Kidnap Stirs Memories for Sclnvarzkoff THE WdOTILID) TDD IIS WEEK 1 ' By DON BOIXE JR. . MAPLEWOOD. N.J. -A 1 :- year old local resident followed closely the nwr account! of the ' Kidnaping of liny reier weinoer ger. . . X-He waa tilled with tympathy (or -. (h parents, like muiioni of. ether Americana. But in addition, the . cue brought back memories of the tnost publicized kidnaping of all For' it was this man, Mai. Gen, , H. Norman Schwarzkopf, who in . 19a led the long, tedious New Jersey State Police hunt for the kidnaper of the Charles A. Und- . bergh baby. A shocked nation read Bis early announcement. (For two years after the body of Charles Jr. waa found in a wooded section near the Lindbergh estate In Hopewell, the state police under Schwarzkopf ran down countless clues, most of', them leading no where. ,:, "v , Jfinally, Bruno Richard Haupt mafi. a gtitteral-volced carpenter from the Bronx, N.Y., passed a $10 gold certificate, one of the ransom notes, to a New York service sta tion attendant. He was arrested , and convicted of murder hi sen sational 15-day trial, and put to death In the electric chair la April. ik . ,. - New Betlr4 - - ' Schwarzkopf now leads a life of retirement from business and state offices but remains' active at com manding ceneral of the 7th 'N. J Reserve Divinion'and consultant on matters of police and safety. ' He formed his own opinions on the kidnaping of the Weinberger baby but kept them to himself, he Said, "because there were so many people who commented on the Lindbergh case who didn't know What they were talking about." - Schwarzkopf 'believes that the o-etUed Lindbergh Kidnap law.' passed after the crime which stir red, the world, has materially cut dowa kidnaping! by making them federal capital offense, The soft-spoken police expert's Voice la known to millions through bis weekly commentaries for many years on the nationally broadcast radio program, "Gang Busters." M iBdletmeats A gang buster Is Just what the taH crisp military man has been most of his adult life from the time In 1921 when be wrote for, and won, the job to organize and head New Jersey's State Police, to 1951. when his Investigation of lawlessness on the New Jersey waterfront produced 64 indict ments. . Other highlights of Schwarz kopf's We: - 1. After World War I service, m Trance, bo waa put in command of border patrols of the El Paso district m Texas. 1. In 1943 he went to Iran as commander of a U. B. military mission and returned after 4 years to be awarded the Distinguished Service Medal for reorganizing the native police fore of 11,000 mem- pen to "a ntgn point of effici ency." . Baited ftaaaggnag S. In 1M be went to Germany aa deputy provost marshal to Gen. Lucia D. Clay, U. 8. military governor in Berlin, and led a cam ' palgn to wipe out a "multi-million dollar smuggling racket 4. Two years later he served as chief of the military assistance group la Italy under the Atlantic Pact I. Re returned ' to America in 1951 to take over the new Job as coordinator of atj the state's public safety and law enforcement activities. He retired from that job last Jan. 1. Old Adversary During his tenure In the latter post, he was assigned to direct an Investigation lata the state employment department beaded - by an old adversary, former Gov. Harold G. Hoffman. . Hoffman was suspended from Ms post and wben he died a few months afterward H was revealed he had embezzled $300,000 from a hometown bank early in his politi cal life. It was Hoffman who In 193 re fused to reappoint Schwarzkopf as state police superintendent, after IS years In the Job, because the late fovernor believed the Invest!' gaUon of the Lindbergh kidnaping had been "bungled . noiiman was convinced more than one person had been Involved In taking the child from bis bedroom. ;x;veio r 1 ;rl rw II days womia lb-popping Ktaery sad fun ea route) See Crater Lake, Shaita Cascade Wonderlaod, Reno. On so Los Angeles via Sierra and breaih-eakina view of Mi . Whit- aey.Tour LA. ( including Dimer-. , Uad). Special aan rrancuco u ht steine-hoine vis Redwood Em pire, Oregon Cot. Leave July 2, An 6 20. a i JuiU inai atatlea IMI ear tern, ita In, a Hf PWM. km SatM. Met HaV , JsdkcHwp. ana skibbi roitMitaTio. torn noav Congress. Displaying Urge to Legislate Foreign Policy Poznan Riot Trials Present Real Danger to Red Regime "V .... By WILLIAM L. RYAN 1 Anoriated Press Foreign flews Analyit ,' A SPECTER of counter-revolution hovers over Poland' Communists. Trial of tht people accused of starting the Pozan riots can be a real danger to a none too solid Polish Communist regime. The international situation is such that the interference of Russian tanks and guns would be awkward and embarrassing to the Kremlin. ..There It a sort of underground anarchy running through the country, a nation overwneimmgiy itoman iatno Clouds on the Southern Horizon lie and at least 90 per cent anti-'could be the most telling de-ests, without regard to whether Communist and -the anarchv'iense if defense indeed were sucn activity laices me lorm oi seems to be infecting the ranks permitted. a strike, demonstration or any other form of trade union strug gle." The Poles can be considered munUt world conspiracy, hingUrJV., mora tin ted now. n a vnu ... .ti u. ,,i, ' of the party itself. Its cement is resistance to Moscow, The Boomerang In December, 1954, the Com- i X A f l r i sense, to gain allies among the work- classes in the HZZ.r.7X:ZZ InS nist world, adopted what it; f ik .. g ifl Art, , called a "Charter of Trade . . t1, . tT-i bum. r wrv. ,,10: 'Organizing strikes and tak- ' f - - ing in them, as well as showing solidarity with strikers,! under no circumstances can; serve a a. nretext for annlica- "Workers," said the charter's ;.;- nf nunishmenL sanctions or! second article, "iiave the right to'repreMive measures, before, dur hold meetings at any place of;in- . the atrike." I waa adopted in Warsaw, of all places, by the World Federation of Trade Unions, a Moscow tool. work, as well as outside of it. for discussion of questions relat ing to their Interests, to express freely their views on such ques tions. Said Article 4: "Workers have than ever be fore. The Ger man and Jew ish minorities hsve been ex pelled by the Russisns. Moscow hss annexed the Ukrainian mi nority. Re maining are Just the Poles themselves, ar population which traditionally and single- m noeaiy nas re" """""" the right to participate in any with contempt and hatredand cUrity m MmM of mter to be out from under the Soviet . ' m" . boot DPHDI P. Dsitrrss Ws-Lr r b.wi h-a.. i wijuiiwuj v t ji rv paint of high arsenate content. After Navy doctors at Naples determined Mrs. Luce s persist ent illness was caused by arsenic. to light this week. Involved was U.S. Ambassa dor to Italy Clare Boothe Luce, attractive wife of Time Magazine If the Communists dared per mit a defense, the "charter could be flung in their" faces. Then the working people of the Communist world could well ask: Do these rights pertain only to workers in the capitalist countries? Thin Ke4 Rule , Pole as a people have an non-U., , n; ,.M. Ki.trv KM nftun .tamed "'1 Of UiplOmOCV v- . - tv,- 4hin i.v.r f After more than a year of Communist and fellow travel-nf. l.r. who rule them bv dictate nd olT world diplomacy came from Moscow is an anomaly likely to be regarded by the Poles as a treachery uncharac teristic of their traditions. For their part, the Russians investigation reportedly showed that minute quantities of the ceiling paint had been sifting down, getting into her breakfast Honduras Honduras is bother ay Communist agitation en benone plantations. Costa Ifica . i 7- 1 . an ... i . i J -a Dominican Kepublio Botitta of Cuba en Trujlllo of Dominican Republic have ecu each other of giving arm to revolutionary plotter. Armas ha accused exll in Mesico en El Salvador of trying to overthrow hi antl- Communlt oovernment. Strongman Anattasio Somoxa nurses . strong distaste for Costa