Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 November 1951 — Page 11

, 28, 1951

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" WEDNESDAY, NOV. 25,1081 Pope Makes TV Misses a Show—

BY CHESTER ‘POTTER Seripps-Howard Staff Writer

Archbishop | . irimdvrw By United Préiss |vision has missed the most dramaWASHINGTON, Nov. 28—His| tic show in Washington. Holiness, Pope Plus XII has For emotional outbursts, sharp

contrasts and colorful language, named the. most Rev. Fr. John !tnhere's been nothing to equal the

F. O'Hara, C.S.C., bishop of Buf- two King Committee appearances falo' and former president of! lof Theron Lamar Caudle, dis-

Notre Dame University, to be fhe[cherged Juste Department tax fifth archbishop of Philadelphia. | Here was a man who on Mon-

The most Rev, Fr. Amleto Gio- | day was an. aggressive, almost yanni Cicognan, apostolic dele- defiant witness as he rose from . . hiss chair and orated to the comgate to the United States, an- i100 and the audience. nounced today that Bishop yesterday, he slumped in his O'Hara was elevated to succeed/chair, his face ashen, his head

ND's O'Hara TWo Days on ‘Committee Grill Wilts

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© THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES PAGE 11- - * -|

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War | Hero | Who Won 597 Medais Dies

Leo Camplin, 60, World War 1 hero who won 59 medals in his 37 years in the Army, died yesterday| ¢ in Cold Spring Road Veterans Hospital. % Services wili be held at 10 a. m.| i tomorrow in his home, 942 N, Tibbs Ave., and at 10 a. m, Friday lin Miller & Sons Mortuary, Brazil. | | Burial will be in National Ceme- | |tery, Ft. Bliss, Tex. | Mr, Camplin, a field artilleryfF man, joined the Army at 19 and

Caudle

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{served under Gen. John J. Persh-

the late Dennis Cardinal Dougherty, who died in May, Bishop

the See of Buffalo Mar, 16, 1945. The archbishop-elect was born

schools and Jesuit Uruguay, and was from Notre Dame in

ana public Lollege in graduated 1911.

Following seminary and gradnate work at Catholic University

Notre Dame as an instructor in 1917, and later served as prefect of religion, dean of the College of Commerce and vice president:

He became Notre Dame's 12th president in 1934, and foundell the university's daily religious bulletin and set up a program for exchange of students with South American schools, - Bishop O'Hara was appointed military delegate to the armed forces in 1939 and a year later was elevated to the title-of Titular Bishop of Mylassa.

Face Health Hazard

CHICAGO. Nov. 28 (UP)—The Board of Health said yesterday that a pumping station breakdown « a "possible public health hazard” on the southwest side and warned residents of the area to boil their drinking water.

When Was Great Chicago Fire?

You'll find historical dates, weath- : er data, breeding, planting charts, © moon phases, other facts—in 1952 St.. Joseph Calendar and Weather Chart.

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Ces

reated

O'Hara was appointed Bishop of!

&. May 1, 1888, at Ann Arbor, Mich. |

He attended Michigan and Indi-!

WU. 8.

{thrown back, his hand reaching nervously for a paper cup of water, He was so' far from the table microphone that reporters had trouble catching his blurred (words. \ Even before committee chairman Cecil R. King (D. Cal,), excused him from testifying at the afternoon session, it was apparent a crack-up was near. Spectators were not surprised when Mr. King excused Mr. Caudle after he told. the commit-

here, he was ordained a priest of tee: “I have a splitting headache. the Congregation of the Holy... I feel very bad.” Cross in 1916. Former U. S. Attorney Bishop O'Hara returned to, wy. Caudle 1s no stranger to

the examination of witnesses, For five years he was U, 8. attorney in his native North Carolina, a vigorous prosecutor, by reports. He has held the two top prosecuting jobs in the federal government, chief of the Justice Depart-

.ment’s criminal division and then

of its tax division. President Truman fired him from the tax job

on Nov, 16 for outside activities “incompatible” with his position, On Monday, Mr, Caudle had

boasted to the committee that as attorney he had brought his office from the “worst record” in

the country, to one of the best.

