Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 227, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 January 1926 — Page 1

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VOLUME 37 —NUMBER 227

WIDOW OF URBAHNS IS APPOINTED Governor Fulfills Pledge to State Treasurer, Taken by Death After Operation— Services Will Be Held Sunday. RECOVERY EXPECTED LATE AS THURSDAY Elected Term of Official Ex- , pires Feb. 10,1927 —Began Career in Porter County and as Deputy in Office He Later Headed. Fulfilling a pledge made to Bernhardt H. State treasurer of Indiana, who died Thursday night at the Methodist Hospital following an operation for kidney trouble, Governor Jackson has announced the appointmeht of Mrs. Grace Urbahns, his widow, to complete her husband’s unexpired term. ' Governor Jackson presented a commission to Mrs. Urbahns • this morning. The Statehouse flag was at halfmast.

When all other treatment hnd failed to relieve the trouble with which Mr. Urbahns had been suffering for months, he agreed to removal of the kidney as a last resort. He was taken to the hospital Monday, the operation was performed Tuesday, and as late as Thursday afternoon his recovery was expected. Toward evening, however, his condition grew suddenly worse and his family was called. Be died at 8:30. It was not until his death and the subsequent appointment of Mrs. Urliahns as his successor that friends realized he had been fearful of the outcome of the operation. His last conference at the Statehouse was one with Governor Jackson, in which he expressed the desire that Mrs. Urbahns be appointed should the operation fail. His elected term of office expires Feb. 10, 1027. Funeral Sunday Funeral services will be held at the home, 404 E. Forty-Third St., 'Sunday afternoon. The Rev. J. Am brose Dunkel, Tabernacle Presbyterian Church pastor, will officiate. Mrs. Urbahns will be the first woman’ ever to be State treasurer. She will be formally inducted into office as soon after the funeral as she chooses. She is a member of the Seventh District Women’s Republican Club and has taken an active interest in her husband's political career. Before their marriage she taught school. Mr. Urbahns was born in Valparaiso, April 22, 1880, the son of John and Dorothea Urbahns. He attended the Valparaiso schools '>*■><l later was student at Valparaiso University, Aug. 31, 1911, he married Miss Grace Banta. They had two children, a son Bruce and a daughter Dorothea. Mr. Urbahnsv was a member of the Lutheran Chqrch of Valparaiso and Mrs. Urbahns belongs to the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church of Indianapolis. The Rev. J. Ambrose ifrpnkel, pastor of the latter church will officiate at the funeral. Named Deputy Treasurer Mr. Urbahn’s political career began with appointment as deputy treasurer of Porter County in 1908. In 1910 and 1912, he was elected county treasurer and on expiration of the second term he became associated with the First National Bank of Gary. In 1917 he was appointed deputy State treasurer, serving in that capacity until 1924. He was elected State treasurer in the fall of 1924, taking office Feb. 10, 1925. He had announced,, his intention of making . the race for reelection. * He was a member,of the Columbia Club and was a Mason. Although his Christian name was Bernhardt, he generally was known as Ben. Besides the widow and children, Mr. Urbahns leaves his mother, three brothers, Herman, Allen and Fred Urbahns, and one sister, Miss Flora Urbahns, all of Valparaiso.

REALTY PLOT GOES TO TRIAL Four, Including Hoosiers,' Granted Delay. Bu t inted Pretw CHICAGO, Jan. 22.—Selection of the jurors to tr ythe officers of the Consolidated Realty and Theaters Corporation on charges to defraud several thousand of persons in Illinois and Indiana began in Federal Court today. Four of the defendants were granted separate trials for a later date. They are F. S. and J. F. Fern, Hollandale, Fla., J. S. Leech, Terre Haute, and A. P. Kester, Sheridan, Iqd.

The Indianapolis Times

TEN ARE TAKEN IN DRIVE ON LOTTERIES Police Proceed With Clean-up Plans —‘Brains’ of Windsor Scheme Sought—City Official, Arrested.

With ten persons already arrested police today were proceeding with plans to clean up every lotttery operated in the city and jail all agents and ticket handlers. Information on several other lotteries was being obtained by officers after the arrest Thursday night of nine men, including Fred S. Beck, 1528 S. Meridian St., assistant city smoke inspector. All are held on charges of operating lotteries. This lottery was known as the “Windsor,” and prizes totaling $40,000 were offered. Francis Hamilton, building commissioner, said he would ask Beck to resign. High school students have been

CASES OF SHAW, STEPHENSON TO BE COMPARED May Get Jury Late This Afternoon —Two Special Venires Drawn. Bu Timet Special tyARTINSVILLE, Ind., Jan. 22. Similiarlty of the murder of Mrs. Helen Hager Whelchel, Indianapolis widow, and the abduction of Miss Madge Oberholtzer, for whose deat& D. C. Stephenson is serving a Use term in Indiana State Prison, is to be brought out by S. C. Kivett, defense attorney, in the third trial of John Thomas Shaw, Negro, charged with murdering Mrs. Whelchel. Kivett will attempt to prove jewelry was distributed among innocent persons to mislead detectives. Mrs. Whelchel received a mysterious telephone call, at 8 p-. m. Nov. ,27, 1923, met an unknown person at a drug store and later went to a dance hall, Kivett will attempt to prove. An “old woman" who got off the street ear as Mrs. Whelchel did near her home, 1868 Applegate St., about 11 p. m., was a signal to someone to pick her up in a machine. Residents knew of no person answering the description in the neighborhood, it will be maintained. Mrs. Whelchel’s body was found on the Big Four Railroad tracks, near Ben Davis, the following morning. It is believed she resisted the attack and paid the penalty of her life.

Nearly half of a second special of sixty had been questioned by noon. There was possibility of getting a jury late today. Shaw was sentenced to die after conviction in Marion Criminal Court, but State Supreme Court reversed the decision. BEVERIDGE TO ARRIVE SUNDAY ‘I Know Nothing, of Politics,’ Says Wife of Former Senator Albert J. Beveridge will arrive in Indianapolis Sunday, Mrs. Beveridge said today. -Mrs. Beveridge arrived at noon from Washington where she spent several’ days en route from Beverly Farms, Mass. Beveridge is in New York. “Oh, I know nothing of politics,’’ said Mrs, Beveridge when asked whether her husband will enter the Republican senatorial race against Senator James E. Watson.

You Will Soon Meet

I' A * .It ' SANDY

Sandy is nineteen. When you tieet her in The Timetr she is standing on the lighted shore of youth, looking on the great Sea of Life. That sea dazzles Sandy. She is impatient to set forth. The journey holds for her gripping sorrow and great joy. “Sandy” BY THE AUTHOR OF "CHICKIE.’’ Starts in The Times January 27

made victims, Inspector Claude Worley said. James Rolles, 540 Century Efidg., a printer, was to be questioned by Worley this afternoon in regard to the Windsor lottery. He was mentioned by some of those arrested Thursday night. The man said to be the “brains" of the Windsor lottery, a printer, is being sought. The tenth person,. Rozel Puikton, Negro, 1418 Roosevelt Ave., was arrested this morning by Sergeant Helm and Patrolmen Debarr and Low. Others arrested were: Harold Beck. 22, of 377 8. Illinois St.: Floyd Newman, 32, of 1814 Villa Ave.; Frank Baklus, 47, of 1448 Urgon St.; Janes Ferrell, 61, 162 W. Washington St.; Jack Ilolsclaw, 26, of 37 W. St. Clair St.; J. L. Miller. Negro, 351 Indiana Ave.. George Grisel, 51, Lorraine hotel and Louis M. Perry, Apt. 2, 2938 JE. Washington St. All except Perry are operators of soft drink parlors. More than SIO,OOO worth of Windsor tickets were found at Beck’s house. Each of the men questioned refused to disclose who headed the ring. Police say a few prizes were offered to stimulate business. Inspector Worley said when “business became bad in a neighborhood, the operators permitted a win of a few dollars to one of the buyers.” Miller told Worley he was ‘‘protected’’ during the Shank administration. Sergeant Russell and Patrolman Bruce procured information that led to the arrests. Five squads of police, headed by Lieut. FYcd Winkler and Sergts. O’Connor, Russell, Cox. Barge and Cummings, conducted the raids. GETS MONEY BY RUSE Young Negro, Begging, Holds I’p Benefactor; Is Given Check. Police today sought a-young Negro who used a cleyer ruse late Thursday to obtain money from Augustus Gohr, 75, of 2428 E. Twenty-Fifth St. Begging for work, so he could earn money for food, the youth was given money to buy hay for Gohr’s horses. He came back and said he had been robbed. Stating he had a gun, he demanded Gohr to give him more money, but Gohr grave him a check with a “fake” name.

