Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 169, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 November 1933 — Page 10
PAGE 10
REYERFUNERAL SERVICE IS SET FOR TOMORROW North Side Woman Dies After Illness of Two Weeks. Funeral services for Mrs. Julia A- Reyer, 2064 Central avenue, will be held m the residence at 2 30 tomorrow afternoon, with the Rev. Frank S C Wicks, pasb>r of the All Souls Unitarian church, officiating. Burial will b* in Crown Hill ceme|ery. Mrs. Reyer died yesterday in her home aftpr a two days' illness. She . was a member of All Souls church 1. and active in work of the Women’s £ Alliance. Indianapolis Altenheim end the League for the Hard of Hearing. j Surviving her are two daughters, ’ Miss Elsa Reyer and Mrs. Albert F. Brennan. Grose Funeral Set i The funeral of Mrs. Della Grose, 52, 822 Laurel street, will be held A in the residence at 10:30 tomorrow, with burial in Crown Hill cemetery. ? Mrs. Grose died Wednesday night. 4 She had been ill for several months. Surviving her are the’ widower, Edward Grose; a daughter, Mrs. David Cunningham, Indianapolis; ; a son, Wilbur Anderson, Wilmington, N C.; her mother Mrs. Minerva Quigley, Indianapolis; four . sisters, Mrs. W A. Pace, Mrs. Earl Kyle, Miss Gladys Quigley, all of Indianapolis, and Mrs. C. R. Nichols, Bloomington, N. C., and three brothers. Charles Quigley, Earl Quigley and James M. Quigley, of Indianapolis. Long Illness Is Fatal Mrs. Mabel Elizabeth Peters Elrod, 29. 821 Markwood avenue, died yesterday in the Methodist hospital, where she had been a patient for . more than two months. Funeral services will be held at 2 tomorrow! afternoon, in the Flanner & Buch- ! anan mortuary. Burial will be in \ ' Memorial Park cemetery. Mrs. Elrod was a member of University Heights Christian church. f Surviving her are the widower, Cur- ! tis G. Elrod; a son, Norman Paul j Elrod, who was 7 years old on the \ day of his mother’s death; the par- J ents, Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Peters, and ' two sisters. Miss Ada Peters and Miss Frances Peters. Newcomer to City Dies Mrs Mattie I. King, 65, former resident of Kirklin. who moved to Indianapolis a week ago, died yesterday in her home at 2501 North Talbott street. She had been ill several months. Funeral services will be held tomorrow in the Kirklin Presbyterian church. Surviving her are the widower, Burt O. King; a daughter. Miss Ilvoe V. King, and two sons, J. Floyd King and Lowell M. King, Richmond. Aged Mother Dies The body of Mrs. Laura Dobell. 89. who died last night in the home of a daughter, Mrs. Max Nowlin, j Valley Mills, will be taken to Eldo-: rado for funeral services and burial, i Mrs. Dobell is survived by four J daughters, Mrs. Nowlin. Mrs. Har- j riett D. Woods. Cleveland; Mrs. Le- 1 nora Siobert, Ceraopolis, Pa., and | Mrs. Fanney Starkey. Omaha, 111., and a son Malcolm E. Dobell, Minneapolis. Minn. Former Resident Dies Indianapolis friends have received : word of the death of Mrs. Edna Gordon Poarch. former resident of In- j dianapolis. at her home in Decatur, j 111. Funeral services will be held in | Spiceland tomorrow. Surviving her are the widower, Clifford Poarch, a son. Kenneth Poarch, and a brother, Lester Gordon. Carson Rites Held Funeral services for Mrs. Elizabeth M. Carson, 96. believed t-o be the oldest resident of Decatur township, were to be held this afternoon in Valley Mills Friends church.
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William Fox, above, motion picture producer, has been called to tell the senate banking committee of the campaign waged by Albert H. Wiggin, former Chase National bank head, and his associates to gain control of Fox Films, Inc., in which they spent millions.
HISTORIC I. U. STREAM SAVED Jordan River to Be Cleaned as Civil Works Relief Project. The Jordan river, one of Indiana university’s most sacred traditions, is to be saved, and not effaced, as had been proposed, as a part of the new civil works program. The civil works administration today approved a project for cleaning the banks and bed of the famous river, which runs through the I. U. campus at Bloomington. The river was described as “little more than a open sewer," in a bulletin of the state health board last summer, and suggestion was made that it be filled in and diverted from the campus. The state board today approved forty-three more projects, which wall give employment to 3,608 men, pay wages totaling $639,755. and result in expenditure of $60,377 for material and equipment. This brings the total projects approved to 585, total to be employed to 33.118. with a wage total of $5,880.902, and $802,208 for material and wages. No Indianapolis or Marion county projects were included in the list approved this morning. Burial was to be in the Fairfield cemetery. Mrs. Carson suffered a lip fracture in a fall two weeks ago. Sur* viving her are a daughter, Mrs. Charles Littler, with whom she made her home, and a granddaughter, Miss Esther Littler. Miss Eitel Laid to Rest ** The funeral of Miss Marie Henrietta Eitel, 36, 3145 North Illinois street, was to be held at 2 this afternoon in the Hisey & Titus mortuary. Burial was to be in Crown Hill cemetery. Miss Eitel died Wednesday in St. Vincent’s hospital. She was secre-tary-treasurer of the Patoka Coal Company and a member of Epsilon Sigma Alpha, business and professional organization. The funeral was to be in charge of the sorority. Surviving Miss Eitel are a sister, Mrs. J. W. Dennington, Lewiston, Mont., and a brother, Jacob J. Eitel, Greencastle. Miller Funeral Held Funeral services for Dr. Earl Miller, 61, former resident of Indianapolis, were held in Detroit yesterday. Additional services will be held tomorrow in the home of a brother-in-law, Robert Varner, Indianola. 111. Dr. Miller was the brother of Dr. Charles Miller, Indianapolis dentist; Harry H. Miller. Indianapolis, and Carl R. Miller, Des Moines, la.
