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The San Bernardino County Sun from San Bernardino, California • Page 2

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San Bernardino, California
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jna5J955.in....: rcujiid unci To Share Atom Panama's Held in Spellman Calls Asia Volcano Ready to Erupt LOS ANGELES UPi Francis Cardinal Spellman, who has just returned from the Far East, Friday said sadly: "I find a smaller area of the free world left there each time." The Archbishop of New York told A -I for ks PANAMA UP) President Jose Ramon Guizado asked the National Assembly early Saturday to grant him leave of ab-- sence from office during investigation of charges he was involved in the Jan. 2 assassination of his predecessor, President hZ'S crr 1ri Cf', Jose Antonio Remon. The Assembly, which had started gathering earlier after Guizado was placed under house arrest at his home, immediately began a special session to consider the request. Police threw a guard around Guizado's home earlier as the in-vestigation into the machinegun slaying of Remon reached a cli-B max. Panama radio stations broadcast -at midnight a call for Ricardo Arias Espinosa, the nation's foreign minister, to report to the leg- lslative hall.

Anas Espinosa is next in line for the presidency. Guizado's son and two of his business associates also were being held by police. Sources close to the investigation into Remon's assassination said "grave charges exist against President Guizado and against other personages implicated in the attempt against Presi LUCKY TO BE ALIVE This is the front of the Ray Kissinger home in Hastings, after an explosion shattered the double brick walls early Friday. Mr. and Mrs.

Kis singer, sleeping in the front bedroom (left), were blown free of the wreckage, escaping with minor injuries. The blast apparently resulted from a gas leak. (AP wirephoto) U.N. EXECUTIVE SAYS HE ACHIEVED GOAL IN PEIPING French, German Leaders Agree tained by the Chinese Communists as Korean war prisoners could be attained. He said "no deals of any kind," nor any link between the prisoner OAS Asks Nicaragua to Stop War Gear Flow Into Costa Rica WASHINGTON (D The Organi sation of American States Friday night condemned the attack of for- Teisn forces on Costa Rica and -asked the government of Nicaragua to take stronger measures to the flow of war equipment from that country into Costa Rka.

The council of the OAS adopted a resolution saving that its inves- 'tigation now on the ground in Costa Rica, reported "a substantial part of the war material was introduced over the northern border" of Costa Rica. Nicaragua is on Costa Rica's northern border. The OAS council also ordered the investigation commission to send observers to all airports "in the region affected" and President Jose Mora of the council said this "of course includes Nicaragua." The commission also was told1 BADEN BADEN, Germany t) Premier Pierre Mendes France and Chancellor Konrad Adenauer announced early Friday they have agreed on a new policy of closer cooperation between France and West Germany. The announcement came at the end of an 11-hour conference at this Black Forest health resort be tween the two statesmen. "I am happy to say that we have achieved considerable progress and a complete agreement on many points," the 79-year-old Adenauer said at a joint news con ference with Mendes-France.

"Our talks have been aimed at stabilizing the peace of Europe," Adenauer said. "French and Ger man relations have thereby been favorably developed." Mendes-France said the two in their talks covered "all great prob lems of international policy." He said he hoped the discus sions with the German chancellor will help "to lessen tension among the peoples of the world." Mrs. James Farley Dies of Heart Attack NEW YORK (a-Mrs. James A. Farley, 60, wife of the former postmaster general and former Democratic national chairman, died Friday of a heart attack.

Farley was with her when she was stricken at about 7 a.m. in their Waldorf-Astoria apartment. The family said she suffered a heart attack last May but generally had been feeling well since then, i issue and other political questions was suggested by either side in his 1314 hours of secret talks with Chou. Asked whether he considers his talks successful, Hammarskjold said: "If, by successful, you mean that I brought the fliers back in the plane, you know they were not successful. If, by successful, you mean that I achieved what I hoped to achieve, they were successful." Hammarskjold gave this summation of his mission to Peiping: "As I saw the situation, it was essential to establish such a contact in order to place before Mr.

Chou En-lai the full and complete case for the release of the convicted men. This I have done. "Mr. Chou En-lai also gave me his views on other questions per tinent to present international tension. This part of our conversations was, however, entirely apart from the question of the prisoners.

