12 to reaf reaffirm firm reaffirm support of its original 22 months proposal. Democratic members of the Public Work CommHtee then backed down, leading to yesterday's favorable vote. Chairman Buckley indicated he did not expect formidable opposi opposition tion opposition to the tax hike bill in the house. But he said he thought "it would run into more trouble in the Senate." In this connection. Sen. Joseph S. Clark (D-Pa.) renewed his pro proposal posal proposal to transfer automotive ex excise cise excise revenues to the highway fund now and make up the loss by plugging alleged tax "loopholes." House Group Finds Ark. Segregationist Won Congress Seat WASHINGTON, Sept. 2 (UPI) (UPI)-The The (UPI)-The House Elections subcommit tee yesterday unanimously ap approved proved approved a formal resolution re recognizing cognizing recognizing the right of Rep. Dale Alford (D-Ark.) to hold his seat ar Congress. t ... 1V f The subcommittee, headed by Rep. Robert T. Ashmore (D-S.C.) said, its lengthy investigation snoweo tne Little Rock, Ark. se gregationist was "duly elected'' last November. Alford defeated veteran Rep Brooks Hays (D-Ark.) in a con troversial election which centered on the school integration issue Aiiord was a last minute write- in candidate. Supporters of Hays, led bv Lit tie Rock publisher John F. Wells, naa cnarjea me contest was marked by many irregularities which would have changed the outcome m favor of Hays, a mod erate on the racial issue. However, an investigation of ballots by the House subcommit tee. romnlptpri lact upnL ahmuoit that Alford was the victor by 1,- 48 votes, getting 30,247 votes to Hays' 28,749. This was 256 more votes than Aiiora received in the original counting of ballots, even though 937 were voided by the subcom mittee. Japan To Present Scheme To US On Use Of Aid Funds TOKYO (UPI) Informed sources said yesterday Japan might re request quest request permission from Washington to use the many millions of dol lars owed to the United Statps for occupation-era relief to helo pay for the buildun of the defense forces of Japan and other free world nations in Southeast Asia. Figures vary on 'how much re lief aid .Taoan received from the United States during the occuna- '.ion. The United States estimated the debt at $'.044v000.OOO in 1953, but subseanently reduced 'he sum to $1,880 000.000 and proposed that Japan pay back one-thirdove ra 30-vear period. 1 The Japanese government did not agree. It asked the United States to 'wait unt'l it had settled all its World War II reparations claims which it did earlier this year. .-' .,''' Sources said the Japanese scheme had not been put before U.S. officials, although National Defense. Agency Director Munen Munen-ori ori Munen-ori Akagi me Monday with Charles H. ShuffV U.S. demity as assistant sistant assistant defense. secretary for mili tary assistance., s TODAY TIVOLI tsi. lSe. BANK! f 125.00 BRIDGES AT TOKO-RI Also: GLASS KEY " with Alan! Ladd FORMULA FOR SUCCSS-U.S. Marines on the island of Adak in the Aleutian chain have been given an assignment that s not covered in the field manuals. Their job is estab establishing lishing establishing a herd of caribou on the island, starting with calves brought over from the Alaskan mainland. The baby caribou are thriving on a special formula concocted by the Marines through trial and error canned milk, cod liver oil and erars. Marines, Army and Air Force are co-operating with the US fish and Wildlife Service in the project Russian Doctors Have Few Worries, Institute Says - o VIENTIANE, Laos (UPD-For- eisn Minister Khamphan Panya said yesterday that Royal Laotian Army troops were pushing active measures against Communist rebel forces and now controlled the key revolt-torn provinces of Samneua and Phongsaly. The foreign minister spoke to an extraordinary news conference in the wake of reports that Lao Laotian tian Laotian government forces had cap tured the rebels' last field fortress at Sop Nao in Phongsaly province. Panya indicated- a marked change for the better for the gov ernment in its battle against the Red Pathet Lao rebels and pre dicted success soon barring for eign intervention. (The Communist North Viet Nam News Agency reported Tues Tuesday day Tuesday that rebel leaders in Laos had issued a special statement de declaring claring declaring that U. S. emergency aid Lfor the royal government- could extremely serious and dangerous. (The statement, issued by the Nelo Lao Haksat Party attacked as a very dangerous decision the U. S. government move to give emergency aid to the Laotian government). Panya's news conference was attended by Prime Minister Phoui Sananikonp, but the latter let the foreign minister do the talking. The foreign minister declared flatly that the key northern prov provinces inces provinces of' Samneua and Phongsaly, where the Communists had been most active, "are under our con control." trol." control." He did not elaborate. "We have taken measures,". Panya said. "We are going into TODAY ENCANTO- 35-20 Elvis Presley in "KING CREOLE" Shirley Booth in "THE MATCHMAKER" SERVICE CENTER BALBOA 6:15 8:30 , AIR-CONDITIONED Starring ROD STEIGER Fay SPAIN 0 AMhowinf Thursday PARAISO 7:001 iSantt "Bonde Black "Sorority Girl" ft "I Shot Billy The Kid" tmailer" Ac "Crime! in The Streets" ciip"TQDM CAPITOLIO J5c. ' 20c. THE TWO i' - HEADED SPY with Jack Hawkins - Also : APACHE TERRITORY VICTORIA t5c. THE STAND AT A. RIVER with S. McNally , Also: KISS OF FIRE with Jack Palance i the active period. For some time our troops were not in fighting positions, were surprised and out outnumbered." numbered." outnumbered." Now, he said, "we are optimis optimistic tic optimistic about the future results." "If there is no more external in intervention tervention intervention there will be no deteri deterioration oration deterioration of the situation," he add added. ed. added. "In 'the present circumstances we are able to handle the situa situation. tion. situation. If there is increased inter intervention vention intervention we hope to face the sit uation with other means." Panya did not specify what he meant by other means. Presum Presumably, ably, Presumably, however, it would involve requesting the United Nations to create somesort of manned buf buffer fer buffer zone as was done in the Mid Middle dle Middle East after the Suez crisis. Requesting intervention from the Southeast Asia Treaty Organ Organization ization Organization was considered very re remote mote remote unless the situation reached a dangerous low. FIREMAN'S HOUSE BURNS EL MONTE, Calif. (UPI)-Fire-man Palomio Romero's house burned down while he was fight fighting ing fighting a forest fire in Northern Cali California, fornia, California, it was reported today. 1 I I I VE-IN 7:00 Today! 9:00 POPULAR NIGHT I $1.10 per CAR! Fernando Lamas in "SANGAREE" In TECHNICOLOR! i l I L Tomorrow! n i L PAUL NEWMAN i j Joan FONTAINE in "UNTIL THEY SAIL" THEATERS TODAY COCO SOLO 7:00 Air-Condltloned Kerwin Mathews "THE 7 th VOYAGE OF SINBAD" Also Showing Thursday! DIABLO HTS. 7 :00 Mary Murphy "LIVE FAST, DIE YOUNG" Thurs. "Flight To Tangier" MARGARITA 7:00 Alec Guinness "THE LADYKILLERS" Thursday 1 "Showdown At Booth 111" GAMBOA v v 7:0 Robert Loggia "COP HATER" i Frl. The Lasraurrh Cms 7:001 Camp Bterd 7:00 'Johnny Rocco" ft "Bomba .The Jungle Boy" A0 25c. BANK I $250.00 THE BOY FROM OKLAHOMA Also: PAJAMAS GAME with Doria Day US, Putting First ICBM On Combat Ready Status WASHINGTON (UPI)- The United States, with a marked lack of'fanfart, is preparing to put its first intercontinental ballis ballistic tic ballistic missile unit on the "combat ready" firing Jine After a two-montns delay due io mechanical failures, the first At las ICBM squadrom is being turned over to the Strategic Air Command (SAC) at Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. The unit has five missiles, three mounted on launching pads at all times and two spares. Later squadrons will have 10 missiles. The United States plans a total of nine squadrons in the West and Midwest. Each of the three missiles kept at "combat ready" will be as assigned signed assigned a Russian target just like strategic bombers. Its guidance system will be set to speed the missile and its hydrogen warhead to a Soviet target more than 6,300 miles away. There was" considerable mystery about the Defense Department's! delay in declaring the first Atlas unit part of the nation s war ar arsenal. senal. arsenal. Such an announcement seemingly would increase U.S. prestige and provide more col war bargaining power. But some officials apparently feared a burst of official publicity might upset current delicate East East-West West East-West diplomatic negotiations on Berlin, nuclear test controls and general arms reduction. They also were apprehensive about work! reaction to such an announcement now while Presi President dent President Eisenhower is conferring with Westerr. leaders in Europe, or later during Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's visit to the United States. The President has billed his vis it to Europe as part of a search for genuine avenues to peace, de devoid void devoid of bluster and missile-age saber rattling. Atlas tests were suspended aft er five explosive failures in a row at Cape Canaveral, Fla., in the spring. Defense Secretary Neil H. McElroy said then there would be a two-month delay beyond the BALBOA THEATER Sept. 4 ON STAGE! 8:00 only! PRICES: .75 .40 1 K-fA I "1 HeBD TODAY ENTERTAINMENT THE BELLS IN BING ROSBY DEBBIE EYNOLDS - V7ilCM yynvii J Th Hry of 4t" fj T, Father Conroy J . JtHf1 whoe pariah wit MfchC all Broadway... t $ J nl hi wonderful i A ! p-.:"- iJM:4 I melody, mankind M k 4 w. k In IMv at HKH-flOEUn previous July 1 deadline for mak making ing making the weapon operational. Now the SAC squadron at Van Vandenberg denberg Vandenberg is about ready for its training shot, perhaps in. a week. But there was no indication whether the Pentagon would give it the go ahead. The Defense Department has scorned any suggestion that Rus Russia sia Russia might have put ICBM'S on the fring line ahead of the United States. Whpn he announced the two two-month month two-month delay in June, McElroy said the Soviets were having trouble, too. Khrushchev has said Russia had ICBM's in "serial pro production," duction," production," the final step before mass production. Language Barrier Adds Foul Note r I IO rieilU invlie CHICAGO (UPD-The Wauke Wauke-gan gan Wauke-gan Women's Club had good in intentions tentions intentions but the wrong language when they set out to hold a fiesta for 100 Latin American partici pants of the Pan American Games. The fiesta was scheduled for Saturday and for the occasion the clubwomen prepared 300 orders of fried chicken for the athletes. Tables were set up in a jBal museum to hold the food anGJfwo bands were on hand to provide the entertainment. There was only one trouble. No guests showed up. The clubwomen sat and waited. They finally gave up and donat donated ed donated the mounds of chicken to lo local cal local hospitals. What happened to the athletes? Cirilo Nassiff, secretary of the Argentine group, explained (trough an interpreter that signs in a dormitorv announcing the fiesta were in English and no one m the group speaks English. SCREEN ATTRACTION 6:15 -- 9:20 John CRAWFORD Mimi GIBSON in The Courage Of I Black Beauty' I ADDED CARTOON and NEWS EVENTS! SHOWS: 1:40 4:05 6:30 9:00 P.M. THAT RINGS ALL YOUR HEART! I ROBERT ER HtKOniOMC HIM NEW FACULTY MKMRF.R. addition to the US Army Caribbean School staff, receives tha "JJ school crest from Col Cecil Himes, school commandant. Tapia uHll fnrut In tVio iarinc Honnrtmpnt MTS Armv Phntn) BALBOA COCO SOLO The Greatest Event In Motion Picture Historyi ,h A m GREATEST IBOYIHG PICTURE I HAVE EVER SEENI"-WoHr Wmchtll A FILM 0E REVERENT AND MASSIVE MA0NIFICENCEI" Life Mogazii Cecil BDeMilles ffictSI KZFSm OOUCTiOn in mm MmmMmmmm CHARLTON YUL ANNt tDWARDG Ht5T0N BRYNNER-BAXTER-ROBINSON YVONNC DCBRA JOHN DE CARLO PAGE.T DEREK Silt CtOWC NINA MARTHA JUDITH VlHCtNt HARDWICKE FOCH SCOTT AN DER50N PRICE W..w..rl,..l,(NU5CH.J(SSl.lAV Jl .JCGll55.fUOICArANIl 1...11. HOl Cinu 3 .J -... J.- -f k, Ku. U rKlm' TECHNICOLOR" ADM.: 50c. & $1.00 THIS PICTURE WILL BE-SHOWN ONLY AT BALBOA AND COCO SOLO THEATRES 75f 40 F TODAY I EXCEPTIONAL WEEKEND RELEASE! It talks straight talk and feels real feelings! lY'?: 7 grasping VIP 'i: of th. ir I more than -v?T I a s?ry -w3Sm I of love. a story (l A I SSOPHU ANTHONY LOREN QUINN 1 1 All ladies present at the showing will be given 1 samples of famous Italian perfumes and colognes, m of the Emporlo Italiano, and an Orchid Corsage courtesy of the National Garden. All admission tickets automatically enter you in tie.l Raffle that will be held today! (Courtesy of P. JHANGIMAL on 4th of July At.). SECOND PRIZE: A beautiful and delicate set l Italian ceramics. (Courtesy of Emporlo Italiano). THIRD PRIZE: A complete set of Cosmetics from the fa famous mous famous "JEANNE GOT1NEAU," also the services of bean bean-to to bean-to expert. (Courtesy of DARNA cosmetic store in Central Ave.). FOURTH PRIZE: An elegant night puree. (Courtesy of CHAMBONNET y QUOTA AYKJURAX Mainr Anthonv Tame, a recent m STARTS SEPT. 5th STARTS SEPT. 12th - r? "m$ NOTE: CENTRAL SHOWS: 1:15 3:10 7:00 -9:00 P. M. 1 !' NOTICE: I I I PACI II TWt PANAMA AMtllCAU All IKWIXDfNT CATIT NOW! BK(S as, g0a ... fi REDUCED vM4; :- 1 EASV PAYMENT Fa7 Duty Free 80 miles per gallon No oil and gas mixture REDUCED from $$g)0 $795 00 fHOOL DANfF fllFTl ""atwan ana Nioaraguan caaets atte namg a oaclet course at the U5ARCARI8 JinVVL UAI1V.C UUCJlJ School were honored at a dinner Friday evening in the Fort Gwlick Officer' Club. Among those attending were, first row from left, Cadet Cuillermo Lopez P., Miss Sonia Ortiz, Caoet Efrel Lopez A., Miss Ruth Ann Himes, Cadet Rafael Jarre Jr., and Miss Nancy Chaphe. Cadets in the rear include Oultlermo Se. rano H., Raymond Anibal Nieto and Eduardo Salvador Soto. (Army Photos) TRADE-IN o EASY PAYMENT 60 DAY GUARANTEE Call: Mr. Arosemena Tel. 3-7206 n LUX BUILDING 34TH STKEET TEL. 3 7206 You'll alwayt SAVE at Aldens! 3 (Dresses... (Blouses... (Handbags Stretch your fashion dollars and expand your wardrobe with our versatile dresses, blouses and handbags! Come and set for yourself! Fresh and pretty dresses that rate admiring glances... Carefree styled Mouses far eol, comfortable wear. . Handbags that are feminine In shnps and styled for spaciousness. CENTRAL AVE. CALIDONIA f ' w '' Miss Nancy Chaphe and Cadet Eduardo Salvador Soto N. of Ecuador. f Miss Leslie Berger and Cadet Rene Ivan Pazmino N. of Ecuador. t lifts: fe 1 tF Miss Elinka Harrison of Colon and Cadet Sergio. Ouinonei J. of Nicaragua, Miss Kathy Coutts and Cadet Carlos Fernando Vasoonez C. of Ecuador. cb rA 7 .vf .iuii-w iiiMiiwintrnriiM -'winiwi Wi wwiW4i it ti n in mini f-rTTrrf -lwlilii'iiwnni mi pmi'WH-mimmmmmmmmtmmvmmmtm W Ww AncTC VAUAir UACTtCCtC Pictured at tho dance are, from left, Miss Carmen ibanez, Cadot Orlando CADcTj, YOUNG HOSTtjitJ Arias C, Miss Andrea Crebien. Cadet Consalo Enrique Arevalo, Miss Anita de la Espriella. CaHa Carlos Maroelo Aleman R., Miss Veronica Blenerhasset, Cadst Jalma Rene Andrada B Prlnoesa Castillo. 