REPORT IS AWAITED Muncie Grand Jury May Give Statement Today In Baby Case. Bu United Press MUNCIE, Ind., Jan. 22. —Muncie today anxiously awaited the report of the Delaware County grand jury which has been investigating the brutal murder of Charles B. Gray, Jr., 15-months-old infant. All day Thursday the grand jurors examined witnesses and then recessed to meet at 9 a. m. today without making a report. The Infant’s mother and father are held in jail. CALL MORE WITNESSES Coroner to Continue investigation of Liquor Case Death. Several other witnesses will be called in his investigation of the death of Thomas Diggins, 32. 131 W. McCarty St., Coroner Paul F. Robinson said today, after a conference with Federal Dry Ageht W. J. Keeney. Diggins, who was to be a State witness in a liquor case now pending in Criminal Court, was found ’end at the home of his mother, Mrs. Nora Diggins. Saturday. Kee■,ey had said he believed Diggins was killed.

Sandy ~A face like an angel’s, a heart of fire and tt laugh ringing with joy—this is Sandy. You’ll raeeft her in The Times Jan. 27. ’’Sandy” is the big new serial you’ve been awaiting. It was written by the author of “Chickie," the story that everybody Tn Indianapolis read. / It is even more real and more gripping than “Chickie.” There's a climax to tighten your breath —to keep you on edge with restless eagerness. You’re going to like Sandy. She’s a friendly, homey kind of girl, for all her beauty. She says the same bright, audacious things you say yourself if you are about twenty and full of life —or the same things that girl of yours likgs to shock you with.

INDIANAPOLIS, FRIDAY, JAN. 22,1926—24 PAGES

COLD SETS MARK OF 5 ABOVE HERE Zero Temperature Tonight, Says Weather Bureau — Snowfall Precedes Mercury Drop in City—Slow Rise Predicted Saturday. EFFECTS ARE FELT BY ENTIRE NATION Only Few Points Along Coasts Escape Third Frigid Wave of Season Here —Streets Slippery, Two Accidents Result. Cold blasts* from Canada swept down upon Indianapolis and vicinity Thursday night and this morning, bringing a low temperature of 5 above zero at 7 :45 a. m. The relentless United States Weather Bureau, after looking at the icy instruments in its observation tower, promised even colder weather with temperature of about zero, or possibly a degree or so below. Saturday is expected to be fair, with slowly rising temperature. Mercury Rises The mercury rose to 12 at 1 p. m. New York and other eastern States reported falling temperatures and snow, while southwestern States had record-breaking cold weather arid heavy snow, interrupting telephone and telegraph communications. Minnesota and Nebraska had snow and sub-zero temperature and Ohio found heavy snow and falling mercury. Freezing temperatures and lower were general over the entire nation except for the Southern Atlantic coast, a few points along the gulf coast in Texas, and the coast line of the Pacific. Preceding the mercury toboggan, snow totalling 1.4 inches fell in the city. This, with the 3.9 inches which fell on Jan. 8 and 9, and other minor falls, brought the January snow mark to 6.2 Inches, just .4 inch below the normal of 6.5 for the month.