"No deals of any kind, nor any link between these other questions and the prisoner question, were suggested by either side." ALL QUESTIONS RAISED The other pertinent questions raised by Cou, Hammarskjold said, included "all the questions you could guess." He repeated this when asked specifically whether Red China's admission to the U.N. was raised. Hammarskjold indicated that the "detention" of 35 Chinese students refused exit permits by the United States was part of the Peiping discussions. But he said: "That question is not related. Among the questions in which there is a direct interest and feeling on the Chinese side, there is this question.

But they are not linked up. They are parts of the general picture." I a news conference that he held "grave fears for the. future." "It is my personal opinion that the Asian mainland is a volcano and may erupt at any time, how or when I cannot say." ONE 'BRIGHT SPOT The cardinal" flew in from a 29-day tour of Alaska, Korea, Japan, Okinawa, Formosa, Hong Kong, Viet Nam, Manila, Guam and ships of the U.S. Navy's Seventh Fleet. He is military vicar to the armed forces.

He was the guest here of James Francis Cardinal Mclntyre, Archbishop of Los Angeles. Cardinal Spellman called the Philippines a "bright spot" in the Asiatic picture. "The islands are stable economically and politically and the people are most energetic. It is a solid refutation against Soviet charges that Americans are imperialistic. Here is a country whose independence we helped gain.

And they are a very grateful people." NAVY COMPLEMENTED He also complimented the U.S. Navy on its relief work among refugees fleeing Communist domination in Viet Nam. "Our American warships are vessels of peace," he declared, adding: "But even among these people who fear Communist domination, one can see marks of anti-American propaganda spread by the Communists." He told of a little girl who was being helped by an American sailor. She asked her interpreter: "Will he beat me?" Husband Confesses Brutal Wife Murder MARYSVILLE lifV-Sheriff John R. Dower announced Friday Donald E.

Berrigan, 31, Oakland dairy technician, had confessed to the brutal murder of his wife, Mar- jorie, in their vacation cabin last Saturday. Berrigan himself termed the killing "brutal" in the confession Dower said he dictated to a court reporter. The young husband related that he fought with his wife for an hour, broke down the bed on which he was trying to smother her, and finally strangled her in the kitchen by putting his heel on her neck. the sheriff announced. Then he tried to hide the crime by setting fire to the cabin.

crt iri Plant 'Secrets' MOSCOW (Jl Russia said Fri day it is ready to share with the world the scientific and techni cal experience it claims to have "piled up" in the operation since last summer of an atom-driven in dustrial power plant. The press chief of the Soviet Foreign Ministry, Leonid Ilyichev, told a news conference Russia is ready to hand over this experience at a World Atomic Energy Con gress scheduled for later this year under the auspices of the U.N. General Assembly. He said his government is send ing Soviet academician Dmitri V. Skobeltsyn to the U.N.

in New York to submit the proposal for inclusion on the congress agenda It will be the first time the Soviet Union has been represented by a scientist rather than a political figure at such talks. NO LOOK PROMISED There was no indication in Ilyi chev's statement that the Soviet Union is planning to let foreign scientists study firsthand the atom ic power station claimed in an an nouncement last July 1 to have been put into operation in this country. That announcement over the Moscow radio said a small atomic engined plant with a capacity of 5,000 kilowatts had been put into operation and Soviet authorities and engineers planned construction of other plants with capacities of from 50,000 to 100,000 kilowatts. "The Soviet government, recog nizing the great importance of the peaceful utilization of atomic en ergy and striving to contribute to the development of international cooperation in this field, is ready to hand over scientific and techni cal experience piled up in the Soviet Union," Ilyichev's announce ment said. "With this aim, the Soviet gov ernment is ready to submit to the conference on peaceful use of atonaic energy to be convened during 1953, according to a decision of the General Assembly of the United Nations, a report on the first plant in the U.S.S.R.

and its works." NEWS TO BUNCHE At U. N. headquarters Dr. Ralph Bunche, U. N.

undersecretary, re ceived Moscow's offer with inter est, and called it news. He said Skobeltsyn is due there Saturday to meet with an advisory com mittee made up of experts from the United States, Brazil, Canada, France, India and Britain which will lay the groundwork for a world conference in Geneva next August on President Eisenhower's atoms-for-peace plan. The General Assembly approved that plan, with out a dissent, at its last session. The United States has been con ferring secretly with Russia in an effort to get it to join in a world pool of atomic energy information and material for peaceful uses. The Americans also have been negotiat ing on the pool with western allies and have indicated they would go ahead with the idea whether Russia came in or not.

