WIDOWS WisH 10 BE CARRIED OUT —————————— Nation Will Do Homage to Late Chieftain Wednesday IMPOSING MILITARY ESCORT General Pershing Will Lead Sad Pro cession To Capitol Hill; Veterans Will Carry Casket. Harding's wish that the "funeral the national completed plans for paying final tribute to Warren It is of the natio earlier from a sma affairs of As he capital 1 Gamaliel Harding. barely 22 years since the heart n did homage r who in Ohio to guide i great people and went, followed sad vigil to thats ead came modesty 1} th town ae so let it Allie w's in the great nsion, towering dome murmur the “l.ead, Kindly Light,” both the through which will strains of ite the final hours And. as closes the massive favor of will residents—so “Nearer the first country religious cerem ny in both began th rrvices f their where offic m i the do will be dened t farewell Twely lives for be swept away and 3d to the sad to look a last open ors and will ommander-in A detachment of t as through in mourning to the White H was left so hopefuly weeks There, in East Room, McKinley men place of their train ascort the of ti Lincoln twelve the center where the 1# great and stalwart % dust lay will tenderly the a taining who is n not a Pre from t Warren Wh di remains of IOre sand For there he will be sident suddenly taken away wiil immed Pershing ill move a of all arms the artillery. t} military escort There will be the guns of of horses and sabers the cavalr and the tramp of the foot soldier whom the nation rely for fought scoured defense Marines, who France nd sen in the wil the sailors, who march, and Idiers citizen sold Guard there of al wiil be, too, Nation will furnish mu the column Following military be the civie procession of which ator la of Massachusetts, a personal friend of Mr. Harding, been asked to act as grand marshal Uniformed Knights Templar Pythias, bands suitable the escort will Sen- ize, close Knights of zations to which the late President be. longed, will march in this procession. Behind civic move great officers the the casket, surrounded by a guard of honor, composed of of the Army, Navy and Marine all In uniform The twelve bearers will march beside the casket. Then will follow Mrs. Harding and relatives of the dead Chief Executive, Woodrow Wilson, ‘if he is able to at- tend, will be placed In this group im- mediately behind the hearse, The third section of the funeral procession will be headed by the Pres. Ident and Mrs. Coolidge, followed by members of the Cabinet, the diplo- matic Chief Justice Taft and members of the Supreme Court, Sena tors. Representatives, Governors of States and members of the Federal Judiciary. The religious services will begin immediately the escort reaches the Capitol, and the body of the dead President is placed in the rotunda be. neath the central dome. They will be nnder the direction of the Rev, Free man Anderson, acting pastor of the Calvary Baptist Church, of which Mr. Harding was a member, The services will be extremely simple. Draped flags and palms will furnish dignified surroundings. Ad mission will be limited to the capacity of the rotunda. After the services the body of the late President will lle in atate, while thousands pass through the Capitol and by the catafalque. [It will be Washington's last glimpse of a be Joved chief executive, Corps corps, a SIMPLE SERVICE IN FRISCO HOTEL Widow, Though Bravely Calm, Is Pathetic Figure IN STEEL COFFIN BODY By High Dignitaries Flanked By Line Of Troops. San Francisco. In sorrow San Francisco bade good-bye to all that was mortal of Warren Gamaliel Harding, who United States, widow, Mrs. Harding, revoir with unwitnessed here since those sad To city his sald au days Francisco had of her own unassuageable sorrow when the city’s thou the Hotel President Harding died the night before, Southern Pacific Station was placed board train to be taken to Washington Escorted by a cf of and - Marine detachments men high official life the he dy nf to lined gtreets where to where a bo iy on Army rtege in on hy i ¢ carried rough President was tered th gt of the ri ne 323 gue ' { tr here At 6:08 P. M. the hody the hearse and startle an aerial Elevent? yefore the hears the frost the the body was fenf removed arvices ! * ali Hafore | lef: been heaped over wi tributes ings were wreath o Behind t @ hearse came the notables of esco which in orary paill and n tho tha hon if He On luded and gh city, State officials Among ‘then Hoover, Warl ational