Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 244, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 March 1929 — Page 10
PAGE 10
NURSE UNABLE TO TELL STORY OF ‘LOVE MANIA’ * Breaks Down and Weeps on Seeing Blood-Stained Garment of Lover. BY FREDERICK C. OTHMAN United Press Staff Corr^svwindent. DENVER, Colo., March I.—The strain Farice King has undergone during her “love mania” trial for murder proved too great for her and the nurse probably will be unable to testify her attorneys said today. Miss King broke down Thursday when the bloody pajamas worn by patrolman Robert K. Evans when she shot him to death, w r ere introduced as evidence. The nurse killed Evans while he was under her care here, because he jilted her years ago and married another woman. When order was restored, Lewis D. Mowry, defense attorney, called Miss King to testify in her own defense. An emaciated figure dressed in a wrinkled black silk dress, she sobbed hysterically as Mowry started to escort her to the stand. As she neared it she noticed the bloody pajamas on the floor where they had been dropped by Dr. B. B. Jaffa. The quiet of the crowded, sun-lit courtroom was pierced by a wild shriek. She dropped to her knees, pressed the blood-stained garment to her lips and cried convulsively. “Oh, Bob,” she said, “I love you so.” Sobbing violently, wtih the clotted pajamas clutched to her face, she sat in the witness box several minutes before Judge Henry C. Sackmann ordered her removed to an ante room. Tears coursed down the faces of her three brothers. Her aged mother sat dry-eyed, staring straight ahead. Before her outburst, Miss King had been unnerved when she was ordered to hare her breast before the jury while a physician described the bullet wound she inflicted upon herself with the same gun she shot Evans. , When it had been announced that Miss King’s physical condition was such that no further attempt 7ould be made to have her testify, Dr. Leo V. Tepley, alienist retained by the defense, was called. “She loved him so that she felt she would be happier in a grave by his side than she would alive, knowing that he lived with another woman,” he said. Dr. Tepley said that in his opinion, Miss King . suffered from melancholia at the time of the murder and as a consequence could be considered “legally insane.”
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BLASTS DREAM OF CIVILIZATION IN FARJIORTH Arctic Wastes to Remain of Interest to Science Only, Says Nansen. Dream of an arctic civilization w'as shattered by Dr. Fridtjof Nansen, Norwegian explorer, in a lecture at Caleb Mills hall, new Shortridge high school Thursday night. Science alone will ontinue to be
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interested in the polar wastes, said the explorer. Vertiably a Viking in modem dress. Dr. Nansen revealed himself not only as a scientist but as a poetic-minded adventurer. Gray-haired though he is, “the north still ealls me and I shall go back,” he declared. Nansen will f' -sake the sailing ship of his arrestors in the spring of 1930 to accompany an airship expedition o the arctic in the Graf Zeppelin. The purpose of the three flights which the Zeppelin will make is to complete the work Dr. Nansen began in the 1890 s. He then proved the existence of a polar sea on a three-year expedition. He now to chart this sea and further to investigat' weather conditions in the Arctic circle, which affect the entire world. This hale and sharp-eyed Scandinavian Marco Polo, trafficker in silent places for Truth, wove a
word-web of Adventure for his hearers. The and mystery of the northland seemed to grip his imagination even more than the scientific import of his discoveries. How r the sun goes round and round instead of up and down? How the passing of the year is like the passing of a day. Spring is all an early dawn; summer a bright noon; autumn one long sunset; winter, night. “I prefer the night.” Dr. Nansen declared. The world was glistening marble under the moon and bright stars. The northern lights turned the heaven into a flaming dome! There was silence and no wind. “One’s soul bowed down before Silence and Death!” Boyd Gurley, editor of The Indianapolis Times, presided at the lecture, which was given under the auspices of the Council of International Relations.
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PLAN BUDGET GUTS Senate to Scan Bill for ReReductions. ' Senators will scan the $55,000,000 biennial appropriation bill closely and the speed with which it was adopted in the house is not expected in the senate according to Lieutenant-Governor Edgar D. Bush and Senator Luther O. Diaper, finance committee chairman. It is hoped that nearly $2,000,000 can be lopped off, but failing this the cuts are expected to total at least several thousands it was predicted. Bush declared that he expected to hand the measure down Monday and give the senators every chance to slash it effectively. “I do not want to see it go through
the senate with the speed that marked its passage in the house.” he declared. Draper said that he earnestly hoped that cuts could be made and that- the finance committee will study the problem. Senator Alonzo H. Lindley, Kingman, chairman of the armory probe committee declared that a close examination will be made to see whether the $250,000 provided for lease-rentals on armories is really needed. Among cattle and beasts of burden the tail is a weapon of defense against flies and other insects.
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