1 WEDNESDAY, SEFTOtBEfl 2 1959 THE FA5AMA AMERICAN AN DTOCTENDUST DAILY NEWSFAFE pa9i t ran 0)(G) IN PRIZES FREE Felix's Double Xmas Raffle 2 FIRST PRIZES of $1,500.00 ea. 2 SECOND PRIZES of ... 250.00 ea. 2 THIRD PRIZES of 100.00 ea. 162 APPROXIMATIONS of . 5.00 ea. For each $1.00 cash purchase, payment of FELIX'S Merchandise Club, lay-away pur purchase chase purchase plan, or payment on charge purchases made after Sept. 2nd 1959, our clients will receive a FREE ticket of five ciphers, Winners may choose their prizes from our fabulous merchandise selection. mmmmmmm pill tt.V.rf'WW v' 1MW.W.'.V WW.'.sv. ...'..v.v,', .'J-:- V LIADDV DIDTUHAV Uttle-May Tr0ita Maduro U pictured with her grand.scall birthday cake at the gay HAPPY BIRIHUAY party held in her honor at the Panama Oolf Club by her twenta, Mr. and Mra. Larry M&-'uro. A liege number of little friend' comprised the gue t list. "4 1 .Hi i. ci'ii V LL CU 11 J I Appearing in the fashion show prcfented for the Fort Kobbe Non Commissioned Officers KODOe 5h0W MOdel Wives Club were, from left, Mrs. Kay Quiggle, Mrs. Jane Ferguson, Mrs. Willie Avery, Mrs. Phyllis Mantkes, Mrs. Marion Jarnagin, Mrs. Joyce Franklin, Mrs. Anne Marie Rasmussen and Mr. Vicki Noel (Army Photo) "-mi-"""1""1 im" """" 1 I O V A7' -? lli if V -ft 'A r it It t C I Co1, Join D' McE,h,r,y dond from right, who presided as acting governor at the con " COnCC At V.0C0 aOlO ference of U.S. Citizen Civic Councils at the Breaker Club in Coco Solo, chats with resident of the community after the meeting. FromJeft are Mr. and M. Jame J. O'SonnHrMcElheny and H. 4. unKr. teiiiiijwiiauiMiiiiiwuijtiwiiwiiwii II I T ii Hi) V f ) s t I V f Vs ? 1 5 ? 1 4- A t1 f -.v ? V ' i ( t WW K i r allium i HOk 4 :3S::S;f:!iS5Si';i:: i mm I Dhinil DADTV Mr Knd Mr, Burton Frederiok Mead poit with their parent following their marriage Sat. PIlllVMb rnrxi I urtny t tt. Mary's Church In Balboa. At left are Mr. and Mrs. David F. Mead of Ancon. At right are Mr. and Mra. Peter Proback. MAIN STORE: No. 22 06 Central Ave. BRANCH STORE: No. 18 60 TivoJl Ave. Plan to spend it shopping with us. You'll enjoy every minute of it! Shopping Mini Max is a holiday in itself and we guarantee you'll have fun. You'll thrill to an exciting "trip around the world" just by browsing through our store. Our ihelve are stocked with plain and fancy foods from every point on the globe. Take some ham and brighten your favorite holiday menus, There' nothing like our cold cut and cheeses for a cool holiday, All taste (no waste) ... all ready to erve (no work)... See them at our delicatessen i counter arfd hVethm. sliced to order Danish ham, Italian hard salami, Imported Swiss eheese, American processed cheese frtfOtit ..M McCormack spices for testy meal Barbecue Spice, Season All f Onion Salt, Garlic Powder Tangy cheeses for spreading Qorgonzola, Limburger, .Komadour, Krauter Selected Spanish Olives large and giant sizes stuffed and pitted Juicy California melons Casahas, Persians, Cataloupes, Honeydews Hot Garlic Dill Pickles Bring along the whole family. Shop relaxed in our friendly store. You can always be sure of courteous congenial service. Also treat yourself to a tasty, cool mack in our coffee shop. 31; We Give Cflico da On Stamps ca o ca d & xi Panama Most Complete Supermarket Via Espafia, )ut three block from El Panama Hilton Store Hours: 7 a m- 10 p ra- Daily, 7 a m- 10:30 p m. Saturdays, 7 a m Double Stamps on Weekends 1 p m- Sundays IT? IIIIJIPODGO CX0(xjj v Stereophonic Radio -Record Players Hymnus Hi-Fi if Distributor Exponents of the technical and muiletl superiority of Telefunken. CASA SPORT, S. A. FURNITURE sj HOME ARTICLES . 4 PAOt IICHT TBI PANAMA AMERICA AJT MUrMlEUT fiAELT KEWSTAFDs5 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER t, 195 White Sox, -Dodgers. iito Pennant Contenders Lose To 3 Inspired Pitchers NEW YORK, Sept. 2 (UPI) Take it from the White Sox, Dodgers and Braves a "spoiler" is a pennant contender's worst enemy in September. The true "spoiler" almost al always ways always is a fellow who'll have to pay bis way into the World Se Series ries Series in October but is happy to spoil the party for the contend contenders. ers. contenders. And, more otten than not, tie's a pretty ordinary periormer except where his favorite oppo nent is involved. Jim Bunning of the Tigers, Lar ry Jackson 01 the Cardinals and Don Cardwell of the Phillies ail pretty much fit thai description today much to the chagrin 01 the contending White Sox, Dodgers and Braves Bunning, rocking along on a so i so season, exienaea nis career mastery over the Wnite Sox' me me-game game me-game winning streak and sliceu tfleir lead over the idle second second-place place second-place Cleveland Indians to five games. Jackson, a ".500-pitchtr" sinct ht joined th Cardinals in 1955 and struggling to btat that i mark all this season, raised his career mark against the Dodg- ers to 12-S with a two-hitter that gave St. Louis a 3-0 win. The defeat dropped the Dodg Dodg-ers ers Dodg-ers 1 1-2 games behind the fourth fourth-place place fourth-place Pittsburgh Pirates. Cardwell, a 23-year old right righthander hander righthander had won one game up to July 1 but has been knocking oft contenders with happy abandon ever since. He's won a mere nine games this season and seven of them have been against the four top contenders. He picked on the Braves last night pitching a six six-hitter hitter six-hitter and hitting a two-run ninth ninth-Inning Inning ninth-Inning homer for the Phillies' 5 3 victory. Harmon Killebrew hit his 39th homer as the Washington Senat Senators ors Senators gowned the Boston Red Sox, 7-4, ,and WhiteyFord and Ryne Duren combined in a seven-hitter as the New York Yankees whipped the Baltimore Orioles, 5-8, in other games. Harvey Kuenn hit a double and thre singles totjraise his average i ELVPArr"THllt,,n away together, Roy Emerson. Jett, and left-handed Neale Fraser of Australia look more like dancing team than Wimbledon and,U.S. doubles champs CM IE Elms (CHEERS) Distributors: FELIPE MOTTA e HIJO Tel. 1-7008 Balboa Boulevard, rnami to .356 and lead -Detroit's J2-b.it attack on 14 game winner Bob SHAW. Bunning, meanwnue, warn ed two baiters in the first inning but did not allow a Wmite Sox runner to reach second as he struck out eight the rest of the way. It was nis urst shutout of uie season anu oniy uie sixui tune uie comparatively iighi-nu-ung White sox nave ueen oianK oianK-eu. eu. oianK-eu. jackson s second snuiout of the year enueu jonnny i'oures' lour lour-jiame jiame lour-jiame winning sneak anu preveni preveni-cu cu preveni-cu uie lJougeis irom moving 10 within a nan game 01 tne uiam is.cn Boyer, who stretched his nit- uiiy sircaK to iU games, ana Aiex Ciioinmas homereu lor tne Carai nais. i'oures anu ion urysuaie struck out a total ol tour batters, raising the Uouger stall's season tolai to a recoru 92. Cardwell, who had made on only ly only one single in 44 previous at at-bats, bats, at-bats, homered off bob Buhl in the ninth to hand the Braves their fifth loss in eight games. The Phillies had taken the lead witn three run in the sixth in inning ning inning but Joe Adcock homered in the bottom of the frame to tie the score. Eddie Mathews also homered for the Braves. Killebrew tied Cleveland's Roc Rocky ky Rocky Colavito for the American League home run lead and also completed the circuit of homering in every park with a 380-foot clout off Boston's Al Schroll. The Sen Senators ators Senators clinched the decision in the eighth when Bill Consolo singled home one run and Roy Sievers doubled home two more. The win raised Camilo Pascual's record to 13-10. The Yankees sent Ford off to a sacrifice fly agaftisf'20-yeat old Jerry Walket. The little lefty, who won his 14th game, was lif ted in favor of Duren when the first two Baltimore batters singled in the seventh. Duren stopped the Orioles with; only one hit the rest of the way.i', ...its the same LEADING HITTERS (Based on 350 Official at Bats) National League G AB R H Pet. Aaron, Milwau. 129 526 100 189 .359 Cun'ham, St. L. 124 400 55 139 .348 Pinson, Cinci. 131 549 113 181 .330 Temple, Cinci. 126 505 90 161 .319 Boyer, St. L. 130 492 72 155 .317 Cepeda, S. F. 129 519 80 164 .316 Robinson, Cin. 129 481 95 152 .316 Mathews, Mil. 123 498 95 154 .309 White, St. L. 128 483 70 149 .308 Mays. S. F. 128 492 103 150 .305 American League Kuenn, Detroit 116 468 84 166 .356 Kaline, Detroit 113 432 76 145 .336 Runnels, Boston 126 482 82 155 .322 Woodling, Bal. 120 382 56 119 312 Fox. Chicago 132 533 72 165 .310 Tuttle, K. C. 119 441 71 134 .304 Power, Cleve. 126 512 92 154 .301 Minoso. Cleve. 127 483 79 144 .298 Cerv, K. C. 100 364 49 106 291 Kubek, N. Y. 108 419 56 121 .289 Runs Batted Tn National League Banks, Cubs 122 Robinson, Reds 115 Aaron, Braves 103 Bell, Reds 101 Mathews, Braves 90 American League Colavito Indians 98 Killebrew, Senators 98 Jensen, Red Sox 96 Malzone, Red Sox 83 Maxwell, Tigers 83 Home Runs! National League Banks, Cubs 38 Aaron, Braves 36 Mathews, Braves 36 Robinson, Reds 32 Boyer, Cards 26 American League Colavito, Indians 39 Killebrew, Senators 39 Allison, Senators 29 Maxwell, Tigers ........... 27 Jensen, Red Sox t 26 Held, Indians 26 Lemon, Senators 26 Mantle, Yankees 26 LEADING PITCHERS (Based on 16 or More Decisions) National League W L Pet. Face, Pirates' : .... 17 0 1.000 Antonelli, Giants ... 18 7 .720 Law, Pirates ... 15 7 .682 Newcombe. Reds 12 7 .632 Conley, Phils 12 7 .632 American League Shaw, White Sox .... 14 5 .737 McLish, Indians .... 16 7 .696 Lary, Tigers 17 8 .680 Ford, Yankees .... 14 7 .667 Maas, Yankees .... 12 6 .667 BHS Opens Grid Season As school opened Sept. 1. coach Larry Horine greeted his '59 edi edition tion edition of Bulldogs for the first time. He and time coach, Ross Anderson, are looking forward to virtually a new team this season. Last year the fans and students of BHS saw many fine players graduate. Probably the hardest tn renlae will hp vprsatilp unrt m. liable Charlie French along with Tom Cunningham and Jon Snod Snod-grass. grass. Snod-grass. The army also took Its toll on BHS talent when they transfered the Ness family to New Mexico. Although ten lettermen are re returning turning returning this year, only four start starters ers starters from last year's offensive club are back. These fine performers, Phil Cage, Doug Pajak, Charlie Rentz, and Dick Scott, are expect expected ed expected to have big years. Football fans will be treated to a full nine game schedule this sea season. son. season. BHS, as the others, will open the season on September 25 play playing ing playing In the annual Jamboree at Co Coco co Coco Solo. The season will end with a CHS-BHS All-Star team taking on the very powerful Miami Jackson High School on Nov. 25. nEVITAUZE; GLANDS YOUR if you leei om I before your time or niter from nerve, brain or phyiic&t wcakneae, you will find happlnena and'' health In a. new American Laboratory met hod which reatorea youthful rlgoun and vitality. It la a aimple home treat-' ment In tablet form prepared by aa American Laboratory and la very eaay to take. It acta directly on your lands, nerves and vital orrant, and works so well yon oan and feel aew bodily power and viaour In a hort time. Because of Its natural ac action tion action on glande and nerves your brain power and memory often Improve notably. This new viand and Vigour raatorsr called Vi-Tabs has been tested and proved in the United Btatea and la now available at all dmaatorea here. Oct Vl-Tabs tablets from your dru flat today, put them to teat and ae he bit Improvement Take the full bottle, whldh laata elcht daya. It wilt make you full of ylaout,. ener-fry and vitality, and you will feel years rounser. The larfe els which lute it days is very economical. " m 4 1 "' H -n.M ft J f . if 1 t r f. COMMANDING GENERAL'S SPORTS CUP Major General Charles L. Dasher, right, command commanding ing commanding general, U.S. Army Caribbean, present the Commanding General's Sports Cup to Colonel J. R. Wright, commanding officer of the 1st Battle Group, 20th Infantry and Fort Kobbe The cup In a perpetual trophy going to the Installation earning the greatest number of accumulated points for sportsi participation from time to time. However, the first installation of USAR USAR-CARIB CARIB USAR-CARIB to win the cup three times or twice during a calendar year will retain the cup perma permanently. nently. permanently. Fort Kobbe, first installation to win the cup, had the greatest number of accumulat accumulated ed accumulated points for the period from June 30 to December 31, last year. Looking on at the left is Lt. Col. B. W. Butters, chief of Special Services, USARCARIB. (U.S. Army Photo) Tennis-Happy Australia Celebrates Cup Triumph By ERIC Rl EL SYDNEY, Australia (UPI) Australia celebrated its Davis Cup triumph over the United States yesterday by counting the take for the 1960 challenge round, suggest suggesting ing suggesting knighthood for Harry Hopman and a cheery "goodbye" for Jack Kramer, the American profession professional al professional tennis promoter. Newspaper headlines carried the news of Neale Fraser's Mon Monday day Monday triumph over Barry MacKay in the decisive singles match at Forest Hills, N.Y., to Australia's city dwellers. Shortware broad broadcasts casts broadcasts carried the details of the 3-2 upset victory over Capt. Perry Jones' Yanks to thousands scat scattered tered scattered far out in the cattle and sheep country. Bill Mordey of the Sydney Daily Mirror wrote that Sydney was al almost most almost certain to be .chosen as the site of the next challenge round in December, 1960. Mordey said the victory engineered by Fraser r.nd Hopman, the manager of the Aussie team, meant 30,000 Aus Australian tralian Australian pounds (67,200) to the Australian Lawn Tennis Associa Association tion Association Sproule Suggests Knighthood He said the association and the challenging nation would split ahnut $134 4(10 in the 1960 chal lenge round in this rennis. happy country. BRAVES SIGN OUTFIELDER MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI) -Leonard Pavlik, a 17-year-old out outfielder fielder outfielder from Wheeling, W. Vs., has been signed by the Milwaukee Braves organization and assigned to their Eau Claire, Wis., farm clu-in the Class C Northern League. 