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The Baltimore Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 1

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1 SUM The Weather Some cloudiness and cooler today, highest in 70's. Cooler tonight. Yesterday'! temperatures: High, 94; low. 65. (Details, Pajje 12; Map, Page 31.) FINAL R1trn1 Tnllfll Httn Ptfnt Offlrf PAtD CIRCULATION IN APRIL (Dully Monday to Frtflny 4VAM2 Sunday Vol.

2 11 No. 9 BALTIMORE, MONDAY. MAY 17, 19.17 Entrrtit ennd-tl nutter Balttmnrf Poit Orfio 32 Pages Cents Haiti Inaugurates Provisional President, Averts War Chiang Fires 3 Officials In Wake Of Formosa Rioting POLICE CHIEFS Ike, Adenauer Meet SET Personal Stress By Graham Hit STASSEN OFF FOR LONDON ii laiiui-Liiiie At Gettysburg Farm Pacific Journey By Dean Sayre CROWD WILD If JOY AT CERE1NK 8N PENSIONS ARMS TALKS Santiago, Chile. May 26 Washington, May 26 Wl The Very Rev. Francis B.

Sayre, President And Chancellor Discuss Reunification The bamboo raft Tahiti-Nul AND GARRISON HEAD OUSTED Nationalist President Expresses Regrets Envoy Dean of the Washington Of Germany, Defense, Lhestot carrying Frenchman Eric de Bisschop and a crew of four from Tahiti to Chile, sank in a Cathedral, said today Billy Graham's emphasis on personal He Will Propose New reform rather than social re form is "terribly By PETKR J. Kl.MP Sun Staff Correitpondent storm today, the Chilean Navy announced. The crew was rescued by the Weapons Reduction Plan The Episcopal clergyman Gettysburg, May 26 LEGISLATION Senate Labor Group To Seek Ways To Curb Welfare 'Abuse' lectured Dr. Adenauer on Black Angus bulls, on the raising of said he not criticizing the Chilean Navy frigate Raquc-dano, which had the raft in tow President Eisenhower and Chan evangelist as a person and ad Black Angus cattle and on farm cellor Konrad Adenauer spent A heavy sea suddenly broke Washington, May 26 MV-Har five hours together this after Fignole, Leader Of Workers, Promises Elections Soon the two cables and the raft problems. President Flown mires him for his "sincerity" and other qualities.

But commenting in a sermon on Gra began to sink. All the crew and old E. Stassen, disarmament specialist, left for London today noon on the Eisenhower farm at.d talked on the problems of a part of their equipment were The President flew here this morning from Washington. He ham's current crusade in New to propose a new American world politics and the art of Taipei, Formosa, Monday. May 27 Chinese Red hntterir fired 115 shells at the Nationalists' big offshore inland of (Juemny yesterday, the Defense Ministry said.

It reported the Nationalist gunners fired back, silencing the Communist artillery. raising bulls. arrived at 8 43 A and prompt York city. Dean Sayre said: "It appears to me that he lets arms-reduction plan which he said "will improve prospects for The 81-year-old German leader ly went to his 500-acre farm to Port-au-Prince, Haiti. May 2fl Daniel Fignole, a forceful those crowds in Madison Square flew here to confer with the a durable peace." await the arrival of his German Stassen, who has been con President prior to three days of Garden think that all that matters is for each of them to con guest.

Reck says his wife's liealth was big factor in his decision not to run again Pago 7 Washington, May 26 iP) Senate Labor Committee mem hers start hearings tomorrow on young leader of Haiti's workers, was inaugurated provisional President today, thus averting ferring here with President high-level conferences in Wash Major John Eisenhower, the taken aboard the frigate, which is heading toward the Chilean port of Valparaiso. The raft sank near the Juan Fernandez Islands, 400 miles olT the Chilean Coast. The 14-by-40 foot raft left Ta hiti November 6, 1956, on its trip to Chile, hoping to prove that Polynesians could have reached South America in pre- fess his private sins and give Eisenhower and other top Ad ington on disarmament, German President's son, flew here with Taipei, Formosa, May 26 (A) his life to God and if enough civil war at least for a few reunification and Western Euro him and acted as his aide during Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek press forward to let God change hours. ministration officials, said he will negotiate "carefully and cautiously" with Soviet repre the day. legislation designed to prevent pean defenses.