lean President Jo Figures. Peru -Scuador Perennial boundary dispute causes frequent clash be tween Peru and Ecuador. Red reportedly were involved Jfppti In violence following Peru's mld-Jun presidential election. Investigation of alleged in filtration of Peron doctrinal I under way. Brazil 1 Newly installsd President Kubittchek I (truggling again! inflation and dis gruntlad Red opposition. Paraguay Paraguay is attempting to Improve her relations with current A rgantlns government. (Trgentina Efforts to put Argentina on Its feet ore beset by revolts and disorder organized by diehard follower of Peron. Executive Officers Resisting Invasion By J. M. ROBERTS i Anoriated Press New$'Analy$t THE 84tH CONGRESS has shown a considerable tend ency to legislate, or try to legislate, foreign policy and the military anairs that go with it. State and Defense Department experts have spent a lot of time fending off congressional efforts to take an active part in both decisions and administration. The President was finally ; forced to veto a military ap-, their water-starved country, new propriation bill theyother day doubts were raised as to the because Congress was trying tojAmerican willingness to finance make itself the judge of what the project weapons were best for anti-air-1 Everyone remembers the pro craft defense. 'nosed Bricker amendment to the Some members of Congress constitution which would hava 'hamrwrH thu Yrtitiv iumvm to negotiate foreign treaties. The argument is not yet dead. The tug-of-war between Con- have under taken to as sume for that body the right to evaluate, and to legis late in the me in me , i light of thsf evaluation, ''t matters such as continued aid for Yugoslavia. The chair man of the Senate House if ii 1 gress and the executive branch over the form and size of the mutual aid program was not un usuaL The insistence of Con gress on increasing military ap propriations over the protest of an administration headed by the nation's greatest military leader was unusual. Politics a Factor Thar irll lMtinn vai Atomic Energy':.,.. . . it Committee suggested that agree-out by ,w0 BriUsh newspaperg menu im " Whicn commentinff on Br tain's tion with other countries should own military reduction program. Another Try for Solidarity Editor-in-Chief Henry Luce and 00'1'- .In "mrner weather it The meeting at Panama of the ana r,0,s- Panama Conference complishment for approval. This lis a general practice in all '-si. r rvnlutinnarv nlnttins nihrr underdeveloned neonle democratic countries J elsewhere in the world, they oe suDmntea oeiore. noi aiwr,iaid cuU lhou,d made only - v-r "for the right reasons and in torn has been for diplomaticconulution b the ,w0 countriM representatives to sign such and not as unUaterai decision, agreements, the same as trea-1 . rea.ons nurelv domestic ties, and then present the c-!:. The value of congressional ability to project its views into foreign affairs is undoubted. The Unconventional Practice President has paid his respects Such questions involve both to jt many times. i ... ... i i c v. --' k- -t . .i . waa kh in inm rkAinr nvi wn n . ik. . ........... imp mnnampniai rpason ran . ..j . m-i t- c- iormer Diavwriam ana Lonzress-i - ricsiuciiu ui m . --- - - ui. . .v.-. ... never iru.. nr " ! woman from Connecticut. jpoisonous fumes. Investigators publics, postponed until this the high level U.S. participation"' ; Z.uv.i. ' ,.pr , l u 1 Whe" h d viet Com-nunisu under Stahn, From a year after h appoint.!found that for 20-months Mr,.Week by PreVident Eisenhow- in the conference is tied d.rectly;th sUn. J'd SV"' P" fA,n,u!ment; " ,1JnvolvM w.h'lh'r bolster his policy in connect.on ,,u.. V.. .1--- ment as American representative uce nM Men trethin8 these er1 recent hospitalization, has to tms unrest: ine nope inai Dy-"!'