0 USARCARIB Lsfis. ANCON POST OFFICE t tefo'-ijf 4th OF JULY AVE. ill jjPPf3 NEW "WEATHERPROOF" .ti "gmjjfr. J A O SERVICE AREA One Room with 700 square meters foi 3 llfjknillri 5 Wneel Btlanctaf jtf0jfa 1 de Panama, SA L ??5ft i Calle Jer6nimo de la Ossa vfc " M " I N 13 33 7M el s4' 'fc htmNHmMM 'jMiE Ernie Christensen of the Sydney Sun wrote that Cliff Sproule, a Davis Cup referee since 1951, has suggested Hopman receive one of the commonwealth's top honors a knighthood from Queen Eliza Eliza-ieth ieth Eliza-ieth II. Australia now has won the Davis Cup challenge round nire times under Hopman's man man-agprship. agprship. man-agprship. "These services far exceed the qualifications required for knight knighthood," hood," knighthood," Christensen quoted Sproule as saying. MAY REVERSE FIELD Mordey and other Australian sports writers indicated' that the surprise 'triumph at Forest Hills may lead Australia's amateur tennis officials to reverse their IHd again in their dealings with Kramer and his pro troupe. The Australian Lawn Tennis As Association sociation Association did not expect to regain the cup for two or three years after its top players, Ashley Coop Cooper er Cooper and Mai Anderson, joined Kra Kramer mer Kramer last January. The associa association, tion, association, which refused Kramer the use of its facilities last year, indi indicated cated indicated recently he would be able to use them this year The Forest Hills triumph may bring another switch. "The spirit jn which the Davis Cup matches were played at For Forest est Forest Hills was 'something that nb( even Kramer can buy," the Syd Sydney ney Sydney Sun said in lauding the sports sportsmanship manship sportsmanship of the players and fans. HEBENTON GETS BONUS NEW YORK (UPI) .-r- Andy Hebenton, star New Yorjc Rang Rangers' ers' Rangers' wing, has signed his 1959-60 contract with the club at a sub substantial stantial substantial increase in salary plus a $1,000 bonus for his outstanding play during the 1958-59 National Hockey League campaign. RP Athletes Win Medals At Chicago The last group of Panamanian athletes now competing in the Pan-American Games in Chicago will swing into action tonight. Four wrestlers will attempt to gain Panama its first gold medal. Eduardo Campbell (125) will try to duplicate his Central, A A-merican merican A-merican and Caribbean victory of last January in Caracas, Ve Venezuela. nezuela. Venezuela. Miguel Samaniego goes in the featherweight (136) class, Seve Seve-rino rino Seve-rino Aguilar (160) in the midle midle-weight weight midle-weight and Fernando Gonialez (191) in the light-heavyweight competition. Isthmian track and field per performers formers performers wind up their events in the 4 x 100-meter relay for wom women. en. women. Among the girls are Carlota Gooden and Jean Holmes, two of the best female sprinters in the world. Of the five weightlifters who re represented presented represented Panama, one, Angel Famiglietti, finished second in the bantamweight class while Frederick Gumbs was third in the welterweight group. Both Panama boxers lost in their opening matches. Federico Marshall was disqualified for holding while Benito Lasso drop dropped ped dropped a unanimoys decision. In fencing, 'the men were quickly eliminated, but the women did much better. Two Panamanian female fencers were among the eight contest contestants ants contestants in the finals. Mrs. Stella .Oflpino Saurer finished third and Marleno Worth ington got fifth place. Panama's only swimmer did not place. The Panamanian delegation will return to the Isthmus- next Tuesday. littort CONRADO SARCEANT National League TEAMS w L San Francisco 73 St Los Angeles ... 72 60 Milwaukee . 70 41 Pittsburgh ... 70 62 Cincinnati ... 43 68 Chicago 62 67 Pet. .557 .545 .534 .530 GB 1Vi 3 .481 10 .481 10 .463 13 .410 19'i St. Louis .... 62 72 Philadelphia . 55 79 Today'g Games Philadelphia at Milwaukee (N) St. Louis at -Los Angeles (N) Chicago at San Francisco Pittsburgh at Cincinnati (T-N) Yesterday's Results (Niflht Game) Philadelphia 000 003 0025 9 ( Milwaukee 101 001 0003 6 1 Cardwell (9-7) and Sawatski. Buhl (11-9) and Crandall. Pittsburgh at Cincinnati (Postponed, rain) (Night Game) St. Louis 3 Los Angeles 0 Only games scheduled. REDS BUY INFIELDER , CINCINNATI, (UPI) Third' baseman Cliff Cook of the Savan Savannah nah Savannah club in the Class A South Atlantic League, the circuit's runs batted in and home run leader, has been purchased by the Cincinnati Reds. RAPID REDMAN Colon bantamweight Percy Redman (left) apparently goes into a sprint as he hurries away from his"' fallen foe Constantino Diaz, whom he sent to the canvas for a" mandatory eight-count in the third heat of their scheduled", four-round prelim on the Sykes-Ibarra 118-pound champion-'I ship card at the National Gym Sunday night. Redman was , awarded a KO win when Diaz was counted out by the referee as the bell sounded to start the fourth stanza and Diaz refused to leave his corner. His seconds claimed that the arbiter erred in ruling a knockdown and argued that Diaz had slipped. Sykes retained his crown by scoring TKO over Ibarra In the tenth round of a match set for 15 heats. n l' N5Wk --'4 d W ,l$i,v' TABLE TENNIS TOURNEY WINNER Individual ocmpany level spores tournaments at Headquarters and Headquarter! Company, USARCARIB School, Fort Oulick, are unusual la that enlisted personnel trom Latin America who serve m guest Instructors are Invited to participate. In a recent table tennis tourney, Sgt. Pedro 3. Castellon from Managua, Nicaragua took first place honon by defeating Sp4 James A. Hatchel for tht title. Above, Maj. Arnold M. Preedman, company oommander, presents Sergeant Castellon with a .trophy. (UJS. Army Photo.- American Leaghe TEAMS Chicago Cleveland Detroit . New York Baltimore Boston . Kansas City Washington W L 0 50 75 55 66 65 65 66 61 67 62 70 SI 70 53 78 Pet. OB .615 .577 5 .504 14V4 .496 15Vi .477 18 .470 19 .457 201 .405 27Vi Today's Games Washington at New York (N) Detroit at Chicago (T-N) Kansas City at Cleveland (N) Boston at Baltimore (N) Yesterday's Results New York 300 000 002 S 11 1 Baltimore 000 000 000 0 7 0 Ford (14-7), Duren and Bevra. Walker (9-8), P o r t o carrero, Hoeft and Triandos. Washington 002 100 1307 8 I Boston 000 200 1104 13 1 Pascual (13-10), Clevenger and. Naragon. Wilson (1-1), Schroll, Chittum and Whitt. (Night Game) 101 020 0004 12 000 000 0000 3 Detroit Chicago Bunning (14-10) and , Shaw (14-5), Moore, Lollar. Wilson. .. Lown and Kansas City at Cleveland (Postponed, rain) I J DAM. tm PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILT NEnsMrEw PAOI N1NV. Dorothy Head Knode Gains Pan-American Doubles SemifinaJ'f WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER I, 1959 By Oscar FRltY: NEW YORK lUPD-The Span Spanish, ish, Spanish, too, hve a word for it and in the case of Senor Alfonso Ra Ramon mon Ramon Lopez of the Chicago White Sox "it is "risa." Which means the last laugh, and which, it becomes more ap apparent parent apparent each succeeding day, We quiet man of Castilian parents is going to have on the doubting American League this season. Because not too long ago they .itina tho axe for the good senor even if he was lucky enougn to nnisn sctuu -again. . Lopez, it was said, was on his way out. And, they shrugged, what could any man do with such a rag-tag band of hitless, aging "senor Al's record as la catcher are dimmed by a decade of rid riding ing riding the managerial bench as well as by his reputation as a peren perennial nial perennial second place finisher. Oh, he had the catching records and still does, having caught more games than any oiher man, a total 01 1,918 in 18 years. FINISHED SECOND NINE TIMES But his 11 years as a manager, eight of them in the majors, put his playing career in the shaue. Because in nine of those 11 years, Lopez-managed teams have lav ished seconu nine times. There was one pennant and even mat enaed in World Series disaster as his Cleveland Indians were shut shutout out shutout by the 1954 Giants. Two years later, after two more gecond place finishes, Lopez walked out of Cleveland without a single dissenting murmur from then General Manager Han Greenberg. -.. "There was a feeling I should have done better," he explained. But the lure was too great and by the next season he was with Chicago for another pair of i finlchfen. Prnvnfcina me LUIS acrtBUW ma, wi.v."... runnerup spot, if be was that lucky, still would mean his de demise. mise. demise. NO PEP TALKS Yet the good senor currently is proving -.that, "nice yguyaU 4on't have to finish last. -1 Lopez, whose -parents emigrated from Madrid to his native Tam Tampa, pa, Tampa, Fla., handles his players "like human beings and adults." There are no pep talks and.no public dressing down. "I treat them as I always want wanted ed wanted to he treated," he shrugs. "Pep talks may be all right in football, where you have to get your team up for a few games. WARRIORS SET DRILLS PHILADELPHIA (UP1) The Philadelphia Warriors of the Na tional Basketball Assn. will Dcgin practice for the forthcoming sea son Sept. 21 at Hershey, Fa. But over the Jong "oasebal'. sea season son season it is better if they are re relaxed. laxed. relaxed. And, after all, they are adults and, even when 1 think they make a mis'ake 1 like to hear their reasoning. Maybe they're right and I'm wrong." The payoff usually has been maximum production with a min minimum imum minimum of talent. Prospects Dimmed For Hamblelonian Speed Time Record By SAM HANCOCK DU QUOIN, 111. (UPD- Pros Pros-nocts nocts Pros-nocts for a new time record for the richest Hambletonian ever today wer dimmed by a forecast of scattered showers and a heavy downpour of rain yester day. Frank Ervin, 55. driver of the 2-to-l favorite, Diller Hanover, owned by Hall Stables of Water- town, N.Y., said that with a dry track he thought Diller might break tho 1:59 4-5 record set by winner Emily's Pride last year. No pari-mutuel h-'ting is per per-mittprf mittprf per-mittprf at tip Hambletonian but unofficial odds were not expec d to chance much because ot tne heavy track. Harness horses seldom compete on a heavy or muddy track as do thoroughbreds, officials said, thus ru'ing out any "book'' on muddy trnc.k performances. Harness howes seldom compete on a heavy or mudrtv track as do thorcughbreds, official said, thus ruling? out any "book" on muddy track performances. The richest harness race in his history, tory, history, with a Durse of $125,283.98, was already assured. But the es timated crowd of 25,000 persons for the classic for 3-year-ottrot-ters may be thinned somewhat by rortinnpri rainv weather. Nrvnp nf th? fipld.nf 15 starters has an established, reputation as a "mudder,'j Diu;tayor.ea uiuer HanoVer'rT'S faceTl) the mud 00 o .viai'.n1it ahH IO.tn.1 shnt a a. j -" hiiu - Farand Hanover was a winner shortly after a,h;avy rain. Diller Hanover's cnances were boosted by his next-to-the-oole No. 2 spot in the first tier while Fa Fa-rand rand Fa-rand Hanover, owned by Russell and Shcpnard of Hanover, Pa., will rac? from the No. 13 soot in the second Her in the first heat. Still rated to give Diller Han Hanover over Hanover bis toughest competition are Tie Silk, owned by Two Gaits Farm, Indianaoolis, Ind., with Raph Baldwin in Hie sulkv. and Circo, owned by Charles Ruder Ruder-man. man. Ruder-man. Gouvcrneur, N.Y. Both are Mo-1 choices. Tie Silk drew 1 1 e No. 14 position and Circo No. 8. Free Boating Course By UPSP5 To Begin At Balboa Sept. 8 More than one million people have taken boating courses from the United Statti Power Squadrons similar lo the free public course that will start September 8 In Bal Balboa boa Balboa under auspices of the local U.S.P.S. squadron. The national boating organiza organization, tion, organization, founded in 1914, has nearly 300 local squadrons, earn one of which conducts one or more tree piloting courses every year. These basic classes are open to anyone; advanced courses are open to members only. The local squadron, founded eleven years ago, offers one public course a year. This year' program open Tuesday, September 8, at 7:30 p.m. in the Panama Canal Training Center, upstairs, Build Building ing Building 0602 Corozo Street, across the P.R.R. tracks from the Balboa gasoline station. The course is designed for people interested in pleasure boating. Ownership of a boat is not neses neses-sary. sary. neses-sary. Classes will he held every Tuesday evening and will last two hours each. Such topics as Equioment and Government Regulations, Rules of the Nautical Road, Seamansnip, Salety Afloat, the Mariner's Com pass, Aids to Navigation, cnarts and Piloting, and Manners and Customs on Shipboard will be co covered vered covered in about eleven sessions. There is no obligation involved in taking the course. Many U.S. citizens later join the local U.S.P.S taking advanced courses and as assisting sisting assisting in the public intruction. Mimi Arnold s Partner; Other US Teams Win i by ; -1 ' JOE WILLIAMS ( ca . Mm! 'v,,w - y I Know why Carmen Basilio had ionable stable" no longer has the to light Gene Fullmer lor me biana "X" middlewe.gh, cham pionship out in San Francisco last Frday nignt? Politics. Wht says? Basilio. 'i ue two members of the cum mission (Julie Helfand and Jim Farley the Second) who voted I recognize Ray Robinson as t n world's champion, are Democrats So is Robinson, and in Harlem he swings votes." Buffalo Clinches First Place Tie For IL Pennant CHICAGO, Sept. 2 (UPI) -Bo.h U.S. women's doubles teams got into the semifinals of the Pa Pa-American American Pa-American Games yesterday as Mrs. Dorothy Head Knode, Pana Panama ma Panama City, Panama, and Mimi Ar Arnold, nold, Arnold, Redwood City, Calif, defeat defeated ed defeated Mabel Bove and Margarita Zavalii, Argentina. 