Started Thursday The downward trend of the red in the thermometer started Thursday. The mercury regb .ered 33 at 7 a. m., fell to 22 at 7 p. m., and then feil about 1 degree an hour until 5 a. m., when the reading was 10 above. It then dropped to 6 above at 6 and 7, this mark being 21 degrees below normal. Lowest temperature reported in Indiana was 4 above at Terre Haute. The zero mark extended as for south as Springfield, 111., and lowa reported temperatures in most sections between zero and 5 below. Chicago reported 6 below, as the cold winds from Lake Michigan swept over the city. In the Northwest, temperatures are rising graduallly, but still are blew zero, J. H. Armington, meteorologist. said. This is the third frigid wave that has visited Indiahapolis this season, the low mark being 7 below on Dec. 27. Jan. 12 the mercury registered 3 above. Streets Slippery Streets became slippery as the snow became packed hard. Two traffic accidents were reported by police.as a result of the weather. An automobile driven by William Brewer. 18, of 34S W. Thirty-First St., bumped into two other machines on Market St., near Noble. Brewer’9 car struck a roadster driven by A. W. Leary, 1238 W. Thirty-Fourth St., and then skidded into the parked auto owned by Ralph Burdick, 702 E. Market St. Bumpers on the cars were damaged and no arrests were made. Cars driven by Harper Lee, 50 S. State Ave., and William Thompson, 863 Fletcher Ave., were badly damaged when they collided on Bates St. Thompson received a slight cut over the right eye. No arrests were made. HOURLY TEMPERATURE 6 a. m 6 10 a. m 8 7 a. m 6 11 a. m 10 8 a. m. 7 12 (noon) .... 12 9 a. m Tip. m 12 PIANIST STILL MUSSING Artist Who Left Evansville Has Not Reached New York. Bn Vnited Prt NEW YORK. Jan. 12—Ethel Leginska, the temperamental pianist, who was reported en route to New York after disappearing from Evansville, Ind., where she failed to fill an engagement, had not arrived at the Park Place home here today, a search disclose^. Friends say they had no word from her and at the apartment where Miss Leginska lives while in the city it was said that she had not returned during the night and no plans had been made for her return. In some circles, it was believed the eccentfic pianist would remain in seclusion in some small town, seeking teTnurse the frayed nerves which she blamed for being unable to It arc her engagement in EvansviU*

Durkin Loses Smile When Told Girl He Jilted Will Help Tighten Noose

If* j&r ' , ifeu ./ml*? j|

Here is the first picture taken of Martin Durkin, Chicago gunman, after his arrest on a train at St. Louis. He Ls at the right, seated beside Edward Dowd of the Department of Just ice, one of the detec lectures who entered his compartment in the train and overpowered him before he could seize his gun,

State Hopes Betty’s Testimony Will Send Sheik to Gallows. By Edward C. Derr Vnlteil Pre Stall Correspondent CHICAGO, Jan. 22.-r-Love tangles in the life of Martin Durkin today tightened the noose which the State is preparing for him. First the State is planning to have his marriage to Irma Sullivan Durkin, his country bride from Cornell, 111., annulled so It may use Irma as a prosecution witness. Durkin already had a wife. It has developed and police have found no record of divorce. Pressure is being brought to bear on Irma’s parents. They'can easily secure the annulment. officials said. Second, Betty Andrews Werner, the jilted city sweetheart has turned against him, and the State expects her testimony will help send the shooting sheilt to the gallows. At the same time, public officials started a campaign to subdue the irrepressible and romantic flappers, the maudlin spinisters and newspaper accounts, fearing that hero worship may influence his trial for murder. Durkin is being pictured as a combination of Don Juan, Roblnhood and Jimmy Valentine—a lover extraordinary, of many affairs with beautiful women, and a daring, kindly, clever crook driven to lawlessness by fate. . Public officials pointed to the famous Leopold-Loeb case as an example (Turin to Page 23)

STRIKE PEACE FLARES^FADES Operators Balk After Lewis Accepts New Plan. Bu fJnited Press PHILADELPHIA. Jan. 22.—Hopes held by John L. Lewis,, president of the United Mine Workers, agreeing to join In a call for renewal of negotiations to end the anthracite coal strike, received a setback this afternoon when an unsigned statement from the mine owners’ headquarters denied a statement made in Scranton, Pa., that the operators had virtually “accepted the Lynett plan of settlement.” While theistatement was not signed it was regarded as official. PLAN FROM EDITOR Bu United Press SCRANTON, Pa., Jan. 22,—President John L. Lewis of the United Mine Workers bf America, irt conference here with E. J. Lynett, publisher of the Scranton Times, today accepted as a basis for negotiations t. plan of strike settlement proposed by Lynett. * ’ He agreed to join the operators in a request to Chairman Alvin Markle of the joint conference of miners and operators, to call the conference together again, to have virtually accepted same proposition The plan includes the Immediate resumption of work by the miners, a five year contract dating from the date of signing the agreement and the continuation of the wages under the last date during the term of the new contract, unless changed as provided for. The agreement provides a plan whereby a conference may be held on the wage question even after the contract has been signed. The miners, however, will remain at work until the end of the five year contract whether or not a change of wages is agreed upon. One year before the contract expires the miners and owners are to met to devise a contract whereby work continue while negotiations are under way for anew contract. GAS ~WAStI~ DEPLORED World Supply Threatened, Says Secretary of State. Wanton waste of gasoline is threatening the worlds supply, declared Secretary of State Frederick E. Sehartemeler In an address Thursday night at the rineteenth annual dinner of the Marion County Fish nrid Game Protective Association at *i T 4Bdlanapolis Athletic' Club, i

PLANE FLIES 900 MILES IN SEA HOP ‘Columbus of the Air’ Reaches Canaries in Attempted Spain-to-Buenos Aires Trip No Mishap.

