Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1942 — Page 4
PELLEY'S ARTICLE BLAMING
;
Prosecutor Says Hitler Rise Spurred Founding of Silver Shirts.
(Continued from Page One)
introduction of this evidence both as to Pelley and the other two defendants, Miss Marion Henderson and Lawrence A. Brown, treasurer and secretary, respectively, of the Fellowship Press, Inc, the firm which published “The Galilean.” Over defense objections, Mr. Ewing sought to show the pro-axis tendencies of Pelley by reading to the 12-man jury approximately 20 excerpts from Pelley’s autobiography, “The Door to Revelation.” One of the portions of the book read was that telling of the decision to found the Silver Shirts. This section. read as follows: “It so happened that I was working late one night in my office at the east end of the main college building when Marion Henderson, my secretary, came in with the Asheville (N. C.) evening paper. I saw eight column headlines. Curiously, I picked it up. The date was Jan. 30, 1033. And screaming from the page were the significant words: “‘Adolf Hitler becomes German chancellor’.” “I. looked at the lines. TI read them again. I sought to comprehend them. Something c¢/'aked in my brain.
Prophecy Working
“I laid the paper down. The prophecy heard that night in the 83d st. flat before going up to Mrs. Leslies’ was working. “ “Tomorrow,” I announced, ‘we have the Silver Shirts.’ “Anderson scowled. Marion was puzzled. One of them demanded: ‘What do you mean, Silver Shirts?’ Tet me alone tonight’ I begged. Tomorrow you'll know everything'.” ‘Other excerpts told of the quick spread of the Silver Shirts and one of them told of Pelley’s efforts to keep down the activity of some of his more enthusiastic supporters. “I had to hold the actionists down
U.S. FOR WAR READ TO JURY
Washington gang while at the same time I trained the metaphysical element to see that ‘thinking nice thoughts’ was all right in its place but that nice thoughts had to be translated into constructive action at the right place and moment.” Pelley said in his book that his purpose in forming the Silver Shirts was to prepare a great horde of men nationally to meet the crisis intelligently and constructively. Mr. Ewing read this portion of the autobiography to the jury:
“It Meant Force”
“Every Silver Shirt must know the full extent of the conspiracy (referring to communism), see it in its most detailed workings, get his thinking up to a level where the size of the plot could be accredited, and if red communism in all its frightfulness were finally projected upon the country, be in a position to join with tens of thousands of similarly enlightened Christians and preserve the form of constitutionaly government set up by the fore-fathers. If this last meant using force to hurl a great regime of scoundrels from the country, very well, then it meant force.” The chief prosecutor read excerpts which quoted Pelley as saying there were Silver Shirts in every state except Delaware and that California had more Silver Shirts than policemen or national guardsmen. In one page of his book Pelley said his supporters in California were sufficiently organized to give the reds a contest if they should try to take over the state. Testimony offered in court yesterday by an employee of Pelley was that the Silver Shirts were disbanded in January, 1940.
Prophecy, Hitler Linked
warranted reprisals against the
magazines. stand that he had ordered a thou-
Mr. Pelley’s autobiography, was the
head of the German people. William H. Carson, government witness from Spokane, Wash acknowledged on the stand thet he was a former member of the
which Pelley appeared. He testified that Pelley, in conversations at the meeting, had said the Far Eastern situation would be very bad for America.
had said something about this nation’s being practically insolvent and that it would be very hard for America to maintain a supply line to the East. : Another, witness, Paul Shemanski, also of Spokane, testified that he had been interested in the Christian Party and had distributed literature in its behalf. He also testified he had been a member of thd Silver Shirts and had subscrib®d to many of Pelley’s He said on the witness
sand copies of “We Fight for De-
mocracy Only” from the Fellowship
Press in Noblesville. He said he wished have ordered 5000 more.” Carson testified he sold one lot of 100 and another of 50 to two friends ‘and distributed the remainder among friends. He said he received two copies of each issue of “The Galilean” through the mail. Some of these he passed on to friends, he said. First testimony concerning the Silver Shirts was given by the last of nine witnesses called yesterday, the opening day of the trial, by the prosecution. John Aarhus, head of the shipping department of the Fellowship Press and an employee of Pelley’s
“he could
Mr. Ewing started reading the excerpts with one in which Pelley said that in 1929 he sank into a reverie and heard a prophecy that “in three years or thereabouts you will find yourself at the head of a national vigilante organization, a quasi-military force, which you will project and bring to strange flower.”
until the conditions of the nation
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for several years, was asked if he didn’t testify before the recent federal grand jury here that Pelley was the founder of the Silver Shirts. Took Trip With Pelley “Yes,” he replied. Mr. Ewing then asked him if he didn’t accompany Pelley on a trip to Milwaukee, Spokane and Seattle last February at which Pelley at-
|tended meetings at private homes.
