Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 9, 1923, Page 5

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_HURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 1923. MARION BELLS | TOLL SORROWS OF HOME FOLK (Continued from Page One.) open and friends and neighbors of the dead president commenced to file past the bler in a steady stream. ‘Troops aided in keeping the people moving. They entered the home by the rear door and passed out the front door. One hour and a half after the pub- lie was permitted to enter the Hard- ing home, the solid mass of persons which jammed the sidewalks and Jawns for a distance of two blocks had seemingly not moved. As fast this mass melted from the front into the single stream which was per- mitted to pass by the bier, it was augmented from the rear. Military officers on duty estimated that per- sons were passing at the rate of two thousand per hour. A number of old employes of the Star office called at the Harding home this afternoon. They request- ed that they be permitted to view the body of their late “W. G.,"’ privately. “Surely,” Mrs. Harding said. “You tell all the folks on the Star they can come out here tomorrow morning at 4:30 o’clock and I will see that the ‘proper arrangements are madi Atter they expressed their sym- pathy, Mra. ing said: “Yes, it is too bad, but I'am not going to down. Remember me to all the folks on the Star.” NATION GIVES UP BODY TO HOME TOWN. WASHINGTON, Aug. 9.—(By The Associated Press.)—Laden with all the honors the American people could bestow, the nation today gave War- ren G. Harding back to Ohio. Yesterday, while a republic mourned at his bier, the great government of which he was head performed funeral ceremonies such as are reserved for departed presidents. Tomorrow, in the shaded quiet of a grassy slope, Marion, Ohio, will en- “tomb @ citizen, the fifth son of Ohio brought home from the presidency to rest, For at the bxpress command of his heroic widow; there will be in Marion mone of the; solemn and impressive display with which nations entomb their chief trates. The caisson which carried his casket over the route travelled by the nation’s great dead in Washington, will be replaced by the loving hands of fellow towns- men; the cavalcade of troops which escorted the body of a commander-in- chief, will be replmec by home folks doing their last duty for a friend and nelghbor, The picture in the great vaulted dome of the capitol where the shades of the natron’s other great dead lgoked down on the solemn cere- mony Will give way to a simple scene Jn the Marion cemetery which will commit Warren Harding to the tomb like other native sons, before him. Warren Harding left Washington forever last night, and today he will be back’ among the home folks he loved so well, to remain until judg- ment. The same trajn which bore him way from the capitol confident and well a few short weeks ago and the: returned him for a short day of cere mony, a/ figure of history, departef from Washington at six o'clock last night for the last part of its sorrow- ful journey. Immediately afterward it will, be bled and never run as one ‘ain again. Tonight another train bearing a president westward will roll out of the capital; but it will not take Calvin Coolidge to represent at Marion the Kovernment over which he now pro- sides. He will go, rather, to pay the homage of a plain American at the tomb of a fallen chieftain, and to give expression to his personal sorrow over the loss of a dear friend. At yesterday's funeral cerempnies, his yvas among the most solerin of the ‘many sorrowful faces in the great procession of woe that passed up Pennsylvania avenue. For to know ‘Warren Harding well wis to love him and Calvin Coolidge has come thus to know and love him through the months of close association. But among all of those in sorrow- ful caravan of yestefday the one that will linger longest among the memories of that sad day, is not President Coolidge; “nor Woodrow ‘Wilson, nor William Howard Taft, al- though they too rod behind the flag- enshrouded casket with a full under: ntanding of the tmgedy which had taken place in te life of one who had planned and aspired to great things. All three of these will be remem- bered long as notable figures in a jotable outpouring of a nation Erlef. But the one who will be re- membered even longer is Mra, Hard ‘ng, who had done much to make “Warren Harding the leader he be- came, and of whom the blew had fallen with a crushing swiftness not to be compared to the pain felt by any other. The president's widow, through all the trying ofdeal, had made good all her promis¢s, when at the moment death closed her husband's eyes, she said: “I am not going to break down; 1 ‘simply, mustn't; I won't break down!" All through yesterday when thou- sands who claimed him only as a president failed to choke back their tears, she who knew him as a hus- band had stifled the outward signs of grief, She sat by his coffin with a fortitude that won her the love and rympathy of every one, determined to Jay him in his tomb among his towns men with fhe calm she feels is due bim. That last sad duty performed, Mrs. Harding plans to return to Washing ton to gather up the Harding home things in the White House and then go back to take her placo again in Marion, among the home folks and near the last resting place of her beloved dead. ———— MARION RITES TO YRESENT CONTRAST MARION, Ohio, Aug. 9.