Bu United Press LAS PALMAS, Canary Island, Jan. 22. —Commander Ramon Franco, Spanish “Columbus of the air,” arrived here late this afternoon on the first leg of his venturesome journey to Buenos Aires. Franco started from the flying field near Palos, Spain, shortly before 8 a. m. this morning and com-

PRESIDENT’S NAME ENTERS IN ALAN SUIT Charged Atlanta Branch ‘Sold Out to Republicans.’ The names of President Coolidge and Vice President Dawes were drawn into the trial in Federal Court today of the $500,000 damage and injunction suit of the Knights of the Ku-Rlux Klan of America, founded in Atlanta, Ga„ against the Independent Klan of America, founded at Muncie, Ind., after the Muncie chapter of the Atlanta organization seceded. ‘The Atlanta Klan sold out to the Republican party and indorsed Coolidge and Dawes, despite the fact that they todied to the Catholics and the Jews,” according to the Walton Enterprise, a Cass County newspaper, admitted as a part of the record in the case. Judge Thomas W. Slick, presiding, took thri ultimate admissibility of the paper under advisement. Article Identified

Samuel Bermendorfer of Mucie, a Whltely County fan.ter, sales-man-ager for a text-book firm of which he refused to divulge the name, and "head offhe Independent Klan, Identified one article In the Enterprise, which plaintiff’s attorneys argue conclusively Indorsed end appointed th paper as the official organ of the Independent Klan. Later the paper charged the selling out to the G. O. P. and said that Dawes was “a former toadeater tot he Roman Catholic hier archy and later a bank wrecker.” The plaintiff offered the paper to show that the Indtepcndent Klan wrongfully attacked and tried to disrupt the original Atlanta organization. Money to Stephenson Bermendorfer testified that while the Muncie Klan still was affiliated with the Atlanta organization he brought $3,000, collected in dues and initiation fees, tb Indianapolis/ to David C. Stephenson, former grand dragon of the Ku-Klux Klan and now serving a life term in the Indiana State Prison for the murder of Madge Oberhaltzer. Bermendorfer said he asked where all the money was going. “It’s none of your damn business,” he testified Setephenson replied. The plaintiff rested its case at 11:25 and taking of defense testimony was started this afternoon. Bermendorfer testified it had been the impression of officers and members of s the Muncie chapter the money was for construction of a Klan University at Atlanta. After Stephenson's answer he said, a committee was sent to Atlanta which found no university was being built or planned and that the money had been diverted. LICENSE DEAD LINE SET City Must Get Money by Jan. 27, Says Controller Buser. The dead line for payment of city licenses is Jan. 27, city controller, announced today. “And I don’t mean maybe,” said Buser. “After that date delinquents may expect visits from police, who will Inform them legal action will be

Entered as Soo . n .^^ s * TWO CENTS Published Dally Except bunuay.

