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€ ¢ only donated his services bui had |NEW CASUALTY LIST actually sold number of tickets} wasHINGTON i—The Defense to this exhibition which was to be ; Department today identified 76, held at Wickers Stadium on April! Korean War casualties. (Lists Nan THE KEY WEST CITIZEN | West Baseball to that of other cities. Davis said that the Little Baseball Leagues were primarily responsible-. for teaching the Monday, April 6, 1953 Page 7 Key Clubbers, C. B. Harvey, Jr. and Joseph Smither were also guests of Kiwanis. Finance committee members Naturalist To High School Appear In Key West Tuesday ¢ Featured In Final Audubon Society Sereen Tour At K.W. High School Dr. Fran William Hall, photo- grapher, naturalist and scientist, will appear as the final number of this season’s Audubon Screen Tours, Key West High School Audi- torium, Tuesday evening at eight o'clock. Dr. Hall, Director of the De- partment of Photography, Carle- ton College, Northfield, Minnesota is presented for the first time to Key West audiences by the Mon- roe County Audubon Society. His color motion picutre and lecture “The Four Corners,” takes his audiences to the unusual wilder- ness in the area where the states of Colorado, Arizona, New Mexi- co and Utah come together. Included in the film are scenes of the Great Sand Dunes Monu- ment; the San Juan and LaPlata DR, FRAN WILLIAM HALL Mountains; Canyon de Chelly, the Arches, Natural Bridges and Cha- co National Monuments. The wild- life inhabitants of this little known area are filmed in unposed color sequences and offer much of in- terest to the public. At two o'clock on Tuesday after- noon in Truman. School Auditor- ium, Dr, Hall’ will present his fascinating film called ‘‘Monstors in Miniature,” which depicts the doings of the tiny cBeatures of the insect world; photographed in color and “blown-up” until they fill the entire motion picture screen, School children are reminded that this Matinee Screen Tour will be held on the date scheduled even though school is-out-for the Eas- ter holidays,;and all the children who have; heen attending the Screen Tours;,and their friends are urgedyto attend at two: o'clock on Tuesday. afternoon. WAIT FOR: PROPOSED CHANGE FOR HEARINGS WASHINGTON (#—Sen, Watkins (R-Utah) ‘says’ he is waiting for the Eisenhower administration to propose changes in the McCarran- Walter Immigration Act before he * holds hearings on it. The measure ‘was passed last} year over former President Tru- man’s veto. President Eisenhower has said the law is discriminatory and needs changing. Watkins‘is chairman of a Senate- House committee keepirig tabs on the act. OFFERS SOLUTION — Red China Premier Chou En-Lai (above) proposes that both sides in the Korean conflict re- turn these war prisoners who insist on going home and hand ever the others to a. neutral state “to insure a just solution te the question of their re- patriation.” His compromise otter te the knetty prebiem of repetriationeie thé first bregk im the Reds* cpretmiaiy-on- yielding ‘demends that a! pris eners be returned.— (4 Wire- photo. POWs Are Pawns Today In \Coach What Appears To Be New Kremlin-Directed Peace Move Cervix Cancer Does Not Need To Be Fatal (Editor’s Note: This is the last of a series of articles prepared by medical experts for The Asso- ciated Press in co-operation with the American Cancer Society as an educational service during April, cancer control month. To- day’s writer is Dr. Charlies S$. Cameron, medical and scientific director of the American Cancer Society, N. Y.) by CHARLES S, CAMERON, M. D. One does not have to die of cancer of the cervix. Almost all its deaths could be eliminated if all women over 35 would report at regular intervals for expert medic#l examination. Yet about: 14,000 women do die each year from this most common cancer of female reproductive or- gans. Fewer than one-third of all tases are now permanently cured. Why? Because the cancer was dis- covered too late. But it could hav been detected much earlier. New microscopic tests make pos- sible detection of cancer of the cervix in its earliest stages—some- times 5 to 10 ‘years before the first ‘clinical symptoms appear. Per- manent cure may be expected in virtually all cases detected in this early microscopic stage, long be- thing is wrong. Early detection of cancer of the cervix was made easy by develop-- ment of the vaginal smear test, known as the Papanicolaou test. Cells are constantly shed from from internal surface tissues, Ma- lignant cells are shed in the secre- tions just as normal cells are, Sus- pected cells can be detected by expert microseopic study. When a group of apparently healthy women are tested, about one out of 300 are found to have changes in the cell structure that suggest cancer. Laboratory exam- ination of sample tissues will show whether cancer actually exists in an early stage. This is the time to find it—the time when it is most easily cured. It can be too late when a woman goes to her physician because she {has discovered warning. signs: Unusual vaginal bleeding between periods or irregular. prolonged or heavy periods. Bleeding which occurs after the menopause also calls for immediate medical exam- ination. But even in the more advanced cases, the cure rate is rising as the result of improved methods of surgery