Dr. Adenauer, looking years younger than his fired the garrison commander their single lives, then by the A crowd of 10,000 massed in It was the major, his army uni what they have called "shocking and two police chiefs today for mere weight of numbers Naw' sentatives when the London age, was in political troume the square around the Presidential Palace went wild at the poor handling of Friday's anti- York or America or the world abuses" in the handling of cm ploye welfare and pension plans talks resume tomorrow. back home and was seeking as American riots. will be redeemed." surances from the United States His general aim, he said, is One of the bills under con The Nationalist Chinese Pies form resplendent with four rows of ribbons, ho greeted Dr. Adenauer when he arrived in the President's personal Aero Commander at 12.34 P.M.

The German Chancellor shook This is a fallacy, Dean Sayre nideration would carry out a rec to try to reverse the "competi tive arms buildup" in the world ident then asked United States said. "It is terribly mislead Christian eras De Bisschop was trying to duplicate Thor lleyerdahl's Kon Tiki feat in reverse. The Kon-Tiki raft drifted from Peru to Tahiti in 1947. orrmendation by President Ambassador Karl L. Rankin to ing.

The salvation of the world Leaves By Special Plane Eisenhower to ci.rb racketeer convey to President Eisenhower doesn't come about by arith metic." and John Foster Dulles, Secre ing. An even tougher measure has been introduced by Senator Stassen took off by special Air Force plane at 1.32 P.M. after a final last-minute conference hands with Major Eisenhower, then without pausing to issue any statement, jumped in a car tary of State, his profoundest regrets at the riots, in which Graham sermon Page Douglas 111. with the back with John Foster Dulles, Secre ing of AFL-CIO leaders. and rode to the farm minutes away.

that German reunification, one of the pillars of his political program, would not be subordinated in the coming London disarmament talks. The two leaders spent about an hour and a half alone on the glass enclosed porch of the Eisenhower farmhouse after enjoying a creamed-chicken dinner; then the two, follow'ed part of the way by correspondents and photographers, toured the green acres of the Eisenhower farm. The President the United States Embassy and information office were wrecked tary of State, at the latter's KOREA FORCE RATEDWEAK swearing-in ceremony. Workers and peasants took over the streets, rolling in the grass and in the dust in an ecstasy of joy. Hundreds fired shots into the air.

But the atmosphere remained tense. Police stood at all street inlet-sections, trigger fingeri ready. Vigilantes armed with clubs and stones roamed the city, halting all automobiles in a search for arms. Two hundred American tourists, trapped in their hotels during 24 hours of wild shooting and artillery fire when civil war threatened, were trying to leave home. Joining the two men at a Both Douglas and James Mitchell, Secretary of Labor have been scheduled as wit and thirteen Americans hurt luncheon were Wiley T.

Buchan At the airport, Stassen reaf Thirty-two Chinese also were nesses for the opening session of hurt and one was killed. firmed that the American plan is aimed at "small, measured an, the Slate Department's protocol officer; Maj. Gen. Howard McC. Snyder, the President's it subcommittee headed by Sen Later, Chiang ordered authori MARTIN HITS DEFENSE CUTS Says He'll Make Strenuous Effort At Restoration steps" of arms reduction and not a sweeping agreement which ator Kennedy Hearings Start Wednesday ties to press a round-up of instigators of the riots.

A qualified personal physician; Major Eisen- Survey Finds Defenses Of (Continued, Page 4, Column 5) would cover all weapons. The House Labor Committee Allies Below Strength I am confident that the de has announced tentative plan? to start hearings of its own on cisions made by President Eis MORE ANTMJ.S. KREMLIN VIEWS enhower and Secretary Dulles Wednesday. ny DON AI.DWIV Seoul. May 26 United the country All airline sched during my stay will improve The proposed legislation is the Washington, May 26 (Pi prospects for a durable peace outgrowth of a two-year investi ACTIONS FEARED FORMOSA RIOTING States forces in Korea today are woefully weak Their unmanned source said more than 200 persons were detained.

The mob outbursts protested a United States court-martial acquittal of Mast. Sergt. Robert R. Reynolds, 42, of Colora. accused of the voluntary manslaughter of a 33-year-old Chinese man.

