Monday, Feb. 27, 1939
Huey's Girl
When Huey Long was an emerging backwoods politician, he acquired a secretary and a favorite in petite, 16-year-old Alice Lee Grosjean. Now 33 and an apparently permanent fixture on Louisiana's payroll, Alice Lee was last fortnight demoted from her $7,500 job as Collector of Revenue to a $5,000 job as State Supervisor of Public Funds. Last week she was suddenly fired. Few days later her husband, William Allen Tharpe, was dropped from his $5,000 job as secretary of the State Tax Commission. Other Grosjean relatives on the payroll trembled. Longster Grosjean had evidently offended Louisiana's reigning triumvirate
--Governor Richard Webster Leche, New Orleans' Mayor Robert Sidney Maestri, and Seymour Weiss--by "going over" to the 1940 gubernatorial candidacy of rebellious ex-Governor James Albert Noe. Another hot candidate for Huey Long's old crown, as yet firmly on no man's head, is his brother, Earl, now Lieutenant-Governor.
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