retaries Daugh The Attorney of a sick bed Wallace and Attorney-General Cabinet members got Hotel march erty TT ral "nr te General up ou line of He rode in an of Mayor James John J jeneral Charles OG. Morton, Rear Ad miral Edward Simpson and J. 8. Me auto Roloh General The participation of the Army, the Navy and the marines in the sion was solemn and imposing officers were In full dress as is tomary on such occasions and swords were draped in crepe Mrs. Florence Harding, widow the late President, standing between Mr. and Mrs. George B. Christian, Jr, as the Rev. James 8S. West read pr Wes All cus their nodded her head slightly as the pas tor raised his hand and said: “God Is our refuge and strength” As the minister ended his prayer, Mrs Harding said “Amen.” The widow stood and watched the half-hundred persons as they filed out, waiting for the room to clear in order that she might have a few minutes alone with her dead before the body was taken to the train for transpor tation to the National Capital. The body of the dead reposed in a drab brown steel coffin, lined with graved on a silver plate was “Warren Gamaliel Harding.” Mrs. Harding, dressed in deep mourning, with a black cape reaching to her shoe tops, was veiled, She held her gaze. on the minister while he read his text, but bowed her head as he raised his hand for prayer. Her eyes were dry at the finish of tha prayer and fn a hallchoked volce she vitored the word “Amen.” Warren Gamallel Harding, twenty- ninth president of the United States, was born November 1865, on «his grandfather's farm just outside the vil- lage of Blooming Grove, in Morrow county, Ohlo, two pioneer American families, hardy Holland Dutch on the one side and 1ib- erty-loving Scotch on the other, father, Dr. George T, 9 despite bis advanced age of seventy- nine years, His Elizabeth Dickerson Harding. the hest sense of the phrase, village school until years and then attended the was fourteen entered the Ohlo "Central he at old, college Iferin. He worked his way that Institution by cutting corn, paint- ing his neighbor's barns and helping on the grading of the roadbed of the raliroad. He also played In college paper, When he Warren went printing office. nineteen years to Marion with alded Warren control of he publisher sumed office of president of the United States. Already he knew how set type and to do all the other duties of a printer, introduced he learned to operate tha machine, Always he carried as a pock et plece the printer's rule those days, The very pro friendly him and hb graduated from the college, the time in village he was moved work At the old, his father the family snd the financially In Marion until to tr Bg the after he was as to * iA jek and he and of the more wns his sl 1d of It relations Star that existed between his, emp There was Oy eas, never a strike on the p and about 14 years a ’ i sharing pla Bor iper, go he instituted a profit- eh : er ] the employees % that were paid them in the paper. Mr the n received divi in the form of stock Har industries that sprang uj tine JOE was Identified also with y in Marion as it grew from a town of 406 to a city of more than 30008), He was a direc tor in a bank and in several manufac- turing nies, and was a trustee of Trinity Baptist church His Rise in Politics. As editor and publisher of a Republican paper it inevits that Mr. Harding should take ar tive interest «Or 11 4 vey able was ac in politi and his atiain- ments brought him to the fir« er of t nt in 3 ne hie tho thie state, He was a mem! senate from 1900 to 1004, and Heutenant governor In 3810 he was the Repub : mt was served po state, governor, | his « election seemed However, th Republ gather} in Mr. Harding was nomi His campaign was based large opposition to American partici the League of Natlons, and that in the election of November 4 he recelved 404 elec toral to 127 for James M. Cox, the Democratic nominee, - He was in. augurated March 4, 1021, with a de gree of simplicky in the ceremonies that pleased the American people. Classed, when In the senate, ag n conservative, President Harding did not depart markedly from conserva- tive lines when In the White House, though his supporters always sald he was as progressive as the good of the country warranted and se conditions permitted. He, like President Roose velt, had a great coal miners’ strike on his hands, and labored hard and with in ti wwimaries for gates from : ia Of t ewsil to spol noes, ¢ conservatis leaders of the ican party pre valled In the the Chicago ng Coliseum, and nated. ily on pation in wns 80 successful votes Arms Limitation Conference. his administration was the great inter. national conference for the limitation Armistice day, At his ing on 1921, instigation the confer. glam, Italy, Japan, China, the Neth. eriands and Portugal, Each country States being Secretary of State Hughes, chairman of the conference: Senators Lodge of Massachusetts and Underwood of Alabama, and ex-Secre- tary of State Elihu Root. The conference adjourned February 6, 1022, after negotiating those treaties: { A covenant of limitation to naval { armament between the United States, | Great Britain, France, Japan and Italy. A treaty between the same Alaskan polley. Various plans to the Interior department lous gases In warfare, | Great Britain, France and Japan re lating to thelr insular possessions and thelr insular dominions In the Pacific, with a declaration reserving American | rights in mandated territory. A treaty between the nine powers In | the eonference relating to | and policies to be followed in matters concerning China, A treaty between the nine relating to customs France refusing to consider | limitation’ of land armament at present time, that part of the confer. fell But what it 4d wis considered a great talnment of world pemce, pow ers tarify. the the Chinese ence throigh id + 8 #1 or {) en | nchieve i toward the | The treaties United pariiame lowe wns { the pacts | ing French chamber and senate. | Favored Entering World Court, Mr. Harding had heen the White House before It : that he did not favor entire Isolation fit soon ratified by the the Britt + other nations fol 3 for a it would not accept President Hard ratified by the wore States senate and sh % fn 1 and 1 thoug t nt, hy t } time H long i feared France However, to them lived Engr not appeared Presidefit Harding's plans came to naught, but this year first-hand infor- He was accompanied by Sec. Work of the Interior depart- ment, Secretary Wallace of the Agri department and Secretary of the Department all of whom are Alaskan situation. left Washington Hoover merce, The President train, Denver, cities, making speeches nt St Helena, Spokane and Incidentally he visited the national parks. First be Zion In Utah, the newest of two our the Rio Virgin, in Wyoming, gorge cut by Yellowstone 1872 fe vigited ore. ated In history and largest and most ofthe nineteen parks of our system Hére he fished, the bears time. motored. boated, and had a good His his abandoned Saw Much of Alaska. The President celebrated the Fourth in the Un return trip, but that was upon of July the trans- trip was Alaska on U. 8. His Alaskan y started for port Henderson, He government railroad Juneau, and He also was shown the best extensive went and visited the principal of new the capital, majestic scenery. Harding creating first return Mr. Yancouver, was Lue On bis ip of the it from European affairs, ut belies this f wrrunsd would country part in the res and ang re evi torati peace Bia bility ame Iu dent early { when proposed that America should member p in the International Court of Jus tice which had been founded unfBer the auspices of the League of Nations, The President was as insistent as ever that this country should keep the league, but believed the court was or would be independent of the greater organization. Against the advice of some leaders of his party, he reiterated this advice on several occasions, and his plan formed the subject of some he accept ah sup out of {rip through the West. think it would split his party, and Ameri dan Ths ii an presides t on Jana- soil President Seattle em -d and revie from ti Hrd + Henderson 3 t of a dogen or command sf Ad- » Aea Re so battleships under him guns the national salute of twenty-one Even then he from the ailment that death, and soon after that his trip, which was to include v ret a OO ond ganenn was in his of Irn to the East via the Pama canal, was canceled, President Harding saade a puaslie ad- dress at Reattle, setting forth his views on the Alaskan situation. Some of his resulted the rest President in the of be almost a certainty that Harding would be nominated | Republican national convention | 1924, | Mr. Harding's home life was ideal save that he had no children, ' Mra. Harding, who was Miss Florence Kling of Marion, were devoted to each other and she was always his true ington. Harding quickly made herseM