7-5, 6-4, and Althea Gibson, New York, and Kafol Fageros, Cocoanut Grove, Fla., drew a bye. ' In tht singles, Mist Glbsan is th Ion American Itfl in ac action. tion. action. Althea reached the finals with 4-1, 43, win ovar Miss Arnld while Mrs. Knodt was eliminated In the semifinals by Yola Ramirti of Mexico. US men players Jen Douglas, Mike Green and Grant Golden all failed to make the single fin fin-alt. alt. fin-alt. The U.S. men's doubles teams both advanced to the semifinals. Grant Franks, Los Angeles tripped iLuis Ayala and Ernesto Aguirre, Chile, 9-7, 6-2, 8-2. Jon Douglas, Santa Monica, Calif., and Mike Green, Los Angeles, defeated ha Alfredo Revelo and Jose Revelo, Dominican Republic 6-1, 6-0. Welghtlifter Tommy Kono, a champion since 152, added the 19th Pan American Gold Medal to the United States list Mon Monday, day, Monday, and a young Mexican fencer. Pilar Roldan, became Ihe fourth Invading athlete to take a top prize In the U.S. do dominated minated dominated games. Xono, from Honolulu, sot three Pan American records en route to the middleweight championship, hnintine 281 noiinds in the press, 3524 in the ierk and 89'4 pounds total for new marks. His victory j they pretend to enthusiastic co eve the United States 19 ootn i operation with the supstate legis Medals out of 23 awarded. ilators knowing that if those U.S. yachtsmen won three of I birds can cut a point off the six events Monday and were in 'take they can put it back just as DA Frank Hogan has been ask Ing embarrassing questions about Vincent J. Velella, such as mightn't the barrister have fronr ed for his hoodlum client, Fat Tony Salerno, as promoter of thr Johansson-Patterson mess'' Poli tics. Who says? Velella. "I'm a Republican leader in East Harlem." Hogan got beat when he ran for Senator, didn't he? (Democrat Hogan was defeat ed by Republican Kenneth Keat Keating ing Keating last fall.) Know why New York City flat racing continues to be blacked out during the month of Ausust the peak month for out of town visitors? Politics Who says? The Old Colonel and for the upphte upphte-enth enth upphte-enth time. It was no accident of timing that Albany simultaneously ruled out concurrent racing (i.e.. here and at Saratoga) and sweeten ed the tracks' take by 1 percent Our old Latin friend. Quid Pre Quo, was ip the steward's stand. The luxury set, which still dic dictates tates dictates the policies of our racing serves two selfish interests by moving the sport to Saratogi. (1) They manage a social togeth togetherness erness togetherness there which is difficul' at the metropolitan tracks: (2) connotation it once nad. We', jale lo see these people go joubt that they would doubt e e-ven ven e-ven more so uiai uiey sanction .he implied intimidation: but ii iiey om o, racing would con con-.mue .mue con-.mue to flourish. In fact, we jus; .mished reading about the open opening ing opening of an excellent new track just outside Cincinnati. JUST A FADED LEGEND One of our young press box ac complieces makes the point (the hard way, we thought) that sine? more than half ol New York's population is upstate, they arc constitutionally entitled to a month of high class racing at Saratoga. On this same basis, it might be argued our upstate friends are e e-qually qually e-qually deserving of big league baseball, and legislative steos should be taken compelling the Yankees to play a fair percent percentage age percentage of their home games in Syra Syracuse, cuse, Syracuse, Albany. Elmira, etc. Racing in August at Saratoga is lovely, indeed We even soent our own dough to vacation there when the town had hotels, goor1 restaurants, gay night life, and when every other guv you met was a New Yorker. Now it's a drab, faded legend, kept alive by political expediency, and emotion tl, K not syeorh,t'it'c. journalism, it the expense of the Big Tnv and its own critical sports situa situation. tion. situation. P S. This has been one of Sa ratoga's most successful seasons. . and it fUHn't cost the ttle more than $5 or $fi million. either. And yet chowder hes like Williams make with the squawk. FRASER UPSETS OLMEDO Neale Fraser of Australia (back (background! ground! (background! returns a smash to his opponent, Alex Olmedo of thS U.S.. during the opening match of the 1959 Bavif Cup finals at Forest Hills, N.Y. Fraser upset Olmedo 8-6, 6 8. 6-4. 8-6 to give Australia a 10 lead. Fraser later teamed with Roy Emerson to' whip Olmedo and Earl Buchholz in the doubles and turned back Barry MacKay in the fifth and deciding match after Ol Olmedo medo Olmedo defeated Rod Laver to draw the U.S. even. The victory was Australia's 15th In Davis Cup competition. (NEA Telephotoi Read Our Classifieds NEW YORK, Sept. 2 (UPI) -The Buffalo Bisons are about rea ready dy ready to unfurl their first Interna tional League pennant in 10 years. The circuit's seventh place fin finisher isher finisher last season, Buffalo clinch clinched ed clinched at least a tie for the flag last night as Joe Taylor homered in the last of the ninth inning to beat Montreal, 1-0. Don Ericson, issuing only five hits, won his fifth straight and eight of the year. , '- Columbus, faced with elimina elimination tion elimination from the flag race through any combination of a Buffalo win or a Jet loss, defeated Miami, 7-4, to prolong the agony. Paul Giel turned in a fine relief job to pick up his third win. Havana stayed in the battle for second place by beating Rich mond, 3-2, in 16 innings. Luis Arroyo, pitching scoreless ball from the ninth inning on, won his third game in five days. The last place Toronto Maple Leafs gained a 4-1 verdict over Rochester. Four Roses l fa il Kentucky Straight Bourbon That old-time flavor is back I ' p" front of the field in three classes. I readily. All in al it that way. SWIMMERS BEGAN ATTACK FOUR ROSES DISTIUERS COMPANY, N.Y.C. KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY 86 PROOF AGED 6 YEARS EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTORS CYRCA, S. A. PANAMA COLON Dr. Luis A. Puyo! Elected President Of Parochial Lood At the last meeting, of the team representatives of the 1959 Ca Catholic tholic Catholic Interparochial Basketball League of Colon, held recently in the Parisn Hall of the Immaculate Conception Cathedral, the follow ing were elected to the board of directors. Dr. Luis A. Puyol Z., president; Carlos Lazarus, vice president, Francisco Villamil, secretary and technical adviser- Luis Manuel Charris, treasurer; Michael March commissioner; Candjdo Amador and Conrado Avila, trustees. The Installation ceremony will be held on Tuesday, Sept. 8 at i jO p.m. Team representatives must bring along a letter of authoriza authorization tion authorization signed by their Parisu Priest, so that their teams can be official officially ly officially enterea to participate. T.ie iinal eniry date will be Thursday, Sept. 17. The inaugura inauguration tion inauguration will be Tuesday Sept. 22. The place where the games will be neld will be announced soon. The entry Fee will be $3 (three dollars) and can be paid to any member of the loop. All sweaters must have a cross in front, ac accompanied companied accompanied by the name of i he Parish and a small number. On the back, a large sized number, for tne benefit of tne scorers and re referees, ferees, referees, via meg will be played on Tues days and t ndays oi eacn ; .view, an... as usual, tne team that wins the huge "Knights of Columbus" of Margarita trophy for three years Consecutively, will gain permanent possession ot It. The inaugural game will be played between last year's cham pions, the Cathedral, and another team, which win be picked ny vote of the representatives. At least live churches of Colon and two chapels of the Canal Zone are ex pevied to participate this year. U.S. swimmers began an and and-iuated iuated and-iuated seven-day attack on Pan American records. Thirteen swim swimmers mers swimmers set records in qualifying heats in three events, the men's iOO meter frestyle, the men s 200 meter breaststroke and the wom women's en's women's 200 meter freestyle. All three U.S. entrants In the women's freestyle, led by a time of 2:20.3 bv Chris Von Saltza, Saratoga. Calif., battered the old record of 2:32.4 by Ana Maria Schultz of Argentina In 1951. Unit United ed United States qualifiers were Joan Spillane, Houston. Tex., and Shir Shirley ley Shirley Stobs, Miami Fla. In teams sports the United States continued at a high peak. The wa water ter water polo team beat Brazil, 8-2. The soccer team, previously a patsy in international competition, upset previously unbeaten Brazil, 5-3, and the men's volleyball team tripped Puerto Rico. 3 games to none. The women's volleyball team also beat a Puerto Rican team, by the same margin. Olmedo No. 1 Seeded For US Tennis Singles then they like The people running the trots, with no August competition, like it even better. Nobody seems to care whether the horse, player who can't abide the jug heads, for all the sparkle and splendor of Roosevelt and Yonkers, likes it or not, and the same goes for the non horse playing taxpayer, who is tapped for the deficit millions the state squanders on this trans trans-parently parently trans-parently contrived ajliance. WELL, HERE'S YOUR HAT But that's hov it is, and it'll stay that way as long as the luxury set can make practical use of a snobbishly sentimental binge to butter up pliantly in fluential legislators. It's things like this that make us wonder if Gov. Earl Long wouldn't make a splendid American king. A great deal of nonsense has been sputtered and scribbled on the subject of Saratoga's suppos supposed ed supposed importance to racing. A popti lar theme is that the more fash fashionable ionable fashionable stables would sell their stock and wash their hands of the sport if the moldering upstate heap were ever abandoned, and then, Heavens to Betsy! Wherr would racing be? Right where it is now. In these changing times, the term "fash AND... more than 5 new Tire Cost GETTING UP NIGHTS ii vo l fluiir mm jar, nv ii NlKhtu, Kb, karh, pn, LnM of v iKour, NtrvouantM or WMknM,vo Mould hHp your. Proaut Olun Im rnnllntf ly with Roatna. Thin mullein mnk you f yoimitr, ttl-onrfr, nn4 tbl ir, rlcp without Inumiotlon. ftootn rrom your h")l tort'' NEW YORK (UPI) Wimble Wimbledon don Wimbledon champion Alex Olmedo of Pery was seeded No. 1 yesterday for the U. S. Tennis singles cham pionships starting Friday at For Forest est Forest Hills despite his four-set Da Davis vis Davis Cup defeat by Neale Fraser of Australia. Fraser, star of Australia's 3-2 cup triumph, was seeded second. Maria Bueno, young Brazilian star who also won at Wimbledon, topped the women's draw of 64 players seeking the title vacated temporarily at least by Althea Gibson of New York. Onlv four native Americans were on the seeding list two men and two women. Barry MacKay of Dayton, Ohio, was seeded third and Earl (Butch) Buchholz of St. Louis seventh in the men's ranks and Darlene Hard of Montebello, Calif., was seeded fourth with Sally Moore of Bakersfield, Calif., eighth among the women. Plavers from 15 loreign nations were gunning for the men's crown won last year by Australia s Asr- ley Cooper, now a pro. women players from 15 nations enteren. Rod Laver of Australia was seeded fourth In the men's divi sion with Ramanathan Khnshnan of India fifth, Luis Avala of Chile sixth and Roy Emerson of Aus Australia tralia Australia eighth. Sandra Reynolds of South Africa was seeded second to Miss Bueno wi'h Britain's Chris Chris-line line Chris-line Truman third. Angela Mor Mortimer timer Mortimer of England fifth, Ann Hay Hay-don don Hay-don of England sixth and Rene Schuurman of South Africa sev enth. Olmedo, who hasn't played a truly great match since Wimbb don. headnl the lower half of the draw in the third quarter where nis e1 icf rivals en route to 'he semifinals appear to he unseeded Emerson, Tony Pickard of Eng England land England and Antonio Palafox of Mexico. 1 V refreshing AFTER-SHAVE LOTION Large Bottle 60c. WITH FIRESTONE FACTORY METHOD RETREADING rut SAW .ec '"T.PUBB& - m Ann SAME TREAD WIDTH SAME TREAD DESIGN SAME TREAD DEPTH USE FIRESTONE PAY-DAY TERMS BETTER RUBBER FROM START TO FINISH TRANSISTHMIAN HIGHWAY TEL. 3-1501 KNICKS SIGN TWO NEW YORK (UPI) Jack George and Frank Selvy, both of whom came to the New York Knickerbockers in trades with other teams, have signed their I59-fl0 contracts with the Na tional Basketball Assn. Club. ALTAIAN'S 2W ITlar SpJOdAlVHCtA 100 Guaranteed ltivitp you to Lislon lo "WHAT'S YOUR FAVORITE' and "i n 830 Keg. 'PI Your Community Network "YOU ASKED FOR IT 1:30 O 9:00 P.. M Del Mdr rcollv wf.s lo your personality. TUB rASAJTlA AMEKICAJ ATI IfWET UIUEJIT DAILY rTEWSFAfiDe ONESDAY, SEPTEMBEE t 195fj Classified Ads Classified Ads Classified Ads Classified Ads AGENTS: Pbonc Panama 2-0710 (or information about Clas Classifieds. sifieds. Classifieds. Charge your ad if you have a commercial contract. Classified Pace closes 11:30 a.m. Mon. to FrU 11 a.m. Sat., 2 p.m. gat for Sun. Office open 6-5 weekdays. L I.AVE YOOR AD WITH ONE OF OUR AGENTS OR OUR OFFICES AT lJ- H SWEET. PANAMA LIBRERIA rHEClADO 7 8 tract Ne. AGENC1AS INTERNAL. DE PUBLICACIONES No 3 Lottery PUu CASA ZALDO Central Ave. ii a LOURDES PHARMACY 12 La Carrasanilla a FARMACIA LOM LOM-BARDO BARDO LOM-BARDO o. 26 "B" Street MORRISON 4th ol July Ave A J St LEWIS SERVICE Ave TivoU No 4 FARMACIA EST A DOS UNIDOS 14 Ceatn) Ave. FABMAC1A LUX-164 Central Ave HOUSEHOLD EXCHANGE J Fen. la On Ave. No. 4 FOTO DOMY-Jafto Araeaseaa Ave. una 33 St FAR FAR-MAC MAC FAR-MAC IA VAN DER J1S 511 Street No 53 a FARMACIA EL BATURRO Parque Lafevre 7 Street FARMACIA SAS" V'.a Porraa 111 NOVEUADES A THIS Beside Bella Vista Theatra an Braaca at Minima Super Market on Via Espafta ft COLON OFFICE: 15th and Amador Guerrero Na. 142Z1 TeL 431. roi IBS , ; Resorts j Automobiles 1 Foster's corteges, near Santa Clara Reasonable ratal. Phone alboa 1 866. PHILLIPj Oeeamioe Cottaioi Santa Clara 4a P rWe Pa Panama nama Panama 1-1177 Criatokal 1-1 673. FOR RENT: Two cHalets, fur furnished, nished, furnished, ending of 48 Street, on the left. No 25. Bella Viita. Phone 3-1 863. Two bedrooms, living-dining room, kitchen, bathroom, porch. FOR RENT: Chalet. Newly constructed Three bedrooms, studio, aaraqe. large fenced yard, hot water Calle G. Loma Alegre Phone Balboa 3228. Rooms FOR RENT: Furnished room and bath, two meals Ladies only. Near Hotel Panami. telephona 1-1146. Employment Opportunities NEEDED: Expert operator for pants and shirts, air presses, Pa Panama nama Panama Steam Laundry, Ave. Na National tional National SECRETARY, bi-linauil. good" ihorthand-typist required by large international company Ap Apply ply Apply in own hand writing to Box "S" 134 this paper. Panamanian registered n u r i wanted for construction infir mary. Call Ff. Clayton i-i"'. Animals FOR SALE One female Boston Terrier Toy bull puppy, four months old. Call Navy 3986. Houses l i Commercial Guide i ADVERTISE IN THIS SECTION I Ads only cost $0.85 per col. inch 1 irU accented for a minimum of one month. FOR INFORMA i Canal Zone Society For The Prevention Of Cruelty To Animals Box 24fi, Balboa. C 7 Phone: Curunriu 51 IS The fnllowlnx unnimals l the ( (-rn.l rn.l (-rn.l Veterinary Hospital need Rooii homes: 1 Male vellow rail, large, excep exceptionally tionally exceptionally handsome and gentle . 1 Male hlaik kitlen 1 Male hlack and while kitlen . 1 Male hlark noj, hort haired, terrier type FOR THE FOLLOWING CALL E ABOVE PHONE NUMBER: 1 Female Oalmalian. spayed, Ihor Ihor-nuilibred, nuilibred, Ihor-nuilibred, deaf. .1 r. old . 1 Male shansy dog, medium alxe. i 7 vrs. old tl Kitlens. I male, 2 tf males, hlac k . and while, 2 mm. old 1 Female cal, black and while, I jrra. old. ! SUPPORT YOUR SPC A. YOU NEED IT IT NEEDS YOU. GIBRALTAR LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Jim Ridge Harry Cornell Davis Stevenson Box F, Diablo, C.T. Telephone Pan. 1-0552 "Boss, if you' air condition it with Mark IV. you can un mv summer sales quota '2 ()'" !' (ilJAKDIA K ( IA. S. A. Tel. 17225 S I'anama City FOR SALE: 57 For V-8. 500, two door, hard top, radio, tutone, SI 300 00 Phone 3-2953. FOR SALE: Mercury Hardtop coupe 1955. loaded, duty paid, eye it and try it at 5281 -A, Mormon St Diablo 2-3654. FOR SALE: Cadillac sedan '51, $500. Hillman Mini convertible, $250. Both good condition. Tel Gamboa 605. CUSTOMERS WANTED NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY New mattresses 6.50. Springs 12.50. Metal Double Beds with Spring 19.00 China Closets 15 00. New Cacas Cost 5.50. Hollywood Beds w o mattress 15. 00. Chrome Dinette Set Only One) 45.00. Brand New 5 pc. Dinette Sets 89.00. Mahogany 5 pc. Dining Room Suites from 59 00. A Thousand Other Bar Bargains gains Bargains in New b Used Articles Cash or Credit We Deliver HX Household Exchange HX 41 Auto Row. Call 3-4911 or 3 3-7348 7348 3-7348 We Buy Your Old Fur Furniture. niture. Furniture. FOR SALE: Ford, 9 passenger. Country Sedan, 1954, V-8, standard shift, perfect condition, recently overhauled, good tires. House 2426, telephone Balboa 2914. FOR SALE: Good transporta transportation. tion. transportation. 