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U.N. Council Asked To Act In Saturday Plane Shooting. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. ia — The United States put its latest cold war brush with Russia before the United Nations today. U.S. Delegate Henry Cabct Lodge dr. asked for an “early meeting” of the Security Council to take up the shooting down of a U.S. Navy Plane off Siberia Saturday by So- viet jet fighters, Lodge returned unexpectedly to New York from a holiday at his Beverly, Mass., home to make the surprise move. He telephoned his request for the council meeting last night to Francisco Urrutia of Columbia, the 11-nation group's President for September. Aides on the U,S. delegation said he would follow up with a formal Tequest by letter today. Nine Rescued Nine of the 10 U.S. crewmen aboard the two-engine Neptune pa- trol bomber were rescued unharm- ed after drifting all night on a raft. One man, Ens. Roger Henry Reid POOR OLD CRAIG SERVICE DIAL 2.3183 Your PURE OIL Dealer Tires .. Tubes . . Batteries ACCESSORIES of Alameda, Calif, apparently went down with the plane. The survivors said they were on a routine patrol mission welloff the Siberian coast when two MIG15 jets opened fire on them without warning, With one “wing on fire, the plane crashed and sank in the sea. The United States protested the attack as “wanton and unpro- yoked” in a strongly worded note to Russia. Before its delivery, however, the Soviet Foreign Office’ had handed U.S. Ambassador Charles E. Boh- len a protest charging that the U.S. plane had flown within the Soviet frontiers and opened fire on two Soviet fighters which approach- ed it, The Russian note said the Red pilots “were forced to open |fire in return.” {is Not “Urgent” Because Lodge asked for an “early” meeting rather than an |“urgent” session, it eas expected jthat Urrutia would not call the j council to meet before.next week. {A request for an urgentsmeeting | j usually means a session the next/ j day. However, the United States ap-| peared to be seeking time to com-| plete its case against the Russians, | but still anxious to beat the So-| viets in the initial punch should | jthe Kremlin also decide to take | the incident to the U.N. Revised accounts of the Soviet | j attack, released in Washington yes- | terday, indicated that the Ameri- WEDNESDAY ONLY - All Spanish . Fox News Box Office Open: 1: MISTRAL \American Aviation, | Chrysler, American Telephone, At- jlas Corp., 20th Century-Fox, and can investigation was still in prog- ress. Red Note Rejected’ In a second note ‘rejecting the Russian protest completely, the State Department had said, “At no time did the United States Navy aireraft open fire on the Soviet air- craft,” Brought back to Atsugi, Japan, the survivors said their guns were not loaded, but Ord- nance Man Ernest Louis Pinkevich of Alameda said he was able to load one gun and fire about 150 rounds “mostly in hope of scaring them off.” 2 The Navy Department also re- vised the position of the attack previously announced by the State Department but said it still was well away from Russian territory. The first U.S. note had said the attack took place approximately 100 miles east of Vladivostok and 44 miles from the Siberian coast, A Navy spokesman said yesterday a plotting of bearings reported by jthe survivors indicated the plane crashed into the sea about 125 miles southeast of Vladivostok and 44 miles off Siberia. _ TODAY'S STOCK MARKET NEW YORK (#—Aircrafts were strong and active today in the stock market in early dealings, but jthe remainder of the market was rather mixed, Gains of between 1 and 2 points in the airerafts were frequent. Else- where, gains and losses spread out over a range of around a point. General Dynamics opened on a block of 1,500 shares up a point |. st 7 and soon stretched its ad- vantage to 2 points. Douglas opened up a point at 82% and then moved up between 2 and 3 points. Among higher stocks were Amer- ican Cable & Radio, Boeing, North U.S. Steel, Jorge il VALLE Cartoon 345 - $:00 P.M. Daily | 3:45 - 9 P.M. WEDNESDAYS CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE @gp- TELEPHONE 2-419 FOR TIME SCHEDULE —gge San Carlos Theatre ir-Conditioned TONIT | Montgomery Ward. Lower were. General Radio Co. Homestake Mining, Dow Chemical, American Woolen, Union Pacific, and Southern Pa- Suspense Drama On At Islander Parelléling in many dramatic Motors, the attention of millions of Ameri- cams not long ago, “The Hitch- Hiker” comes to the Islander Thea- ver tonight heralded as one of the | season’s outstanding suspense films. Directed by Ida Lupino, Hollywood's foremost woman di- rector, and boasting a superlative