-"-"-- . t,.. M. T .,, . arsenic lumes ana eating rood (mrht T.at n Anwr n n a nose personal coniacis wun ms uiiin - -v - drinking coffei. that was familia-r but not entirely flatterJAmerican counterparts, presi-o wait half a century for an in- ioia ..j ...wi it. nfj in Rome, Mrs. Luce suffered a;"rsf 1938 and packed its leaders off, - . H1Jand it HuMiin nMiiwt (amn AfW, " , ( . i i ... . ., , . i : i HDrinKipa wun npaniv nnT gnosea aa anemia: ana. nervoi r - ' . - to Russian prison camps. the war the Russians hsd to con struct a new Polish party of power-hungry opportunists. There is little likelihood that the Russian leaders trust the r.tiff... Thi wmv it r. Mrs- L-uce realized wnen the vealed by Time and confirmed Navy verdict was verified and by the State Department that """J. arsenic ' j . i .u.i- - rimlriil erannmv. thev want jn aeni xasciinowcr can ncip ac;; 7 ,.- . ' - Hotter Than Usual some oi me imeroauonai lruu The chief execuUves of coun-ing and contribute generally to tries stretching from the south-.hemispheric unity. it the actual cause of her illness'w,., discoveredthat she was in'ern border of the United States The Latin American countries in their lifetime. Fundamental Reason This heavy emphasis on speed of development, coupled with anfPP1 w PProvaL crossea u mey naa 10 agree, o Coneies the author- to partiamenU nd then come j, b resolution, to take a back for signing. The way it ,t position. works now, the agreement andi ... signing is all done at once, and1. H must, then, get along a then narliamenU denosit their best he Mn whn Congress diS- waa arsenic poisoning arsenic, ticklish aituation. If the arsenicto the cold waters of the Antarc- are at present atruggUng through almost toUl lack of native capi- There was discussion in Con Kremlin hu been treating the Polish aituation with kid gloves. as it hoping it would not ex plode the myth of the new look. Moeeew'a Agent Of all the Warsaw Reds, per haps Moscow finds the present from the ornate eeilin nf diplomatic relations might be K.i- villa Kti-nnm jeopardized. Th hMtrnnm r.illn. at h. me xrue cause oi ner mness Villa Taverna the residence of remained secret even sfter the degrees hotter than usual. terns of life, tic have been asked to assemble, violent changes in economic and at Panama at a time when South social structure, the result in American feuds and political un- many cases of the impact of the rest happen to be boiling a few age of industry on ancient pat- American ambassadors in Rome "u' of the trouble was located. is heavily beamed and deco- . Pi1..10 ,mi week raa in h M nariii ivU ,ith 'ter friends told Mrs. Luce thev first secretary, a second-raterclusters of roses and rosettes. It ,n"iL netr9 "" oi the story, named Idward Ochab, tha most has been painted and repainted! . ambassador returned to trustworthy, and this m itself M(Countless times, apparently with the United States last May for an anomaly, because OchaD, jeanus oi nia paaiuon, exnioiu m ft in onorr ... . an urge to revert to harsh SU' linist measures to hold his pow er. He is apparently being balked by frightened men Approved: By the U.S. Senate,' measure which will grant full treatment to counteract the ar senic her system had absorbed. She now is going on a three week Mediterranean cruise be fore returning to her post in Rome. Several of the presidenta were1 South Americans are aware of DEFENSE: More Cutting Ul and in many individual 'fress this week of a ban on pro- agrees. .Inflexibility Results The state of the times, how- countries a lack of resources, is posed American aid for Egypt's ever, is such that even the ex- often credited as the fundamen- Aswan oam at a time wnen veryPerts are frequently confounded, tal reason for perennial political delicate negotiations were going Congress can take positions as instability in Latin America. forward. It was still in progress the result of specific situations In recent months, the issue on the very day that Egypt an-jwhlch, when applied te a broad forced to refuse invitations to what an industrial economy can has taken on new seriousness inounced a pro-Western stand range of problems, put the ex