pleted the flight of more than 900 miles without mishap. During the trip he was in communication with Teneriffe and Las Palmas and also communicated with a passing ship. Franco started from the same place Columbus, In 1492, set sail for America. He hopes to reach the Argentines in one week. The route across the ocean to the Argentine capital is by way of the Canaries, Cape Verde Island, Fernando do Noronba in mid-Atlantic and Brazil. If he succeeds In his program, Franco hopes to return to Spain by way of the west coast of South America, Central America, Cuba and the United States. Franco hopes to be the first Spaniard to complete the flight from Europe to Argentina. He has before him the record of two Portugeuese colleagues in 1922 in a flight from Lisbon to Brazil, and he has the opportunity to grasp from Italy the laurels that country hoped to win when Casa Grande set out for Buenos Aires only to be halted before he was fairly under way. BABY CRIES FOR ABSENT MOTHER Woman Leaves Home Tuesday—Not Heard From. “Muvver, Muvver, I want Muvver,” and little “Buddy” Huffman, 2Vfe years old, whose mother, Mrs. Mary Huffman, has been missing from her home, 414 Peter St., since Tuesday, pushes away his toys and cries fretfully. “He has scarcely eaten anything since his mother went away,” said his grandmother, Mrs. Pearl Smith, 937 Olive St., "and his sister, Margaret, 4, is constantly staking: "Where’s mother? When shall I see her?’ Edward Huffman, the husband, has no idea where his wife has gone. She told relatives Tuesday that she was going to the doctor, but never arrived there, and it has been found that a large sum of money which she had deposited in a trust company has been withdrawn. It is said that Mrs. Huffman has been in poor health for some time, and was melancholy. * CONTRACTOR IS HEART VICTIM Henry A. Durflinger Found Dead in Office. Harry A. Durflinger. GO, of 3605 Crescent St., contractor, was found dead today in his office, 508 Holliday Bldg. Coroner Paul F. Robinson said death probably was due to heart disease. Durflinger had lifted here thirtyfive years. Since his wife’s death, two years ago, from the same cause, he had cared for four small children. He was a Mason and Red Man. Surviving are: Mr., and Mrs. O. L. Durflinger, parents; W. B. and Robert Durflinger, brothers, and Mrs. Elva Small, a sister, and the children. CARDINAL iif DYING End May Come Any Time, Word from Mereier’s Room. Bu United Press BRUSSELS, Jan. 22.——Cardinal Mercler, Belgium’s hero churchman, is dying. The end may be delayed a few days, but his Use is gradually ebbing away, and physicians give no hope that he can recover. His physicians said early evening that the cardinal would not survive the night.

Forecast

FAIR and somewhat colder tonight; lowest temperature near zero; Saturday fair; slowly rising temperature.

* COURT’ DENIM OF HOSIERS Watson and Robinson Ars Flooded With Petitions! Telling Them ‘Not to Votd for World Plan if They 1 Want to Go Back/ BOTH SOLONS ARE ON > . THE FENCE AS RESULT Junior Senator Said to Have Received 5,000 Letters, Ten to One Opposed—*l Am Still Studying the Question,’ His Answer. By Roscoe B. Fleming United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Jan. 22.—A flood of letters, petitions and protests against the United States joining the world court have been received by the Indiana Senators for the past week. At Senator Robinson’s office it was estimated that names of at least five thousand persons have been signed to the protests received there. While

Widow Witness WASHINGTON, Jan. 22. Mrs. Woodrow Wilson from the gallery today, heard Senator William E. Borah, who helped kill her husband’s proposal for American entrance into the League of Nations, commend the late President for his theories at Versailles. But the League has violated all these theories Borah said. He said it was a gigantic military machine for t he enforcement of peace by brute strength.

an occasional letter favors the count, the proportion is at least ten to one against it, it was said. At Senator Watson’s office the huge stack of mall received in one clay oh the question was examined by a reporter, who did not find one letter favoring the court. Bitter and intemperate expressions were common. “If you don't want to stay home next term, vote against this proposition,’’ one man Wrote Watson. Both on Fence The result has been to put both Senators on the fence. Formerly they had been counted as supporters of the World Court, which had been Indorsed and advocated by President Coolidge, as both are strong administration men. “I have not yet made up my mind,’’ Senator Robinson said today. “I am still studying the question carefully, in order to be perfectly sure of my position before I announce It, and to be sure in my mind that I am right." A large stack of copies of the Washington Post, administration organ which Is, however, bitterly against the court proposal and has devoted its lending editorials to it for many weeks, shows that the Senator is devoting much time to tho arguments against the Court. (Turn to Page 8)

BEBE DANIELS INJURED Hurt in Fall From Truck While Filming a Comedy In California. I BEVERLY HILLS, Cal., Jan. 22. —Bebe' Daniels, film star, was in a serioys but not critical condition today, Auffering from injuries received when she fell from a truck during the filming of a comedy. She sustained a slight contusion of the brain and was taken unconscious to a hospital. • MAPPER FANNY sip m j ' ' CHU •* nes stsviet ms, - The easiest way is to let him talk about himself, but wbo wants one who does? >