Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 207, Decatur, Adams County, 2 September 1952 — Page 1

Vol; L. No. 207.

Truman Opens fe2 Dem. Campaign In Pittsburgh

• v ' V I • ' 1 ' . i ■ • ; f lw ■' - litl MM T' 11 MT & ,' ’ r>J _■ I ■< imhl hhhoh t ’ i- - Ik. ; •. ; ■■ W ■ mH BK •'Wl MO J- 8 I J R r U M M? With thp P^MdJn°t r > t^ e nw m ß Cr i t >«^^ y in ‘ piUsbu fo from the back platform of Ji ß special train, hotter h I wJi A. P h*? b May?)r D&vi<l L - W®* (center) rind Alleghenyl county oonimissioner John J. Kane (right), who, nominated Mr. Trttaian for Veep in the 1944 convention *

Holiday Death Toll In Nation Placed Al 574 Highway Deaths On* Long Holiday Less Than* Previous Year ; By talrife PRESS Highway deaths during’the Labor Day weekend were less than jthe record I niMnber set a year ago. Reports from the nation Showed today. f | J/ \ V : i -The accidental death toll for the \ holiday beginning 'at 6p. m.‘ Friday ana ending at midnight; Monday showed; 574 accidental deaths from all, causey. ’ j | I Traffic deaths were 440, 2f un-. der the record 4&1 of the 1954 Labbr Day holiday. There were 4y ,droWnings> 14 plane crash; and |?3 persons killed in miscellaneodfs The national council tiad forecast--480? traffic deaths.' i h|ed; H. Dearborn, president of! ■, the .council, ya id at Chicago that; the council wiyhed,the “toll could have been lbwier but we naturally, are gratified [that it\"wss less' than last year.” “The saving can be attributed, we believe, to greater realization .; by the driving public for the need’ for ektra caution at this time and to special traffic law enforcement efforts by state and local policeall over the country. “No -one knows, of course, whoiie life was saved by the low? er toll. But it could have been ■California led the states in traffic deaths with 45 followed Michigan with 29, Illinois with 2|5; New York with ?3, and Indiana and, Georgia with 22 eych. 1 Although Michigan was , I well doWn the list in traffic', fatalities, its officials called ft **<pne of the deadliest, holidays in, v histjpry.”; 1 weather contributed U the Michigan toll, lightnify; killing three persons engaged m holiday pursuits. The state had 41 holiday deaths, from all causes. The safety council baid motorists apparently drove more [ carefully on rain drenched highways in many sections of ; the country. ’ The end of hurricane Ablet struck New York With wind and, raiii. It was the storm] which earlier had killed four per sons in South | Another hurricane, galled Bak • er, was swirling northeast 6'fs Puerto Rico and foreicgkter AHan| Marshall at Miaihi skid it "coultl be quite athowler.” , i . ( At Fort Worth. Tex.f a 100-mile gale and rain stonn rainmed Cars? wyll air force base Monday night and in less foqr' minuted caused, an estimated damage the base and planes. • '"j m 01 . i f ■. '' ■ 1 ■ ' I ■ Truman Makes Brief J Stopin Fort Wqyne FORT WAYNE!, Ind. UP — ident Truman made a 10-mlnutp unscheduled stop h£re Monday ah his special train changed crews eri/oute to Milwaukee, Wis. /■Mr. Trutoan appeared ojn the rear platform and waved to ,about lot) spectators. He made n,o speech. The President was inside tbh train whe|n it passed through thb downtpwh. station. A crowd gathered despfty earlier announcements the train,woiild not stop.

- 1 '■ 1 i- '.: .| | ■. ■ .■ • ■ :■ 1 ' * DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT :i k. \ i v I ■ ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER IN 'ADAMS COUNTY ft* -k . i J