1948 Super Buick, 4-door edan. Single owner. Excellent condition Telephone 3-6794. FOR SALE: 1957 Chevrolet, 4 4-door, door, 4-door, sedan. Six cylinder. $1400. Phone 3-1745, between 7 to 4 p m. Phone 3 1411 after 6 p.m. FOR SALE: 1954 BSA 600 cc. Excellent condition. (Misc.) Co Co-Icmbia Icmbia Co-Icmbia Hi-Fi new $150.00, 22 rifle Remington $25. 2-3708. FOR SALE: Morris Minor con convertible, vertible, convertible, duty paid, motor com completely pletely completely overhauled $350 or best offer, Pedro Miguel 4 429. iuim oalu zutu AUTOMOBILE FINANCE Government Employes Service Personnel Finance Your New Or Used Car GOVERNMENT EMPLOYES FINANCE Co. LOW RATES IIP TO 36 Mo on new cars AGENCY DEHLINUER No. 43 Automobile Row Phone 3-4984 3-4985 All Types of Auto Insurance We Certify RADIO and TV SERVICE W cwtify quolity part ond irvict . . fair chargti. TROPELCO rrvnmrn"nrt IRS I 111 W', f I Uriel .' h i ,ood I I'tiiir krr pmf Guaranty beal. TROPELCO, S. A. Tel. 3-7489 f I f fi i Aportments FOR RENT: Three bedroom apartment. Maid's room. Hot water. Garage. Paitilla. Phone 3 -2279. $50 00 furnished apartment. Northamerican neighbors. Fre Frequent! quent! Frequent! transportation. Yard Tel. 3-0471. FOR RENT: Modern one bed bedroom room bedroom apartment, dining and liv living ing living room, kitchen, balcony, gar garage, age, garage, room for maid, etc $75. Via Argentina. Tel 3-4994 FOR RENT: Very cool and comfortable one bedroom apart apartment, ment, apartment, San Francisco Phone 3- 5024. WANTED: Furnished house in Golf Heights, at least three bed bedrooms, rooms, bedrooms, from September 28. Be Between tween Between $250 and $300. Amer American ican American family. Prefer 4-month lease. Call 3-4719 during office hours. FOR RENT: Beautiful large apartment occupying entire floor. Best residential area, three bed bedrooms, rooms, bedrooms, master bedroom air con conditioned, ditioned, conditioned, with private porch, two bath, maid's room and bath, large porch, large livingroom, dining room, pantry, kitchen, dinette, ljundry facilities, closed garage. Phone 2-1 538, during office hours. FOR RENT: One bedroom apartment, garage, Bella Vista. $75 00 Phone 3-1917. FOR RENT: Apartment at Via Porras No. 64, on the right fac facing ing facing Eden Theatre. Living-dining room, bedroom, porch. Phone 3 3-1863. 1863. 3-1863. FOR RENT: Cangrejo, Fully furnished modern one room apartment, hot water, balcony, refrigerator, etc. Call 3 1789 FOR RENT: Furnished, one bedroom apartment, Foto El Hal Hal-con. con. Hal-con. Tel. 3-1 179, hours 8-12:30 p.m. and 2-6 p.m. Beside Pana Panama ma Panama Hilton. FOR RENT: Modern one bed bedroom room bedroom apartment; living dining room, hot water, maid's room, garage, etc. Via Argentina $75. Tel. 3-4994. FOR RENT: Modern three bed bedroom room bedroom apartment with two main bathroom, maid's room and bath, extra large livingroom and din din-ingroom, ingroom, din-ingroom, everything in fine shape, garage with doors, locker room and space in yard for extra car, etc. Every conveniences of modern home Rent $150 00. Phone Panama 3-0763 or 2 2-0027. 0027. 2-0027. FOR RENT: On bedroom fur furnished' nished' furnished' apartment, Gl inspected, centrically located $65.00. 2034 7a. Ave. EspaSa. Tel. 3 5692. Jr. College Has Accounting Courses To Fit Varied Needs 3 The following accounting cours courses es courses will be oftrred by the Canal Zone Junior College in the regul regular ar regular session starting today. Elementary Accounting, cover covering ing covering the fundamental principles, is scheduled daily at 9. No prere prerequisite quisite prerequisite is required, secretaries who expert to be en en-the the en-the name inmcates, primarily for secretaries who except to be en entrusted trusted entrusted with some accounting work as part of their duties. The course meets at 9 a.m. on Mon Mondays, days, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. No pre requisite is required. Intermediate Accounting will be given on Monday and Thursday from 4:30 to 6:20 p.m. Elementa Elementary ry Elementary accounting is a pre requisite. The text quotes liberally from publications of the American Ac Accounting counting Accounting Association and the A A-merican merican A-merican Institute of Certified Pub Public lic Public Accountants. Students may en enroll roll enroll in accounling only, if (hey wish. In the Extension Division, start starting ing starting Oct. 1, Elementary and Ad Advanced vanced Advanced Accounting will he offer offered. ed. offered. For advanced accounting, in termediate accounting is a pre prerequisite. requisite. prerequisite. Other accounting cours courses, es, courses, such as Cost Accounting, Gov ernment Accounting, Income Tax Accounting, and Accounting Sys- PASENGER TRAF1C UP NEW YORK (UPI) Ameri Americans cans Americans starling out on or winding up European vacations sent trans trans-Atlantic Atlantic trans-Atlantic passenger traffic shooting up to a record high pace last week. The Trans Atlantic Passen Passenger ger Passenger Steamship Conference said 23 liners left New York for Europe with a record 16,524 passengers. LEGAL NOTICE 1'nilrd SUIrs District Court For The District of Thr ( anal Zone Balboa Division In thf nuler of the mintr of John Vttuir Hanson, Deceased. No. 9M7. Pro bale. Notice of llm art for proving III and hearing application inr Irtleni NOTICE is hereJ.-v given tht a pell linn for Ihe probate of the will of .lohn Arthur Hanson, deceased: and for Uie Inuance of letters of administra tion with the wilt annexed to T. C Henter was filer! In this Court on Au- qimt JO. 195. and that September 1 195 at o'clock a m In the Court room of this Court at Ancon. Canal .one. has been set for Ihe hearing of aid petition, when ann where anv per on Interested may appear and contest the same, and show cav.se, if any. why said oetlllon ihould not be granted Dated at Ancon, Canal Zone, this August if,. 1Sf Sara de la Prfia Clerk of CimiiI l Sen 1 1 B sMarlan I) Ron en Deputy Cleric of Courl Home Articles FOR SALE: Kenmore automatic washing machine in A-1 condi condition. tion. condition. Call 3-3595, can be seen .at house No. 28 7th Avenue, San Francisco. FOR SALE: One 9 foot West West-inghouse inghouse West-inghouse refrigerator, new unit. One 10 cu. foot, deep freie. Telephone, Balboa 2479. CUSTOMERS WANTED NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY New mattresses 6.50. Springs 12.50. Metal Double Beds with Spring 19.00. China Closett 15.00. New Cavas Cost 5 50. Hollywood Beds wo mattress 15.00. Chrome Dinette Set 'Only Onel 45.00 Brand New 5 pc. Dinette Sets 89 .00. Mahogany 5 pc. Dining Room Suites from 59.00. A Thousand Other Bar Bargains gains Bargains in New b Used Article! Cash or Credit W Deliver. HX Household Exchange HX 41 Auto Row. Call 3-491 1 or 3 3-7348. 7348. 3-7348. We Buy Your Old Fur Furniture. niture. Furniture. FOR SALE: Rattan table with four chairs, double couch, ward wardrobe, robe, wardrobe, lamps, curtains, etc. Rea Reasonable. sonable. Reasonable. No. 3, 52nd Street. Tels. 4-1444, 3-0638. FOR SALE: Norge automatic washing machine $130.00. Tel. 5-362, house 249-A, Gatun. FOR SALE: Baldwin Acrosoni piano, Statei made cordovan ma mahogany hogany mahogany bedroom set, Bendix washer and dryer, sewing ma machine, chine, machine, k ton Fodders air condi conditioner, tioner, conditioner, Simmom Hide-a bed, me metal tal metal office desk, dinette let, floor lamps and miscellaneous house household hold household items. See at No. 40, Fif Fiftieth tieth Fiftieth Street, Panama. Apartment 5. Telephone 3-6794. FOR SALE: House furnitures bamboo livingroom set, wicker chairs, air conditioned unit, two ton, used two months. Due to trip. Alberto Navarro Street, La Casteliana Building, No. 48. Apartment No. 3. Phone 3-6260. FOR SALE: Feather weight Singer sewing machine with at attachments, tachments, attachments, ease and button-hole maker $75. 00. Call Balboa 2- 1819. FOR SALE Wostinghouse refri refrigerator, gerator, refrigerator, good condition, call Bal Balboa boa Balboa 3411 Morrison, Diablo. Reasonable price. FOR SALE: Cheap. Refrigerator with cabinet combined, good working condition. Apply B. Codner 7-47 M Street (inside). terns will be given If ten or more students are interested in enroll enrolling. ing. enrolling. Registration day for Exten Extension sion Extension Division courses will be Sept. 22 The accounting classes will meet on Mondays and Thursdays Each of the accounting courses mentioned above is a two-semes ter one except secretarial ac counting which is a one-semester course. Properly prepared stu dents may earn four hours of regular college credit per semes semester ter semester by the satisfactory comple completion tion completion of each of them, except in secretarial accounting where she credit is three semester hours. Several score of Canal organi zation accountants, administrative workers, ana secretaries nave been enrolled over the years in accounting courses in the .lunior College and many nave earned significant promotions by their accounting knowledge. All individuals interested in business administration on a pro professional fessional professional level find accounting useful, since Colleges of Business Administration require at least the introductory accounting course, no matter what the stu student's dent's student's field of specialization is. Secretaries and clerical workers do also, since it is frequently ad vanlageous for them to have an elementary knowledge of the sub subject; ject; subject; engineers, because most colleges of engineering require the introductory course, since ul ultimately timately ultimately most engineers assume administrative responsibilities; lawyers, since in their civil cases, it is often essenlal that they at least an elementary knowledge of accounting and in the case of cor corporation poration corporation lawyers, this knowledge must be more than elementary; doctors and dentists who keep ac accounting counting accounting records of their profes sional earnings and expenses and citizens generally who wish to have sufficient background know knowledge ledge knowledge to understand what they read In current periodicals about business developments. Several score of Canal organi organization zation organization accountants, administrative workers, and secretaries have been enrolled over the years m accounting courses lti the Junior College and many have earned significant promotions by their accounting knowledge. RECOGNIZED BY CHAIR SAN .JOSE, Calif. (UPl)-I.yle E. Jpnes, accused of being a peeping torn, offered this explana explanation tion explanation when nabhed while carrying a chair through a backyard: "Wln I eo for a walk, some times I Ret tired and wanl to sit dow Miscellaneous FOR SALE; Aged naruraPiM naruraPiM-nure nure naruraPiM-nure at five-away pricei by. tit trucfclwdf. CH 2-2641. CUSTOMERS WANTED 'rio EXPERIENCE NECESSARY New mattresses 6 50 Springs 12 50. Metal Double Bedi with Spring 19.00. China Cloieti 15 00. New Cacai Coit 5 50. Hollywood Beds wo mattress 15 00. Chrome Dinette Set (Only One) 45.00. Brand New 5 pc. Dinette Sett 89.00. Mahogany 5 pc. Dining Room Suites from 59 00, A Thousand Other Bar Bargains gains Bargains in New t Used Articues Cash or Credit We Deliver. HX Household Exchange HX 41 Auto Row. Call 3-4911 or 3 3-7348. 7348. 3-7348. We Buy Your Old Fur Furniture. niture. Furniture. FOR SALE: Piano, desk, chain, tables, band saw with i h p. motor, table saw 8" 6" pointer 1 h p. motor and other house household hold household items. Call after 4:30 p.m. motor and other household items. Call after 4:30 p.m. Phone 2 2-2906. 2906. 2-2906. FOR SALE: 50 beautiful bud budgies. gies. budgies. $100.00 for the lot. 521 -B, Curundu Hts phone 83-3181. Boats & Motors FOR SALE: Outboard motor, Johnson, 3 h p. excellent condi condition, tion, condition, long and short lower units, also set ueed golf clubi. 6427, Los Rios, phone 2-4436. FOR SALE: 16 ft. Boat cabin two bunks, $150.00. Phono 3 3-1411 1411 3-1411 after 6 p.m. 3-1755, 1 to 4 p.m. Wanted WANTED FOR RENT: Resi Residence dence Residence of three bedrooms, two bathrooms, maid's room in El Cangrejo, Campo Alegre or Golf Heights. Tel. 2-1956 from 8:00 e m. to 12:00 noon. 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. WANTED TO BUY: One me medium dium medium sixe crib. Call Balboa 2 2-2475 2475 2-2475 or 2-3345. Lessons SPANISH CLASSES Every day except Saturday and Sunday; morning, afternnon and evening c I a I e s, Enrollment: August 17 to Sept. 7. Classea Begin: Sept. End Nov. 27 PANAMANIAN NORTH AMERICAN ASOCIATION, Peru Avenue No. 66 (near Bella Vii Viita ta Viita Theatre). Tel. 3-7963, 3 3-3018. 3018. 3-3018. Motorcycles FOR SALE: 1952 ARIEL twnl 500 c.c, $225. Phono Brooki Claxton, Panama 3-3493. Take Your Parasol, Raincoat Along This Month; Thunderstorms Slated The following weather condi conditions tions conditions are based on past records and may be expected to occur in the Canal Zone and vicinity tnis month. Weather: Mostly cloudy and rainy weather will continue during September and heavy rains and thunderstorms may be expected oVer the Isthmus at frequent Intervals. Rainfall: Average rainfall for September Is 7.93 inches at Bal Balboa boa Balboa Heights, 10.92 inches at Madden Dam and 12.41 inches at Cri.'stnhfil There is. however, considerable variation from year to year and montnty totals nave ranged from 2.62 to 16.32 inches at Balboa Heights, 5.96 to 18.44 Inches at Madden Dam, and 3.U to 22.99 inches at Cristo Cristobal. bal. Cristobal. Rainfall will likely occur on 20 days distributed over 64 hours at Balboa Heights and 22 davs and 83 .lours at Cris Cristobal. tobal. Cristobal. Sunshine: There will be an average of about 5 hours of sunshine per day with 4 or 5 clays with no sunshine at all. Temperature: The monthly mean air tcmDerature will aver age about 80 degrees Fahrenheit on both sides of the Isthmus. The maximum temperature will average 86 degrees on both coasts and the minimum will average 74 degrees on the Pa Pacific cific Pacific coast and 76 degrees on the Atlantic. The highest temperature on record for September Is 94 degrees and the lowest 68 de degrees. grees. degrees. Such extremes, how however, ever, however, are of Infrequent occur occurrence. rence. occurrence. Kelalivf Humidltv The rela tive humidity will average close 10 ob percent on ooin coasts and 90 percent in the central sprtlnn at Martripn nam The dally range will be between 95 and 75 percent on the Pacltlc and 91 and 75 on the Atlantic. Winds: Light variable winds will be experienced over the At Atlantic lantic Atlantic coast with southerly or offshore winds predominating Northwest wlnda will orevall ou Real Estate FOR SALE: Lor. 500 and 1.000 metert, im the Nuevo Hipodromo Urbanization acroes the Rem on Racetrack: All (oti with etreet Wonts, towage, water main and electricity. CaH W. McBarnott Tel. 4-0976. CUSTOMERS WANTED NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY New mattresses 6.50. Springs 12. 