Reynolds told the court he caught the man looking through a bathroom window while his wife was taking a and lessen the dangers of Cation by another Senate Labor subcommittee, directed first by Representative Martin Republican House leader, said tonight he will make a strenu battle positions are overgrown war, lie said. Senator Ives NY.) and with weeds an invitation to Stassen did not elaborate but Taipei Riots Seen Sympto Communist attack. Says People Were Demand he obviously had in mind Eisen later by Douglas. In a report last year, this sub ous effort to restore what he called "shocking" cuts in the defense budget, bower's decisions at a White In contrast, the North Koreans and Red Chinese across the de matic By Congressmen ing Island Be Given To Reds committee said that while the ules to the Caribbean island were canceled. Scores Killed Scores of Haitians were killed or wounded in the firing yesterday and today, but it was impossible to establish any accurate count of casualties.

One of the provisional President's first acts was to accept the resignation of Brig. Gen. Leon Cantave. (he arrpv chief who had ruled Haiti since last House meeting yesterday. These great majority of welfare and Martin summoned the House apparently backed Slassen's dis militarized zone have, in the four years oi armistice, built up pension plans are honestly ad shower, and shot in self-defense Republican Policy Committee ministered, "there have been Washington, May 26 (P) Two Democratic congressional lead By HOWARD NORTON Moscow Bureau ol The Sun when the intruder came at him an army far more powerful than armament views over those of Admiral Arthur W.

Radford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of at any time during the Korean to meet tomorrow morning before the House resumes debate ers today described the riot shocking abuses, such as embez zlement. collusion, kickbacks, Moscow, May 26 The Krem War. which destroyed the United Staff, who has taken a dim view lin told the Russian people to with a cudgel. Dismisses Heads Chiang dismissed the Taipei garrison commander, Lieut. exorbitant insurance charges, on the $2,586,773,000 slash The Communists have new jet States embassy in Formosa as day that last week's rioters in voted by the House Appropria planes, new tanks, new artillery and various other forms of mal feasance." symptoms of anti-American feel tions Committee.

and, in the opinion of South Tuesday. ing which could break out in Formosa were demanding that the island be turned over to Red Gen. Huang Chen-wu; the commander of military police. Korean intelligence officers. Saying he wanted the com many other parts of the world.

A challenge to Cantave's com The report estimated that more than 75,000,000 workers and their dependents now are China. They suggested the "difficult Lieut. Gen. Liu Wei, and the they may also have atomic weapons. All the weapons in mittee to know "the full extent of the damage" the cuts would mand of the army by the Haiti police chief.

Col. Pierre Ar- The case of the American situation would be helped by chief commissioner of police of covered by these plans, with an South Korea are either obsolete dded restraints on United Formosa, Lieut. Gen. Lo Kan. do to national defense, Martin nual contributions to the funds or obsolescent.

States troops stationed abroad. But Premier O. K. Yui's Cab soldier and the Chinese coolie which actually caused the riots was brushed aside as just an said he fears that if something totaling nearly $7,000,000,000 mand. had threatened civil war in Haiti.

In his resignation. Can-lave said "bitter political pas Representative Zablocki A ten-day inspection by an Associated Press team found is not done the security of the The reserves of the pension inet remained in office. Chiang rejected its resignation yester other illustration of the reasons nation will be imperilled." chairman of a House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on the Far East, said a "more com why Formosans want to be freed plans amount to some $30,000 000,000. Responsibility Noted sions had culminated in I he troops engaging in "fratricidal battle." Top Republicans To Meet day while the country's top watchdog body, the Yuan, ordered an investigrtion to deter from American "occupation. toward any agreements reached with the Russians.

Quarles Comments Donald A. Quarles, Deputy Secretary of Defense, today sought to minimize the apparently conflicting terms in which Stassen and Radford have discussed disarmament policy. He said he does not feel there is any "deep split" on the question. The Pentagon position, he said in an interview on "Face the Nation" over CBS-TV, is that "our security must not depend on their (the Russians) being honest" in keeping a disarmament agreement. He conceded in response to a question that there has been some talk among the military that Stassen might make commitments in the London nego Asked to what extent he The subcommittee took the And the Russians were tipped plete educational program" might help hold down outward shows of superiority by Ameri mine whether the authorities Both Cantave and would seek to restore the total position that these private wel off that they can now expect the Martin told a reporter that to could have coped with the rioters better.

stood at Fignole's side as he was sworn in. arms given to the "corrupt fare and pension plans have reached such proportions that cans in lands where United States standards range far morrow meeting ot the top alert, seemingly well-trained South Korean soldiers manning 150 miles of the front from well-entrenched positions, although they were equipped with old, World War II weapons. Under Strength But a 5-milc-wide sector, athwart the classic invasion route north of Seoul, is entrusted to an American division which is at only CO to 80 per cent of normal strength. The Named new garrison com Chiang Kai-shek gang" by the Col. Antonio Kebreau, com Republicans in the House would they place "a grave responsi higher than those of the local mander was Gen.

Huang Chieh, Americans to be turned against mander of the Southern Mili populace. try to work that out. This discussion, he said, would be fol bility" upon the Government for their sound operation and for the Americans. commander in chief of the Army, who will hold both posts. Senator Mansfield tary District, was named army chief in Cantave's place.

Speaking through its mouth the elimination of abuses. Named to succeed the military piece, Izveslia, the Kremlin as The current subcommittee's police commander and For lowed by the introduction of amendments on the House floor aimed at "restoring a good por in a separate interview, said United States defense officials overseas should be "subordinate to the decisions of the Ameri Promises Election Fignole. a 43-year-old mathe serted that the newest anti- mosa's chief police commis South Koreans criticized dur sioner were their respective dep American riots are merely the tion" of the defense cuts, uties, Maj. Gen. Wu Chih-hsiung can Ambassador in the country tiations that could threaten Martin's action came as Lyn and Maj.

Gen. Chen Yu-ching. in which they are stationed. matics professor noted for hu pile-driving oratory and somewhat leftist leanings, promised speedy "free and honest" latest in a long series which started in 1950 when the United States Navy "seized" the island don B. Johnson (Texas), Senate ing the war for failing to stand and fight alongside Americans call the American sector the weakest link in the battle line.

United Stales field commanders Sees Ambassador Chiang, who returned yester Democratic leader, chilled hopes United States security. Calls Powers Limited The No. 2 defense official "May Foreshadow" "What has been happening in of Formosa. day from his retreat at Sun- "Are Protesting" of Administration leaders that the Senate could be counted on to restore the expected House slashes. Moon Lake in central Formosa, openly express concern.

He declared his dislike of dic Taipei and Japan may well foreshadow similar happenings in other parts of the world added, however, that Stassen's negotiating powers are limited The Formosan people are spent an hour with Rankin in a conference at the President's protesting against the American by instructions from Eisen This is how the opposing sides stack up today: In the South, there are about where American troops are sta tatorships and promised to establish law and order and preserve good relations with the Johnson said he does not re occupation and against the cor hower and have always been home in Scholars Forest in Taipei's suburbs. limited 700.000 South Korean troops, hearings are to consider legislation and are entirely separate from the investigation being conducted by the special rackets committee into improper practices' in the labor-management field. However, Senator Allott Col.) suggested that the earlier labor subcommittee probe "sparked" the special committee's racketeering inquiry, which is headed by Senator Mc-Clellan (I), Ark The legislation dealing with welfare and pension funds is intended to assure disclosure of their financial operations in the belief that this would serve as a deterrent to malpractice and mismanagement. However, the Administration bill and the Douglas bill differ in a number of respects. Sep United States.

gard as "sacred and untouchable" the $30,000,000,000 in new funds President Eisenhower nipt policy of the Chiang Kai-shek gang," which is "turning the island into a United States Quarles also was asked about The Ambassador afterward Fignole has neen rated by said Chiang had expressed his tioned," added Mansfield. He is assistant Senate Democratic leader and a member of the Foreign Relations Committee. The Taipei riot was touched off after a United States court-martial acquitted a GI accused the United States position in seeking an agreement with originally asked Congress to military and naval base," said. regrets about Friday's incidents. Rankin said he had asked the many in this Negro republic probably a winner in any hon make available for defense.

Russia on some sort of mutual about 80,000 Americans including two infantry divisions and logistics and command units, and fewer than 5.000 other United Nations troops, including a British regiment in the process of being withdrawn. The executive agencies have In seven years of American aerial inspection of each other's President for the meeting to im est popular vote in Haiti tur conceded already that they can occupation," the Kremlin territory. press upon him the seriousness bulent presidential campaign. of killing a Chinese Peeping paper trumpeted, "the might of The Defense Department live with $1,300,000,000 in de- fense cuts made by the House," Fignole inauguration was the olulion agreed upon by five ill- This compares with an 800.000- would like completely "open with which the United States viewed the matter. He pointed out.

he said, that the police Tom. A dispute over who should try a United States service man in the death of a Japanese woman is clouding United Johnson said. "They claim now man United Nations army at the skies" over both countries but lssorted elements his own sup end of the Korean fighting in made no determined effort to (Continued, Page" 4, Column 3) porters, the adherents of Dr. (Continued, Page 4, Column 2) (Continued, Page 2, Column 5) Francois Duvalier and Clement (Continued, Page 2, Column 4) States-Japanese relations. lumelle, two of the ten candi Zablocki's subcommittee, arate legislation also has been dates for chief executive, and World Population Grows slated to open hearings tomorrow on service men missing and June Offered As 'Be Kind Cantave and Armand offered by Allott and Senator Goldwater Civil war threatened to break unaccounted for in the Korean The Administration measure out yesterday when Armand at At Rate Of 5,000 An Hour war, also plans to ask Defense and State Department witnesses To Saucer Flyers Month' calls for the registration of wel fare and pensions plans with tempted to take over command ot the army from Cantave.

The attitude of Dr. Louis the Secretary of Labor, and the filing of sworn annual reports at 2,250,000,000 and 2.652,000 Dejoie, another leading candi 000, respectively. In the 1956 London, May 26 Any date, was still a question. time now, some highly intelli Dejoie, a wealthy planter and edition, the corresponding estimates are 2,246,000,000 and gent creatures may step out of (Continued, Page 2, Column 2) 2,467,000,000. The Soviet Union's flving saucer somewhere on earth; so the Flying Saucer Review, which calls itself a bi giving information about receipts, disbursements, assets, liabilities and other data.

Douglas's bill requires the filing of similar registration and financial reports with the Securities and Exchange Commission. It goes beyond the Administration bill, however, in its mandatory disclosure On Other the American military, naval and air forces stationed in Formosa has not been able to suppress the will of the people for independence and freedom, and their loyalty to the home country." "The popular uprising against the American occupiers of Formosa testifies once more to the growth of the forces which work for the liberation of the Chinese island of Formosa," lzvestia asserts. "It testifies to the bankruptcy of the policy of those who hope, with the help of cannon and aircraft carriers, to block the course of history." Called Warning The riots, according to the official Government paper, are an ominous warning to the American occupiers, under whose feet the earth is burning." It notes, mysteriously, that because of censorship by Chiang and the Americans, "many details of current events in Formosa are still unknown." It adds that "the arbitrary-action of the American military authorities, their inhuman cruelty in respect of their local population this time was the direct reason for the uprising of the people who refused to tolerate their rightless situalion on an American military base." monthly "journal of space, made a special plea today; in closed session about the Taipei riot. Zablocki said he will seek a committee inquiry if the facts warrant. "Carefully Studied" "I am of the firm belief that these demonstrations were not the result of any one incident," Zablocki said.

"I think this very troublesome situation should be carefully studied in an atmosphere free of prejudice." The Wisconsin Democrat said that while the Communists seize on anti-American feeling wherever they can, it appears to be other basic factors which are causing trouble for the United States. He said that, on Formosa, one cause may be a feeling by some three years, and next month ought to bring the next peak, the magazine said. Saucers have been sighted throughout recorded history everywhere, the editorial added. "The records are there for those who take the trouble io look for them," the review said "During all this long period occupants of flying saucers have not harmed us. "Considerable Evidence" "This review has devoted a great deal of research into both current and historical saucer ac 'Be kind to visitors who come i nrrc I to us in flying saucers." It's going to be a great year New York, May 26 (JP) Uniled Nations statisticians reported tonight the world's popu-iation has been growing about 43,000,000 a year or 5,000 an hour.

The United Nation's 1956 Demographic Yearbook a 751-page compilation of figures about people said this increase of 1.6 per cent yearly results from a birth rate of 34 babies per 1,000 persons yearly and a death rate of 18 per 1,000 yearly. It estimated the world's population in mid-1955 at An increase of 1.6 per cent a year would bring this up to about 2,778,000,000 bv mid-1957. Trims Estimates In a foreword, the United Nations Statistical Office said il had had to trim its 1940 and 1950 estimates of world population because it had been overestimating the population of the Slaying of pro French Arab panics Parisians who fear Coty is target Page 2 for flying saucers, the magazine said in an editorial, and it is just possible that navigators of the celestial spaces may decide that the time has come to get acquainted with the dullards who live on this planet. Senator Green To Set Record 1940 population estimate was cut ffom 196,000,000 to It is still the third most populous country in the world behind Communist China with 582.603,000 (1953 census) and India with 381,690.000 (1955 estimate) and ahead of the United States with 167,191,000 (1956 estimate). 36 On Island The least populous political division in the world is the Swan Islands, United States possession in the Caribbean north of Honduras, with 36 persons by the 1950 census.

The most densely populated is Monaco, with 22,000 people on its one square mile compared with 21 per square mile in the United States and less than one in places like Alaska, tivity, and has not come across of the Chwese Nationalists In A Twinkling If uch visitors do arrive. there is no reason to believe that they will be hostile, the "that the frv.e world and the United States are not co-operating with them in their desire to liberate the fatherland." Also, Zablocki said, resentment in many countries stems from what natives feel is Ameri editorial added. They will be of superior intelligence and could probably destroy us all in a twinkling; but the magazine said Robeson sings in London via telephone Page 3 Open skies'' jets, crews stand ready Page 4 Thousands flee homes as new floods threaten Dallas Page 6 Editorials Page 12 Woman's Page Page 10 Television and radio. Page 8 Comics Page 31 Shipping news Page 31 Orioles defeated by Boston, 9 to 0 and 5 to 4 Page 15 Parkton, White Hall areas hit by flooding Page 32 Other local news on inside Pages 8, 9. 20, 21 and 22.

a.iy substantial reason to believe that saucer occupants are hostile. On the contrary, there inconsiderable evidence that the visitors are friendly toward the inhabitants of this barbaric and warlike planet. "It may be well to keep this 'bought uppermost. It is to be hoped that if any large scale contacts from outer space occur, the peoples of the world will show friendship, goodwill at.d brotherhood to our celestial neighbors, instead of the customary suspicion, distrust and lack of mutual understanding the countries of this planet there is no reason to think they can extravagance and disdain for the local culture. Washington, May 26 (Senator Green R.I.), tomorrow will become the oldest man ever to be on active service in the Congress.

Green, who is going on 90, will pass the mark set by Representative Charles Steadman, of North Carolina. He died in office in 1930 at the age of 89 years, 7 months and 25 days. Born October 2. 1867, Green will be 89 years, 7 months and 26 days at midnight tomorrow Green, still frisky, already has announced plans be in his Senate seat when "he's 100. Soviet Union.

This mistake carne to light last Summer, it explained, when the Soviet Government published an estimate that the union's population April "As the history of the liberation of the Chinese people teaches," the paper concludes, He said Americans abroad Greenland, French Guinea and Spanish West Africa. should not be mads to live according to local standards, a 1. 1956. was 200,200,000 "sub "and as is well known to the American military men. the armaments given by the United "hardship" by American cri would care to do so.

There ought to be a lot of flying saucers flitting about the next few months, it explained, because saucers, like May flies and meteorite showers, seem to come in droves. The saucers seem to reach peaks of highest activity every i stantially lower than the esti mates previously computed." Among other things, the yearbook shows that Russian-born are second only to Italian-born among groups of foreign birth in the United States, number Stales to the corrupt, anti-popular Chiang Kai-shek gang In the 1955 Demographic teria. But there may be "some way of curbing the extravagance" as it appears to foreigners, he said, may be turned against the hated Yearbook, the world's 1940 and 1950 populations were estimated ing 1,084,282 against 1,427,145. ually show toward each other. occupiers..

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