loved i people, His Western Trip. President Harding's Adaska trip was 1022, He inherited the “Alaska problem.” be on the down grade, with decrease In { population and mining output, | ened extinction of the fishing Industry land numerous other unfavorable » “Alaska for Alaskans™ “There is no need of government. managed, federnlly-pairfor developmant there must he no reckless sacrificing of resources” a few years” “Where there is possibility of better. machinery of admin istration, Improvement should and will be effected.” Other conclusions presented by Pres. ident Harding were: be made for road building. That the federal government should be more llheral In encouraging the technical, sclentific and demonstration work in agriculture. That restrictions should be laid on the fisheries and on the fonekts, That the development of the coal i i 1 | conditions, That the govermment should retaln ownership and operation of the Alas kan railroad. During the President's {liness the greatest concern was felt and ex. pressed In all foreign countries, and thelr governments were constantly EMBROIDERY IS ANCIENT ART Has Been Practiced for Ages Among Both Civilized and Savage Peoples. Embroidery 1s the art of ornament. ing cloth and ofiser materiiils with the needle. Most of the embroideries made today nre usually coples of the ancient ones, Embroidery is belleved to have been ; applied to skins almost as soon as needle and thong were first employed to Join pleces of skins together into garments, In Lapland the natives em- brolder their reindeer skin clothing with needle of reindeer bone, three of reindeer simew and applique of strips of hide, Travelers say that in Cendral Afrioa, among the primitive tribes there, the girls embroider skins with figures of flowers and animals, supplementing the effect with shells and feathers, Ameng the ancient Greek textiles exhumed from Crimean graves are both tapestries and embroideries now preserved In the hermitage at Petro grad. Ope of the embroideries Is at- tributed to the Fourth century B. C* and Is in colored wools on wool, Removing Scorch in Clothing. A slight oration In clothing caused by a scorch can be removed by rubbing with fine sandpaper. This does not mean sandpaper of the qual. is used to remove paint from required Jom 8 Jl od Fresh Fruits are Plentiful ! Use the short Certo-Process for making jam and jelly with Berries, Cherries, Peaches and other fruits in season. You will find they are the begs jams and jellies you ever tasted. Cerro is sold by grocers everywhere or sent postpaid for 35 cents. 1 MINUTE’S BOILING of 2 POUNDS OF FRUIT th 3 POUNDS OF SUGAR 4 ounces OF Certo makes 5 POUNDS OF Jam Wrapped with every bottle is & recipe booklet which Ti story. Douglas-Pe@tin Corporation 4 Granite Bidg., Rochester, N.Y. Cerro (Surgjell) No reason now her tongue to tell That sad old story "It did not jell” Her jam's now perfe@—jelly, too She uses CERTO—s0 ohedd vou i Mothers!! Write for 32- Page Booklet, “Mothers of the World” Use This Coupon The Lioyd Mfg Company Bagrwur ue d Ce Menominee LS on Pieass send me you Mothers of thy boosie Worig Ngan Cuticura Soap AND OINTMENT Clear the Skin Soap 25¢, Ointment 25 snd 50¢, Talowum 25¢ W. N. U, BALTIMORE, NO. PAPYRUS BOOKS WERE ROLLS Modern Term “Volume” Has Been Found to Mave Mad Its Origin in These Cylindrical Works. In form was ng q ustomary use a long sheet o it upon a stick, pect 10 maps at the Detroit New columns, each of of page, the reader b the roll in his two hands the part which them. As he a unrolled on the other, he term “volun to modern books ancient practice rolis. The lor a wooden hill one et, *h gave the volur yond the edges of the sheet were terminated In knobs or bosses, which guardell In seme measure the edges of the papyrus or rolls of parchment, which were often made In the same manner. The whole volume was also inclosed In a parchment case, on the and ana was conspicuously recorded. World Calis for U. 8. Autos. All parts of the world are opening up as markets for American motor ves hicles. Though some European coun- are heavy purchasers of ‘he the best cus 10,214 and 7.270, respectively, Billion Trees. The American Tree association Is working to the end that a billion trees be planted in this country in 1023. Ia other words, reforestation cannot be accomplished merely by debate. —Blrme ingham Age-Herald, TE —— If coffee disagrees heli] Postum
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers