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Stowaway Killed | In Plane Crash | SEATTLE, April 24 —A stow- away who may never have known the plane was in trouble—and for whom there was no parachute if he had known——rode a giant dis abled plane to his death yesterda: after 10 regular crew member: had parachuted to safety. * The victim of the unexplainec tragedy was Roger Rondeau, 24. & preflight mechanic for the Boe ing Airplane Company. He war killed when a four-engine KC9: plowed into logged off land 70 mile: southwest of here and 40 mile: from where its crew had aban doned it over the Fort Lewis Mil itary Reservation. The big plane was on a tes’ flight before being turned over t: the Air Force as a military a‘: freighter. A few minutes after leav ing Boeing Field here, one of th plane’s engines exploded. The pieces knocked away ° large section of the tail surfac making the craft virtually unma: ageable. The pilot, Capt. Charlc Cresswell, nursed the plane fro: $00 feet up to 5,000 feet then bk ordered the other aine men aboar to jump. He followed after settin the plane’s automatic pilot. Cresswell said no cne knew Ror deau was aboard and “I don know what we would have don if we had known about him then. Every authorized crew member and passenger has to have a para- chute. There was no other chute aboard...” Rondeau’s mutilated body was found in the lower tail section, where he is bélieved to have stowed away on his ill-fated ride. Boeing officials said they could not understand why he was aboard the plane. Leave For USSR MOSCOW W—A Soviet trade un- fon delegation left for Peiping to- day to attend the Chinese Commu- nist ‘celebration of May Day and the seventh Chinese Congress of Trade Unions. LIBERAL ALLOWANCE ‘Nes. $824,309 and 2,459,178 NO DEFROSTING TO DO...EVER ced eouree, it's olecttie! GLAD JIDINGS TABERNAC le ie ho ee A, LE SUNDAY SCHOOL on Easter Sunday morning. The number totaled 185. Rev. D, T. Newman, who with his wife, may be seen at the extreme right of the fodMh row. Mr. Newman is pastor of Glad Tidings Tabernacle. The Tabernacle is in the background. It is located at 801 Georgia Street. JOHN L. LEWIS ASKS CONGRESS TO STRIKE ALL LABOR LAWS FROM BOOKS; GIVES REASON Declares His Strikes Never Endangered United States By ROWLAND EVANS JR. WASHINGTON (#—John L. Lew- is asked Congress today to strike from the law books. “lock, stock and barrel” all labor laws passed in the last 21 years. The burly mine workers chief, in a prepared statement, told the Senate Labor. Committee: “This proposal is seriously made. The ever rising tidé of industrial strife in recent years and the re- peated governmental interferences ... under existing law and the bit- terness engendered thereby in all segments of our population justify the Congress in stripping the sta- tute books of both the Wagner and Taft-Hartley Acts.” That would leave two basic laws dealing with organized labor—the 1982 Morris-Laguardia Act and the 1914 Clayton Act. The Taft-Hartley Law, passed in 1947 to supersede (he 1935 Wagner Act is now up for possible revision before the Senate and House Labor Committees. Most of organized la- bor favored the Wagner Act and wanted it kept on the books. No matter how amendcec, Lewis said, Taft-Hartley Act will re- main “a thorn and a spear in the _ of American labor.” He ad- led: “A liberal application of cologne or a generous sprinkling of ‘Chanel No. 5’ cannot and will not deodorize an otherwise odorous creature...” The law, Lewis said, a specie Forms designed to save time, priced to save you of fraud on not only labor unions but upon the country at large.” The Norris-LaGuardia Act lim- ited the use of injunctions—court orders which forbid certain types of conduct—in work disputes. The Clayton Anti-Trust Act attempted to’exempt labor unions from pros- ecution by declaring that labor is “not a commodity.” Lewis’ union has been the target three times of the Taft-Hartley Act’s 80-day, no-strike provision dispute. “It can be categorically stated,” he said, “that in each year when strikes ‘have occurred the coal production was greater than in the years in which there were no strikes.” He said this “negates completely the hue and cry of national emer- gencies” and added that the nation “has never suffered irreparable injury from deprivation of coal.” Lewis said the present law's “fundamental evils” cannot be cured by amendment. HOW THE CANCER (Continued from Page Qne) said. This does not inciude the Patients suspected of cancer, who were diagnosed at St. Fran- cis as not having the malignant Gisease. There were at least eight of this latter class of pa- tients, she said. All this takes money, and the l only way that money for the Can- leer Society’s worthwhile efforts } butions, Mrs. Daniels said. “Your pennies, nickles, dimes and dollars pay for the treatment of thesé medically indigent pa-/ said yesterday that, from here on, | tients, those who cannot afford| he is looking to Europe to set the | private surgery, x-rays, and even | examination.” | Referral of medically indigent } County cancer patients to the St | Francis Clinic began when the | clinic opened April 1, | ation between the Society and Dr. | Herman Boughton, director of the | Clinie began even earlier in Feb- | Tuary 1951. |. Result, the present happy ar- rangement whereby Dr. Bough- | ton’s clinic at St. Francis receives | Monroe County patients, and also for use if a national emergency | Cabinet Ministers Spend On Defense Deciding What To By HARVEY HUDSON PARIS (®—Cabinet ministers of the 14 Atlantic treaty nations buck- led down today to the central pur- pose of their curzent NATO coun- cil meeting—deciding what to spend this year on the Western world's defenses, Moving into the second round of their current thréexlay. ‘session here, the foreign, defense and fi- nance ministers must.agree how much ‘they can !ay out without weakening gational economies. But one big item of uncertainty persists—how large America’s for- eign aid appropriation will be. Several European countries can- not decide how much they will spend themselves until they know exactly how much American help they can count on. Despite this, the ministers today studied a big volume of figures view.” It sets forth each nation’s economic. capabilities and willing- ness to pay ‘for arms. Officials who have been poring Jover these figures-for months say ;European rations wil pay out for NATO defenses. | The U. S. outlay for foreign aid, | | delivery of material and mainten- | can be made is by public contri-| ance of land, sea end air forces | }in and around Europe is expected to at least match this sum. U. S. Secretary of State Dulles | pace in rearming | “They can appreciate the peril e,” he said. firm in pointing out, U. S. expects better than w |. Dulles was however, that the army treaty to get German troops into uniform, He warned that the American Congress would be reluc tant to approve sny large appro \priation for NATO without assur- ances tWat progress was being |made on the treaty. The ministers agreed yesterday known as the NATO “annual re-} about 12 billion dollars this year} a 2 Watch Out For ‘Red Hair--Dentist LOS ANGELES —Beware of red hair, a Dallas dentist warns} his colleagues. Dr. Phillip E. Williams told a State Dental Association meeting yesterday that red-haired patients are the most, difficult, because: “Red heads, male or female, always feel pain, wheher it is present or not. Tacy have emotion- al complications others don’t have. Neither blondes nor brunettes present the same problem.” { When, in 1905, the Cullinan dia- mond was found in a South Afri- can mine it was the largest dia- ‘mond ever found, Bill’s Licensed PAWN SHOP 716 DUVAL ST. KEY i | 1951, Cooper- | Prompt action on the European | THE KEY WEST CITIZEN | 18 MONTHS Friday, April 24, 1953 | = | Cicadas do no harm in feeding | on plant juices, but when the fe- males gash twigs in laying eggs, | the twigs often die. 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ADMITTED FREE Mat. 2 & 4:06 Night 6:12. & 8:18 AIR CONDITIONED STRAND Mat. 3:38 Night 6:36 & 8:30 AIR COOLED 20th Century Fox — Presents — there could be no slackening of | I NATO efforts on the basis of} Russian peace gestures thus far. | The council went on to other) political questions today. Under this heading they were expected | to take up a progress report on the proposed European army wT posal and a Teport by Greece an: ceca or Bosc a Pa Turkey on their new defense Ganiele weld. "There's pid agreement with Yugoslavia j | enough money in the World OS | pay not fer only the skilled | receives a grant from the Society. |The Woman's Auxiliary of St. | Francis, headed by Mrs. Herman Boughton, raises $4,000 a year for expenses at the clinic, including purchase of equipment and sup- The right forms can streamline your oper- ations. Why not get suggestions and pric- plies. “W's wonderful the way the es? Both make sense! *. ) bespitel.“ Cancer funds are desperately needed to continue this work, Mrs. Free Dance Sat. ‘Daniels said. She urged the public to contribute as ‘uch as possible. “Cancer strikes one in five. The young as well as the aged. Strike beck!” Night FLEET RESERVE ASSN. HOME Careline Street Music By... THE TUNE TOPPERS eaqaumu7wordoa MA WCHAM<om $495 FREE HOME SERVICE Our representotre will cel te show sem. ples Ond to take memserementy of peer table. Tou ore ender se cbligation. Thx service ie trae — nll toder’ Key West Venetian Blind Co. 133 OVVAL STREET Lou's Radio | " J : Cartoon Bex Office Opens 1:45 Pm. CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE Phone 2.3419 For Time Schedule REPORT DEATH OF SOVIET DIRECTOR MOSCOW #-The Soviet today reported whe death of Valentine Vologdin, director |Research Institute on the j trial application of high frequency | electrical currents i SUBSCRIBE TO THE CITIZEN DIAL 2.5661 LOUIS CARBONELL THE OWNER Phare 2738 Ariman Press press Prof of the 42 DuvaL ST. inte