Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 February 1950 — Page 13

ISTS

JOURS §P.M t Sunday

, 3995 - hington St.

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inside indianapolis ~~ wei=ad* The In

wor a

| AMANY TIMES a letter doss more good than

fiAs far as T know this isn't Write A Letter

2

started me off on the subject of letters. : We nfet just as she was leaving the main floor to-go to the basement and package patients’. letters for distribution. Mrs. Alexander was sorry

. but she couldn't chat at the moment. It was im- -

. “portant that the letters get to the wards. As soon as possible, too,

<=. So, I followed her. There were hundreds of let- .

fers ‘in pigeonholes. Her job was to get them to

ward clerks, Patients want their mail at the usual

"hour in the morning. Most of them know to the minute when there's a delay.

=

“What if all those envelopes contain bills and -

tax blanks?” Mail Brings Happiness’

- MRS. ALEXANDER just laughed and hinted that I wasn't too familiar with hospital mail. Willing to learn. Where to? Ward D. Mrs. Louise Payne was the ward clerk and she would be waiting. Sure enough, Mrs. Payne was expecting the brown envelope. She smiled at the size. “The more mall that comes in the happier the patients are,” said the little lady in white. 3 A swift search through the envelopes brought a big smile to Mrs. Payne's face. As she hurried off she said, “I was hoping this man would get a letter, He's been looking for this for weeks. I'm so - happy I won't have to pass him up this morning.” ~~ Ward C was the next stop, Irene Shaw put aside + her paper work and took the envelope Mrs. Alex-

= ander handed’ her. “You'd be surprised how much

|. better they feel 411 day when I give them a letter. “2 Oreven a card if it’s a funny one,” said Miss Shaw. + There was no objection to my standing outside Fe door to see the mail delivery. When Miss Shaw

"2% entered every man well enough to move a muscle

i+ reacted. Many smiled and two or three waved and '. held out their hands. J “Anything for me?” asked one oldster as the

ward clerk walked past his bed. “Are you sure you don't have anything?” : : “Maybe tomorrow,” she said hopefully. “You'll get a letter tomorrow.” The man relaxed and

ianapolis Times

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1950

"PAGE 13

said the letters would be read over and over again. “Too bad relatives and friends don't write more

4 : often to sick people in hospitals,” commented Miss . y ® : Shaw. “Especially to patients far out in the state.” a N : ' Mrs, Mareen Gates, ward clerk in the isolation ward, told the same kind of a story. She said the; “SS ob : \ . —-- - =

==emazze=Old Game Of Politics Remains

little ones send her or-the nurses to see about mail three and four timesa day. | Mrs. Gates mimicked some of the polio patients. “Oooh-—you have a letter for meeee? You have two?” Then she went on to tell how she has to read the letters to some of the more helpless victims. Her job is wonderful if mail is plentiful, she said. But when she passes some youngster looking at her from the mirror on an iron lung, the job gets tough. :

Cheerful News Best = :

IN WARD G, Nurse Judy Browner told me mai could come up 15 times a day and it still wouldn't be enough. he Ida Mae Dorn, student at Indiana University Extension, is clerk in the women's ward. Miss Dorn was a polio victim in 1945. She also has had three operations at the Medical Center. “I know what it means to get letters,” smiled Miss Dorn. “They're almost as important as food or medicine. When I pass out the mail here everything gets real quiet. Nobody talks, they just wait and when I don’t have a letter for someone who is hoping like everything for one; I feel as if I'm to blame. You don’t feel so good when somebody you love forgets about you.” All the ladies are in agreement that cheerful letters with a lot of good news are the best. Next! come funny cards, When 1 left the hospital I! didn’t feel 50 good. There were many times I could! have written a letter or sent a card. Too busy is kind of a weak excuse. Nuts,

i Guests of Honor

By Frederick C. Othman

- WASHINGTON, Feb. 7-The lamb chop in the ‘lace pants and the green peas in the paper cup geason is upon us. Those bigwigs with’ zinc-lined stomachs are in luck. The rest are doomed to ulcers. The President is being invited to so: many shindigs with food that he’s frequently going + through the motions of eating dinner twice. As for the Veep and the beauteous Veepess, I don't ~ suppose they ever get to eat at home, Not even breakfast. All over the place are cocktail parties with caviar; at the fancy ones the champagne comes out of electric fountains. And even an old farmer like me gets invited to more of these ruckuses than he can attend. Or wants to.

Mr. Hope Gets Confused

““BUT I DID take in one the other day which, being typical or perhaps a little better than most, I'd like to tell you about. This was a luncheon

by the Women’s National Press Club in honor of .

the much-dined Alben W. Barkley and his bride.

~~Thtis' Mrs. Barkley with two genuine pink flow--

ers on her black dress and two phony pink roses on her black hat is a good deal prettier than her pictures indicate. The Veep didn't look so bad, himself, in a spotted cravat. The guests of honor seemed to be in good appetite, though the food consisted of chopped-up grapefruit cocktail, pale chicken with pallid sauce on top of boiled rice, head lettuce salad, and raspberry sherbet with curlicues on top. Some of the customers didn't get to eat their salad because Ihe waiters took away their forks with the chicken nes.

Bob Hope, the comic, was in town to pick up a medal for his work entertaining soldiers, ‘so the.

‘The Brand Is Hard fo Wear'—

po. a

Typical of the hundreds of Democratic clubs in Indiana is the Irvington ‘Aggressive Democratic Club, headed by Albert L. Koesters, left. Mr. Koesters recently succeeded Edward C. Harding, right, as club president. Harry J. Buchanan, center, is treasurer.

‘Grass Roots’ Clubs Germinate Wide Interest in Party Destiny

(First of two articles) IT HAS BEEN SAID! there's more polities per square inch In The spindly-legged gold chairs which hotels Indiana than anywhere eisé in the nation. provide in their main ballrooms were getting a Certainly the game of politics is one of Hoosierland's favorite little uncomfortable by the time Mr. Barkley got| sports, enthusiastically played outdoors and indoors the year around. to make his talk, but as he said, he intended to Youngsters are indoctrinated before they reach voting age. make it short because he’d sneaked away from the Young, old and middle-aged voters keep close to a thousand political

” { ladies asked him in for a free meal. He ate it with gusto (a wonderful actor, that Hope) and! then he_made a speech. . He said that he-believed a free press for women was a fine thing. Hg said he had taken this up with a number of ladies and had his face slapped. The newspaper ladies laughed long and loud. Then ‘Mr. Hope got to bowing to the Veepess and saying nice things to the Veep and managed to get a little fussed. He called Mrs. Veep Mrs. Hadley. The audience gasped, but Mr. Hope never seemed to notice that he'd pulled a boner. The bride kept smiling. .

The Irvington club meets monthly in*Buckley's Restaurant in Cumberland. Exchanging ideas before a recent meeting convened arc, left tol right, Mrs. Harry Buchanan, wife of the club treas. uref; Mrs. Bernard Korbly, whose husband is 18th Ward Democratic chairman, and Mrs. Paul Me» Duff, wife of the Marion County Democratic chairman. Speaker at the meeting was Phillip Bayt, city controller, who discussed city government. ;

»

Senate and had to go back to preside over same.