! Leaders Named For i Lutheran Hour Rally j Rally Feature’Of , Laymen's Meeting ! .' 4’■ , L .' . Prof. Armin I C. %ldsen, well kntiwn Lutheran! Hour speaker, will Speak at the September.2l Lutheran flour rally to pe held! |n the Deca- . tar high school auditorium at 2 j o|clock. The public is invited. ; J (Mmnitttees fbr the affair were announced today by Gerhard general ehkirman. The rgpyWill be a featuri of the Nortfee>h Indiana district of Lutheran !a|men s league! convention which vViil l|e held in Diecatui! bn that date. Delegates from 138 congregations in Northern indiaria] apd Northwestern Ohio are.expected to attend. ’ Won Lutheran; chuteh of Decatur Wpl act as the; congregation with she other dine Churches in the Decatur area asjsistipg. perihard Schultz, general pbrnmitchairman.'is assisted by Reinhdld Bauer, D; Hoyt Callow,’ H. H.j, Kruetkeberg., vice-president Northern Indiana district of! Lutheran 'wthtq’s league, L. lA'. |acobs, secrfpary Northern Indiana! district of Lutheran laymeln’s league and the! 41jev. Edgar P. Schmidt, pastoral adY|fcor Northern Indiana district of Lutheran laymekTs league; \ lother clphmiittee a£e afe follows: > [ .: .(Arrangements: Henry Krueckbimrg, chalrihanj Emil Bienz, Hermpn Steele* and Harold Thiem®- . Earl Caston, chairman. Theodore Grotrian and F. C. Ifehmiege. ?! ?Program: ReV. Schmidt and Dave Htcbler. . I ■■ ■ J L Board of ushers: Paul Hartcher, Chairman and Lawrence Fuelling of Zion, Decatur. t|o Ge assisted by two representatives from each of the nine congregations in. the Decptur area. Decorations and Convention disReinhard Werling, chairman, ahd George Rentz. Registrations!: Norman Witte, ChaiEman, Aardn t Weiland, secret (ary, Mrs. Neiman Witte, Mrs. Aaron Weiland, Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Zwick, M ■. ahd Mrs. Charles Stuckey and Mr. and Mrs. Witi &t»hnepf, Sr. I J ; Banquet: D. floyt Callow, chairnian, Reinhold Sauer, Phil Sauer Alid Chester Kleinkniriht. , —y ■ Electric Seryice Off For Short Time .-A driving rain and wind from a ct)ld front about 50 miles wide lats Monday afterhbon j knocked out e|ectric sbrvice in Iparts of Monrpe and Union township;', reports. ;the city light department, which' said service restored by 7 o’.clock, in the evening. ' 1 —< Mrs. Otto Uhrick Is Taken By Death v ?Mrs? Isabel Uhrick; former Monrrie resident, died at 5 a.tn. Monday at heir horhb Id Dunkirk. Sun vlving arte her husband, Otto; threb daughters, Mrp; Viola Groves, Mrs, ZFeila Clay ahd Mrs. Minnie White, all of Dunkirk; three sons, Chester of Dunkirk hrih Roy and Harry of keystone, and a sister, Mrs. Alice Springer of Andrews. : ' '■ j Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m; Wednesday at the Junes funeral home in'Dunkirk. Burial ririll the In the Rah cemetery west I of Honroe, where the body may be Viewed before interment.

Charges Reds] Infiltrate In Defense Areas ' • ■■ il ■ I j I , '■ ■ ’ '! Pickets Interfere With Hearings By House Committee | I't-i' - | ! -L’ CHICAGO), UP — Piak et a marched into the federal building singing “solidarity forpver” i'today and interfered with a hearibE by the house Un-American activities committee pn alleged Commuh|st infiltration into defence indufetries. The pickets, numbering abott 150, carried sighs prohesting flw lsieatigation. Most of them werep;riiembers of the Independent Ignited Electrical-Farm Equipment ]|mioQ, .some of whose leaders were fonderstood to haye been summonsed as witnesses. \ 1 , i The pickets halted at the bloated door of the courtrobm wheite the hearing was being held. ’Their voices could pe heard clearly inside the room, and! sometimes drbwned out the testimony. AV times; there were loud knotks on; the door There was no immediate ef| ort to disperse the throng. A few C licago policemen stood by, but thej| were powerless to ■ make arrests Inside the federal building unless asked to ’do so by federal ' auth< rities. U. SV marshals in the b« tiding made ho effort to restrail the demonstration. :'f|V - : , Rep. John ' S. Wood, cbminitttee chairman, changed Communists haVe infiltrated into major d?fense' areas to kjeep international Communism infornjed on the U. S. defense effort. ' I . V In a statement 2riP® n ing I committee hteartng here, Wood said iriVestigations in Maryland, ! Massachusetts and Michigan “disc lose a pattern of Communist concen ration ih major, defense ateas of th< country,” ■ , |'\ , said testimony before tl b committee' showed i‘hqw the Clbmmu* nifst ’party has usbd its m; mbers eiriploVed in Indus! ry ,to ke ;p the national organization Os th< Communist’party and thel intern Tional \Commutiist movement fully t dvised of industrial potentialities . . .” He rilso ibhargted that thte C >mniunist party has sbughfc to “bo onlze” the defense etfoht and has' tndeavored to “infiltrate and control labor uniofos in defense areas.’ r/ Wood said he had anticipa Ed ihp picketing. He said the hearings he®e were scheduled last Juup. long before the Farm Equip-mentj union began a strike against Intern itional Harvester.. . He defied union charges t iat the hearings were (designed to break the strike. “The committteh his succe* ded to a marked degree in exposin Communist infiltration into cert tin labor unions with the result iri many instanceo that the unions involved have rid themsellves of Comlnunißt domination and influence,” § Wood S4i< h 1 '! He charged that the Corr ntern, the Red international of | labor unions, and the! central committee of the\ U. S. Corpmunist have made infiltratiohs of the funlons their major objeciive. 1 1 »• ! . • I -\ . /r-■ ■ I r INDIANA WEATHER Fair tonight; and Wednesday. Cooler tonight, a little warmer Wednesday. Low tonight ,4«54. High Wednesday Ih/ the 70’s.V- \ ; | T

