Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 December 1944 — Page 8
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onrareeny | Mother Asks $10,000 From
\
CLAIM LOWERED IN BABY ACTION
Doctor After Getting Infant Back.
(Continued From Page One)
The new suit, charging that Dr. Parker gave her baby away illegally to foster parents the same night it was born, demands $10,000 damages instead of -a million. "The mother apd 18-day-old daughter were reunited at a dramatic meeting at the office, of Dr. Parker, 2226 W. Michigan st, when the foster parents from neat Columbia City brought the infant here under a superior court habeas corpus order for a hearing at 2 p. m. yesterday.
Crowd Jams Courtroom
~ rd
‘A large crowd that jammed the courtroom was disappointed. Attorneys anpounced that the “habeas corpus petition had been dismissed and the hearing canceled. No trial date was set for the new $10,000 suit. The foster parents, whose names were not revealed, were reluctant |to give: up their new baby. Attor|neys conferred with them for two hours before they finally agreed to | release the child. | Attorneys said the foster parents insisted on getting a refund of expenditures from Dr. Parker, who gave them the child, before they would consent to give up. custody.
Million Dollar Suit The $1,000,000 suit had charged
{that the foster parents paid Dr. Parker $142 in medical fees before they took the baby. When financial adjustments were made with
Dr. Parker, thé couple released the baby. The young mother, declaring she was “glad to have her baby back,” took her daughter to the home of her parents in Leslie, Ky., where she sald the baby would be cared for properly. Dr. Parker repeated previous explanations about how she happened to give the baby away. “Thought I Was Helping” “I thought I was helping the girl when I said I would find a home for the baby and the mother signed an agreement that the infant should be adopted several weeks before birth,” she said. The mother admitted that she had signed the agreement but that she had changed her mind after the birth and wanted her daughter back. Under the state laws, Dr. Parker did not have legal authority to place the child in a foster home without first notifying the welfare department, even though the mother had agreed to an adoption, Miss Louise Griffin, director of the children’s division of the state welfare department, said “it is illegal for an individual to place children in foster homes without a license or authorization from the state wel-
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‘Spy’ Scare in . : Probe Fizzles
(Continued From Page One)
the information that the Room 537 peep-hole certainly wasn’t the only péep-hole in the house. As a matter of fact, he acknowledged, you find them in the strangest places. There are also a number of loose and battered hinges, he added. The war, you know,
Dirt Accumulates
Considerable dirt had accumulated in the paint crevices created by the Room 537 peep-hole drilling, more ‘than could have settled there during the last week-end.
Wood scats indicating that someone had attempted to remove the door hinges likewise were antique, a fact that could be determined without a microscope. Enamel which had long before been spread over the hinges was still intact, proving that they had never been removed. The only thing really puzzling the abashed investigators today was how that filing cabinet key was bent. They concluded that the metal possibly ‘was soft enough to yield from over-usage. At any rate, if no one gained entrance to Room 537 except the investigators, it seemed logical to assunie that the investigators themselves might nave had something to do with it,
Buckles Dubious
The election fraud investigators today were frankly ready to admit that the original hue and cry might have been a bit exaggerated. Chief] Investigator Harold Buckles, rubbing his chin reflectively, was dubicus about the whole thing. He sald it was quite possible that it all happened in days gone by. “I'm always reluctant to believe anyone could be so foolish as to try to steal evidence in an official senatorial investigation,” he concluded, . Oh yes, the F.B.1I. loaned the
that's all, brother. F.B.I. Chief Percy Wyly II said that his men
had no authoritative interest in the “case” whatsoever.
PATTON SHATTERS SAAR RIVER LINE
(Continued From Page One)
east bank of the Saar river yesterday south of Saarlautern. They pushed a mile beyond the stream, Other units of the 95th were reported wedging into the outposts of the. Siegfried line more than a mile and a half beyond Saarlautern. Inside Saarlautern, the Americans were mopping up the last enemy sniper nests, To the southeast, the 134th regiment of Maj. Gen. Paul W. Baade’s 35th division slashed ahead three miles. They reached the outskirts of the Prench fortress town of Sarreguemines, on the German border 10 miles below Saarbrucken, Saarbrucken, Industrial capital of the Saar basin, was under heavy artillery bombardment. Third army units were barely six miles away, German broadcasts sald American
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES |
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SEE POST-WAR GAINS FOR RURAL SCHOOLS
(Continued From Page One)
convention, held the spotlight at the opening sessions with the first set of formal resolutions. Urge Reclassification They proposed: ONE: That action be taken, looking toward a reclassification of townships as to their size and relation to adjoining townships. TWO: That township trustees be given representation ou state and county welfare boards, and the state board of education on the ground that trustees are directly involved in these functions, : THREE: That. commitments of patients to the Indiana university medical center be returned to the jurisdiction of township trustees instead of through circuit court clerks, The resolutions will be adopted at the closing sessions Thursday. Roy M. Amos of Goshen is president of the association and Mark Gray, Indianapolis, is secretarytreasurer,
BRITISH BATTLING ATHENS LEFTISTS
(Continued From Page One)
ances of full British support from Prime Minister Churchill, Though five leftists resigned from the Papandreou cabinet last week-end, the remaining members were reported to have pledged full support last night. Scobie also asked him to support Papandreou, Sofoulis said, but he replied that he could not comply because that would mean “supporting a dictatorship.” The crisis was touched off by the government’s order to E. L. A. 8.
liberate Greece. E. L. A. 8S. refused on grounds that such action would permit the government to set up a dictatorship, especially since its own forces would remain armed.
METERS MADE IN 22, NOT ’40, FIRM SAYS
Liegh Winters, a representative of the M. H. Rhoades Co. Inc. Hartford, Conn., today declared that his firm’s parking meters were made in 1942 and not 1940. One of the bidders on the city's proposal to buy 2000 parking meters, the firm was originally reoprted to have offered earlier models to the city at approximately $55 each.
BUTLER-BALL STATE GAME POSTPONED
The Butler-Ball State basketball game will be played Dec. 18 at the fieldhouse instead of tonight, Coach Pop Hedden of Butler announced today. Although the game is scheduled for Dec. 18, Coach Hedden said a
mistake in the date was made on the tickets, Butler will play Stout
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War Worker, 93, ‘Wanted to Help!
(Continued From Page One)
In Indianapolis’ major war plants there has been a 13 per cent decrease in employment in the last year.- The greatest falling off was in September through November. Meanwhile production lags and the U. 8. employment service looks upon the manpower , situation here as acute.
” » ” f “I JUST wanted to do something in the war,” is Mr, Wertz’ explanation of why he works. “Age has nothing to. do with what a person can do for his country.” Mr. Wertz knows that his body is old and bent. But his mind is clear, his eyes sharp, his hearing keen and his hands strong. When the war ‘is over he ine tends to keep right on working. “How long I work will depend on how long I live,” he said. “This is the easiest job I've had. I can sit and do it.” ; EJ o » HIS JOB isn't easy. Hour after hour he handles nearly red-hot nozzles which he screws on to the air purifying can of the gas mask. And his day starts earlier than for most at the plant. His wife, Mary, is badly crippled. Before work he gets breakfast, packs his noon lunch and straightens up the house. Then he walks to work a mile and a quarter "away. A day's labor, and he walks home, does the shopping, gets supper and keeps his wife company. v Ten per cent of his pay goes into war bonds, bonds he may never see mature. And he made extra purchases in the sixth war ‘loan campaign.
NURSE HELPS TREAT UNCLE IN HOSPITAL
Student nurse Betty Pickett has more than a professional interest in one patient at City hospital today. The patient is her uncle, William E. Leonard, 1222 N. Chester st, who is in a critical condition as the result of an automobile accident Monday night. Miss Pickett was on duty in the accident ward when her uncle was admitted to the hospital. She helped physicians treat him for head and internal injuries. Nurse Pickett is the daughter of
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nd Asso Tel Co 3! ndpls P&L 3%s 70 Indpls Railways Ce Indpls Water Co 3’ Kokomo Water Wk ner Packing Cc ungle Water Wor N Ind Pub Serv 3 N Ind Tel 4%s 6 Pub Serv of Ind 3% Pub Tel 4%s 55... Richmond Water W rac Term Corp § 8 Machine Corp *Ex-dividend.
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