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administration's clean-up the gov- ernment program will be run: by F i 5. z it, Hl i ‘| ee ee & ad il sie ft § A i i FH (ee i il & 1 if i i EE i i i z 3 Fest ‘ rit : f i i at. ule ih E z ie 5 dd 3 E BF s i (Continued From Page One) citor Allan B. Cleare, Jr., that the woman would be subpoened Can-|for appearance at next Friday’s cer Sotiety has awarded 1,217 /guilty-plea session. grants to scientists to investi-| Clyde Martin Davis was fined gate te cause of cancer and to/five dollars for passing a school findewmeans of . controlling the}bus; Troy Lanier Baker was fin- disease, ed costs for reckless driving and Under Happy Irish Eyes Af 8 ? ui 53 Eg g FE & Fs ER O) One) se doctors pollen. induced ition to. repeating the program this ‘year, dis- Sai eee proclaiming est as a wen for hay. fever Victims will : of, Commerce 000: for sum- year,” said ~with some be a dl u ! E Fi : é i ee lit! 1. Had hydrant rentals reduced from. $7,800 to $3,900. 2, Received verbal notice that an old Aqueduct Commission bill of $12,000 for unpaid services would be cancelled upon signing of tbe new lease nt, $. Retained a price of 40¢ per unit for water used, while all other customers now: pay ‘$1. sentence deferred on a charge of no directional lights. Olin Ray Shoan was fined, five dollars for improper parking on a bridge. , (Continued From Page One) to legal authorities, the young- “t didn’t: want. Dad ‘implicated. business.” Tt would hurt_ his Ee ‘Said. It wasn’t funny to him, how- ever. He became frightened, he said, and asked the Carmichaels ed let him off at the Overseas le. A “It seemed as if something was going to happen, so I took down their license number,” the blonde young sailor testified. When asked by State Attorney | Lancelot Lester; what. that. num- .| ber was, he “reeled it off from one made ay. He had made one in the Earlier’ Kenneth — Sandberg, ‘Boca Chica sailor, testified that memory. Lester thereupon cor- roborated it with ‘the. registra- tion of the Carmichael’s. Stude- baker which had also been identi- fied as the car. Representing the accused Car- michaels are William Albury and Enrique Esquinaldo, Jr. State Attorney Lester who con- ducted the investigation of ‘the alleged murder before the Grand Jury, questioned for the State the 10 witnesses who appeared today, He stressed throughout that the attorneys. had to prove that ty the: presumption is not great that the father and son were guilty. :|Today’s DOROTHY LYSLE, Western Union operator, enjoys time -off from ardous duties while Key West office is tion-wide strike. PLANE FALLS IN (Continued From Page One) closed. due to na-~ " house shake and then there was an explosion. I heard p people shout- ing orders, ‘Get out of the houses! Get out of the houses!’ I ran.” Fred A. Woop, a metalworker who was standing on the street, said, “I saw the plane come dewn and it looked as if the wings folded downward ‘just before it hit a house. Then there was a big flash.” A truck, standing near a park- ing lot, blew up when part of the plane hit ft. Burning gasoline was spattered over streets and build- ings. One witness said he counted 420 cars wrecked . Sound cf the crash was heard a mile and a half away. Shortly after the crash at 8:25 a.m, EST, the Port of New York Authority Operations Department ordered the International Airport closed for a half hour. Jack Harris, an Associated Press photographer, said he was in a bus a block from the crash. “It didn’t sound as if the plane was having motor trouble,” he said. “He gunned the motors, ap- parently trying to gain altitude, just before he hit.” Mrs, Theodcra Devlin, who lives across the street from one of the flaming houses, said: “I was in bed. I heard this ter- rifie roar, then the crash. I ran to the window and saw a mass of flames. A man who runs a park- gin lot and two beys were helping one another out through a window of the burning house. There was a deathly silence right after the plane hit.” Mrs, Richard Diamond, who oc- cupies an apartment in the same building as Mrs. Devlin, said: “I knew it was a plane as soon as I heard the terrible crash, I ran down and called for firemen and police. There was an explosion three seconds after the crash—one large and then two or three after that. It seemed as if the whole block was in flames.” One resident said the stricken area was directly under a regular aircraft approach course to Inter- national Airport. The plane