Decatur, Indiana, Juesddy, September 2, 1952.

TFX > ■ | v < Pres. Truman Charges Eisenhower Tool For Selfish Politicians

Stevenson Is Planning For Western Tour V L .-' . V ' : ' i :i ' V . Demands Scrapping Os Taft-Hartley Act In Holiday Speeches SPRINGFIELD, 111. UP — Gov. Adlai ‘Stevenson, pleased/] with the results of his fivespeech swing through, the pivotal labor stronghold of Michigan, began preparations today, for a 40day western campaign tour. He.said the crowds that greeted him in Michigan’s industrial centers were “better than I expected,’’ he was cheered by the applause that greeted his demand that the Taft-Hartley act be scrapped and repldpep ' with new labor legislation. Today Stejvensbn planned to work op a number of speeches he will make west. He al‘Bo will clean up some accumulated Illinois state matters and re ceive a. country ham from Lt. Gov James Blair of Missouri. During ' the week the Illinois governor \ was v expected to talk with several prominent farm leaders regarding his appearances pt Denver and at the national plowing contest at Kasson,\Minn. Stevenson laid down his program for a new labor law in his principal Labor Day address .before an estimated 40,000 persons in Detroit’s Cadillac Square. He said the Taft-Hartley act is a “tangled snarl of legal barbed wire” that must be repreced with a new law including emergency peacetime seizure powers for the president. , : ”1 don’t 'sat] everything, in the Taft-Hartley act is wrong,”' Stevenson said. “I-don’t think it is a ‘slave labor* law. But I do say that it was biased ami politically inspired, and has not improved jabor relations in a single plant. “We must have a new law, pnd my conclusion is that we can bpst remedy the defects of the present law by scrapping it and starting oyer. What should be retained ban be written into the new law best after the sympolism of trie Taft-Har.tley act is behind, i U 8” h •.? \ The Democratic presidential pominee said that “in fairness to all,” the new law mrist include certain presidentlefl seizure powers, a ban on \ “tyrannical” court injunctions to prevent strikes, and outlawirig of juAsdictionel strikes arid union boycotts.” I; ' ! ? ! ‘i’. \ He said disputes '(should 'be settled by private collective bar- i A . I <Tnm To Paxe Six* t- ■*-« rt -

Parade Os Planes Is Well I Received Sunday

‘About 400 people visited; the ■'parade of planes" Sunday afternoon at the Hi-Way airport. From 12:3’0 p. m. on cars lined the east side of Uy S. 27 to glimpse the light planes move in and out of the field. ; | Early in the afternoon the wind was so unfavorable that it was thought thd day would fall flat. Later on, however, winds subsided enough i for planes from Other fields to cbpie in. At about 2:30 they began to come in. A plane came from Illinois but had no idea anything was going on at the field; they were merely making a visit to the possibilities of ; buying a store in the Decptfir field Was the closest one to Berne and the two airmen' said tlgey were grateful 'to find it. Mr. and Mrs. George jWorley of Shgerbtown, the police chief and s wffe, flew in with a trim little Frank Grey came in frpm Portland with a Piper Cub; ode of hi® students,’ HbrscheJ Romine, followed close behind. Three planep flew over frpm Huntington butj did not waht to land because of the high winds.

Allied Planes Hit As Red Positions Attack Front Lines With Bullets, Bombs \ SEOUL, Korea, UP J —Unarmed Mosquito light planes through loyr clouds and Communist maehinei gun fire today to lead swift United Nations fighter-bombers in biillet and bomh ] attacks on Red ’■ front line positions. , t» ' The slow-moving si>ot!ter planes 1 zoomed low over Commupist tren--1 •hWL. and gun positions in deft- »- ance Os Red small arms and auto- - matiq weapons fire, They showed Thunderjets, Shooting Stars and - Mustangs ‘ where to drop their 1 bombs, bullets and napalm. : Thanks to the spotters, U. N. ’ fighter bombers destroyed two ar- ■ tilery pieces on the western front, t ripped up seven gun positions, two 1 big guns and 11 front line bunkr ers on the eastern front,, and ha- > rassed the enenly in the center. • Northwest of Chorwop, fighter- • bombers destroyed one C6m\munist • tank, the first Red armor-dad to bp knocked out since July 12. ! f American F-Afi Sabrejets sighted four (Communist; MIG-15 jets over ’ Northwest Korea, but the Russiaric built planes scurried across the ' Yalu river without offering to Bftmth Korean pilot* iu F IJI M tangs, attacked an advance supply dump north of Kumsong, desJtroy- ’ irjg eight buildings. ,Gn ; the ground, a Communist' ’ *• ’ | (Tom Ta ’ Pace Two> o.^— _ . J i•- s ' ■' : ; ‘‘ ' 1 - ' > < September Term Os Court Opens Today \ ]Ad aims circuit court con vened for Its September term today with the first order of business being the calling of the docket by cir- 1 cuit court judge Myles F. Parrish. ! The criminal docket will be called first, followed by the civil docket. It Js scheduled to continue through Wednesday. One Man Killed In \ Wreck Near Two Adams county men were injured, one seriously, when the old auto in l which they were riding overturifiedi one-half mile smith of Blilff ton early Sunday morn mg, killing ope man. Rudolph Olivo, 217, of Dallas, Tex., Was killed when ttyrpwn‘through the cloth top of Mapuel Perez, s?M : of Decatur routd 4, wfcs seriously injured, suffering ,a brain concussion and cheSt injuries, arid Samii,el Gonzales. .19, also of 1 route .4, j sustained minor t)ody bruises rind a ’ severely-bruised knee.

Among them was Walt Snider, who was to .demonstrate crop dusting. X . r A highlight |n the afternoon cttrpe Junior Lake, h General Electric employe and the .mas- , ter of, ceremonies for the aftertrpbn, announced flights tor all tile children who eared to go u|p. . He was mobbed: Over 125 reglstipped for 'flights around the city. •In this connection, Aridy Appelniaii and Kenny Beard deserve a great deal of credit. Theirs was the only plane to take, over 30 kids for rides. All afternoon the two airmen alternated trips until finally, it is reported, the ship Was grounded because of a bad magneto or spark plug on their Cessna. Bob Railing theA took oirer the "airlift” with his AeronHe took up about 10 children. QnO r big surprise was that parents: were urging their t children to go for the free rides. At the , end at least 60 boys and . girls J were left disappointed because , there was no thne. ThV field management, however’, promises there pH be another "kiddie airlift in , ’ (Turn pace Fourj 1

— ~.4,, Warn Ships Os 2nd Hurricane In Atlantic H I? {Severe Hurricane Results In Warning By Weather-Bureau “ \ MIAMI, Fla. tJP 4The weather bureau warped ships 'today to exejj cis£ caution a “severe” hurriy cahe whipping The Atlantic onlx miles east-southeast of Miaim| with up to 135 miles a< htfpr. T I This hurricane, second of thrj season, formed as the first petered oiik in the Ndw England states; Tjje new ptorrii is only days] old and promises to be a “hum, ;digger,” the weather bureau said] ]The storm was 370 miles northnortheast of Ban Juan, Puerto Rlfco, and; moving in a northwester y direction at 12 miles per hour. The advisory said there is a ten- ’ ”de;|icy for the hurricane to turn mwe toward the west-northwest — a dangerous course to Floridrii residents. ‘■ r | ‘ilThis is a severe hurricane and alllfcMps in its! course should exercisfcj Caution” the storm forecaat- ' ersljwakaed. Gales spread Over 225 miles of shipping lanes in the Atlantic noiwh of', Puerto Rico. Hurricane fproe winds reached 75 miles north of Hie storm’s cbnter. - . , The new hurricane gathered ferocity in the gulf stream as its’forerunner billowed across New Efland, leaving in its path four persons, dead, ; two ships briefly grounded, and Stream flooding. ]|Rivers in Virginia and North Carolina continued to swell with feoffs fbom rriins which accompanied the first storm’s sweep inland dfealing Sbuth Carolina a hurricane punch. jGales, acconipanied by hail and binding rain, toppled trees and utility poles in New York and New Jersey before thp waning storm completed its destructive journey. Three Meetings Held lii Auditor’s Office i!' . ■'! -" ■ T 111 I [County Council In i Study Os Budgets ■ iL * ! \' 1 jThtee meetings—including o;M gnevance hiring with the state bi>ard of tax, conrmiSsldnerß — ■wjire held this] morning and after* noon in the auditor’s office. ] /yAdams county mil th|t morning, in regular ses-siriiir-one day late because of the! htftiday— to allow hmtine county; claims. ’ ]N :.. ! ' j The county ■ Council tljfeir annual session for Jhej p£r| P®se of reviewing-lall in] thte copnty departments and ap| prpving them if see fit Thebudgets will tihen pass oh tp the tak adjustment iboard \ which? nriiets September i, j That group; w|ich also annually for on| day only, ;has| the \power of approving the hpdgfets or lowering After the jax adjustment! board, the budgets Igo to the state boi|rd of tax for; the; final okay. | . - A| field man fr<|m\ the st4te board of tax commissioners vMill hold ' hearings on Rhe complaints of Yager fuieril home, Berrie, and! Floyd Acker o| Decatur; thtey prppst Certain assessment determinations by she hdard of review which met last Mak 1 -|2-l ncti Railfall Here On Labor Day ijhe Labor driy Wind and rainstorm brought I].T2: inches of rain in jbecatur, Hetman “Hi” Meyer, locMl weather reader, reported toThe storm came up late Monday afternoon and rain fell during mofct of the night. T'. ' / '

Storm Roufs Labor Day Crowd At Fair Indiana State Fair Back In Business INDIANAPOLIS, UP — The Indiana state fair was back in business today after picking up the soggy, wind-blown pieces strewn about the fairgrounds by Labor Day’s crowd-scattering, storm. Clearing weiather this forenoon ■ enabled full-scale * resumption of ; fair activities, but a record ajttendr anc,e spell was broken. Cool; weath- ; er which moved in on the heels j of the rain was expected to keep ; attendance down,, for such outdoor ’ attractions as harness racing this j afternoon and tne evening State ] Fair Follies. Monday afternoon’s rain and wind battering storm brought a swift finale to fair officials considered a mostly -successful holiday week end. Warm, sunny jw eather brought out record crowds . Saturday and Sunday; while Monday’s pre-storm attendance hit 125 - . 807, about 31 j)00 &hy of the Labor l Day record set in 1946. Thp rains held off long enough . to eti&ble completion of the first i day of Grand Circuit racing. A c|t pacity crowd of 10,000 was on Hand . to watch Sharp Note, wixher of , the 1952 Hambletoniak.<sp'li|fc r .the ’ three-yeaToliJ trotters. * Hardest hit by the washout was , the evening performance . of the Follies, expected to be a sell-but. Holders of some 6,000 advance sale tickets were given rain checks or offered a refund. \ High winds; with gusts up to 50 miles per hour, levelled seven tentfe and caused One serious injury. T’welve-year-old Ernest G. Stewart, Indianapolis, Ws taken to Methodist hospital tfath possible leg ft natures when struck by a falling tept pole at the Farm Bureau Co-op lent. I Also flattened by the wind wa!s the SIOO,OOO premier of at the Fair.”? The exhibit collapsed on 100 spectators and Hollywood film stars Tpny Ramano and Forrest Tucker. ?No one was injured, and the shd< was moved out-of-; doors for an impromptu performance. In Monday's livestock competition, a five-man Lake county team coached by Charles Gernes, Crown Point; won tori honors in the junior dairy judging Contest. A team member, EM Hein, Crown Point, took first place in individual dairy judging. . 1 ■ '/-f' H x William- E. Adamson of Morion county 16(d the junior judging contest, and Boh Murphy, Marion county, woh the individual livestock judging. Funeral Held Today For Eleanor Reppert Prominent Decatur [lady Dies Sunday Funeral services were conducted this for Miss Eleanor Reppert, 47, prominent Decatur lady, who died kt; 1;45 o’clock Sunday morning at hep homte, 421 North Second street. she had been in fait ing health ifpr the past eight months and • critical fote several days preceding her death. Services were held at the Zwick funeral home at 2 o’clock, with the Rev. William C. Feller officiating ! and burial Was in the Decatur ceme-, ted. ■ I “ Miss Reppert Was associated with ] her father,i Fred Reppert, national-! ly famous ,auctioneer*, in operating the Reppert school of* auctioneering and had managed thje school since her father’s death iri 1946. /. Miss Reppert, a lifelong resident, of Decatur, was bofn in this city Sept, 2, 1904, a daughter of Fred and Della Klrsch-Reppert, and graduated from the Decatur high school in 1921. She was a member of the Zion ; Evangelical and Reformed church and the Eba Tau Sigma sorority. Only near survivipg relative is a brother, Roland L. Reppert, Decatur physician. };• J’.?

Price Five Cents

Beingllsed As Spokesman For G. 0. P. Efforts President Truman > On First Stumping r Tour Os Campaign i ABOARD THE PRESIDENTIAL t TRAIN, En Route to Washington, - UP — t Truman charged . today that Dwight D. Eisenhower, j “who knows better,” is being used > as a spokesman for “selfish polir ticians in a Republican effort to s get votes with irresponsible foreign s policy statements that Increase the risk of war." I In a speech prepared for delivery t from the rear platform of his triain; s at Parkersburg, W. Va„ Mr. Tru- . man said Eisenhower, Republican r presidential candidate, had.“helped s vigorously” to carry out the ad- . ministration’s foreign policy. . But Elsenhower, Mr. Truman r said, noW is being Bhowri “how to be a hypocrite.in a few easy less 1 sons” by; “home masterminds at t hand in the Republican councils.” President Truman said one of 1 th/ese masterminds had helped in I formulating the administration’s > Hireign policy. He appeared to be ■ W^iS rji ? g to John Foster Dulles. ' The President’s speech at P*rfr--5 ersburg came as Me resumed his > first stumping tour of the Campaign . after a major Labor Day addi-est. > in Milwaukee where he blasted . Eisenhower as a “captive ca'niHdate,” "Charged the Republicans I I want to “turn back the clock,” and , slapped at the recent supreme court invalidation of the jstedl plant seizure as a “modern Drted Scott opinion.” In his address today, Mr.-Truman struck out at wJUat he called “loose talk” by the mastermind Republicans about, liberating the enslaved peoples of Eastern Europe. He shid the fate bf the peoples in the 1 Soviet borderlands behind the Irdn Curtain is “one ©f the greatest and most terrible tragedies ] of huhian times.” He said that “we shall never forget these people.” .But, he added, there is ho way to free these peoamong other “outside activities.” The Judiciary subcommittee invited Caudle to appear, along with former Attorney General J. /T«mi To Paxe Stx) f. \ Caudle Testifies At Closed Hearing Gives Testimony On' Jury-Block Inquiry > WASHINGTON, UP—T, Lamar Caudle,'ousted head of the . justice department’s! tax division; testifies behind closed doors today on charges the department trjed to block a grand jury inquiry into St. Lotflg taxi scandals. . Rtep. Kenneth B. Keating, R.N. Y. said a house judiciary sub- . committee investigating the- department also will ask Candle about the “bpckgrdund of administration” in the agency. President Truman fired Caudle last Nov. 16 because of “outside activities incompatible with the duties of his office.” Caudle was ousted during an investigation of nationwide tax scandals by a house ways and means subcom-* mittee. \ . The group pad questioned Cau-. die about his free airplane rides, discounts on automobiles, apod a commission on an sale—• pie now except by uie of force. He said the administratibn’s for- 1 ' eign policy is based on doing ' everything possible for the peoples behind the Iron Curtain short of force or a move ’that might set W another world war. “In spite of this obvious fact, there, has been, all along, a group of Republican obstruction—-men of little minds and mein aspirations— Who have put party above country, and have worked for instead of peace,” he said. .