50. Metal Double Bedi with Spring 19.00. China Closets 15.00. New Cacai Cost 5. 50. Hollywood Beds wo mattress 15 00. Chrome Dinette Sot (Only One) 45.00. Brand New 5 pc. Dinette Sett 89.00. Mahogany 5b pc. Dining Room Suitdi from 59 00. A Thousand Other Bar Bargains gains Bargains in New & Used Articles Cash or Credit We Deliver. HX Household Exchange HX 41 Auto Row. Call 3-4911 or 3 3-7348. 7348. 3-7348. We Buy Your Old Fur Furniture. niture. Furniture. FOR SALE: 5000 M2 with deep well and other improvements, 16 milei from Panama on Trans Trans-Isthmian Isthmian Trans-Isthmian Highway, 80c. per M2. Telephone Balboa 3753. Services TELEVISION AND RADIO SERVICE. Our new service plan givei you faster, more econo economical mical economical and better service. Phone 2-1905 Crawford Agenciai. Tivo-. II Avenue. U. S. TELEVISION Mean reliability, and lasting re repairs. pairs. repairs. For better home service call 3-7607 Panama from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday to 6 p.m. Protect your homo and proper property ty property against Insect d a m a g o. Prompt scientific treatment on emergency or monthly budget basis. Telephone Pronto Service, Panama 3-7977 or Colon 1777. Personals ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS DRAWER "A" DIABLO BOX 1211. CRISTOBAL, C.I. PHONE BALBOA 3709. Miscellaneous BOGOTA . QUITO . LIMA . admire the feast of our Lord of Miracles, exclusively typical of Lima. Sea the exciting bullfights . visit the Pacific International Trade. Call BLOK AGENCIES 3-3397 today and ask for further information on this excuraion planned for Oc October. tober. October. LOST: August 4th Budgy bird (parakoet). Blue and gray with chit cap. In Margarita. Name M A'MIUi". Talki will. Generous reward. Mary Mehl. 8057-C. Third, Margarita. Tel. 3-3240. the Pacific coast. The average velocity will be aDout o nines per) hour at Balboa Heights, 2 miles per hour at Madden Dam and 6 miles per hour at Cristo Cristobal. bal. Cristobal. Fogs: Nighttime and early morning fogs may be expected quite frequently over the Gail Gail-iard iard Gail-iard Cut section of the Canal and the central section of the Isthmus along the Trans-Isth-r.i an Highway, but rarely at either Canal entrance Most ol ihe logs form around midnight and may be expected to dis dissipate sipate dissipate before 8:30 am. Storms: Local rain .quails and thunderstorms will occur quite frequently, and duriiv these lo local cal local storms wind velocities may leach 30 miles per hour or more but they are of too short dura duration tion duration to cause any appreciable dan.sge. Si'pleniber is the month of most frequent West Indian hurricanes whose paths cross the ship lanes of the Carib Caribbean bean Caribbean Sea, but their usual path is too far north of Panama to cause damaging winds on the Isthmus. TAKES OVER COMMAND SEOUL, Korea (UPI) Lt. Gen. Kmergy Welzel arrived yester yesterday day yesterday to take over as chief of staff, United Nations command and U. S. forces in Korea, succeeding Lt. Gen. Robert M Lee. Lee has been named deputy commander of the Air Defense Command at Colorado Springs, Colo. PALACE REFUSES COMMENT BRUSSELS (UPI) The royal palace has refused to com comment ment comment on press reports abroad that Princess Paola, wife of Prince Al Albert, bert, Albert, was expecting a baby next spring. Paola and Albert, brother of King Baudouin. were married two months ago and are honey honeymooning mooning honeymooning oa that Spanish Majorca Island. INVESTORS j GUIDE By SAM SHULSKY King Features Syndicate, 23S E 45 St., Now York Q. I am 55, and thinking off re retiring tiring retiring next year. Have $27,000 in Treasuries due in 1962 and '67; about $3,000 a year income from real estate and $90,000 in savings. Can I hope for a total income of $10,000 a year? It took me 25 years of hard work to a a-mass mass a-mass the above, so I don't want to do anything foolish. A. Far be it from me to scold anyone who has amassed this fortune, but will you please tell me "whatinelP you, were plan planning ning planning to do with this money all the time you were squirreling it away? You are far too good a businessman to have considered .merely drawing out $125 every time you need it. However, that's money under the bridge. If you want to retire at 55 and there's no reason why you shouldn't you have to put most of that sum into equity invest investments ments investments investments which will go up in value if and as the dollar continues to lose ground. That means owning things in instead stead instead of dollars. Stocks are ona such item; real estate another. You seem to know quite a bit about the latter, so I wouldn't rule that out. But certainly part of the pro program gram program should include high grade common stock issues or deben debentures tures debentures or preferreds convertible in into to into common. I am sending you a list of such companies. As to procedure that's a puzzler. You have a lot of nomey to invest, and judging from your retirement program a short time to do it in. In view of present unsettled markets, I would lean toward dragging your feet. That means you will go into retirement with a good deal of your money still in savings. But that would be bet better ter better than putting the whole a a-mount mount a-mount into securities in a sin single gle single year and then discovering later that you bought on a high market. I would guess that you'll have to take at least five years to set up thf full program. They are yielding a fair amount on present market values and the near maturity assures you of renivrrv of your money. I think you can make the $10, $10,-000 000 $10,-000 a year easily, once you get your program set up. Q. I am a widow, 43, with a son in college and a girl in high school. I earn a substantial amount as a saleswoman. Have $8,000 in savings and a $3,000 mortgate on mf home Should I pay off the mortgate or invest some of my savings for retire ment? A, If you were certain that this is going to be the home for for you for the remainder of your lifetime, I suppose it would pay to wipe out the mortgate. You would thus be saving more in monthly rent costs than you could get in income from invest invest-meent meent invest-meent of the $3,000 in good grade stocks. Offsetting this reasoning, how however, ever, however, are the facts that (1) The mortgage isa relatively small one and a light burden in view of your Uicome; (2) with one child in college and another on only ly only two years away, you may find your housing needs materially changed; (3) you ought to get started on an investment program for retirement as soon as you can. If these lalter points are valid, you could put perhaps a fourth of your savings into good oil stocks and utilities and keep add adding ing adding to your holdings on a regu regular lar regular six-month, orannual basis from current current income. I am sending you ome lists of sug suggestions. gestions. suggestions. Wall Sfreet CHATTER WALL STREET RUNOV MUST NEW YORK (UPI)-The stock market has become so thin that any follow-through on a wave of jelling could depress prices deep deeply ly deeply and quickly, arns Arthur Wiesenberger and Co. It recommends a cautious in investment vestment investment policy at this time. Standard and Poor's also recom recommends mends recommends caution at this time and savs such a policy could bring its reward in the shape or more ad advantageous vantageous advantageous buying opportunities later on. . It names Ford a stock for ac action, tion, action, and recommends purchase of that issue. Standard's also says Black and Decker appears to have better-than-average growth poten potentialities. tialities. potentialities. It sayi Coca-Cola is a sound investment for current re return turn return and further appreciation pos possibilities sibilities possibilities while ColgaW-Palmolive is a worth-while commitment. For the long-pull, standard's likes corn products, Heint, Merck and Otis Elevator. Investors Advisory Institute rec recommends ommends recommends 10 stocks for income: Borg Warner, Chesapeake and O O-hio, hio, O-hio, Cream of Wheat, Family De Department partment Department Stores, Pacific Lighting, Public Service Electric and Gas and Pullmaa Today's Opening STOCK PRICES NEW YORK, Sert. 2 (ITPI1 The stock market eased a bit further at the opening today in moaeraie trading. Tight money news again domi nated the market. Increases in in interest terest interest rates yesterday sent stocki down sharply and speculation tht i ederal Reserve Board may boost the discount rate tomorrow kept the market off balanca today. ALr lnd 54 Advocate Asbestos 275b Alleghany Corp 12 Aluminium Ltd 33' Amer Cyanamid 59V4 Amer1 Motors 48 Amer. Tel and Tel 79 Anaconda Copper 65 Arkansas Fuel 32 AVCO Mfg 13 Beth Steel 56 Bettinger Corp 27ir4b Bicroft Uranium 70b Blauknox rfs British Pet 7 Burroughs 30 Canadian Eagl li-Hb Celanese 39!a Cerro de Pa-sco Whtt Chrysler 67 Cities Service 53Vi Coastal Caribe 1 Colgate Palmolivt 397a Colorado Fuel 3 Cons Electro Dynamic 38 Creole Pet 46 Crown Cork and Seal 35b Cuban Venezuelan Oil 5-16b Du Pont 267 El Paso Natural Gas 31V4b Fairchild Engint 7b Fargo Oil 5 Felmont Pet 6 General Dynamics 48 General Electric 80V General Motors 56 General Plywood 420 Gulf Oil 109Vib Harsco Steel 42Vab Howe Sound 21 Imperial Oil 39'a Intl Pet 34b Lockheed 26 Magellan Pet iy,b Montrose Chem 13 New Eng. Tel and Te! 194b Northrop Air 30V Olin Mathieson 50 Paneoastal 2b Phillips Pet 546 Pure Oil 39 Royal Dutch Shell 61 RCA XD103V Reynolds Metal 44 San Jacinto 9b Servo Corp 27 Signal Oil and Gas eob Sinclair Oil 57 Socony Mobil 43 Sperry Rand 22 Standard Oil NJ 50 Studebaker-Packard" 42 Superior Oil 1790b Texas Gulf Prods 337 Textron 55sb Underwood 24 United Canso Ofl 15-16b US Rubber 61 US Steel 105 Westinghous Elee 91 Wheeling Steel 64 Cub Scouting Roundtabl To Feature Aesop's Fables "Aesop's Fables" will be ths theme for illustration tonight at the Cub Scouting part of th Roundtable to be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Panama Canal Training Center, This theme is designed to encourage the reading of these fa mous fables in which animals speak and live experiences. Fables are told to teach lessons in tests of character, shrewdness. or courage. They are written in a style enabling every Cub Scout reader or listener to imagine him self playing the parts in the story. Stressing the "how-to-do-it" at the roundtable will be Cubbing Roundtable Commissioner Johnny Gough, who promises to furnish each person attending with a print printed ed printed pamphlet of Aesop's Fabletf.and with a variety of ideas concerning their illustration in the Den and Pack: For example, there will be th "Town Mouse and Country Mouse" in a 3D setting inside a shoebOx; an Aesop s costume; shadow pup puppets pets puppets and a puppet theater front, made from cardboard; a skeleton relay game; and others. All Cub Scout Leaders including pack chairmen, committeemen. Den Dads, Den Mothers, Assistant Den Mothers, Cubmasters anil their assistants, and other parent! or adults interested are invited to attend tonight. New Paint Job For Diablo Office The Canal Zone Bov Scout nfflea in the Diablo Service Center will be closed today and tomorrow. The office will get new shelving and a new volunteer naint lob dur ing the two-day closure. ADDS TO TROUBLES SWINDON, England (UPI) Leonard Price, 31, broke away from police who were taking him in handcuffs to a local jail yes yesterday. terday. yesterday. He was recaptured and charge of staling the h and cuff 1 ftUrf asMfcue him. WTDNESDAI, SEPTEMBER 2, 1959 ""THl STblY Of MARTHA WAYNi TBS PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER ACE ELIVIN Mtrtht Speaki Up BY WILSON SCRUGGS j TERRY AND THE PIRATES gcorgr WDNDt) IF THEY tO- WHSN THE COPS i ALLR16rIT,9tt'S60NE. BREAK UP THIS MO THEYtl HAVE A HECK OF A JO F16UK1NS OUT BUTIU HOW COME THREE YANKEES ARE PEAR "X PRISIILLA'S POP Bu$y Signal v Ai. VERMII 1 I OOVOUKKOWtOJHA V fvK. ifSMOME KW1 V HOW HOkAE, OF IW W5IUKS, 0 -. -p., MPNWUE ? BUT I CAWT&Y CO) KUOw) I BLAME UK! I 111 '""" W'iNfe2r!L J 1 1) ARE AT LEA5T FIVE CLOWNS I tj I IttYE OVERHEARD T. f ft n'? 'V 1 f Y look toe. lffl if YaWSELF-? fJri Question s .1 , ALLIY 00 CAPTAIN IASY MORTY MIIKLI i FtlCKLf I AND HIS VIIINOA Air Born Y MERRILL BLOSSLR MUHf NOT MUCH DK3 NUTTY LATEST) OF AM AQ-L IMVEMTION.' LUM6 IT DOES NT HOOK UP TO HIS i as-. Jjr! l-0SE oe NAWr'eoT IT ALL VVRON6, FRECX THE STUFF N "WE CYUNDER. 6NT FOR. BREATHING- its his JET-EJECTOR. For. Tired swimmejjs 7 -5sS. Misting Y V. T. HAMLIN i H WHY, MY kf THE ROBOT'S V THIS IS FJW KNOCKED OOP TERRIBLE! STARS 1. SHOULD SAY HECK, NO.' FUN IT IS! WE CANT IS FUN BUT TERRIBLE! HAVE ANYTHING KEVENGfc 16 LIKE THAT GOING SOMETHING ON AROUND A ELSE.' I4CBP' N I i i HERE AND CALL ) J. THAT THINS t m t Mr -IT 7 nV' WHERE ARE I 1 M3U?OXY I OH, MY GOSH, I WHERE IS HE? WHAT3 Bki VHAPPENED TOHIM f OUR LITTLE GIRL I 15 BE CAMMING TO Y grow up.'ncm i A vou S (no, not ) MEAN J 1 STARTING TO NOTICE QW I'JqUt'. 1C T 't '' J" i 1 VI ill. TUGS BUNNY No! AIM' V PS5T1 I HAP A 1 QUARREL WITH I PETUNIA 1 I'LL i OWE V-YOU FIFTY 1 CENTS IF YOU'LL DO ME A FAVOR, ; bugs 1 r PER THAT I0NP 0 POUSH.NAME IT! 1 I'M ALL EARS, J STEP A . LITTLE ' CLOSER THESE FLOWERS is FROM PORKY! HE WANTS T'KNOW IF J . YA'LL FERSIVE 'IM, PETUNIA! IOOTS AND HIR BUDDIII Right on Schtdul kY IDGAR MARTIN L-XU i "7 f WW v"?, o VOOV.UQ, VOV.U5v vAjwy xo y&.5.Aio uC Jr t-27 VU ,T? 1Wt by OTA nrlo, fctfl. T.M f. U.l. Prt, Off. Jtff'i Plan Y LISLII TURNER BUT IT l. H.IICIFD IKI HFK vl UBCOM4CI0U5! ANPIMAV I'VE REAP Or UWCOVER IT THRU Hypw&l5! jiwk ncscwvri IN HYrNOllSW IM THE LMOIq ATORY! (duf True Life Adventures iriii Liui-i vvai i iw wi-i w -& efi-i-A'i i .T I ft'!, NE OP THE H AM ADRVA.D 'S WIVES TOP6 TO FLIRT WITH A NEI6HT30R BUT THE MASTER OP THE HAREM FROWST ON UCK PAUIAMCiB. tySfifWrf HP? TUt rtlh'V rtMPLPV THAT DeTKOyiWfl HER HAS TRIED f-Ofc MONTHS, UWPLEASMT H3 .iuii .imrv uis uutT PiunmiTlfUUaT run D- ICC C 1 He' SURE NOW HER C0HCIWS ni isJi.r.LT.'L6.' k."?L' "T:.,; v '::r "".iu' r,,Wiren .men uc umo mir it i here we are1, t n H-i PC7N IN 1HB I KSr nrr 17 TjlI TI ruuis-.ou i mw v-; LBSSai Za rd-l I I icrj JfiV V 1 I uaic uet? ITI J PFf.ALL. LUflO Hra" iyF 1. .. T tea (jpfaui Mpur I nrri m r:. i j i 1 inn u ncn. lw i r .m'twi I wr Suddan Changa Y DICK CAVALLI ! YOU'RE I'M GOING DESI(5NING TO TAKE IT A ROCKET I THERE 9 TO THE J 3ELFi(Ch WELL, IF WE'RE GOING Wck TO THE MOON I'D BETTER LU I GO AND BUY MYSELF A J VGOOD WARM FUR COKr.yfJfy f 6AV, ARENT TM06E VOUR N i MOON ROCKET PLANS? ) llfeT 1 V i(Si 8-27 SUd- tZi-' I Both the nekshbok ANP WALWAT?t? WIFE WILL. FEEL, HIS WRATH. Dbtrttmttd by Xinf Twtnm Syrvlleutt, 5 '2. SIDF GLANCES Bv Calbraith BUR BOARDING HOUSB with MAJOR H00PLR OUT OUR WAY llY i. R. WILLIAMS KEEP YOUR 5HlRTOr4 POME WA9NT ULIILT IN AT5AV,Y3U KNOW. THERE'f DIFFERENCE BCTWeENTHeoWIWS ON THE RR AMD COOkJlMG IT WITH HEY, OUT THERE.' ARE WE SON N A T lO T-l VAIE. 3UST SIT HER& llLL AND LOVlNS CARETHESeDEMlZEMS ANn XsOnn 2 unuft op THE T3EEP WILL SB A MASTERPIECE A80UT PEEDINgA ?f;2H2JLI)ARy ART, BUT X YVOULtJNjT UP THOSE C- c 1 rrcr Mr r KCLlAl IIN t-WM PISH r rcK;t,u(Nb Or- YOUK OATKONOMIC IIYVIWATUKITY n n n ISC IK- Sucss THAT'LL HOLD .A' itf HAVENT I WAKWEP T r ER fiOSH SAKB, A 6UV ATTENPIN' A XXI A90UT 7REB 1 LECTURE AIM'T WUCH INTERESTEP HO WHAT CLIMBIM6? USPAkl- TH' PROFESSOR'S SAYIW IF HE'S HAKU6IM' GEROUS-SOOMUSHT FROMTH' CEILIN'OP r n .tT. SET Plizy AMP FALL THE CLASS ROOM.' V f -JS&i POWN A WP BREAK AM HELPME JOFSSal2fl,W ARM OR A LEG OR il DOWN.' VZSft VHIib SOMETHINC5 JUST lI1'TT hTil "C , LOOK AT VDU WOW IA Sf( (LAJ I HOW MANY TIMES IIWSSt Si- tHL PO I HAVE TO TELL lft' SvjfA J" MDU-SAV.ARE -lBJ ..