Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 80, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 August 1934 — Page 14

PAGE 14

INCUBATOR IS A ‘LIFE-SAVER' TO QUINTUPLETS 'Mechanical Mother’ Keeps Tiny Mites From Losing Lives. Thu h iti la*t of an artlrlr* on toultiplr birth*. t* .trtr *rr Stn ie~ r The little Dionne quintuplets share with thousands of American Infants the penis of starting: life in an incuba’or. A large hospital having over a hundred births a month will have about one infant a mo’Uh that comes into the world so tiny and frail that it must be placed within the mechanical mother to cherish the spark of life within it. Tlv normal child weighs about seven pounds at bir*h. and all mfan‘ weighing less than five pounds are candidates for the incubator. The Dionne babies were born about two months early, and because there were o many of them they weighed much less than the ordinary premature infant: their combined weight was reported as only 13 pounds, 6 ounces. Babies in the incubator, as a rule, gain weight rapidly. They are fed on human milk whenever that is possible, and it is dropped into the tiny mouths with a medicine dropper, they are generally too weak to nurse at first. The total ra'ion is only about two teaspoonsfuls every two hours at first, yet that Is plenty for such tiny mites. Oxygen must be provided 'or the breathing of some of the infants. For those who do not require oxygen, ventilation is provided by the open top of the incubator. The temperature is kept constant bv electricity, or by some other means where electricity is not available The incubator is kept much warmer than the air of the ordinary nursery— from 95 to 98 degrees Fahrenheit is considered just right. .This keeps the body temperature of the infant at 98 or 99 degrees. The babies must be turned frequently so that they will not develop pneumonia from remaining too long in one position. Occasionally they must be lifted out of the incubator, but. in general all the care, bathing, feeding, and changing is done right there in the human nest. The incubator baby is not weighed every day as is the normal infant, but is weighed every other day, and all those having to do with his care arc interested in watching the line on the weight chart turn upward. Very great success in the saving of precarious lives has resulted from the use of the incubator, which was first designated for use in the Paris Maternity hospital in 1880. GREWSOME JOKE GIVES POLICE NARROW ESCAPE Dummy Painted Red Is Left in Road by ‘Funster.’ A practical joke narrowly missed resulting in a tragedy last night as a police squad car raced to the 300 block Blue Ridge road on a report of a dead man, killed by a hit-run driver, lying in the street. At Twenty-eighth street and Capitol avenue, the squad car crashed into a parked car in an effort to avoid a lumbering sedan which came into the path of the speeding car. Miraculously, neither the four occupants of the parked car nor the police were injured. Another squad car screamed out to Blue Ridge road and found a dummy smeared with red paint laying m the street.

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BEEBE AGAIN DROPS INTO DAVY JONES’ LOCKER

A dive of 2,510 feet to the Atlantic ocean bottom off Bermuda was completed Saturday by Dr. William who is shown in the picture at the left with his aids. Left to right are John Tee-Van, Miss Jocelyn Crane! Beebe, and Miss Gloria Hollister. New machinery installed in the heavy steel ball used in the descent worked well. At the right is the bathysphere being lowered into the sea.