Veep Shows Who's Boss

MR. BARKLEY made a graceful and courtly talk, studded with ¢ompliments for the female sex; he called his bride his better four-fifths, and, to -her-amazement, he said: ; niin - “My wife has just told me it is time to quit, but in order to demonstrate publicly that I am no henpecked husband, I refuse.” The Veepess hadn't said a word. Neither had she taken her eyes off her husband. He quit in a little while and all the ladies—there must have been 500-—stood up. Not so much to do him honor, but to get a better look at his bride. Then she

{clubs going, scattered through! HS | every one of the 92 counties from| MRS. RUBY WARE, DemoLake Michigan to the Ohio River, |Cratic state vice chairman, praises | These hundreds of clubs in both the Democratic clubs on the com: {rural and urban areas. of the Munity level as of “the greatest {state, dealing with people virtual-|importance” to the party. {ly in their homes, form the mas-| Every city of any size in the {sive “grass roots” foundations oniState has. Democratic community... {which the political structures of STOUPS, some of them bearing the | the major parties are pyramided, | 1abel of “Jackson Clubs.” Young Hin De Mocrale Are organized In 75 | o . | INDIANA'S famous grass roots per ont 0 ® counties,

Pp | {Ware estimates, i {political clubs take many forms,| Nearly all counties have Wom-

{and for the most part are spon-ien's Democratic clubs, and the {sored and encouraged by the state vice chairman is enthusi-

Mrs.

hurried home to.change her-dress, because she Party organization. They may be. astic over their work. “Women g {

had to go out to dinner. ~ For the paying customers (a lady who believes in equal rights picked up my. tab) the price was $3.25.

x

“Ingrid’s Baby Born in an Embroiled World Because of Selfish Parents, Ruark Writes

"Finds People Have a Long Memory * For the Inconsistencies of Celebrities

By ROBERT C. RUARK

of the birth of Miss B.'s Italian woods colt.

marriage arrangements and legal J do find the plight of little imacy. ~~ what's-his - name d | amusing, nor will the poor little | codger.. find his own life very amusing. The brand is hard to wear; even if the parents be obscure. : ‘The life of any reelebrity's child i dirtticult : enotigh, even if Mr. Ruark’ they are legally™= a

| nocent children

and honorably wed. When you Most of his life, if he is a ednibine illegitimacy with famed ful, strong man. If he is not,

parents, the sufferer has got to be

the baby. {house a scarred

There has been a great deal of|and a twisted, possibly inverted,

nonsense written about the brav-|tempérament.

-. 80y Of Bergman-and-Ressellini-in:-. People have. a long memory of ISRAEL FEARS EPIDEMIC x ignoring convention, defying the inconsistencies among the famous.! JERUSALEM, Feb. 7 (UP)

“* NEW._YORK, Feb. 7—The girls are all, yackety-yacking about contention was the Bergman Bambino, and the air is thick with clinical details

Much is peing said about the future careers of the papa. | Fo But the viewpoint of the most important member of this dra-'of legally wed and popular parmatic accouchement is being ignored in the welter of post-deliverylents, can be cursed with an en-|

‘Tove to a lifetime of famed fllegit-

THIS was merely because her equally lovely mother, Helen {Hayes, was. entangled in a pro|fessional legal squabble at the time of her birth, and the bone of whether Mary could be construed as an act of God. If a sweet and beautiful child,

——when-he goes to school, or goes to

Their own lives are their own play, or goes to work? ito wreck, if they wish; they com- ° {mit a tremendous grievance against their child by permitting 20dy. so long as his doings con-| im to be born for-the-front-

pages;:cern himself and the other adults

tamped as illegitimate, while the involved, but I disclaim the right mother is legally wed to another Of adults to wreck a child's life > lout of selfishness or improvidence | There is a harsh word for in- in the conduct of their affairs.

: ¢

who get them-

he will merely]

The last touch I like. and bloody soul, ee

Drinks extra, At some of these whooplas| the locals have paid. a good. deal more for less.. -

during cliche, can you imagine the! Bergman baby's predicament!

