Adelia Di Carlo

Around 1907, she left teaching and dedicated herself to journalism writing as a social chronicler in the evening newspaper El Tiempo, directed by Carlos Vega Belgrano.

[2] Julieta Lanteri's death in 1932, ruled an accident by the police, was called into question at the time by El Mundo writer, Di Carlo.

The news daily published details of the incident, including the fact that the police report had had the driver's name and vehicle tags blotted out; that the man, David Klapenbach, was a member of the right-wing paramilitary group, the Argentine Patriotic League; and that Klapenbach himself had committed numerous murders.

[3] In 1945, De Carlo promoted the "Exposicion Interamericana Del Libro Femenino", which received great attention.

One of her most important works was the founding of the "Clorinda Matto de Turner Cultural Association", holding the presidency for more than forty years, till her death.

Adelia Di Carlo (1935)