&--i N W3jSl, W l VDU PAVIWATTEN-f i'JNJ i TOW TD WHAT 'V I fjf&rffl t TH8 WORRV WART-' -y il V IL i ft .V: t m. .t u r i "I'm all for higher education, but I hate to think of sitting around again in dresses!" JUMPING FOR JOY Carol Caron fiathers ia her parachute, after dropping almost a mile to earth at Livermore, Calif, Carol jumps as a hobby and Is a member of a "sky-diving" club. ikjr- A V,.- ,k viixdwf 2 ; ; t ftS JmstM. 1 FOR THE SMALL ONES One way to make room for more car In less space is suggested on sign, above, on Hofstra College campus in Hempstead, N.Y. AfOVAS PANAMA AfiWAYS PANAMA-MIAMI 55 00 MIAMI-CHICAGO 51 45 PANAMA CHICAGO 45 Tory's TV 4:00 Mr. Wl jM :"'' Canf t;i'iciilno 7 0O RovbI plivlum r 7 ;30 Jimmy HaywooH Shnw f 10 Miff-Wplt Movl: nin' mi' Q 0 TrH'flr Court in on HVri Nlhl rifht I I 00 ( FN Nf.V.'S II 15 F'H' Tai'-I unci Highway Patrn' CouitrsY of Aerovlas Panama Alrwta PHONES: FANAMA: 3-10573-16983-1699 OFFICE HOURS: from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. YOU, MACK". 1 830 Jks. Manama 1090 Jk&. Colon AM mMrfJt'1 Larry Jack so nk odgers xs B fa n TliE KMimm RECOILLESS RIFLE, pride of the Infantry, tears up a reinforced bunker sis units from the 1st Battle Group, 20th Infantry, present a weapons demonstration for 84 Latin Amer American ican American military students now enrolled at the U.S. Army Caribbean School. One of the newest pjces with which the Infantry is armed, it is also one of the most effective and accurate. On the trigger i;Sfc Alberto L. Brown while the armored is Sgt. Gordon W. Dustin. Twice each jnear classes at the school watch a display of all weapons used by an Infantry company in a modern pentomic army battle group. (U.S. Army Photo i j tat Am Sfudents See Weapons Demonstrated In Live-Fire Show At Army's Piha Range A out 84 Latin Araer.tun students from 14 countries now attending the U.S. Army Carib Caribbean bean Caribbean School, Fort Gulick, watched an hour-and -a-half-long live-fire weapons demonstration to today. day. today. The demonstration on the Pina Range, Ft. Sherman, showed the firepower of a modern pentomic battle group in action. C Company of the 1st Battle Group, WM I nfantry, under the command of Captain Manuel Y. Brasil, demonstrated all weai is and show ed their devastating effect. Students1 were accompanied bv Col. Cecil H imes, commandant of the ITSARCARIB School: Lt. Col. Philip M. Judson, assistant commandant; Lt. Cel. Carlos Betancf s-Ramirez, director of the school's tactics department. Lt. Col. Alden P. Shipley, director of instruction; Lt. Col. Herb Herb-trt trt Herb-trt Daubert, director of the armament and automotive department. Lt. Col. Richard I. Paul, di director rector director of the technical department, and other of ficers from the faculty. Among those at the program were Col. John F. Schmelzer, ehiet ef the U S Army Caribbean G 3 Section; Col. John R. Wright Jr., Commanding officer of the 1st Baltle Group, 20th Infantry; Lt. Col J. N. Lunsford Jr., battle group executive of icer Maj. Ralph E.' .Carpenter, battle group S-3 and Maj. Grover V, Smith. S 2. Countries represented at the school ere: Bolivia, Colombia, Cost Rica, Ecuador, E. Salva Salva-W, W, Salva-W, Guatemala, Haiti, Hondu Honduras, ras, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Pana Panama, ma, Panama, Peru, Venezuela, and United St a to students from Puerto Ri Rice. ce. Rice. All weapons of an infantry coin party were demonstrated plus the support of the battle group's 4. 2 Mortar Battery. ' -Sp"' Luis A. ('otto-Colon first Jolw::,Use of the bayonet vCjjl. Henry McDuffie Jr. de demonstrated monstrated demonstrated n's ability with the ,4."i pistol by firing into a sil target placed approximate ards in front of the students, stol is issued to all mem kerfc of crew-served weapons. sub machine gun, or grease gtm, is of .45 caliber and is cap able of firing around 450 rounds JeT minute, lt wa.s fired bv Sp4 ames S. Talley. Atarbin developed during 3norld War II was the next weap weap-.m .m weap-.m demonstrated for the students. '"Jfhis 5'2-pound weapon, which 'tat be fired either automatically i pnimi-automatK'allv at a maxim maxim-cyclic cyclic maxim-cyclic rate of 750 775 rounds niimite, was fired by Sfc. I.. . SWlek. The maximum range of tJUl'weapon is 220(1 yars; however, imir effective range is 275 yards. vJJThe next weapon shown was . K soldier's stand-by, the M l Tjflt. It is said that this nine Ound clif-fed, gas-operated se- fAi trv OFVirwnn.tm, st. 1 W h S Ilk-. lUII .... v .'orney Charles A. Coolidge, faove, hss been selected to re re-View View re-View U.S. disarmament policy fcjld bring It up to date. Presi President dent President Eisenhower ordered the review in line with his hopes ,tht an agreement may be reached arms reduction. 1 T v mi-automatic weapon played an important World War II. Spf. Cornelius Lloyd utilized the M l, which has a maximum range of 3500 yards. Every company has at least one sniper, normally the best ri rifle fle rifle shot in the company, who uses the M l rifle fitted with a special telescopic sight. The sniper for C Company was Sp4 Michael Borzerviatow. He hit the targets approximately 500 yards in front of the students. The latest weapon audition to the Infantry company is the new M 14 caliber .30 rifle, which eventually will replace the M l rifle, carbine and the sub-machine gun. Cpl. Donald C. Newton fired the rii using the 7.62 mm NATO cartridge. To increase the firepower of an Infatry company, each squad in the company now has two Lirow.i ing automatic rifles, air-cooled, gas-operated, magazine fed should er weapons. Pf'. William O. Averett showed the students its two cyclic rale 350 rounds per minute for the slow rate ana 550 rounds per minute for the last. Kach rifle platoon of an Infan Infantry try Infantry company has 2 light machine guns. They are the model 1919A4 with the ground tripod mount, or the model 1919A6, with the should shoulder er shoulder stock and bipod. This gun is of the firepower of the light cooled. Pfc. Jecry D. Castleman ;and Pvt. Abimael Quinones-Rivera gave an impressive demonstration of the .firepower of the JLgbt machine fiun. To demonstrate the heavy water-cooled machine) guns tor the students two guns were set up: On fired by Sfc Warren C. Edwards and Cpl Tommy H. Reynolds the other by Sp4 Zoltan Nagy and Pfc. Pedro Garcia Oca so. The objective of the heavy machine gun is to lay defensive fire in front ol positions, each gun firing alternately. The last of the machine run de monstrated to the students was (he .50 machine gun fired by M Sgl. William K. Mashburn and Sfc! Kllison C. Turner. The use of grenades in bolh of fensive and defensive tactics was shown by C Company. Sfc. Price Walker demonstrated South Begins New School Term Still Largely RICHMOND, Va.t Srpl 2 UPI Fie cities in North Carolina and Virginia admitted a nc.,l!ei mg of Negroes to their white schools yes lerday. The South began a new school lerm'atill largely segregat segregated. ed. segregated. Sixteen Negroes enlond three formerly white schools 'n Arling Arlington, ton, Arlington, Va., across the I'otonu.' Riv River er River from the nation's capital, and the North Carolina cllies of High Poinl, Charlotte, Greensboro and (ioldshoi-d enrolled about 18 Ne Negroes groes Negroes with whites. In High Poinl. a furniture man ufarluring hub of North Carolina's his ability wilh the fragmentation grenade, the ohciisivc givu.m. anu Ihe white phosphorus grenades. Cpl. Eldridge Henry, placed two therrpite grenades, one in a bucket of water and one on a piece of sheet steel to show the effects to the students. Cn Donald C. New Newton ton Newton then put on an exhibition in the use ol colored smoke. To wind up the grenade portion of the pro program, gram, program, Sgt. Kred A. Stephens of Sweetwater, Tenn., ami Cpl. Mc McDuffie Duffie McDuffie fired colored smoke m the rifle grenade launcher. Pfc. Barnabas Czikora., and Sp4 Freddy E. King fired the 3.5 rocket launcher at a bunker a a-bout bout a-bout 200 yards in (ront of the stands. The rocket launcher is a flat trajectory weapon that can be used defensively and offen offensively sively offensively against tanks, fortifica fortifications tions fortifications and vehicles. Although the rocket launcher is the beginning of Ihe Iufatrv's ar tillery, there are other flat trajec trajectory tory trajectory weapons, including the .55 mm recoilless rifle, die 75 mm re coilless rifle and ihe 106mm re coilless ri le. In the demonstra demonstration, tion, demonstration, Sgt. Howard A. Rogers, and Sp4 John F. Cnswold fired, (he 57 from the shoulder and the 75 from a tripod. On the 106 mm recoilless rifle, Sgt. Cordon Dustin and Pfc. James M. Howell demonstrated the hard hilling, accurate 106 on concrete emplacements. To wind up the demonstra demonstration, tion, demonstration, one platoon of C Compa Company, ny, Company, with attached supporting weapons, laid down a curatain of fire in front of the stands in He famous "mad minute." Sgt. Ismael Diaz played the part of the comic in the demonstration. His antics and arguments with 1st Lt. Fermin C. Casiano, the nar rator, provided much amusement, especially when his water pistoi triggered the simulated atomic bomb to close the program. The U.S. Army Caribbean School at Fort Gulick is the onlv school in the U.S. Armv devoted exclusively to tne training to the training of Latin American stu dents. All instruction is given in Ihe Spanish language. Purpose of the school is to pro vide unity of action and methods among Ihe armies of the Western Hemisphere a lid to create mutual understanding and respect among its people and countries. industrial Piedmonl region, token integration was a new experience. The city admitted two Negro(s to previously all white schools lor the first time. Georgia, South Carolina. Alaba Alabama, ma, Alabama, Louisiana and ivlissiii.s'ppi opened their public schools for an another other another term on a rigidly segregated basis. A Chapel Hill, N.C., Negro bov appealed to the city sc hool hoard last night to adnul him i,i a whu' school; a new desegregation nut nn behalf of 14 Negroes loomed in integraled Alexandria. Va.: and a I Federal appeals court refused 'o Eisenhower, de Gaulle Make Speedy Start With Cold War Talks PARIS, Sept. 2 ( UPI ) President Eisenhower arrived in gaily. decorated Paris today and received a new triumphal welcome. He promptly plunged into Cold War talks with President Charles de Caulle. Their first session was de. scribed as "good and encouraging." Presidential press secretary James C. Hagerty said the two leaders were so pleased with their initial meeting that tbey decided to extend their talks by at least one hour tomorrow Hagerty announced that Eisenhower and de Caulle will leave an hour earlier than planned for Rambouillet, the French president's official country residence, where they will spend tomorrow night. They may drive in the same car to Rambouillet presumably to give them further time to talk. The President stepped from his plane at Le Bourget airport into a brilliantly colorful welcome. Paris was bathed in warm, clear sunshine that brought tens of thousands into the streets to cheer him. The welcome was cordial and friendly, but more restrained than those in Bonn and London where the crowds almost mobbed the President's car in their frenzied enthu. siasm. De Gaulle met Eisenhower at Le Bourget and the two greeted each other with the warmth of old friends. However, the Paris phase of the Eisenhower international peace crusade before his talks with Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev is apt to prove the toughest of any on his tour. Within an hour before his ar arrival rival arrival at the Quai d'Orsay the French foreign office, which us the temporary W'hite House while he is in France Eisenhower drove to the Elysee Palace for a preliminary talk with de Gaulle. All along the route from the airport to the foreign office and back to the Presidential palace, Eisenhower received warm and friendly greetings. France threw into the welcome the full panoply of color and ceremonial for which it is famed. Do Gaulle It known to be angry and disappointed because me United States has not sup supported ported supported French plans for setting up a "big three" political di directorate rectorate directorate of the United States, France and Britain to run NATO. The French president proposed t lii s nearly a year ago in a mem memorandum orandum memorandum which the United States and Britain ignored. Eisenhower today pledged to concentrate with de Gaulle on the "single goal of peace wilh just justice" ice" justice" for the world. The President ended his mem memorable orable memorable five-day visit in Britain with a plea that the United States and Britain maintain their close bonds for the sake of world peace. Replving to d Gaulle's wel- co e address, Eisenhower at once indicated his determination to seek agreement with the French desoile their deep suspicions of his trip and coming meetings with Khrushchev. "Now we have an opportunity in these troublesome times tc talk together and to concert all our efforts to one single goal of peace with justice," said the Pre President. sident. President. Meanwhile in Washington it was learned that Eisenhower will hold the crucial round of his forthcoming talks with Khrushchev in the seclusion of Camp David, the presidential retreat in Maryland's Catoctin Mountains. This was disclosed by diploma diplomatic tic diplomatic sources as the State Depart Department ment Department announced that Khrushchev was bring with him to dhis coun country try country an official party of more than 50 persons, plus 39 reporters ic ic-presenting presenting ic-presenting Russian publications, radio, television and the official T..ss news agency. Eienhower and Khrushchev, the diplomatic sources said, will con fer at isolated and tightly guard guarded ed guarded Camp David from Sept. 24 un til about midday Sept. 27. Their talfcs will come at the end of the Soviet leader's two week US visit. At Camp David, the leaders of Ihe world's two most powerful na nations tions nations will have an opportunity to disvuss their Cold War differences frankly and al length, free from the pressures and insl fusions of protocol and the public spotlight. Eisenhower, the source said, will try to determine whether the tough Soviet leader is real really ly really ready to ease the Cold War grant a delay in in'CKralion of while schools in Pine Bluff, Ark Ten-year-old Stanley Vickers, denied admission to Chapel Hill white schools earlier this summer, appeared before Ihe school board in the university town with at least two petitions from white par parents ents parents saying they would "welcome" him to an all-while elementary school. The (' S Court of Appeals al SC Louis refused to gran! a slay of an order directing Ihe Doilarway School district at Pine Bluff, Ark to admit throe Megroen white or considers his US trip as just another propaganda mission. Soviet foreign minister Andrei Gromyko will accompany Khrush Khrushchev chev Khrushchev to this country. He and Secretary of State Christian A. Herter are expected to join their chiefs at Camp Da David vid David part of the time. The ceremonial aspects of Khrushchev's visit will be out of the way by the time the Camp David sessions are held. They will be disposed of when he arrives in Washington, Sept. 15 and goes through a round of formal functions Sept. 16. Between then and his return to Washington, Khrushchev, his family and official party will visit New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Des Moines and Ames, Iowa, and Pittsburgh. The State Department has an announced nounced announced that five members of Khrushchev's family his wife, two daughters, his son and a son-in-law, Alexei Ivanovich Adzhubei, editor of Izvestia were coming with him in addition to his offi cial party. The department released a list of 21 persons already chosen for the official party and said at least 30 more would be added. AGREE TO COOPERATE CAIRO (UPI) King Sand of Saudi Arabia said today he and President Gamal Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic had agreed on "the renewal of coop eration in Arab affairs." Saud is on a four-day official visit to the United Arab Republic he met with Nasser for almost two hours today. 