was carrying pounds of miscellaneous cargo, U. S. Airlines said. It left Fort Lauderdale at 1:07 a.m., and had stopped at Charleston, S. C., for gas. | The airline identified the cap- jtain-as William B. Crockett Jr., 26, of (1241 Southwest 29th St.) Fort Lauderdale, and the co-pilot as Jack L. Woederhoff, of (1821 Sev- enth St.) Fort Luaderdale. They apparently were killed. No [others were believed aboard Fire Chief Peter Loftus said his 13,000 ‘“Demp’s (Lt. Van ter) news was ever: so ever to all-of you, love, Ji “There is little I can letter. My boy .was fully and was on an me i ip assignment he longed for. He was a skillful lot—an excellent. marksmai entirely resourceful. “I have been on many with Jim, including ‘big game ‘ex: Ppeditions in Africa. He always.got his share and. more, When-he dis- appeared on 4 April, he was on his biggest for keeps. Due: to bed weather, the first three hours were ; against him and he elected te con* tinue the search elsewhere. Know- ing him, I am convinced he. was. determined no to come back empty-handed, “I express my greatest apprecia- tion for the extensive search which the Air Force, as usual, has con- ducted for downed crews: Natural- ly it is a severe shock to-me and his mother, his young family, and his sisters. We gather strength .in this trying hour, knowing that Jim was on a mission of righteousness, and that Almighty God is with us throughout. We have unbounded hope for his safety and final Te- | turn to our side. Personally, I ex- E ay RAILROAD TICKET © OFFICE AGENTS ALL SCHEDULED AIRLINES HAVANA-NASSAU HAVANA Oppesite Greyhound Bus Station 510 SOUTHARD STREET PHONE 298 | | | | e@ department had been training its | | men for such a disaster, ever since | the Elizabeth crashes “We've been secretly drilling | |them,” he said. i Wirephoto SIX-YEAR-OLD CLARE ROBERTSON holds her new brother, Josiah, while three other Robert- son children gather around to admire the newcomer to the family in their home in Kansas City Mo. went to Europe to adopt a single child but came h tba Grst ¢ was bor bw 1 igt t, the boys are The four older children--all Irish—were adopted three years ago by the Robertsons, who me with four from a Doblin orphanage. Josiah Michael, 5, Charley | | FIFTEEN ARE KILLED | (Continued From Page One) |The heart of Mobile's downtown {business section lies scarcely a | mile to the south | Both planes were, based at | Brookiey Air Force Base here. The C-124, which can carry 200 fully equipped troops, was re |ported to ; Might. The C47 was reported in- {bound to Brockley from Maxwell Air Force Base. Montgomery What caused the collision was jmot immediately determined. The night was dark but there was ao rain or fog Maj James C. Caldwell, provost marshal at Brookley, said identifi jeation of the dead would be a lengthy process. Names will be released until next of kin are noufied The only bedy thus far found was lying about 200 yards away) the wreckage of the C47 in avy swampland surrounding the city dump have been on a local j not | TO ALL CANDIDATES ‘Sample Ballots Te cacu 2c EACH NOW AVAILABLE At The ARTMAN PRESS CITIZEN BLDG. OvER 206 UNDER 5m Stock Market NEW YORK # — Ev ve around in the pepivcaa lay and did virtually ing. Prices moved over oe covered by a major fraction either way.. Many leaders and many more didn’t even trade at all. The volume of business was esti- mated at 500,000 shares. A week ago the volume was 730,000 shares. The approaching steel strike was the cause of the doldrums. The steel issues themselves moved narrowly, holding to the upside part of the time. Lower today were Republic Steel, U. S. Rubber, Montgomery Ward, Phileo, Kennecott Copper, Standard Oil (N. J.) and United Air Lines. Higher were Bethlehem Steel, Douglas Aircraft, Homestake Min- ing, Dome Mines, Dow Chemical, American Tobacco, Southern Pa- cifie and Sinclair Oil. Curb stocks were narrowly mixed with a few igsues heavily traded. Higher were Kirkland Lake Gold Mining, Ogden Corp., Wright- Hargreaves, Barium Steel, Creole Petroleum and Great Lakes Oil. Lower were National Phoenix, Pa- cific Petroleums, Calvan Consoli- dated Oil, Canada Southern Oils, Eureka Ltd. and Investors Royal- Corporate bonds were mixed. LAD DESIGNS 123 DUVAL STREET Call 1042 For Estimates COOL - COMFORTABLE - PRACTICAL | Come in and See Our New Creations for Spring YOUR EASTER SHOES See Our Large Displey for Every Member of the Family CHAS. ARONOVIT DEPARTMENT STORE KEY WEST'S LARGEST STORE