—Dietz on Science—*• FAME ACHIEVED BY TWO IN SUN RESEARCH WORK Drs. Charles G. Abbot and George E. Hale Rank as Outstanding. BY DAVID DIETZ Scrlpp*-Howard Science Editor CAMBRIDGE, Mass.. Nov. 24 Announcement of Dr. Charles G Abbot at the meeting of the National Academy of Sciences here that the weather everywhere on earth repeats itself every twentythree years, keeping step with the Hale magnetic sunspot cycle, serves to focus the attention of the world on two great astronomers Dr. Abbot and Dr. George Ellery Hale. Both men have devoted the major portions of long and busy careers to the study of the sun. Dr. Hale, however, has concentrated upon the sun as an astronomical object while Dr. Abbot has sought the connection between the sun and our weather. It looks now as though Dr. Abbot has found that connection and that its underlying reason lies in one of Dr. Hale’s discoveries. Dr. Hale Makes Find It was Dr. Hale who discovered that sunspots in a given hemisphere of the sun reverse their polarity in each cycle of eleven and one-half years. Thus while the spots go from minimum to maximum and back again to minimum in eleven and j one-half years, it takes two such periods or twenty-three years to get back to the starting point from a magnetic point of view. Why this magnetic cycle should control the cycle of terrestial weather is a question which can not be answered at this time. But it is sure to provide a tremendous impetus to research activities. The inventive genius of Dr. Hale paved the way for our modern knowledge of the sun. At the beginning of the century, Dr. Hale invented the device known as the I spectroheliograph. This instrument, which photographs the sun in a single wave length of light, makes it possible to see the actual structure of the solar atmosphere. Directs Observatory A quarter of a century ago the Carnegie Institution of Washington decided to build its great observatory on the top of Mt. Wilson. It called upon Dr. Hale, then director of the Yerkes observatory, to take \ charge. At Mt. Wilson, Dr. Hale designed and built the two great! tower telescopes for the study of the sun. First a seventy-five-foot tower was built. This functioned so well that another tower 150 feet high was erected. A well seventyfive feet dedp was dug beneath the 150-foot tower and a spectroscope installed at the bottom of it. The ordinary spectroscope fur-* nishes a little rainbow of color or spectrum a few inches long. Dr. Hale’s spectroscope,’ in the well beneath the great tower furnishes a spectrum more than ten feet long. It was this powerful apparatus which enabled him to discover the magnetic nature of sunspots. A few years ago Dr. Hale retired from active directorship of the Mt. Wilson observatory and assumed the title of honorary director. He now carries on his research at a private observatory in Pasadena.
Too Nibby Oppossum Is Captured on Statehouse Visit.
W’HEN Carl James, statehouse parking lot custodian, saw a j small animal staring at him from I between cars on the parking lot, j he thought some of the statehouse { wags had played a joke on him i with one of the exhibits in the i statehouse museum. Closer inspection revealed that the animal was a young opossum, which he captured and turned over to the state conservation de- ; partment. Now, James is looking for the mother opossum and the ; rest of the brood.
SOCIALIST CANDIDATE TALKS HERE SUNDAY Senatorial Aspirant Is on State Speaking Tour. E. E. Bailey, Socialist Labor party candidate for United States senator in 1932, will speak at 2 Sunday at 29 South Delaware street. Mr. Bailey is making a speaking tour of the state. His subject will be: “After the NR A, What Will It Be. Industrial Democracy or Industrial Feudal- + ism?” There will be a question ! period after the address. Admission will be free. The Socialist Labor party is the original and only true party of Soi cialism in America, and stands I against the field, according to Charles Ginsberg, secretary. SOUTH SIDE CLUB~TO HOLD TURKEY DANCE Turner Hall to Be Scene of Party on Wednesday Night. A turkey dance will be held by the i So-ifc-Si Club of the South Side j | Turners Thanksgiving eve, Nov. 29. !at the Turner hall, 306 Prospect. | street. Music will be provided by Bob Carlsen's Syncopators. A large turkey will be awarded as a door prize. Committee in charge is composed | of Mae Caldwell, Mildred Poehler, ; James Watson. Eimer Tafflinger, I Frank Callahan, Henry Graber, ' Theodore Buehler. Joe ,Lang and i William Wolf. • BLAZE CAUSES S2OO DAMAGE AT KITCHEN! . 'J City Soup Headquarters Service Continues After Fire. Fire which last night caused $203 damage to the Marion County Employes’ Relief Association soup kitchen, 227 East Maryland street, failed to halt the work of serving food to the needy today, it was rei ported. The fire, of undetermined origin, started in the basement.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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"NOV. 24. 1933