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 Panama Canal Company: Balboa Cristobal TEMPERATURE: High H 84 Low 70 73 HUMIDITY: High 94 Low 68 87 WIND: (max. mph) SW-14 NW-18 RAIN (inches) 1.13 1.77 WATER TEMP: (inner harbors) 80 81 LAKE ELEVATIONS: (iatun lake Madden Dam . 83.79 214.22 BALBOA TIDES THURSDAY, SEPT. S High Time HI 3:38 a. ni 15.5 ft. 3:55 p.m 16.0 M low Time HI 9:59 a.m 0.5 ft. 10:17 p.m .9.2 ft. schools. Gov. Orval Faubiu said the decision proved the Feoeral courts were taking over the schools. At Miami, Fla., the Dade Coun County ty County School Board has ordered foui Negroes into the previously-white Orchard Villa School Sep:. 8 Ihe same date lour other Virgin,:, ci cities ties cities start integrated classes bill it appeared the school would be all all-Negro Negro all-Negro by then. A Miami newspauer survey showed only six whites plan to at attend tend attend Orchard Villa, located in a neighborhood which has a rapidly increasing Negro population. 1 Read story on pagt 8 Police Nab Teenage Murder Suspects--Hoover Asked To Parley On Violence NEW YORK, Sept. 2 (UPI) Police today captured the alleged leaden of the Hell'i KitehM playground attack early Sunday that left two teenagers dead and prompted rtatt and etV tX ficials to call a series of top-level meetings on this city's risin youth violence Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller asked FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover to enter the battle kr ai- f!r.nnL "VTe.rS.,en.Cy meetin next week- stat c"y leaders were preparing for ether ferences scheduled tomorrow. The cape-clad "Dracula" and the "The Umbrella Man" were arrested early today aft idenUfied01" EaSt BrnX" W"h th'm W" third y0uth who , Police said Sal Agron readily admitted: "I'm Dracula, the guy you are looking for." But the slender youth who in. Teenage curfew law through 25-man council have asked Jor-e the attack wore a blue cape with the council because "kid glove I curfew. I red lining and silver buckles on nis snoes denied killing either of the victims: "I cut somebody early Sunday but I didn't kill anybody," police quoted him as saying. However, a witness was report reported ed reported to have said "Dracula" boast boasted ed boasted he had done the stabbing af after ter after the attack in a darkened play playground. ground. playground. Agron said Tony Fernandez. arrested with him, was "The Umbrella Man," also wanted in connection with the murders. Four other youths already have been charged with murder. Rockefeller stepped in to try to stem the Teenage crime wave as Mayor Robert F. Wagner prepar prepared ed prepared to launch a program of his own city officials increased their de demands mands demands for a 10 p.m. city-wide youth curfew, and an emergency task force of 1400 police patrolled the streets to stamp out youth crime. "Dracula" swashbuckles at the head of his gang carrying a cane and wielding a knife with a long blade. Members of his sang arrested previously said Dracula stabbed lJ'ITLP Ai man, an.i lJfiri, Upri, Ur 3UMII ach of another. Rockefeller called in his entire executive staff to d"al with a 10 10-day day 10-day crime rampage in which four Teenagers were killed and a num number ber number of persons were iniured. Police Commissioner Sleohen P. Kennedy announced that 38 youths between 16 and 20 were arrested in the first seven months of this year on murder and manslaughter charges. Of these, 13 were under 16. Kennedy disclosed that Teen Teenagers agers Teenagers had been seized for 134 rapes. 664 robberies and 813 cases of felonious assault. Arrests of Teenagers totaled over 15,000. The murder and manslaughter rate was up 26.7 percent. In announcing his emergency meeting, Rockefeller said that parents have a responsibility to try to do something to make New York City's streets safe. "I am deeply concerned, both as governor and as a Darent." he said. "I know thai all the fami families lies families in the s'.a-" are concern concerned ed concerned about this trend. "We're going to have a meet meeting ing meeting here to discuss the question as to what additional the state can do throus'i our agencies and Ihrough coordination or state, loc local al local and orivat? a"mcies. "We must mobilize more effec effectively." tively." effectively." Rockefeller said the Teenage ciime wave was a "great trage tragedy' dy' tragedy' for the city. He added 'hat juvenile delinquency is a nation national al national problem but tlut "obviously in the city, we have our own special responsibilities." Wagner has called a meeling of top city officials al Citv Ha'1 to. morrow to map new s'eps to durb juvenile delinquency. City founcil majority leader Jo Joseph seph Joseph T. Sharkey said he was pre- narod to call an emeryencv nieet- mr at any hour of the day or n:2ht if it would help end tre!1 (een-aeod violence. Sharkey said he would push a Army, Air Force Merger Urged By House Group WASHINGTON (UPI; A con congressional gressional congressional committee urged Pres Prescient cient Prescient Eisenhower today to or order der order studies looking toward a merger of the Army and Air Force to curb military waste and Ihe weakening effects of inter- service rivalries. The House Government Opera Operations tions Operations Committee endorsed the nroDosal which was contained in a 156-page report by a subcom subcommittee mittee subcommittee which made a broad study of military rocket prgrams ear earlier lier earlier this year. I! said the decisive weapon for Ihe next decade will be the nu nuclear clear nuclear missile which, for land land-baser baser land-baser operations al least, calls for the combined talents and tech technical nical technical resources of both the Army and Air Force. Segregated NAACP attorney Otto Tucker said he Would seek a Federal court order to admit 14 more Ne Negroes groes Negroes to the predominantly white schools of Alexandria, another suburb of Washington. Front: Royal, AlexandriaSl'har AlexandriaSl'har-lotlesville lotlesville AlexandriaSl'har-lotlesville and Norfolk atari inte grated classes Sept. 8 Front Roy Royal al Royal and Charlottesville for the l:d lime. Durham, N.C., will admit eight Negroes to its white schools lor the first time tomorrow, anil Winston Winston-Salem, Salem, Winston-Salem, N.C., will start Ihe third year oi token integration Ihe tame dar methods have failed. "It's time for drastic measur- t, Sharkey said. "The do-eood- crs have succeeded in doing no- thing but knock down our city." At least seven members of the FBI Finds 1 Murder. Homicide Try Or Rape Occurs Every Four Minutes WASHINGTON, Sept. 2 (UPI) Murder, rape or assault with in indent dent indent to kill was committed every four minutes in the United States last year, the FBI reported today. The FBI's statistical crime clock expressed in graphic terms Ihe 9.3 per cent rise in crime last year over 957. FBI director J. Edgar Hoover said an estimated 1.553,922 very serious offenses occurred in 1958 ;m increase of 131.637 over 1957. The fieures were reached un- !der a new uniform crime report ing systm s?t up a year ago. They were drawn from the rec fr ct of the na'S ords of police departments repre- population The FBI used seven major crimes as the basis for measur measuring ing measuring the overall 9.3 per cent boost. Under the new system It no long long-r r long-r considers minor larcenies, neg negligent ligent negligent manslaughter and statutory rane as part of the crime index. Forcible rape led the way last year with a jump of 13 per cent. Robbery and burglary followed cjosely with increases of 12.7 per cent and 12.6 per cent respective respectively. ly. respectively. Fears Raised Ike Will Suffer First Vefo Override WASHINGTON, Sept. 2 (UPI) Administration forces faced an al almost most almost hopeless fight in the House today to preserve President Ei Eisenhower's senhower's Eisenhower's record of never hav having ing having a law enacted over his veto. Some key Republicans Drivately conceded that the bailie was lost. The issup was joined as house leaders called up for f'oor action the President's veto of a $1,206, $1,206,-748.549 748.549 $1,206,-748.549 annronri-ition bill to fin finance ance finance public wor!:s orojects. The President vetoed the bill last Fridav because it carried S5l.510.600 for 67 flood control and navigation projects in 31 states for which he had refused to budg budget et budget funds tinder hjs "no new .-tarts" policy. x- Since Eisenhower enticed the Whi'e House in 1953. the House ris never mustered the two-thirds vote necessary to override a re residential sidential residential veto, although the Sen Sen-a'c a'c Sen-a'c has done so twice. Eisenhow Eisenhower er Eisenhower has ve'oed 143 bills. Both sidps conceded in advance today's showdown vote that uld the House override the Tp'r, I ins President's veto, the Senate was iust about certain to follow suit. "Until the Air Force and Army join hands in a single service ef effort fort effort it said, "the costs of de defense fense defense will mount ever higher, du duplication plication duplication and waste will grow likewise, and the nation will be exposed to the vitiating effects of inter service jealousies, rivalries and wars for many years to ((me." The Air Force was a branch of the Army until 1947 when they were divorced under the act set set-ling ling set-ling up the Army, Navy and Air Force as co-equal services under ihe Defense Department, The subcommittee, headed by Rep. Chet llolifield (D Calif.), said it originally did not intend to get into the issue of military unification, which has been the subject of a continuing controver controversy sy controversy in and out of Congress. "However, as thtJinissile) study proceeded, it became in increasingly creasingly increasingly plain that the strategy of land-based missile power can cannot not cannot be divided into the convention conventional al conventional concepts of land or air com combat," bat," combat," it said. Asserting that something must be done to eliminate overlapping Army and Air Force missile ef efforts, forts, efforts, the report said current inter service "turmoil" supports the view that this cannot be achieved "short of a merger of the Air Force and the Army." It said there still would be prob problems lems problems between the new merged service and the Navy but that these problems would be "of vasily lesser dimension" than those exiiting now. Among them are Tammanv Hall lehipf ra ard Newman, chairman of tni New York County Republican Orv jganization. Larceny over $50 rose 10.3 per. cent while the remaining offeifsr showed a smaller climb, namely: aggravated assault, up .26 pt cent, the lowest rate of incregj i r BID FOR STARDOM -?, Fonda. 20. daughter of Henrr Fonda, is making her bid ioiJ stardom in Hollywood. Violinist Sf. Malo Here For Recital r At National Theater Alfredo de Saint Malo. to raf. ed Latin America violinist i back in his home citv of Panama for a few days. He will present,; i lecuai next tuesaay at the Na tional Theatre. Along with Hans Janowitz, pian pianist, ist, pianist, Saint Malo has chosen an in. teresting program, including works of Handel, Mozart, De Debussy bussy Debussy and Lalo. Every time St. Malo Dlavs. lone or with the Symphony, a ca capacity pacity capacity crowd is attracted. :H has had a very busy school year at the University of Texas, whenaj he is in charge of the violin sec section, tion, section, Department of Music. H has been working hard and achieved top form. Local music lovers still remeOir ;er his concert last September with the Symphony, Walter My Myers ers Myers conducting, when he received a thunderous ovation from a packed house, in one of thehest performances ever given In Pa nama. Tickets are alreariv nn j one dollar, and reservations can "e mane py calling the Depart, ment of Fine. Arts, telephone"- 0?58. THE ALMANAC Today is Wednesday, Sept. 2, the 245th day of the year, with 120 more days in 1959. The moon is new, The morning stars are Mercurj and Venus. The evening, stars are Mff, Jupiter and Saturn. On this date in history: '" In 1666, the great fire of Lon London don London started and raged on 'ttr four more days. In 1789, Congress established the Department of t)he Treasury. In 1864, Civil War General $31' Ham Sherman began his famotn "March to the Sea." ; In 1901 1 the "big stick" be became came became the trademark of Vict President Theodore Roosevelt In 1930, two French aviator completed the first non fit flight frbm Etirope to the UnTtei States. Their 1 plane wai. ekjJM "The Question Mark." In 1945, the Japanese signed, JJn terms of unconditional aurreijoVr aboard the US battleship Misiou Misiou-ri ri Misiou-ri in Tokyo Bay, ill In 1947, nineteen American sta stations tions stations fligned' the Treaty of R IflCjB Janeiro, agreeing to mutual, aid in the case of armed agressifljl. Thought for today: Former Pr-. sident Harry Truman said: shall not forget Pearl HarwJr. The Japanese will sqt iorgeCStl USS MitMKut" r if ,.-,i. i IP iwiii mini ri ii" i'MiiwiiiiinMiiMwiitniM.w.'&M |