The Moscow offer was seen in the West as the Krem lin's effort to counter the effects of Eisenhower's widely hailed plan. There was no official comment in Washington, but-the general view there was that the offer should be taken with a grain of salt. South Africa Puts Restrictions Upon Carrier's Negroes CAPETOWN, South Africa tn An order circulated Friday said the 400 Negro crew members of the U.S. aircraft carrier Midway, due to anchor here Saturday, will be allowed to drink only in bars reserved for the class officially listed as Cape colored people. These are people of mixed blood, as distinguished from African Negroes.

The bars for the colored are called non-European bars, and Ne groes are not allowed in them. Each Negro sailor from the Midway will be entitled to a certificate exempting him from liq uor laws that ban sales of liquor Africans, the order said. The sailors must be in uniform, to get into the bars and they will be allowed to buy drinks only for consumption on the premises. The Midway will be here four days. piiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiB FOR RENT I ADDING 1 MACHINES 1 Your choice ef kaybaords HAND or ELECTRIC a of Costa Rican Troops Closing in On Rebel Base Near Nicaragua Chief, ouse Leave dent Jose Antonio Remon." The Assembly can remove Guizado either by accepting his resignation or by impeaching him.

The chief executive stepped up from the vice presidency and foreign ministry six hours after Remon was killed at the Juan Franco race track, four miles from the city. Five national guardsmen with steel helmets and machineguns surrounded Guizado's home. A source close to the investigation said the police guard had been ordered to "protect the president against any popular reaction." Saturnino Floret, deputy com mander of the guard, confirmed that Jose Ramon Guizado son of the president; Rudolf Saint Malo, a partner in the president's construction firm, and Euribiades Jimenez, member of a prominent Panamanian family, had been arrested. to send observers to "any place which might be utilized for transport of troops or military equip ment toward Costa Rica." The resolution also asked that the governments of the 21 American republics consider a date and a place for a meeting of the foreign ministers and secretaries of state of the hemisphere. The investigating commission reported that it has establishes that a large part of the "military ele ments" entering Costa Rica came from Nicaragua.

President Mora told reporters that United States and Ecuadorean planes are flying over northern Costa Rica on "peaceful observa tion missions." The Organization of American States held two secret meetings to try and decide what should be done about the situation. control of Guancaste Province in which La Cruz is situated and the city of Alajuela, on the Pan-American Highway only about 20 miles from San Jose. The rebels said they have prepared two airstrips in the northwest corner of the country and taken a large number of prisoners near La Cruz.) Col. J. Garcia of the Costa Rican general staff said the only military activity was in the La Cruz sector.

Garcia said it was difficult to establish contact with the rebels because, although President Jose Figueres' forces were moving up quickly, the rebels were scattering back even more rapidly. Luis Quintanilla of Mexico, the chairman of the five-nation investigation commission of OAS, and other members prepared to question prisoners brought into San Jose from Villa Quesada, where the outbreak started Tuesday. The San Bernardino Daily Sun Vol. LXI. Saturday.

Jan. 15. 1955. No. 118 Fourth and Streets Phone 2121 San Bernardino, California Published daily except Sunday, and Sunday in combination with The Sun-Telegram, covering all of San Bernardino County with its population of 361.800, San Bernardino City population 75.756.

The Sun Company of San Bernardino. California, publishers. Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice of San Bernardino. California, under the act ot March 3. 1879.

By mail at addresses within United States, (L75 per month. At newsstands single copies. 5 cent. By carrier 11.75 per month. 121 per year, in combination with The Sun-Telegram on Sunday.

Delivery complaint closing time 9 a.m. Member of The Associated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published here ElECTROLUX Rebuilt A Guaranteed by Comet Complete With ATTACHMENTS Free Paint Sprayer with Purchase PHONE 87-2110 FOR FREE HOME TRIAL mn STORK VACUUM CLEANERS ft SEWING MACHINES 245 EAST BASE LINE Open Monday 'til 9 PM. ill tf FULL I to 1 I I Eisenhower Calls on Nation San Diego 'Ham' To Get Edison Radio Award WASHINGTON ff Benjamin S. Hamilton of Las Mesa, Friday was chosen the outstanding amateur radio operator of the year and will receive the Edison Radio Award.