and’.radiation. One clinic recently reported that 50 per cent of all patients, early and, late, applying for therapy were alive at the end of a five-year period, Promising new methods of treat- ment are in the process of devel- opment: eerie ol X-ray ma- chines, powerful radioactive cobalt packs (a by-product of the atomic bomb) and -radioactive gold. Just as “in time” is important | Ploited to successful care of cancer of the cervix, it is important to success- ‘ful treatment of other cancers of the reproductive organs. A physician usually can detect symptoms before they become apparent to the patient. Neglect ean be the difference between cure and death, Local Air Force Man Ends Course Phillip Camus, 17, son of. Mr. and Mrs. Camus, 51S. W. lth St., Miami, Fla. is completing his AF basic airmen indoctrination course at Lackland Air Force Base, the “Gateway to the Air San | is the world’s largest air force base, site of Air Force basic training, for men and women, headquarters of the Hu- course includes a scientific eval- {uation of his aptitude and incli- | nation for following a particuler | vocation and career, EDEN CANCELS TRIP LONDON #—Foreign Anthony Eden, fl with a bdiadder condition, hay his scheduled departure Southern Europe and the aod is expected to undergo an eration within the oext three or four Gays. H nie He & £ The average person ic Ireland , eats about 23.500 calories a day compared with an average of about 3,200 in the United States. By DON WHITEHEAD ° WASHINGTON — More than 145,000 prisoners in the Korean War—3,198 of them Americans— were the pawns today in what ap- peared to be a giant new peace of- fensive directed from the Kremlin. It isn’t particularly surprising in the light of past events. Early in me Korean War, the Chinese Communists disclosed they placed a high political and propa- ganda value on their Allied pris- oners, It remains to be seen whether the Reds will try again—at the truce talks which resumed today at Panmunjom—to exploit the cap- tives they hold. The first indication of their atti- tude came in November, 1950, shortly after the Chinese entered the war to support the North Ko- rean Army shattered by the United Nations forces of Gen. Douglas MacArthur. The North Koreans had used their prisoners cruelly. Americans who fell into their hands generally were treated brutally, The old rules for humane treatment of prisoners were ignored. Many Americans were massacred. There was nothing phony about those acre reports out of Ko- rea. I saw massacre victims my- self near the little town of sunchon in North Korea. Survivors who crawled out of the hills told us the story of what had happened. A prisoner-of-war ‘train stopped in a lonely tunnel at dusk ... Red guards told the Americans they were to be given food pris- fore the patient is aware some- s because I wanted to get home.” Many American prisoners may have given the Chinese the impres- sion they were sympathetic to Communist indoctrination, while mentally saying, ‘Nuts to you.” The Reds have said they are holding 3,198 American prisoners of war, 1,000 other nationals, and 9,000 South Koreans. The U. N. coast of Korea. The most fanatical were among 6,000 kept in one com- alate stables the pew = mirring up Dloty rigs at Koj. The truce talks broke down over the Red insistence on forced ze- patriation of all prisoners—regard- less of whether they wanted to re- turn home or not. The Allies would not agree to this. They said to return prisoners pea Lingala md them back to certain death. Now Red China's Premier Chou Enlai suddenly has offered to ne- gotiate the U. N. proposal to ex- change ailing prisoners, Conceiva- WASHINGTON w—Easter egg. followed by small children and course House lawn today in 12 years. multitude—it was more than time—has s 5 sri ee tH i? z * ae i j | Riseahower. | Presidest god Mr. the first lady's mother, air | oS. Dowd. te Egeter service at the Nationa! Presbyteriss Cdarch Speaks | To Kiwanians younger--boys the ftindamentals of baseball so-that when they reach- ed high school age there was little forthe coach to do but to direct the strategy of play. Coach Davis called attention to Gleason Snow and Norton Harris reported on the Jackie Price show which Kiwanis is sponsoring for Junior League Baseball. Harris said that Jackie Price had not 2 1858. peak of World War I. 784). Of the total 25 are di wounded, 2 missing in a Li gRn anurans vee SUBSCRIBE To THE ciTie The regular dinner meeting of| the fact that the Key West High the Key West Kiwanis Club was} School Baseball Team has been held on Tuesday, March 312, 1953, | in the District or State Finals dur- president Glynn Archer presiding: | ing the past three years and he J.| predicted that with good breaks, might Key West High /State Championship. Out-of-tow guests included: Guest speaker was Paul Davis, Coach of the School. Coach Davis gave an ex- cellent address in which he Point- | Struble, Hamilton, Ohio; ed out the superiority of Key | C., Walls, Ft, Lauderdale, Florida. “Wheat eons , ROUND TRIPS 4 NATIONAL Instructor and Baseball) Key West ep DAILY! MIAPRA! 47 MIN. NON-STOP Loethigeen “DIAL 2 Airlines @ They’re here! Over 190 com- pletely new Ford Truck models, in a tremendously expanded line! Ranging from Pickups to 55,000-Ib. G.C.W. Bic Joss! 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