the conference because of the do to living standards. Like with the apparent new Russian wh'ch was the first break in her ecutive branch in an inflexible policy of extending CommunistRuwn-"ning neutrality for position. aid in an attempt to proselytize more than a year. - j Most attempts to do this fail, with rublea instead of guns. Thus it would seem that at the The fact that they are made. The success of the United precise moment when the Egyp-i however, indicates a certain Pnwrf,,l c.,lnrvnrt lin the streneth of its vast armv iol"le oeiegaiion in convincing tians appeared most convinced amount oi aisirusi oi tne aomin Althoueh no final decision is'Mvy ir 'or- , tneJLtin vernments that their Aitnougn no nnai decision is( ' ,.,l.'r0(, t0 economic development t:it"' .t. :jz ; " cooperation with one an pvrs ait v aj in 11 bi.;ii iiiuuatcui"l""i'vnlM ""j itwr of the wisdom of turning to the istration which other countries countries of the Free World I are quick to recognize, even and away from the Communist more quickly than they recog- . .... . . i-. . .... . . . . j juaj irivvc iu nave a .asi -iDr nciD in me DaramounL nize inn lume di h la jusl xhii around him, men like JosefSocial Security retirement bene- 'n project planned for itics. Cyranklewict, the Premier, wholfits to disabled .workers at ,ge! Villa Taverna has been redeco-ment Ulk of cutting back the). 4. It will be extremely diffl-of (uture .vents south of the! wants to Uke things cautiously, so and reduce the retirement age ,u ","rc- '" mesiw oi nmrncan srmea iorces cun to oaiance tne ouoget ana border. Ochab is a pal substitute for for women from 65 to 62. the late Boleslaw Bierut, whose Entered: By Marine Sgt. Mat cold ruthlessnesa fitted the Sta;thew McKeon, a plea of not ancient designs have been cov-ihas picked up powerful support cut taxes at home unless there: ered with a dummy ceiling, and in non-military sectors of the are defense force cuts, mainly the lower surface, given a linist pattern welL But If Bierut!guilty to charges of maltreating!01 w,e Pmt- had not died this year, he would recruits and manslaughter have had to go anyway, to sat isfy the new look propaganda. Poles are a proud and cour- ln connection with the death of six recruits during a disciplinary march McKeon staged at Parris ageoua people proud enough.Island, S.C, on April 8. and courageous enough to dare Signed: By the Soviet Union Communist Boss Khrushchev, and East Germany, a joint state-! and hia viceroy, the Polish Mar- ment. reiterating the Red stand shal Rokouovsky, to send tanks that reunification of Germany is and guns against Polish fists, (impossible without direct nego What could be aaid In defense tiations between the East and of the people being brought to West German governments, trial for last month's uprising? Accepted: By President Ramon! A great deal, but th greatest Magsaysay of the Philippines, an! irony of all is that the Commu-invitation to visit the United' niit' own cynical propaganda States early next year. Dates Tuesday, July U Runoff primary election in Oklahoma. Friday, July 27 Anniversary (third) of the signing of the armistice ending the Korean War. Saturday, July 28 Democratic primary elec tion in Texas. coat Eisenhower administration. Reasons Listed High officials outside the Pen tagon gave these reasons for the growing attractiveness of a per haps drastic American manpow er reduction: 1. Cuts heavy enough to re quire withdrawal of some or "thinning out" of all five Ameri can divisions now in Europe would not necessarily shock overseas allies. Western Europe is reportedly far less fearful of Communist aggression than it was three years ago. 2. Russia, it is believed, soon will make additional reductions because of the tremendous cost of new weapons now becoming' virtually standard equipment. Study in Progress It has been reported that President Eisenhower will prob ably order some manpower cuts after seeing the results of studies now being made by the joint chiefs. Responsible authorities say they understand the Army, which would bear the brunt of the cuts, was opposing any such action. Army strategists argue that a substantial army. equipped with convential weap ons, will continue to be neces sary in case of non-atomic wars. Quote President Elsenhower in a letter to Civil Defense Ad ministrator Val Peterson emphasizing the importance .of civilian defense measures: "It Is . . . clear that no mat ter how crashing a blow we can atrike la retaliation for an attack upon us, to permit our great centers of popula tion and industry to lay ex posed to weapona of modern war Is to Invite both an at tack and national catastrophe." CIRCUS: Big Top Folds An Era Ends 'economic complexities, combined RinglingBros.Barnum & Bailey i" .heavy dose of bsl weather, this week sbruDtlv folded the l' c,rcus P'gued this Imammoth tent over "the greatest;?" with ious labor trou- show on earth" and announced , con- (titntlM aHinliHat au. iatl.ai that the last remaining majorl""""''' !"". w.raai-uni touringcircustroupewouldnever rf"- w,"c" iriuuy again appear under canvas. reminded many a father that AtoRJMtwr afclrfW4lM (v4MffJ twttviQ , JfllffMe MllW4Wp4liS S4W ArTIR THI SMOKI HAS UrTID ONI THINO IS CLEAR t alAR TRACKS The announcement appeared times have changed. Congestion to be a permanent death knelH!r ""IMnJ wK-grow-for a robust and colorful Ameri-ln cltles .n" "owd,nK ,h can tradition, a traveling specta- Clreu OI M1' c. which has brought exhila- " r''" '' rating thrills to generations of co"rse' h? cuut into the cius children and kindled nostalgic! au.die"c,e ln the "me w,y " h memories for generations of, ,m"ny 0,ner Mieruin. . parents. ,ment fields. The grand tent collapsed un-l The Ringling circus was at der the weight of mid-century, Pittsburgh when John Ringling norm announced tne end naa arrived. "The tented circus as it' now exists is, in my opinion, a thing of the past," North said. "We are considering plans for the future which may involve an al- Sidelights Navy Airman Raymond Smith finally reached Japan this week, after being forced to bail out of three successive military most completely mechanically planes in which he hitched rides. 'controlled exhibition. ... .His first jump was from a T33I Indoors Next Tear jet trainer he caught at Self- The ,.new 87th pr.n,.lion ;,d.ge iAlU,l M,,ch of Ringling Bros. Barnum & Later hat hit the silk near Glen- B,n 8Co bined Snowi will v,ew III. when a Neptune, , A , , bomber got into trouble. Hi,.? Madison SquarePG,rd'en " "V "'""jNew York and will play the 1957 in other air-conditioned all over "the". United i.....fnl md Urn knit in liimnl " ,,i ,J Kiseasoi. again near Genesco, 111. Appro- arenM priately, the extracurricular c-lstates" In the meantime. North re vealed the troupe would move The California State Board ;S.r,sot.. Fla. North could not KH'uv he reached for rnmmnt anrf nn. tivity was all in Smith's adopted field. He s studying to be a para chute rigger. of Education has new course at Fresno State Col lege in San Luis Obispo. Next fall atudenti at Fresno will be able to take up enology, which it the art of wine making. A -4 6-y tar-old-boy in court body else in authority would say what will become of the 800 to 1,000 performers, animal train ers and roustabouts on the payroll George Higgins, president of o?charg of'Ualing $20 worth the Sarasota Chamber of Com oi D.scDaus in j-ierre. o. u., merce iue$tei that the circus was sentenced to the scrub room might m,k, a w , gUnd ln this week. Turning down the u,. Florida city. offer of the boy's father to payl drcu(, CWH rt'Z"? I" olcustomers." he said, "let the cu. piwtkM, sma (r slats on the 31 Venetian blinds in the county courthouse. itpmers come to the circus." i 1 I Mil HlffhU Ratenwd. APNtwifMturnj aal MSSrHtna, n GREYHOUND t. 1 Km ItrtMt 4. N. Church Phone I-Z42S Ct Ul TOW AVOtm TAVU AOIHT , - ' . ' '" ' '' . . . - - ' ' ' i i ' ..'-' ' ' ' ---' 'i in - ' ' - - '- - i r - '"-