Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 48, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 July 1934 — Page 6
PAGE 6
RITES SET FOR MINISTER WHO ' DIED IN PULPIT • ' * The Rev. Basil L. Allen Will Be Buried Here Tomorrow. Funeral terriers for the Rev. Basil L. Allen. 69. of 333 North Ritter avenue. who died while addressing a meeting of the midsummer institute of Butler university college of religion yesterday, will be held •t 3 tomorrow in the residence. Dr. Bruce L. Kershner of the college of religion faculty will conduct , the services. Burial will be in Me- ! mortal Park cemetery. Mr. Allens death was believed to have been caused by a heart disease, aggravated by the intense neat. > It was the second to occur on the Butler campus this summer attributed to hot weather. The first death was that of Glenn Johnson. Butler student, who collapsed* and died of heart disease while running for a street car last week Mr. Allen was state chairman of the Prohibition party. He is survived by the widow. Mrs. Naomi Orubb Allen; a daughter. Miss Mildred Allen; a brother. Andrew Allen, and a half-sister, Mrs. Vina Markham of Owen county. Evelyn Butler Rites Services for Miss Evelyn Butler, professor of the Demia Butler chair of English literature at Butler uni- i versity. who died Tuesday, were to be held at 3 this afternoon in the home. 124 Downey avenue. Dr. W. A. Shullenberger. Central Christian church pastor, will have charge of the services. Burial will be in'Crown Hill. C. 0. Williamson Dies Following an illness of two days. | Chester O. Williamson, 45, of 731 1 South Meridian street, died yester- \ day in Deaconess hospital. FuNeral services will be held at 3 tomorrowin the Harry W. Moore funeral, home, with burial in Crown Hill. J Mr. Williamson and a son. Robert Williamson, operated a j funeral service company. Mr. Williamson was a member of the Knights of Pythias, the Fraternal Oder of Eagles and the Junior Order. United American Mechanics. Surviving him are the widow . Mrs. j Florence Williamson; three daugh- J ters. Misses Ethel. Margaret and; Deloris Williamson; the son. Robert Williamson; and three sisters. Mrs. Crystal Harker. Mrs. Marie Aegerter and Mrs. Nellie Brunk. Rudebeaux Burial Held Funeral services for Mrs. Cecelia Reardon Rudebeaux. 3807 North Pennsylvania street, who died Wednesday at St. Vincents hospital following a brief illness, were held at 9:30 today in the residence and at 10 in SS. Peter and Paul cathedral. The body was taken to Lexington. Kv„ for burial. Mrs. Rudebeaux is survived by her sister, Mrs. E. G. Spink, with whom she made her home. Alice Mullen Services Last rites for Mrs. Alice Mullen. 71. of 2532 College avenue, who died Wednesday following a three weeks' illness, will be held at 2 tomorrow in the home. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Surviving her are the widower. Jacob Mullen, a retired policeman; seven children by a former marriage. Emery Green. Kokomo; Benjamin Green. Earl Green, Mrs. Nellie Owens. Mrs. Jessie McKinley, j Mrs. May Senti and Mrs. Pauline Clark, all of Indianapolis, and two brothers. W. H. Jackson and J. C. Jackson. Ella T. Frazier Dead Mrs. Ella T. Frazier. of 406 East Forty-seventh street, died yes- j terday in her home, after a three j years' illness. Funeral services will be held at 6 tomorrow morning in the Finn Brothers' funeral home and at 9 in St. Mary's Catholic church in Richmond. Burial will be in Richmond. Surviving Mrs. Frazier are the widower. Charles H. Frazier; a daughter. Miss Irma Frazier; two sons. Albert Frazier and Edward Frazier; two sisters. Miss Anna Griffin. Indianapolis, and Mrs. Margaret Crump. Richmond, and a brother, Dan Griffin. Richmond. Richardson Rite Today Funeral services for Mrs. Sarali A. Richardson. 75. of 1291 South Emerson avenue, who died Tuesday in her home, were to be held at 2 this aftemon in Henryville. Burial wav to be in the Henryville cemetery. Mrs. Richardson had lived in Indianapolis since 1904. She is survived by two daughters. Mrs. Blanche Magruder and Mrs. Emma Long, both of Indianapolis, and five sons. Thomas. Roy. James and Francis Richardson, all of Indianapolis. and John K. Richardson. Jeffersonville. Louise Legg Succumbs Following a long illness. Mrs. Louise Jackson Legg. 68. died yesterday in the home of a daughter. Mrs. George T. Bryant, 4162 College a venue. Funeral services will be held in tne home at 2 tomorrow, with burial: in Crown Hill. Mrs. Legg is survived by two daughters. Mrs. Bryant, and Mrs. W. L. Zimmerman. Kansas City. Mo., and two sons. Harry and EdHard Legg. both of Indianapolis. Condit Rites Set Funeral services for Mrs. Orie Burton Condit. 70, Clermont, who died Wednesday in the Methodist hospital, will be held at 2 tomorrew in the residence. Burial will be in Crow n Hill. Mrs Condit had taken an active i
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part in social affairs of Indianapolis in earlier years. Surviving her are the widower, H. H. Condit; a son. Preston B. Cohdit. Clermont; a niece, Mrs. Burton Field, and a nephew. Albert M. Bristor, both of Indianapolis. Publisher Is Dead Following a short illness, George M. Bassett, 73, died yesterday of heart disease at the home of his daughter, Mrs. William P. Butler, 2916 Park avenue. Funeral services will be held at 2:30 tomorrow afternoon in Mrs. Butler's residence. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Mr. Bassett had been a publisher twenty years. He was part owner of the Union Labor News, and published a number of labor periodicals. Surviving him are two sons, Lowell H. Bassett and William R. Bassett, and two daughters. Mrs: Butler and Mrs. Clarence H. King, all of Indianapolis; three brothers, Harry W. Bassett, Washington, and Walter M. and Homer D. Bassett, both of Indianapolis, and a sister, Mrs. Blanche Anderegg, Indianapolis. Hite Services Today Funeral services for William Dayton Hite, 78, retired member of the Indianapolis police department, who died Wednesday at his home, 5353 North New Jersey street, were to be held at 3:30 this afternoon in the Flanner <fc Buchanan funeral home. Burial was to be in Crown Hill. Mr. Hite is survived by a daughter, Mi-s. Rice W. Lambert.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
THREE DOCTORS RISK LIVES FOR PARALYSIS TEST Woman Physician Joins in Experiment With New Vaccine. B<j United Pm* NEW YORK, July 6.—Three doctors, one a woman, have submitted to injection of a newly developed infantile paralysis vaccine because it's something that can't be tried out first on guinea pigs. Only humans and monkeys are subject to infantile paralysis. The vaccine has been tested in Rhesus monkeys and appears effective. "We wanted to try it ourselves before we asked.others to take it,” explained Dr. Josephine Neal. She and her fellow-experimenters. Dr. William H. Park; 70. and Dr. Henry Wirt Jackson, emphasized they were not becoming martyrs to science. Their chances of contracting infantile paralysis, she said, were very, very remote.” All three physicians, laboratory doctors of the department of health, were inoculated with five cubic centimeters each of the new serum, which was developed by Dr. Maurice Brodie, assistant professor of bacteriology at New York university,
aided by Dr. Park and his research assistants. The serum is intended to avoid paialysis rather than cure it. It was obtained from the spinal cord of monkeys suffering from infantile paralysis. The material was ground up in a solution of formalin which killed the virus but did not kill the immunizing properties of the virus, according to the physicians. In three or four weeks, the blood of the three experimenters will be tested for the antibodies developed by innoculations. If-the tests prove successful, it is hoped to develop the immunication system more practically. At present the supply of serum used to cure poliomeyelitis, the scientific name for infantile paralysis, is limited. If the new serum proves effective it will be possible to manufacture it in large quantities, depending on the supply of Rhe?us monkeys. Carloadings Increase Again WASHINGTON. July 6.—The American Railway Association today announced carloadings of revenue freight for the week ended June 30 totaled 'M4.572 cars, an increase of 22,700 cars above the previous week.
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'PITTSBURGH U. ! FIRES LIBERAL SOCIALWORKER Chancellor Denies History Professor's Ouster Due to Activities. By United Per** PITTSBURGH. July 6.—Dr. P \i E. Turner, associate professor of history at the University of Pittsburgn and prominent in liberal economic quarters in Pennsylvania, has been dismissed from the faculty, Chancellor John C. Bowman disclosed today. The professor, who only a year ago resigned as head of the Pennsylvania Security League, has been allied closely with the drive against (“sweatshops,” and for old age pen-
sions and other similar social legislation. Dr. Bowman denied his activities ! along those lines had anything to 'do with the dismissal, j “I merely thought his position could be better filled by another man.” Dr. Bowman said, “but there's , a lot of good in the man. He isn't jail bad by any means. “I didn't know he was associated with the Pennsylvania Security League. I never heard his name ; mentioned in connection with sweatshops.” j Dr. Turner's resignation as head of the Security League a year ago ■followed publication ol Black News. ; a league publication criticising the state legislature for failing to enact complete social legislation program. Asks 39-Year Tax Refund By United Pie** MOORESVILLE. Ind.. July 6 j For thirty-nine years John Bryant : has paid taxes on his property here. Now he has discovered that the property never has been incorporated within the town limits and that he never has owed the money. He has asked the town i board for a refund.
JULY 6, 1934
MME. CURIE BURIED AFTER SIMPLE BITES Only Close Friends, Family Attend Funeral. By ( nitrn pr> * PARIS. July 6. —Mine. Marie Curie, co-discoverer of radium, was buried almost without cerei monv today at the village cemetery lat Sceaux. twenty miles south of Paris. The body of the woman j scientist was put beside that of her ;husband in a crypt. Only Mme. Curie's closest associates, scientists at the Curie institute, accompanied her two daughters and son-in-law to the cemetery. At the family's request the government and universities were not represented. Bov Thought Kidnaped Returns BLOOMINGTON, Ind.. July 6. Fears that Junior Johnson. 12, had been kidnaped were dissipated late yesterday when he returned safely to the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Johnson.