” " ” » I TAKE no moral stand on any-|

i | All his life this kid will bejwithered with Stephenson's con- 2f Stephenson's suite in the Hotel failed to reckon with the legal| iselves born of unwed parents; and known as Bergman's folly, or I ToT

rit is. flung:-at- them forever in somethin anger. It is a fighting word, and vicious. {little Rossellini - Bergman - Lind-| {strom will wear a bloody nose for Rossellini, has both admitted the Stephenson? Where did—he come was “Mr. Butler, Mr. pride-ichild and announced that there! from? {was to be no honeymoon... |

Bmore euphonious and; I note the proud. father, Signor

Babies are an awful nuisance! p: their parents’ honeymoon. {Re

“|Oklahoma, And as a youth) he wartant ior his arrest.

organized by communities, wards, don’t give up as easily as men,

‘townships, Sexes, races Or ageiwhen they start out to accomplish {groups. They often overlap. | something,” she explains.

Frequently the clubs are semi-! yaw {social In nature, They hold! IN SOME AREAS, particularly {parties, conduct campaigns at|/in the industrial northern coun lower levels, offer meeting places; ties, there are scores of clubs orwhere local candidates can be ganized on racial lines. The pri(heard. They build up steam which{ mary objective in every case is loften is continued in political talk |the same: to keep people politics {in barbershops and filling sta- conscious the year around. {tions, or when neighbors meet at; (Tomorrow: Indiana Republican

{grocery counters. Igrass roots organizations). i .

f

: ’, Photos by Bob Wallace, Times Staff Photographer, Participating in an infgrmal cdocus during thaclivington group's meeting are Mrs. Iroge McCleary, Marion” County Democratic vice chaitman; Bernard Korbly, 18th Ward | tan; M Helen Bearnard, 18th Ward vice chairman, and Paul McDuff, county chairman, Newly installed offi-

¥

cers of the Irvington club include Mrs. Roy Fox, vice president, and Mrs. Clara Hilkene, ‘secretary.

‘were. pleked up on ‘murder war- AS IN previous encounters with mented evidence against “the

Stephenson’s Fall Was Fast, Complete Klan Leader's Huge Political Power 7, = ™ Fo bi Subtle ih ei

Collapsed at Time of Greatest Need FROM te moment of his ar- had been lodged in a’ cell, he ‘is-|tect others,’ Stephenson shouted

By PHILIP ¥. CLIFFORD rest, the legal! wheels of defense sued this statement: trom Michigan City. : i (This is the last of a séties on D. C. Stephenson, whose plea [began spinning at a dizzy clip ini “In ;the.words of the famous As a result of his disclosures, y © ion. Friday.) what hag thus far heen 8. futile general, ‘Surrender, hell, Ive fustthe mayor of Indianapolis was THE ARREST, trial and conviction of D. C. Stephenson ex- #ttempt to clear Stephenson of begun to fight.” [indicted for violation of the core ‘ploded a myth and set off & chain reaction that thundered through- &il charges: : + Both Gentry and Kienck -ex- rupt practices act. He was given {out the state. The chain reaction was bur. pressed amazement that the jury a 30-day jail term. Six members { The myth, born of Stephenson's vanity--his oft repeated dictum,.Seoning fast. {convicted “the bogs” and let them|of the City Council were indicted , Eph Inman, an Indianapolis go. 3 {for receiving bribes. They paid { Hoosierland's political skies blackened, and astute -politicians Criminal lawyer, was retained to, “If he was guilfy," Gentry de-{small fines on minor charges and heard = fearful rumblings. But —— == — defend the fallen Klan dragon. |clared, “so was 1” iresigned. - [they were quick to recognize the ‘he Hoosier capital ¢ity on Apr. 2,| “In the weeks that followed;! Kienck voiced an identical . .. : handwriting on the wall. 11925, when Detective Lt. Jesse Mr. Inman pulled “every legal opinion. {IN 1928, The Times was awards - once —a political MeMurtry, accompanied by three rabbit out of the hat in favor of] Stephen, true to his word, had ed the Pulitzer Prize for its part dead. Its influence other officers, rapped on the door his prominent client. But. he 'just begun to fight." iin destroying the Kian. Member | Scarcely had he arrived at ship in the hooded organization Washington. = talents of William H. Remy, then Michigan City where he was as-/dwindied to little more than 4000, Stephenson, “Wimselt, “answered the “Marion ~ Couiity prosecutor. Signed Number 11148, “when fie] ANd “now, 25--years after his - {the summons. /Mr. Remy, a-violent foe of the began his campaign for freedom original arrest, Stephenson is still man| At first he told the officers he Klan, was successful in blocking that is now closing in on the guar= trying to get-out— Stephen- every move made by Mr. Inman. ter-century mark. ‘ | His future rests with the three One of the As a last resort, Mr. Inman, When writs and petitions fell'men, who will consider his peti- _ His origin seems lost. in the|detectives, however, recognized scored a point when he had thé short of the mark, the ominous|tion for parole in the statehouse faded pages of history. ithe erstwhile Klan dictator, and case venued to Hamilton County./echo = of ® “frameup,” . “political next Friday. . . : The most. popular belief’is that|Stephenson said, “Yes, I am Mr. And on May 25, 1925, Stephenson skulldruggery” and “expose” came|- Members of the Clemency Comwas born in Texas in 1891 Stephenson, what is this racket?” and his co-defendants were taken bouncing over the penitentiary mission include its secretary, and spent most -of his youth in| The officers said they had a.to the county jail at Noblesville Walls... .. oo. diein Harvey. Hire, Leo T. Mulva, presis ...... rrest. - {dent of the Board of Trustees of {the Indiana State Prison and