acting cast topped by Edmond O’Brien, Frank Lovejoy and Wil- jliam Talman, this Filmakers Pro- WEDNESDAY. THURSDAY 2 SHOWS NIGHTLY — 7 and 9 P.M. IN PERSON! Stars of Radio — Coast to Coast GRAND OLE OPRY FROM NASHVILLE, TENN. ” BETCHA’ “BACK UP BUDDY” AND Hi RECORD HITS. — “SATISFACTION GUARAN. ‘OLD MOTHER NATURE” — 'Y HEART | LOVE You” — 18 OTHER GREAT COLUMBIA +X GRANDA JONES OTHE HITS! << TUNESMITHS “MOUNTAIN DEW” — “OLD RATTLER” and R KING AND RCA VICTOR RECORD Sensational Recording Band *Singers *Dancers *Comedians LOW ADMISSION ALL SEATS Tax Incl, TICKETS ON SALE 5 P. AT THE AUDITORIUM Don’t Miss The Stage Show ‘Of The Year CONVENT AUDITORIUM *door action. j i tions officer. ‘duction for RKO Radio combines strongly emotional drama with out- “The Hitch-Hiker” depicts the nightmarish adventure experienc- ed by two peace-loving citizens who suddenly find themselves seized as hostages by a gun-crazy hitch-hik- er as he attempts to escape from the law in a mad dash across Mexico. Their attempts to effect bis capture while still at the mercy of his gun before reaching his des- tination and their certain death is said to provide real edge-of-the- seat entertainment. USS PENGUIN IS \BACK IN PORT Returning from an extended op- erational tour, the submarine res- cue vessel Penguin returned here Saturday morning. Upon her arrival at pief 1 on the Naval Station, the captain, Lt. Comdr. E. Mikich and crew were greeted by Capt. Wil- |lard R. Laughon, commander Sub- | marine Squadron 12 and Comdr. G. W. Forbes, Jr., SubRon 12 opera- | Penguin | By DON HUTH MANILA #—Two more articles of a proposed Southeast Asia sec::- rity treaty were approved in secret negotiations here today, and a re- liable source said foreign ministers of eight nations may have a Pact ready for signing by Wednesday. One more article was provision- ally approved today, the source said, The biggest controversy still to be ironed out involves military commitments to be made by the United States, Britain, France, Australia, New Zealand, Thailand, Pakistan and the Philippines. Thailand and the Philippines were reported holding out for an NATO-type agreement under which all members would come instantly to the defense of any member at- tacked. The United States is arguing f a pact under which each membe: would react to an attack on an- other within its own constitutional framework. Delegates today adopted an ar- ticle stating that nations “by means of continuous and effective self-help and mutual aid will main- tain and develop their individual and collective capacity to resist armed attack and to prevent and overcome -subversive activity di- rected from without against their territorial integrity and political stability.” The informed source said ap- proval came after Thailand aban- doned demands to include subver- sive activity within a nation as well as outsie its borders. The delégates also reportedly agreed to accept general terms in which the economic. clause of the proposed draft treaty was written. It provides for cooperation ‘‘with each other in development of eco- nomic measures designed to pro. mote economic stability and social well-being.” Reds Are Enraged By Success Of U.S. Press Activity WASHINGTON (# — The U. S. Information Agency says its press service has “enraged Communists and undermined their influence in India, Japan, Austria and many other critical areas.” A summary of press service erations abroad was made pul last night by USIA Director. Th dore C. Streibert. It was prepare by Harlan Logan, chief of the press service. Logan’ said the service relies “primarily upon objective, factual news reporting and commentaries based on facts.” He said it sends 30,000 to 36,000 words of news, background and commentary weekly to 62 USIA posts overseas. During the last year, some 93% | million booklets,: magazines and |newspapers in 50 languages were | distributed, as well as more than 1,000. photographs. BILLIONTH ANIMAL COUNTEL AT CHICAGO CHICAGO (#—One dollar a pound was paid today for the one-billionth animal to arrive at Chicago's Union Stock Yards since it opened on Christmas Day, 1865. It was an 1,180-pound Hereford steer, owned by Bert Fevold, of | Humboldt, lowa. He was to receive a check today for $1,180 from Wil- liam Wood Prince, president of the | Union Stock Yards. The current | market price is about 27 cents pound. CITIZEN ADS BRING RESULTS | | Tuesday and Starring... HITCHHIKER Edmund O'Brien Virginia Huston «rewcer— Wednesd: Also DAKOTA Show Times: 10:15 DAKOTA KID— 9:03 ONLY CARY GRANT | JOAN FONTAIHE Two More SEATO Articles Are Approved By Negotiators Asian nations had been holding out for more concrete proposals as to what will be done to develop economic stability and social well- being. 4 | The delegates provisionally ap-| an article calling for the! creation of a Southeast Asia Trea- ty Organization council which would meet any time members feel it necessary. The source said the United States has indicated it is willing to drop from the treaty preamble the} word “communism” as the speci- fie aggressor against which the pact is being formed. The United States had been hold- ing out alone for identifying the aggressor as communism, US. Secretary of State John, Foster Dulles was quoted as telling the negotiators the United States could not sign a treaty without some form of reservation from other members explaining that “we do not consider any aggres- sion the same as Communist ag- gression.” | Dulles stressed, the source said, that the United States considers Communist aggression in Asia the | same as an attack on the United States. On the other hand, he said, a local war in the Far East wouid | not be considered by the President | and Congress because it would not | be a threat to the United States, “This is a very complex mat- | ter but it’s not going to hold up | signing of the treaty,” Dulles said. | “However, all will have to under- | stand our position when the treaty is signed.” The source said France has sub- | mitted a possible solution to the | Problem of whether Laos, Cambo- | dia and Southern Viet Nam should | be included in the treaty area. The French delegation proposed a “document of protocol’? which | would add the three states to the Woman Shot During Movie FORT WORTH, Tex. (p—A wom- an was shot to death last night | in a movie featuring the thriller, “Dragnet.” Miss Allee Blackwell, 38, arose from her chair, staggered a few | steps and collapsed. She was dead! on arrival at a hospital, Her 46-year-old ‘man companion | told police a pistol slipped from his pocket to the floor and dis- charged, The bullet ripped into Miss Blackwell’s body. He was re- leased after questioning, When the shot rang out, matiy in the audience rushed from the movie but there was no stampede, The show continued after the shooting. W. German Shipyard Has Russian Contract LUEBECK, Germany, — The Luebeck Maschinenbau Gesells- chaft shipyards have signed a con- tract with Soviet Russia for con- struction of five fishing vessels worth 12 million dollars. The firm is the second West German shipyard to sign to build | fishing vessels for Russia, _ The planet Uranus is 31,000 miles in diameter. | REGU TAC Se OE We Deal In New and Used Furniture Eisner Furniture Co. Poinciana Center Tel. 2-6951| Tires . . Batteries .. Accessories DARLOW’S PURE OIL STATION STOCK ISLAND TEL. 2.3167 Open 7 A.M. ‘til 10 P.M. area covered by thé treaty al- though they would not play as} active a role in SEATO as other members, | The source said that if the/ French proposal is accepted it may also be used to cover Indochina | under economic provisions of the | treaty. | | ANOTHER FREE 3-Day Tour To Havana Inquire At EL PASAJE SPANISH RESTAURANT 1005 Truman Phone 2-6136| Factory Methods Used— | All Work Guaranteed Marine Radios & Asst. Equi; FOR PROMPT AND ASLIABES | SERVICE—SEE DAVID CIFELLI 928 Truman Avenue TELEPHONE 2-6008 Key West Radio and TV Service Calls Answered Promptly RADIO — TV REPAIRS INSTALLATIONS PHILCO DEALER RANGES — Tv sets REFRIGERATORS 826 Duval Street’ HONE 2-8511 Automotive Repairs Wheel Balancing Front End Alignment | Page 2 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Tuesday, September 2, 1954 | STRAND 100% Air Conditioned Office Opens at 1:45 P.M. CONTINUOUS SHOWS FROM THERE ON The Finest and Largest Theatre in Key West Last Times Today Wed. - Thurs., Top Actions: DANGEROUS MISSION! Pict —— a u MONROE "a AIR CONDITIONED y Tues. and Wed. Thurs, - Fri, - Sat, Show Times % THE SCREEN’S MIGHTIEST SPECTACLE! on AR DLO ‘Aocone Dagon by 2 TMMONS ot ROMAN LE (eat 0 py Pa Ohya Cores ad A Panga PR GREATER THAN EVER ON | THE GREATEST MOTION LAST TIMES TODAY SCREEN! : i eae saa, PICTURE EVER MADE! DAVID 0. SELZNICK’S Production of MARGARET MITCHELL'S story of te 01d Sooth GONE WITH THE WIND CLARK CABLE VEN LEIGH LESUE HOWARD OLA de HALLAN "% FULL LENGTH! % UNCHANGED! 3 hours and 40 minutes A SELZNICK INTERNATIONAL PICTURI BOX OFFICE OPEN: 12:15 P.M. SHOW TIMES: 12:30 + 4:30 + 8:30.7.M, CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE SAN Telephone 2-3419 For Time Schedule CARLOS THEATRE AIR - CONDITIONED First Run In Key West . DICK POWELL ' 1 ' ' i 1 ‘ t ! DEBBIE REYNOLDS WED. - THURS. - FRI. - SAT. Reg. Adm.: Matinee 20c - 52c — Night 80c - 67¢ 100% Air Conditioned T'S ALL ABOUT A MAN-ABOUT-TOWN AND A GIRL ABOUT 16... and the things he learns about love FROM HER!