Bellefonte, Pa., August 10, 1923. PRESIDENT HARDING DIES SUDDENLY When Thought to Have Recovered from a Threatened Attack of Pneu- _ monia. He was Stricken with Apo- plexy in a San Francisco Hotel Last Thursday Evening. . Warren G. Harding, twenty-ninth President of the United States, died jnstantaneously and without warning last Thursday night in the Palace ho- tel, San Francisco, at 7:30 o’clock, a victim of a stroke of apoplexy, which struck him down in his weakened con- dition after an illness of exactly a week. : - The Chief Executive of the Nation, and by virtue of his office and person- ality, one of the world’s leading fig- ures, passed away at the time when ‘his physicians, his family and his peo- ple thought that medical skill, hope and prayer had won the battle against disease. 3 The strenuous 6000 mile trip to Alaska so sapped his vitality that a slight cold threatened to develop into pneumonia and his return to Wash- ington by way of Panama Canal was abandoned. For a week he fought against the dread disease and pulse, temperature and respiration had re- turned to near normal giving hope of recovery with complete rest which he was taking in the Presidential suite in the Palace hotel. The disease had been conquered, the fire was out, but seven days of silent, though intense suffering had left their mark and a stroke of apoplexy came without an instant’s warning and be- fore physicians could be called, mem- bers of his party summoned, or reme- dial measures taken, he passed from life’s stage after having for nearly two and a half years served his nation and for many years his native State of Ohio. . With the passing of Mr. Harding, the office of President devolves upon Calvin .Coolidge, vice president of the United States, a man silent in nature, but demonstrated as strong in emer- gencies. He was notified of the death of Mr. Harding at his home in Plymouth, Vermont. The suddenness with which the end came was shown by the fact that only Mrs. Harding and the two nurses, Ruth Powderly and Sue Dausser, were in the room at the time. Mrs. Hard- ing, with her characteristic faithful- ness and constant ‘tenderness, was reading to the President at the time. Then without a warning a slight shudder passed through the frame of the Chief Executive, he collapsed and the end came. Immediately the. indi- cations of distress showed themselves, Mrs. Harding ran to the door and call- ed for Lieutenant Commander Boone and for the other doctors to come quickly. : Only doctors Sawyer and Boone, the chief and assistant physicians, were able to reach the room before the na- tion’s leader passed away. They were powerless to do anything. EXECUTIVE'S WIFE BRAVE. Brave in the face of the President’s illness, Mrs. Harding remained brave in realization of his death and did not break down. Mr. Harding came of hardy pioneer stock. He was born in Blooming Grove, Morrow county, Ohio, Novem- ber 2, 1865, the son of a country doc- tor, George T. Harding. Like most country boys, he went to the country school between morning and night chores and later attended college at Iberia, Ohio. He tried school teaching for a year, but having had a smell of printers’ ink while sticking type for his college paper, the lure drew him into the newspaper field. ‘ His family meantime had moved to Marion, in an adjoining county, where he obtained his first newspaper job, and where his life interests were cen- tered. thereafter. Mr. Harding’s ambi- tion was to become a publisher, and it was realized at the age of 19, when he bid in’ the Marion Star at a sheriff’s ‘sale. The paper was purchased under a heavy mortgage and his friends have often said that the struggles and hard- * ships which were his in making this paper a suceess had much to do in: fashioning his character and develop- ‘ing a broad 'patiénce and tolerance which were his chief characteristics. PROUD OF NEWSPAPER. Whatever his other attainments, Mr. Harding’s greatest pride was in his professional ~ accomplishments and training as printer, editor, and pub- lisher. acting duties of his high office serve to dull his delight in pottering about a composing room. On his first trip back home after his inauguration, he went to the Star office, pulled off his coat, rolled up his sleeves, borrowed a chew of tobacco and helped “make up” the paper. His luck charm was a printer’s rule, carried always in a vest pocket. As his ambition had carried him in- to the ranks of publishers, so his fan- cy took him into. the realm of polities. From the first he was an ardent par- ‘ tison, and his insistence upon wearing a “stove pipe” hat, the badge of sup- port of James G. Blaine, while a re- porter on a Democratic newspaper brought him a sharp reprimand from his chief, who held it to be inconsist- ent for a worker on a Democratic pa- per to so prominently display the | symbol of his Republicanism. The future President’s ability as a stump speaker won him early recog- nition from his local party leaders. Marion county then was in the Demo- cratic column and he undertook to switch it to the Republican party, but his first effort at office on his party ticket resulted in a defeat, though he commanded an unexpected vote. The President was a life-long Bap- tist and was a trustee of his home church in Marion. He also had been a member of the Elk and Moose fra- ternities for years, and after his elec- tion as President he became a thirty- second degree Mason and a Shriner. Golf was his favorite recreation, but he also liked to fish, although his op- portunities for that sport were limited er, November 26, 18 Nor. did the interests and ex- played hard and possessed the faculty of putting all his worries behind him during his recreation hours. ’ MILESTONES IN THE PRESIDENT'S Sa WIFE, her 5 % ' Here were the milestones in War- ren G. Harding's life: 2 Began career as il publish- Elected to Ohio State Senate, his first political office, November 6, 1898. Elected Lieutenant Governor of Ohio, November 3, 1903. Defeated as Republican candidate for Governor, November 8, 1910. { Elected to United States Senate, November 3, 1914. Nominated for the Presidency, June 12, 1920. : Inaugurated March 4, 1921. Died in San Francisco August 2, 1923. President Warren G. Harding is th third President of the United States to die from natural causes while hold- ing office. William H. Harrison, of Berkeley, Va., ninth President of the United States, died of pleurisy at Washing- ton, April 4, 1841, after having serv- ed but little more than one month. Zachary Taylor, of Near Orange, Va., twelfth President, died of bilious fever at Washington, July 9, 1850, about a year and a half after he was inaugurated. COOLIDGE SWORN IN AS PRESIDENT. Vive President Calvin Coolidge be- came President of the United States at 2:47 a. m. Friday, eastern standard time, when he took the oath of office in the living room of his father’s farm house in Plymouth, Vt., the little mountain village where he was born. Three hours earlier he had been noti- fied of the death of President Hard- ing and in a brief statement had ex- pressed his grief at the passing of his “chief and friend” and his purpose of carrying out the policies “which he began for the service of the American people.” The swearing-in formality was short and ‘simple. In the little sit- ting room of the farm house furnish- ed in homely style like any other Ver- mont country ‘home, the President stood with right hand upraised at one side of a little table with Mrs. Cool- idge beside him. Across the table, his father read by the light of an oil lamp the impressive words of the oath of “I do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the office of Presi- dent of the United States and I will to the best of my ability preserve, pro- tect and defend the constitution of the United States.” The father’s voice trembled as he read. Mr. Coolidge repeated the words distinctly and calmly and at the end added the solemn affirmation “So help me God.” Several hours later President Cool- idge was on his way to Washington to take hold of the helm of the ship of state. : A CHINESE ; TOOTHPICK FACTORY. Few people, probably, know that a missionary and a group of Chinese students are contributing substantial- ly to our supply of quill toothpicks. When, because of the war, a certain dealer was unable to import toothpicks from his factory in Bohemia, he asked the United States Consular service to find him a new source of supply, and in the course of time he received an answer from a Methodist missionary, the Rev. George S. Miner, in Foochow, the capital of the Chinese province of Fukien. Without a cent of appropriation from the missionary board of his church, Mr. Miner had equipped and was conducting one hundred and sev- enteen day schools for the poor boys, and he wished to give his students every opportunity to help themselves. The toothpick man, who according to an article by Mr. Paul Hutchinson in the world Outlook, “shortly went to China, learned all this and saw that an unlimited supply of goose quills was to.be found there, and straight- way he commissioned the missionary and his school boys to make tooth- picks. 3 arin & “In the city of Foochow, Mr. Miner had built a large higher .primary school, which isthe term used in Chi- na for a school corresponding to the last four years, of grammar school. By ripping out a few partitions and installi first floor of the dormitory into a toothpick factory. There was no ma- chinery, but. there were ' plenty boys, plenty of room, plenty of light, plenty of air—and plenty of quills. Thirty boys sat at long benches, each holding in his right hand a razor- sharp knife and a short piece of wire. With a quick twist his left hand plae- ed the quill in proper position. Two cuts and a thrust of the wire to clear the interior, and the toothpick was done! A boy whom I watched when I visited the factory had cut seventy- two hundred toothpicks the day be- fore, Mr. Hutchinson says, and the factory at that time had produced one hundred and sixteen thousand tooth- picks. : : From the cutting room the quills go to great vats filled with soda solu- tion in which they are soaked; then they are washed and dried and sorted according to sizes. After that they are packed and shipped on their jour- ney to America—more than two and a half million of them every month. Most of the boys cut quills four hours a day and spend the rest of the time in getting the education that is such a precious thing in the new Chi- na. Some of them who have so little money that they must work all day get two hours of school work in the evening. But all of them are earning their way, and the sight is an en- heartening one to those who are anxious about educational tendencies in the Orient.—Ex. A Fly Net Substitute. The fly is no friend of the horse. Here is a recipe from The Farm Jour- nal for an inexpensive wash that is very effective in keeping flies away: Oil of baybecries, 5 parts; napthalene, 10 parts; ether, 16 parts; methylated spirit, 60 parts. ese are common ng a picket fence, he turned the |. Our Dead President. A Tribute by Levi A. Miller, of Pleasant Gap, who in his capacity as a Pittsburgh newspaper man interviewed Mr. Harding when he was a candidate for Senator for Ohio. In this hour of National sorrow it is a gratifying reflection that during the more than a century of our history as a government no man has been elected to the Presidency who was unworthy of the great office. The noble, emi- nent statesman, whose memory we now honor and mourn, has, with abili- ty and fidelity met the requirements of his exalted station. His work is done. His hands are folded, and his name is henceforth upon the list of the illustrious dead. Peace to his ash- es! May God comfort the one most bereaved! We all agree that President Hard- ing was a man of unusual high culture and high ideals; his interest in human- ity’s progress was great and manifest. He was an ardent friend of education in every imaginable form from the lowest to the highest. He was an every day President; his personal charms and qualities as a man had won the affection of the whole coun- try. This was particularly noticeable in Washington, where from his service in the Senate and his brief time in the Presidential chair, he became known personally as to no other part of the country, except perhaps, to estimates of those who knew him well, always did the amiable and courteous things. He was thoughtful and considerate. Everybody who went to the White House came away pleasantly impress- ed, whether Republican, Democrat, Populist or Socialist. It had not been uncommon with other Presidents for men of more or less prominence to come away from the White House say- ing rather unpleasant things about the treatment they had received. With Harding it was different, and in that personal equation doubtless lay a large share of his success as a public man and party leader, in securing ac- ceptance of policies for which he stood. Harding was always so able to see both sides of questions, to rec- ognize personal and local limitations, that his relation with the world and with the American public was always very pleasant and agreeable. No cleaner man, in every sense of the word, ever came to public view. Even in the heat of a political fight he never uttered a sentiment nor a sentence un- fit for publication or for use in a mod- el home. He had a pleasing conversa- tional tone, except when emphasis was required from the stump. He was never bitter or unfair even in the se- crecy of political conference, clearly denoting that what may have been des- ignated as diplomacy was a part of the’ man’s nature. He grew constantly in the stature of statesmanship and broadened his distinguishing views as the development of the country com- manded. But to the end he maintained the same calm courage, the same person- al attractions, the same virtues of pri- vate life that marked him when he first aspired to the Senate. As a forcible and attractive public speaker His efforts were not of the spread-éa- gle style; there were no rhetorical dis- plays of language, no sophomorical lugging in of figures for the purpose of ornamentation. What he said was pertinent, and in the plainest and mest effective English. There was no haste in his utterance, and no hesitation; it flowed on like “Pontiac waves,” gath- ering volume and power as it proceed- ed, sweeping before it the sophistry and even the argument of his oppo- nent, as the waves do the weeds of the sea. In speaking, he usually began slowly and deliberately, as though he he had few equals and no superiofs. | - would have caressed his lips into quicker life and feeling; every sylla- ble coming clean cut and fervid from his tongue, while his bright eyes glow- ed with gleams of emotion. In view of these undeniable characteristics it is not surprising that that talented or- ator, “Billy” Bryan, recently said that President Harding was one of the ablest and most talented orators that | this country ever produced. This great and good man will be missed, and his many good qualities will never be forgotten by a grateful people while the world exists. —For all the news you should read the “Watchman.” Ford’s 8,000,000th Car Turned Out, 7,000 a Day. Detroit, Mich.—Ford motor number 8,000,000 went off the assembly line at the Ford Motor company factory July 11th, establishing a new million production record. The last million motors were pro- duced in just six days less than six months, motor number 7,000,000 hav- ing been turned out January 17th of this year. Production at the start of the last million was approximately 4,800 motors a day and on the increas- ed schedule in effect since has been brought to more than 7,000. MEDICAL. So Deceptive Many Bellefonte People Fail to Real- ize the Seriousness. Backache is so deceptive. It comes and goes—keeps guessing. Learn the cause—then cure it. Possibly it’s weak kidneys. That’s why Doan’s Kidney Pills are so effective. They’re especially for weak or dis- ordered kidneys. Here’s a Bellefonte case. Mrs. Mahala Kreps, Phoenix Ave., says: “A few years ago my kidneys were in a wretched condition and I suffered a lot with dull, nagging back- aches. At night the pains were so se- vere I couldn’t rest. My kidneys act- ed too often and I had frequent spells of dizziness and headaches. I used Doan’s Kidney Pills as directed and they helped me from the first. Four boxes of Doan’s cured me of all signs of the trouble and I have had no return of it.” Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Kreps had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. 68-31 you Fine Job Printing 0—A SPECIALTY—o AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is no atyle of work, from the cheapest “Dodger” to the finest Ta BOOK WORK that we can not do in the most sat- isfactory manner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work. cali on or communicate with this office. CHICHESTER S PILLS 1 1 Chi.ches.ter 8s Diam Pills in Red and Gold metallic boxes, sealed with Blue Ribbon. 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The Broad Way of steel tracks between New York, Phila- delphia, Washington, Baltimore, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Detroit, Toledo, Cincinnati, Chicago and The Broad Way selected by discriminating travelers seeking comfort, convenience, service and safety. Pennsylvania Railroad System THE STANDARD RAILROAD OF THE WORLD OOOO RA SS The Broad Way TO THE ~~ West The Hall Mark ¥ - = 6.48 P. M. - » 9.32 P. M. 9.30 A. M. t. Louis. STE EEE ERE ERED = =me=ma=——, naa = = le emesis) er] W. L. FOSTER, President Are You Looking Ahead? Never put off till tomorrow what ought to be done today. CAPITAL $125,000.00 68-10 I] eee eee eee eI IE) One of the most essential things is beginning a Sav- ings Account, and the best place to start is with this bank. What are you going to do 20 years from now? Begin your account today, and that question will not worry you. DAVID F. KAPP, Cashler. c= The Bank of Security---Stability---Service lg The First National Bank of State College State College, Pennsylvania SURPLUS $125,000.00 Watch, Diamond, or Set of Silverware, purchas- ed on our Easy Payment Plan enables all to own these arti- cles in a way that does not add hardship to the pocket- book. We will be glad to serve you. F. P. Blair & Son, © 64-22tf} Jewelers and Optometrists Bellefonte, Pa. in oyr store at - $5.65 we place on sale your choice of Any Stetson Hat Em The regular price of these Hats is $7.00 and $10.00. This is not a clean-up sale, but for the pur- pose of acquainting our people with the real value of a Stetson Once you own one you will always wear them A. Fauble