|

i for parole will be heard by the Cl

“I am the law in Indiana”-—slid into ignominious oblivion.

power was

|viction of the brutal slaying of Madge Oberholtzer. : 1 BN n= FR

BUT WHO was this

[son's secretary.”

iby Hamilton

Sheriff | ee {learned the fundamentals of the ‘Very well, read it.” Charles Gooding.

FINALLY the storin broke.

County

world and its customs for love From the first day that lovely, Authorities feared today that a 304 Kindred gunk. .. oi HOF tho Toei" al Thy iat her I ct is ey are young woman, she was harassed as the Middle East struggled = guilty of an appalling selfishness/and hounded by the term, “act of der the heaviest iin ey

within memory, ’ ” —- br -

i

for condemning the fruit of their, God baby.”

About Pecple—

Hobo King Speaks Out Against T-H Law

- Jeff Davis Asserts Labor Measure Cuts Members Out of Picket Jobs

Jeft Davis, king-elect of the nation’s hoboes, Central Labor Council in Portland, Ore., that the Taft-Harley Law it at the burglar on his second made it difficult for his constituents to obtain jobs as pickets. Visit, but missed. en he came He said, under the law, pickets were often asked what their back the third time Mrs. Newton “legal interest” was in the strike. ; rapped him over the head with |the box that permits him to see the gun which he took away ‘out. |from her. Each time she lost her J om. cash, : Malcolm W. Bingay, editorial di-| ” rector of the Detroit Free Press, won an argument with hospital] doctors today. : oi: the organization|Attendants at had given the/Grace Hospital bums higher so-|brought him his cial status. portable type- [nila from San “In some states Writer so he’ll be 38 Francisco. Showthe bulls let us/able to resume ling annoyance ride the rods Inyhis SOTA statt: jyues asked 8 . os dignity now,” he Sunday. about Miss Gas5 Mr. Davis said. Mr. Bingay re- [ton he snapped, £3 a = =u ceived severe “I do not care to Ronald Gene Syslo, 14-month-burns when a 'talk about that.” old: bronchial pneumonia patient,coffee and { Miss. Gaston, 25, Was ‘kept alive by oxygen fed into brandy mixture Bingay tn New York a cardboard box while he was blew up at a °° said she expected rushed 50 miles to Children’s Hos- banquet :Jan. 17 He's .been beg- to fly to Manila : al, Denver. An ambulance ging doctors to let him start writ- today but did not driver rigged the improvised oxy- ing ‘again ever since bandages say whether she = Mr Quirine ie tent after the infant fought were removed from his eye. (would join the Quirino party.

nine days.