Still, it took only about four hours of questioning, spread over two days, for Mr. Caudle to become” so near collapse he could not continue Television wouldn't have had Rudolph Halley whose harsh,

high voice was a feature of the Lefauver committee hearings. But it would have had Adrian W. Dewind, chief counsel of the committee. Mr. Dewind—earnest, ybed sharp qustions at the 47-year-old witness. Mr, Caudle digressed or replied, I do declare, I just can't recollect.”

dead-pan—stat

n

Mr. DeWind brought him back

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{ing in Mexico before going to Eu- ¢ rope in World War I. i Although gassed in the Argonne Forest, he captured 16 Ger-' {mans before being captured him-

a)

You get more pleasure from every

{ing near {Hall taking pictures with a per-

ns self. He escaped rand led 163 activity . . . more “efficiency on AN ‘ T. Lamar Caudle as he appeared before the House Ways and Means Subcommittee. doughboys back to Allied lines, the job—when your eyes are all | - Ny. ' “ " wigs " " " |Gen. Pershing and Field Marshal they should be! Have your eyes GLASSES Ne 3 | just can't recollect. | have a splitting headache. They were rough on me. | Ferdinand Foch pinned the Croix ied now. Get glastes only ¥ fii : on the track time and again, and, Mn Caudle said that Charles Another tax attorney who was ge Querre on him in a base hos- they are needed. CREDIT tried repeatedly through re- Oliphant, chief counsel of Inter-'a Whitehead guest through Mr, Pital in France. : phrasing questions or shooting nal Revenue, went on one. of the Caudle’s invitation was James M. In recent years he was a guard OFFCE HOURS: over new ones to improve Mr. trips at his invitation. Later Barnes. a Washington tax lawyer at Municipal "Airport. = 9:30 to 1 Caudle’s recollection. he admitted he telephoned Mr. and former administrative assis- Mr. Camplin was a member of JEWELERS) . 9 iid Mr. Caudle with his rich south- Oliphant about Mr. Whitehead's tant to President Roosevelt. the American Legion, Disabled @—JLNLLCAY 2 to 5:15 1 ern drawl and southern expres- tax case, following a telephone Mr. Barne's firm of Barnes and War Veterans, Cutters, 40 and 8, 137 W. Washington 3 sions was fully as telegenic as call from Mr. Whitehead. Hill currently represents William and Loyal Order of Moose. \ ng 75 TY Tr § any Kefauver committee witness. ap Caudle “couldn't recollect” q pias Wheeling, W. Vo. Trace He is survived by his wife,| “wii a It wae a ore gSramatie Show | just, what he told Mr. Oliphant (rack owner, whose tax case has Esther, his mother and three than Frank Costello's hands or gpout “the Whitehead case and , : : 3 “oF 2% been blasted on the Senate floor brothers. Jake (Greasy Thumb) Guzik's My. DeWind couldn't pin him ,. o John 1. Wiliar ‘R 7 refusal to ‘answer questions. down to anything more definite fH. > n nd ¥1alams of A Actually, the “incompatible” than that he “may have” tried Jt": The firm did not Tepresent| activities Mr. DeWind brought to help Mr. Whitehead. Mr. Lias when Mr. Barnes took

out yesterday weren't as impor-|

tant ‘as some vet to be disclosed Also on one trip was I. T. Cohen Under questioning by Rep. Carl by the committee. of Atlanta. Mr. Cohen was a T. Curtis (R. Neb.), Mr. Caudle Mr. DeWind did develop that Member of the Washington law said that Mr. Whitehead had told while in the Justice Department firm of Campbell, Cohen and Lan- him his tax troubles were his own Mr. Caudle: hdd gone to Palm dau, now dissolved, which han- fault but Mr. C: added that Beach twice in a plane owned by dled tax cases here. Mr. Jacob he thought Interna! Revenue had Troy Whitehead, Charlotte, N.C., Landau of that firm paid $900 to- been “rough” on him. businessman who was under tax ward the purchase of a mink coat “They sold his factorv and his investigation. Mr. Caudle insist-\ Which Mts. Caudle bought for automobile, and he hasn't even ed he knew nothing of the inves- $2400 at wholesale. She paid the got a plane to fly around in,” Mr.

ligation at the time, rest.

‘A Horrible Mistake’ —

Yugoslav Cop Gets in Trouble For Jugging Gl Harold Russell

By ERNIE HILL ' BELGRADE, Yugoslavia, Nov. 28 (CDN)—Harold Russell, winner of two Hollywood Oscars for his part in “The Best Years of Our Lives,” was detained by Yugoslav police today for taking pictures of a statue of Marshal Tito. Mr. Russell, | president of the American Veterans of World War IT until last month, is attending the convention here of the International Federation of World War Veterans, which is sponsored by the United Nations. Mr. Russell, who lost both his hands during the war, was strollthe Cone Convention am Broadman, of Cambridge, Mass. “A policeman grabbed us and

insisted we escort him to the station.” said Mr. Russell. “We went quietly, “We were detained in a room

went quiet! for about 15 minutes until an Eng- ons y

lish-speaking secretary was sum- didn’t photograph military objec-

HAROLD RUSSELL — "We

the plane trip.

Caudle said plaintively.

rible sounding names in Yugoslav.| I'm afraid he got into worse troubl e than we did.” |

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