The award is given each year by the General Electric Co. to the "ham" radio operator performing the most outstanding public service. Hamilton, 35-year-old junior college electronics teacher, was chosen for providing San Diego County "an outstanding civil defense and disaster emergency radio network." 'American Spy' Shot by Russ MOSCOW mThe Soviet govern ment announced Friday night its border forces had shot dead one resisting "American spy" and had captured another after they had been parachuted into Soviet Es tonia last summer. The State Security Committee of the U.S.S.R. named the two men as Kalja Kukk and Hans Toomla, without further identification.

The captured man has been turned over to a military tribunal for trial. The committee said the two men fought in the German army dur ing World War II and then they escaped to Sweden from where they were taken to the United States to be trained as spies. It said one received his espio nage instruction at a town about 30 miles northwest of Washington, D.C., the name of which translates into English as Poolsville. (The Postal Guide lists a Poolesville, Md.) The other, the announcement said, was trained at a spy school about four miles outside Fairfax, also near Washington. It said they were sent from the United States to a spy school at town called Starenben, Germany (probably Starnberg, near Munich) where they learned sharpshooting, radio communications, writing with invisible ink, forging of documents and parachute jumping.

The committee said the men were flown from Munich to a point over Soviet Estonia where they were dropped into Soviet territory. Their mission was to collect in formation on Soyiet airfields and other military objectives, to select places on Estonian soil suitable for dropping other United States spies, to copy Soviet documents, and to recruit new agents for the U.S. intelligence. The committee said the men were instructed that when they had finished their task they should proceed northward through the Soviet Union and cross the frontier into Norway, where they would be met by a representative of U.S. intelligence.

Heads LA. Chamber LOS ANGELES Carl P. Miller, executive director of the Pacific Coast edition of the Wall Street Journal, is the new presi dent of the Los Angeles Chamber Commerce. Mr. Mrs.

Wise Shopper SEE this hdwd. bedrm. set, dbl. dresser, dust proof, beveled edge, plate glass mirror, tookcese head-board, footboard, 2 nite stands, box spring spring mattress, inner- 199 all for State tax 3 per cent $5.97 Total Including tax $204.97 Down payment $24.97 $180.00 Monthly payments $8.63 Other Excellent Values I TO 5 ROOM GROUP SPECIALS The Furniture Center "Store of Unusual Values" 98A E. Base Line at Tippeccnoe Open 9 to 9 Monday Hire Thursday 9 ta 4 Friday fi Saturday UNITED NATION, N.

Y. (UP) U. N. Secretary-General Dag Ham-marskjold said Friday that he had achieved his goal in his "free-the-prisoners" mission to Peiping by opening the door for negotiations with Red Chinese Premier En-lai. Hammarskjold told a news con ference that he considers his mission to Peiping "successful" in that he achieved what he set out to do: establish contact with the Red Chinese through which the release of the 11 Americans and all other U.N.

Command personnel still de- CIO Council Pushes $1.25 Minimum Pay LOS ANGELES The Califor nia CIO Council said Friday it is sponsoring state legislation which would establish a minimum wage of J1.25 an hour. "There are fcousands of workers in California earning less than this minimum amount," said John Des- pol, CIO legislative representative "The S1.25 minimum wage would not only raise the health and living standards of those workers af fected, but the added purchasing power would increase prosper ity and help stabilize employ ment." Firm to Hire Negroes WASHINGTON tfV-The Capital Transit Co. announced it is going to hire Negro bus and streetcar operators, beginning at once, adopting an employment policy without racial considerations. of 'Reprisal1 men returned safely to their homes. All Americans are united and dedicated to this cause.

Truth and right are on our side. "We must trust in the communi ty of nations and in the tremendous influence of world opinion." The President said that the im prisoned men are fighting men trained to discipline and Ameri cans now owe them "discipline from ourselves. Feetil Condition! Treated ay Maw, Modera Mathad. Patient Can Continue Workina. Na Shots.

Surgery ar Hospital Bill PI LOS Consultation Without Obligation Dr. R. W. Jones. D.C.

Ph.C. 989 Street Phone 3-3485 Nof: Walt Marcy I camldertd aur feramoat authority aa physical developmant. Ha operate! tha Rationally tamoua Walt Marcy chain of lyms tor.men and women. IMPORTANT HEALTH HABITS Do this for me this year. Cut your coffee down to three cups only per day.

Eat three pieces of fresh fruit daily. Drink one quart of milk every day. Smoke if you must but only to relax, five cigarettes a day. If you must drink, just one per day. Take a comprehensive vitamin supplement like our Dyn-A-Pak for at least 90 days In the year.