_ | whether his countryman, Conchita

Gaston, opera star, will fly with i » 3 ./his party to Ma- y

frustrate a persistent robber who! vw = =» has visited her three times in| DURING the dawn of the 1920's,

After the first rob-|Stephenson joined the Klan, and! today told the Dery she bought a gun. She fired his selfless activity,

Elpidio Quirino, Philippine pres- Klan that Evans added 20 other 3% rearrested on indictments re-| ident, today declined to discuss|®t2tes: from Maine to Nebraska,

{printing craft. When World War| And he made Lt. McMurtry, a. »

“Flim [sion as a lieutenant but ap-lani armed; do you want me t 12 the trial began before the late

0 parently never saw service over-idisarm?”’ They said they did, and |seas. After being discharged from automatic. From his vest, ithe Army he settled in Evansg-! Stephenson removed the bad iville, where he began organizing the Horse Thief Deféctive {returning veterans, an activity, clation. » {which he said, eventually led him (The Horse Thief Detective linto ‘politics, |Assoclation was the -strofg-arm contingent of the Kian.) ” = ”

Be of testimony was taken. - As50- The all-male jury considered the evidence at hand for about

dict of guilty against Stephenson. Gentry and Klenck were acquit

disarming rsonality and eloquent orato ih red the attention of the favorite henchmen, Earl Gentry gparks for sentencing. late Hiram W. Evans, then Im- and Baz Klenck, were also ar- ..... you anything to say beperial Wizard. : hg . In 1922, Evans gave him the! e three men lost no time in Judge Sparks. asked. task of organizing the Klan in POStINg bonds. They had been Stephenson's usually jovial and Indiana. Stephenson, ever the Charged with assault and battery. = I A | The next day, however, the trio|bouyant spirit seemed broken, opportunist, did so well for the In a voice that quivered with {turned by the Marion County emotion, Stephenson said:

to Stephenson’s domain. ~'|Grand Jury.

Among other things, Stephen-| . 8 i lson sold Klan memberships for indictments charging assault and manslaughter. It has always been

$10 each, of which he kept about Pattery with intent to kill, my impression ‘that no man

members for from Malicious mayhem, kidnaping law. I believe it is universal opinHigh Sole to 3 {and conspiracy to kidnap. Gentry ion, Some say Stephenson made he-| gn A i114 |spiracy indictments. 1 Iwo Ais ang 5 m lop Stephenson was released under and a. half million people in IndiWith the apparent “blessing” | $25,000 hond.. His aids each'ana, with outbursts of applause of Dr. Evans, there was no hold- Posted $5000 bonds. . ing Stephenson. He pulled: all As he left the county jail, ble for the jury to return a fair stops in his dizzy. meteroic flight Stephenson refused ta discuss the verdict. red to “top drawer power in Indiana. ©a%e with waiting reporters. But “Time will unfold the, - cold, He couldn't be stopped. “as . he reached the street, he white light of truth that D. C. Not, that is. until that fateful Stopped, turned suddenly and told Stephenson is not guilty of mur-

orts to fit him with an| ‘@ w # “| Mr Quirino said he discussed ask for the emergency Mrs. Florence Newton, 48, Co- ‘general matters” involving U. 8.-| Gene liked the cello- lumbus, O., store proprietress, Philippine relations with President ed Hole in the top of wondered just what it takes to Truman in Washington.

no of Miss Oberholtzer.

train trip to Hammond, the re. MeWsmen: “It's a {rameup, a der in any degree, or of any deto tk Smear supreme.” . : gree of homicide.” : sults’ of which led lo: the tragic Twelve days later, Madge With that Stephenson walked ) rl dl. {Oberhaltzer died- in her home and, back to the counsel table and sat - TWILIGHT was settling over| Stephenson and his co-defendants down. ;

i |

for this court passes sentence?” ea

“I'm not guilty of murder or, Stephenson was named in five any lesser degree of murder, or|

and hissing, rendered it impossi-

From his prison cell Stephen- Noland Ci. Wright, member of

{editor of the Vincennes Commer- diana Reformatory.