LAST RITES SET FOR ROT RILLED BY GUN Parents Say Youth Was Victim of Accident. Funeral services for James (Duke) Hurley, 13, who died yesterday of an accidental self-inflicted bullet wound, will be held at 9:30 Wednesday morning in his home, 6420 Bellefontaine street, with burial in Holy Cross cemetery. The boy apparently was a victim of curiosity, his family said, w'hen he took a .32-caliber revolver from a bureau drawer Saturday morning, a shot was discharged, entering the boy's head. He is survived by the parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Hurley; the sister, Miss Marietta Hurley, and five brothers. Kenneth. Irwin, Edward, Robert and Paul Hurley.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: Eph Petro. Morgantown. Ind.. Ford touring. from 400 South New Jersey street. Paul Shirlev. 1134 Hoyt avenue. Chevrolet coach. 33-703. from in front of 1134 Hoyt avenue. William Bivins, day Citv. Ind.. Chevrolet coach. 173-389. from Riverside park. R E. Ross. R R. 3 Box 802, WillysKmcht truck. T-20-774. from Capitol avenue and Louisiana street. A B Miller. Belleville, 111 . Dodge sedan, 300-179 Missouri, from Chespeake and Illinois streets. J S. Asimakis. 1710 North Talbot atenue Ford Victoria coupe. 84-410. from in front of 1606 North Illinois street. A L Cross. 2942 North Olnev street. Ford coupe 85-666. from Pennsylvania and Ninth streets. Insurance Company of North America, 1444 Consolidated building. Chevrolet coupe 92-120. from 3312 College avenue. Frank Houghland. 1928 Adams street. Ford V-8 coach. 33-503. from 120 South Pennsylvania street. W E Jones, Glasgow. Kv.. Ford tudor sedan. 17-548 Kentucky, from 130 South Illinois street. Karl Klogaus. 921 East Minnesota street. Dodge sedan. 106-248. from New Jersey street and Fail Creek boulevard.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to' George Eakin. Nohlesville. Ind Chevrolet truck, found at Ft. Wayne avenue and Alabama street. _ .. _ , _ . Olen Witisnand. Greenfield. Tnd . Ford roadster, found at Madison avenue and McCartv street. _ Albert Parks 610 South Temple avenue. Chrvsler found in rear of 1211 Climber street. _ .. . . . Lee R Flournev. 1818 Bellefontaine s’reef Chev rolet coach, found at 1800 West Eleventh street. _ „ _ Wilbur Houdasheldt. R. R. 16. Box B-134. Ford coach, found at Sixtv-third street and College avenue. Irene Clark. 2822 North Illinois street. Buick coupe, found at 3017 North Arsenal avenue. . Jack Cain. 1640 North Illinois street. Dodge coupe, found in rear of 418 East Fifteenth street. Louts Wiliams. 1844 Sharon avenue. Durant sedan automobile wrecked J. F. Gilbert. 646 East Thirtv-third street. Plvmouth coupe, found at Douglas and Michigan street Mber: Pauehertv. 1610 Somerset avenue. Ford truck, found at 2100 Northwestern avenue. __ _ . W J Smith. R R 5. Box 60.->. Nash sedan found at New York and Muskingum streets. _ Thomas Willard. 2420 Guilford avenue. Ford roadster, found in rear of 2251 Alvord street, stripped Edgar Eddleman. 223 West South street. Harlev-Davidson motorcvcle Thomas Willard. 1949 College avenue. Ford roadster, found m rear of 22.il Alvord street, stripped. Napoleon Roberts 955 South Capitol avenue. Ford roadster, found at Senate avenue and Walnut street, wrecked Ravmond Knapp. 1309 North Pennsylvania stroe’. Chevrole- coupe found at Thirty-fourth street and Fall Creek boulebard. _ R Hiehes 2030 Hovev street. WillvsKnight >erian. found at Georgia and Illinois streets _ . .. Eugene Swope. 2153 Ransdel! avenue. Whippet coach, found near Beech Crove_ C B McDonald. 42 West Eleventh street. Ford coupe, found at Labor park.

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Scientists to Try Soon for Another New Record. By United Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 13.—Dr. William Beebe and Otis Barton, record-holding deep sea explorers, were preparing today for a new' and deeper descent into the ocean in t heir two-and-one-half-ton steel diving ball. Advices to the National Geographic Society, co-sponsors ol the Beebe expedition operating in Bermuda waters, indicated the scientists were checking all their apparatus to make sure that no defects developed during Saturday's record dive of 2,510 feet. As soon as the equipment is thoroughly checked, it will be only a matter of waiting for favorable w’eather before Dr. Beebe and Dr. Barton descend again into the jet-black ocean depths. On their last dive, Beebe and Barton, through three-inch thick windows, observed scores of fish hitherto unknown to sceince. “I never saw so much new stuff,” cables to the geographic society quoted Dr. Beebe as saying. The scientists spotted these unknown creatures with the aid of powerful searchlights that cut through a region into which light never before had penetrated. Motion pictures were taken and through a telephone connection to the surface Dr. Beebe dictated thousands of words of scientific description. Lake Michigan “Navy” Mobilizes By United Press CHICAGO. Aug. 13.—Lake Michigan's "navy” steamed aw'ay from the naval training station today for annual maneuvers which will bring 17 ships, 24 airplanes and 1.500 naval reservists into mock combat.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

2 AVIATORS DIE AS FIANCEES LOOK ON Sister and Sweethearts of Pilots Were Awaiting Rides. By United Press CHICAGO, Aug. 13.—With the screams of their sweethearts ringing across an airport landing field, two youthful fliers crashed and were burned to death when a gust of w'ind nosed their plane into the ground as it landed. The men were Raymond Casson, 28, of Corning, Ark., who obtained a transport pilot’s license two w'eeks ago. and Louis Wasti, 22, Chicago. The accident w'as witnessed by Miss Marie Wasti, 21, sister of Louis and fiancee of Casson, and Miss Carolyn Senn, 22, Wasti’s fiancee. Both were awaiting their turn to ride in the three-passenger plane.

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LEGAL BATTLE LOOMS IN CASE OF LITTLE GIRL Foster Mother Retains City Attorney to fight for Child. A legal battle loomed today as efforts were being made to return Juliet Korth, 2’r, to her mother in Minneaoplis, Minn., and take her from the custody of a city orphanage. Mrs. Mabel McCane, 32, of 1155 College avenue, foster-mother of the child, charges that the mother gave her the girl in a signed agreement. Mrs. McCane Is at liberty under SI,OOO bond following her detention on a vagrancy charge. The child, who has wandered around with her for the last year, was placed in a city orphanage. Police received a telegram from Mrs. Florence S. Davis, secretary of the Hennepin County Child Welfare Society, Minneapolis, Minn., saying that money would be sent police here and arrangements made for the return of the child to her mother. The girl is in the city orphanage under a juvenile court order. Mrs. McCane has hired an attorney to defend her in court on Aug. 17 and also to battle against the child being taken back to her mother. She claims the mother of the child turned her over to Mrs. McCane in a hospital which she owned in Minneapolis. She said the motl> er told her that she did not want the child. Beauty Shop Supplies Stolen Thieves yesterday stole a permanent wave machine, twelve pictures and other beauty supplies, all valued at $495, from Room 704, Kahn building, G. V. Gothlen reported to police.

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HERE’S A PICTURE WITH THREE TITLES

~ . i ■ ■ ■■ ■■

It was a royal sendoff the king and queen of Siam received when they left London after an extended visit. Come to see them off at Victoria station was towering Prince George, who is shown at left escorting the diminutive rulers to their train.

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AUG. 13, 1931

M'NUTT VISITS INDIANA TROOPS AT CAMP KNOX Governor Gets 19-Gun Salute at Kentucky Fort on Arrival. Be Times Speri'il FT. KNOX. Ky„ Aug. 13 —A salute of nineteen guns was fired this morning by Battery A. One-hundred-and-thirty-mnth field artillery, in honor of Governor Paul V. McNutt, who is here to observe training activities of the Thirtyeighth division, national guard. Governor McNutt arrived by plane from Indianapolis yesterday, and ; was met a’. Goodman field by i Major-General Robert H. Tyndall, Thirty-eighth division commander. | and Major Elmer F. Straub. Indiana ! adjutant-general. ! After inspecting the field artillery firing field, the Governor was to j visit headquarters of the various Inj diana regiments which are a part | of the Thirty-eighth division. Governor McNutt is expected to return to Indianapolis tonight, following a dinner in his honor. Injured in Fall From Swing A fall from a swung at Highland ! park resulted in a broken right arm yesterday for Dorothy Roberts, 12. |of 305 Dorman street. A boy jerked the swing in which she was sitting, police said.