He said he did. Under cross-examination, Mr. Aarhus said that these meetings,
|attended usually by 20 or 30 per-
sons, were “esoteric physical” in nature. Judge Baltzell asked Mr. Aarhus if he knew what “esoteric or metaphysical” meant and he said that he didn’t. “They were sort of religious meetings,” he explained. “Did you know some of the peo= ple at the meetings?” Mr. Ewing asked. “Yes,” Mr, ‘Aarhus’ replied. The judge asked him how he knew them and the shipping clerk replied that some of them had visited the Pelley plant at Asheville, N, C., where Pelley had his publishing headquarters before he moved to Noblesville. He said he didn’t know if any of the persons present at the meetings were former Silver Shirts. Under cross-examination, .Mr. Aarhus testified that “as far as I know, the Silver Shirts are not in existence. They disbanded in February, 1940.”
Listened to Broadcasts Another government witness, Jesse B. Kling, a proofreader and typesetter at the Fellowship Press, testified earlier that he sometimes listened to foreign shortwave broadcasts, both from Germany and England and that he sometimes told Mr, Pelley about them “in a casual manner.” The government yesterday afternoon laid the foundation for its sedition case against Pelley and two associates py calling witnesses to identify documentary evidence. ' Pirst witness called by Mr. Ewing was Charles Doriot, assistant to the Indiana secretary of state, who identified the articles of incorporation of the Fellowship Press, Inc. Other prosecution witnesses called were: Chester A. Roberts, Hamilton county recorder, and Roy Horney, Hamilton . county surveyor, who identified the property and deed of the Fellowship Press, Inc., at Noblesville; Douglas J. Williams, FBI special agent, who seized the minute book of the Fellowship Press on a search warrant of Pelley’s residence here, on N. Pennsylvania st. last April, and Dwight K. Williams, Waynesville, N. C., who worked as a pressman for the Fellowship organization from 1937 until early this spring. Mr. Williams identified various publications which were published at Pelley’s direction.
CLASH IN WAR GAMES WADESBORO, N. Y. July 29{} (U. P.) —Skirmishes, marking actual beginning of the second phase of the 1942 war games, broke out || along a 20-mile' front eariy oul} as Blue army patrols reinforced by
or meta-
opened attacks on advance Red army posts.
FRASER IS ‘IMPRESSED’ U. P).—
by the whole war setup: in Australia and by the confidence that
tary authorities.
between toes, may mean dread
Eases
HV. 222
motorized and mechanized cavalry fii
CANBERRA, Australia, July 29 Hilf me Minister Peter |} ii Fraser of New Zealand said today |} that he had been greatly impressed
existed between the Australian gov- |Hiii ernment and united nations mili-
Auto Victim
Silver Shirts and had attended aj: meeting last March in Spokane at|#
Carson also testified that Pelley|
FUNERAL SERVICES will be held at 10 a. m. tomorrow at the Conkle funeral home for Miss Margaret Louise Hensley, 16-year-old Indianapolis girl who was killed in an auto accident Monday afternoon as she returned from visiting friends at Ft. Harrison. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Miss Hensley was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, William" Hensley, 520 Rochester ave. The accident happened on Road 67 one and a half miles east of the city.
CLUES SOUGHT IN GRAVEL PIT CASE
Disappearance or Robbery of Swim Party Member Is Investigated.
Sheriff's deputies today were investigating the possible disappearance. or robbery of Earl Carrico, 31, of 136 S. Neal ave., after night-long dragging and 10 charges of dynamite failed to produce his body in a gravel pit. Carrico, who could not swim, originally was believed to have drowned in a midnight swimming party Monday night at W. Minnesota st. and Eagle creek, which is posted against swimming. Although Carrico was reported by his employer's wife to have made from $46 to $50 a week as a bricklayer and cement worker, deputies said his billfold found on the gravel pit bank was empty. Meantime, two adults in the swimming party were to appear’ in juvenile court to answer charges of contributing to delinquency. Judge Wilfred Bradshaw of juvenile court previously had requested the sheriff to arrest parents of children swimming in posted pits. There were four minors in the midnight party.
SEEKS TO MAINTAIN INSTITUTION: STAFF
The State Budget committee met today to consider ways to keep the staffs of state institutions at their necessary numerical level and still avoid a special session of the legislature to provide increased pay rates for attendants and other workers. Budget Director Andrew Ketchum said that the law provides that heads o fstate institutions cannot contract for expenditures exceeding their appropriations. “However, we recognize how imperative it is that we maintain the proper staffs at the state hospital and institutions,” he declared. He said the committee is considering discussing the problem with the potential leaders of both parties in the legislature which meets in January and see if it wouldn’t be advisable to spend
the money now and make it up}
in a deficiency appropriation at the regular legislature session.
SUSPECT DETAINED IN TRAFFIC DEATH
A 22-year-old suspect arrested in connection with the hit-run traffic death of Claude Thomas, 27, of 412 E., Market st. is scheduled to appear in the Beech Grove magistrate’s court tomorrow night. Thomas was killed when struck by an auto as he walked along the Bluff road near Glenns Valley early Sunday, July 19. Sh ’s deputies said the suspect admitting that he’ hit but that he thought it Ww and drove on. Deputies also said that they had two affidavits signed by passengers in the suspect's car who claimed that it was the one which struck Thomas. The suspect is held in the county jail on: a $1000 bond on the technical te of vagrancy. IE fin i “A FINE SERVICE iti A FARR PRICE" IS
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| months before Pearl Harbc',
{Ben Pryor Will Teil Her
How Hubert Dang ed From a Plane. (Continued from Page Oe)
He was a bombardier. i But Mr. Pryor had to live it that way, for there was ri’ way of - telling.
Then there was yes erday et
tending to his 12 hives | It's a hobby with him.
Mabel S. Waddle, 2112 Ni Delaware st. Hi Mrs. Waddle had juss! ‘ heard from her boy, Arthur, &n aerial gunner. Arthur and Hube!: were pals when both played ipotball together for Cathedral. | ” Ed »
THE CABLEGRAM froin Arthur said: “Pryor and I :re together again, and we’ re Ik {eeling fine. Pryor was decorate’ in a raid. I can’t tell you a: ything more about it. Perhaps a was in the papers.” There’s no need to say, Ho ww Mr. Pryor felt. { Then he got to figuring and he thinks he knows how it: came about. : Early in the summer. Arthur had cabled his mother thas Hubert had been “gone” for ¢ shout a month. “Of course, he wouldn': have told her Hubert was Kile,” Mr. Pryor said. But now, if Hubert had bi icen on a raid, that’s why he was! gone.” He’d gone out with the ai: force and Arthur was in the l:ospital for an appendectomy. ; It was a mistake that 2 would be happy to recti i xcept the Japs, maybe. “He’s awful quiet till him mad,” said Mr. Pryor “I always told him to take care of himself, and be surk | he was right.” id
“ou get
2 » td
MR. PRYOR admitted, though, that the first time his Loy got in a fight, “I took him doi: 1 to the woodshed for a little conizrence.” Naturally, Mr. Pryor fants to talk about his boy, now. About the time when he wes playing football for Cathedral hig! school. “Maybe the team wold get kind of down and be behind, and everybody would holler, {Ye want Pryor, we want Pryor.’ “And, boy, he'd get there.” Then there was ‘the | bert was younger, 14 in ‘act His mother died when !i2 was 6 months old and he was raised by three aunts in Bellefont:ine, O., until he was ready | ft fr high school. ir
light in
” » ” H AUNT Mamie Fitzpeatiit one day from Belleforifa said for Mr. Pryor to, over. “Hubert is just killing | i1s. ‘terrible,” Aunt Mamie sa i. Mr. Pryor is a freight! conductor on the New York Cenfral railroad, but he took the day off and hurried right over. “It’s terrible, it’s terri, e,” said Aunt Mamie, “Why, Mamie, what's! Ben wanted to know. “Well,” said Aunt M: mie, went down to the sheep ‘arn and Hubert was down there, but he didn’t know I was. | J “Well,” gasped Aunt Mamie, with a flood of anguizh coloring her face, “he was smoking a cigaret.” Mr. Pryor heaved a dee ) sigh. 8 » # i HE LIKES to tell i‘a story now, for he thinks it’s quite a joke on all concerned. And right away Mr. ‘“ryor is going to write Aunt Mande and tell her another story | about Hubert. “Oh, will she be glad 40 hear this one!” Ben said. | Meantime, he’s awaitiziz more news. |
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(Continued from Page One)
Recently he advocated continuous day and night mass bombing of Germany, which he is convinced would bring her to her knees without a land invasion. |. American troops now being concentrated in England and, Ireland, he said, could be used to supplement the British in mopping up after Germany was broken by mass bombings, 2 ” s “] KNOW SOME military men say you can’t conquer a nation by bombing alone,” the senator said, “but because it hasn't been done in the past is no sure criterion that it cannot be done in the future. “If our bombers can destroy even one city a week as the British destroyed Cologne, I don’t believe it would be long before Germany. collapsed.” This, it can be said, is also the opinion of very sound air officials. It is the basis of the formula for concentrating British and American bombers in an air offensive ‘that would send 1000 bombers a night, carrying a devastating load of 3000 tons of bombs a trip, over city after city in Germany. A task force of 2000 bombers, providing 1000 in operation and 1000 in reserve, can be built up within three to six months under the formula already laid down in these dispatches. This would require diversion of only two-thirds of American production coming off the line, with a third left for other fronts. Nor would it divert from any present front. The British. would provide the other half required for the 2000-plane task force. ”
FDR's Go Sign Necessary
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT'S
diversion of bombers, in driblets, to all fronts of the world, and start the concentration of sufficient bombers in Britain for the knockout blow against the Reich. Mr. Roosevelt paved the way for this all-out air offensive when over a year ago he ordered a sub-
duction. The fruits are now being realized. > Senator Norris is a humanitarian, and mass bombings have an appeal to the humanitarian anxious to spare as many lives as possible. The objective of the bombing offensive, as of all British raids on Germany, is to destroy key industrial objectives—not civilians. Visitors returned from Berlin who were there during British raids tell how the R: A, F. squadrons swept over the streets of the eity, dropping no bombs, and moved on' to the key industrial centers to drop their loads. Loss of civilian lives in bombing raids is small compared with the huge losses when armies lock horn to horn, as now along the Russian front, and as they would
in a land invasion of Europe. ” ” ”
First War Figures Cited
IN TWO YEARS of German bombing of England, 43,235 civilians were killed and 54,123 seriously injured. In the first world war, with 65,038,810 mobilized on both sides in destructive trench warfare, total casualties, including dead, wounded, prisoners and missing, numbered 37,508,686, or better than one out of every two men mobilized. A total of 8,538,315 were killed or died of wounds or disease; that is, one out of eight. Nobody here minimizes the cost of a land invasion of Europe. Beyond that, the United States and England are not now prepared,
Bomb Germany Out of War!
Hitler Is Tied Up in the East arid Now —— Is the Time for Democracies fo Strike’
and won’t be for some time, for that Herculean task. Land invasion, unless preceded by devastating oombing as described in these articles, will take men and sup- | plies in staggering numbers to bridge the channel and attempt to break through the line Hitler has built along the whole coast, behind which his legions sit on their arms, waiting. The cost in lives by bombing
| would be small by comparison.
2 ” =”
Casualties Mount CASUALTIES IN A joint task
force, on the scale projected for mass bombing raids, would run in six months operation between 50,000 and 100,000, it is estimated, counting losses in the bombing of ground crews as ‘well as losses in bomber crews. The formula, previously outlined, would put 1000 or more bombers over Germany continu-
ously, when weather permitted, which would mean about 15,000 bombers to contact their targets during a month, Losses were reduced in the Cologne and Essen raids to 4 per.
cent of bombers engaged, which
would mean a loss of 600 bombers a month out of 15,000 bomber trips. Two-engined bombers have ea crew of five; four-engined bombers, a crew of seven. That would mean a loss of between 3000 and 4200 airmen a month. Losses might run heavier at times. But, over all, losses of men in bomber crews should not run over 25,000 for a six-month period. To that must be added losses in ground crews from enemy bombing operations. During the six months, with the new mass bombing technique, Germany would be well-nigh paralyzed.
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