|cial, telling the locati two | Special’ Judge. Will-'M. Sparks. Itiopiion 8, the location of tw

he took from his pocket a .45 lasted ‘almost five weeks ~during former Klansman's private papers. in 1952. which mote than 2000 pages of; Boyd Gurley, editor of The In-

dianapolis Times, began a fiery Pelle p roled, It y, rd : { Wl

‘crusade. . The black boxes diggorged.

d a became obvious that Stephensdn, five hours before returning a ver- i. jo climb to success, and later

ignomy, had amassed and docu-

: : ted. : : A SHORT time affer Stephenson. (On the’ morning of Nov, 186, Two Hospitalized

was taken into custody, his two Stephenson appeared before Judge

| treatment. | Dwight Roger, 31, of 209

In Auto Mishaps

| Two persons were hospitalized wartime sedition; today faced a

rly today for tréatment of In-itwo to three year term in North | juries received ‘n- traffic acci-

dents on Indianapolis streets. Three others were also injured. | {They were released after first aid

orth St, was In serious condi{tion In General Hospital. He was {injured when the car he was driv-| ling collided at 13th St. and Col- Offering. unregistered. stocks for $4. White robes and peaked caps, Assault and battery with intent should ever'be deprived of his lib-| F

{ lege Ave. with one operated by | . manufactured for .about $1.10,!0 commit a criminal attack, erty without the due process of

Herschell Dunn. 20. of 2255 In- {alt Mr. McLean said Pelley is

{dianapolis Ave. Mr. Dunn was that this procedure was not! giightty iates 2

pe- 2nd Klenck were named in con-|in the due process of law. Three ‘hundred. people out of the three ig Martin, 22, of 1180 Madeira

If they reject his petition this

containing - the week, Stephenson may file again

Faces New Term

|

| yesterday from Federal Prison in "Terre Haute ‘where he served {nearly half a 15-year sentence for

{Carolina. | Solicitor W. K. McLean has In. dicated he will attempt to return ithe 60-year-old Silver Shirt leader . {to. North Carolina when he leaves [the Terre Haute prison on Feb. 14, | Pelley was convicted in the Tar Heel state In 1935 on a charge of

E.

{sale and misrepresenting their

considered a fugitive there. The Silver Shirt 18ader was sen-

A passenger in Mr. Dunn's car, tenced here by Judge Robert C.

Baltzell in "August, 1942, when -

[St., was treated at the scene for | Pelley was found guilty of charges

cuts and released.

Catherine McCaulby, 23. of 2612 Winthrop Ave. was in fair con-

iwhich accused him of publishing inflammatory articles and making false statements inténded to pro-

dition in General Hospital as the mote Hitler's cause and interferes

result of an accident early today at State Ave. and the Pennsyl-

vania Railroad.

She was a passenger in a car which struck the standard of a 1942, crossing signal. Driver of the undermine the “loyalty,

{car was: Timothy Hardy, 32,

". 12952 Northwestern Ave,

- Pelley: was also one of 33 pi ‘sons indicted by a District of Co~ lumbia federal grand jury in July, charges of conspiring te moral¥ of and discipline “of armel aforees Rage pi ;

" } X { legitimate Mary MacArthur was;pneumonia. epidemic. might: sweep 1. broke. out. he joined. ibe Army.read every word. of. the. warrant... FIVE. MONTHS. later, on. Oct, 900. Wrote fa. Thomas. H..Adams, the Board of Trustees of the In= ‘until her tragic death as a Israel and Jordan-held ~Palestine:and—eventually won a commis- Then, he told the policemen,

William Dudley’ Pelley, paroled \

with the U. 8, military program...

v

his

2