Exercise daily In a controlled manner or at least a half-hour three times a week. Get at least seven hours sleep every night. EXERCISE RELAXES Exercise helps relieve tensions. Constant tension keeps the body from functioning properly. Tension causes poor vision, tension keeps your stomach from digesting its food, tension stops your hair from growing, tension causes constipation.

Truly 1 can help you become more youthful, happier, give you a renewed abundance of energy andj release you of a lot of those worries Just by simply going through my special system of relaxing 'exercises three times a week. Treat yourself to a wonderful new year. Take that first step and come Into one of my gyms today, tomorrow at the lastest. SPECIAL OFFER Right now we are running a special Introductory offer to the first 50 pupils who start the new year right. We are actually offering two courses for the price of one.

Three-month, six-month and year courses. Id San Bernardino the Walt Marcy Gym is located at 443 Third Street. Hours are 12 till P. M. dally.

Courses are payable $10.00 per month. To Avoid Talk (Continued from Page One) United Nations personnel detained in Red China. "He believed," the President added, "that progress has been made and urges that restraint be exercised to permit of future efforts. "Quite naturally the immediate reaction of all Americans is that the secretary general's announcement is disappointing. All of us are rightly aroused that our airmen have not been long since released by their Communist captors in accordance with the clear terms of the Korean armistice.

"We must never forget one fundamental thing: We want our air Your Body Beautiful IS road loo iii Carpeting by BIGELOW MOHAWK AMI'S LEE GULEISTAN Modern, Traditional, Early American PRICED AS LOW AS SAN JOSE, Costa Rica Gov ernment troops were closing in rapidly Friday on La Cruz, a rebel base in northwest Costa Rica. But the Civil Guard com mand said no contact had been made and the rebels appeared to be fading back rapidly toward the Niearaguan border. While the troops sought to catch up with the group of about 300 rebels who seized La Cruz and nearby Puerto Soley Wednesday, U.S. Navy airmen, armed for defense, launched their first "peace observation" flights over Costa Rica. The initial flight was in the La Cruz area.

(The rebel radio, in a broadcast heard In San Salvador, claimed just Arrived I Turns for easy viewing anywhere in the room. 21-in. Aiu-minized picture tube, Finger Tio Tuning, power engineered with new Golden Grid Tuner. OhSer Philco 21" TV in low (f(0)95 ViJ phi ico 4006 SAN BERNARDINO'S OLDEST ft LARGEST EXCLUSIVE PHILCO DEALER AMOS DEE'S 1223 W. BASE LINE PHONE 7-4258 by Walt Marcy START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT Each year at this time we make resolutions to better ourselves.

Whether it be in a physical, mental, financial or moral sense, we like to tie these resolutions to the birth ot a new year. To do anything always requires a first step, a first initial breaking away from our day in and day out habits of thinking, living and acting. DAILY HABITS KEY TO IMPROVEMENTS The physical body In which you have lived these past years has been abused day after day year in and year out. Let's list a few abuses: First and foremost. Mental Tension, caused by money worries, domestic quarrels, business troubles, fears, antagonisms and hatreds.

We are becoming a nation of neurotics, as proven by' the tremendous increase in the number of mental institutions and mental doctors. We must learn to relax. One way of letting off steam is by using the large muscle groups of the body In special regular physical exercises. POOR EATING HABITS The second greatest abuse of your body are your Incorrect eating habits. You do not eat enough fresh fruits and vegetables.

You do eat too much pies, cakes, breads, candies and processed devitalized foods. You do eat too much variety of foods at any one meal. You do eat an excess of starchy foods. You do not drink enough milk daily. Other abuses are terrific eye (train, inhalation of smog, too little sleep: too often, too little exercise, too much coffee, too much smoking.

All of these and many other abuses are causing your speedy FOR ANY ROOM IN YOUR HOME CALL US FOR A FREE ESTIMATE 2 FULL YEARS TO PAY WE CARRY OUR OWN CONTRACTS LOTS OF FREE PARKING SPACE VAN NESS 470 4th Ph. 2161 1 "Op Monday Nights" imiimmimmiiiimimiimiiiiimiiiiimiimiiiijiiH 440 SO. "The Drive-In Store' E. ST. SANDEFUR A.

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About The San Bernardino County Sun Archive

Pages Available:
1,350,050
Years Available:
1894-1998