—(By Asso- ciated Press—His home town of Marion awoke today, eagerly aweit- ing the arrival of the funeral train bearing back to Ohio for eternal rest the body of Warr Harding The train with the body of of en G the dead president was due to arrive here at 10 A. M., central standard time, Preparatory to the final funeral ser- vices tomorrow that will be in direct contrast to the official services held yesterday in the capitol at Washing- ton, The elaborate services yesterday were for Warren G. Harding, presi- dent of the United States; the simple service here tomorrow will be for Warren G. Harding, citizen, friend, neighbor—and husband. For two days, his friends and neigh- bors will accord the Iate president the customary funeral rites of the small towns of the middie west and then, with strict simplicity, will accompany Mrs. Harding and the body to the cemetery, where {t will be entombed tomorrow afternoon. ‘The only funeral services here will be at the cemetery and they will be extremely brief and simple, in accord: ance with the wishes of Mrs. Hard- ing. Only relatives and intimate friends will make up the sma!! party going to cemetery. Even news- peper | be excluded from the servi » tomb. , funeral train arrives (ne coffin will be taken imme- y to the home of the dead pros.dent’s father,” Dr. George TT. Harding, Sr. The trip from the sta. tion to the father’s home wil be made in a hearse not on a military cals. son, as stated yesterday in Washing- ton. At his father’s home the body will Ue in private until 2 o'clock this af- ternoon, from then until 11 o'clock tonight, the public will be permitted to gaze upon the kindly face of the former Marion newspaper publisher, who became chief executive of his country. Again tomorrow from 9 a. m., until 1 p. m., the public will have a last opportunity to pass by the bier of Mr. Harding. At 2 o'clock the funeral pro- cession Will form for the journey to the cemettry and at 3 o'clock the body of Warren G. Harding will be iaid at rest. It will | be placed in a receiving vault until a suitable mausoleum can be erected; Only mémbers of the intimate party that made the trip to Alaska with President Harding are aboard the funeral train. Cabinet Members Hoov- er, Work and Daugherty are in the party. President Coolidge, members of the cabinet and other high government officials, who as private citizens will attend the: funeral services here, will arrive tomorrow at 11 a. m., on an- other special train. It was Mra. Harding's wish, and her wish is law in Her home town . In today's funeral procession from the station to the Harding home, and in/the last Journey tomorrow from the ‘home to the cemetery, there will not heard the tramping feet of the sol- ers; no civic or other organizations ‘will be in line, Only the family and intimate friends will directly follow the hearse. Mrs, Harding’s desire for a simple, Private funeral for her husband, re- sulted today in the cancellation of plans for Ohio newspaper publishers, members of the Associated Ohio Dailies, in which Mr. Harding was an active worker, to march in the pro- cession as a body. Although thers will be no military escort today or tomorrow, three thou- sand Ohio national guard troops to- day patrolled the streets of Marion, keeping back the huge crowds of Ohioans and people from other states who came to pay their last respects to their dead chieftain, arion was crowded to overflow- ing this morning and other countless thousands were blackening the high- ways leading into the city. So great was the crush that state authorities stationed patrols along the main roads to prevent speeding and conse- quent injuries or loss of life. Hundreds of Marion residents today opened thetr homes to care for the many visitors who could not find hotel quarters, Many motorists came prepared with tents and camping outfits. Business will practically be at a standstill in Marion today and to- morrow. The whole city plans to give {Itself up to deep mourning. On some streets near the Harding home, the cemetery and the old home made famous by the front porch campaign, the only activities of a usual nature will be the deliveries of milk and ice. The Marion Star, the newspaper that until recently owned and published by President Harding, will suspend publication tomorrow in order that its employes may attend the funeral ser. vices and pay their last respects to their “chief.” All points of interest connected with the life here of Mr. Harding were be- ing heavily guarded by state troops to safeguard them from the ravages of souvenir hunters. An especially heavy guard was placed around the old Harding home from which Mr? Harding, then a United States senator conducted his famous front porch campaign for the presidency, and where, after election, he met and con- ferred with the “great minds” of the country, Everywhere throughout the city, flags were flying at halt mast, and everywhere was to be seen the ‘black and white bunting of mourning, Almost every home had displayed in its front window a large picture of the late president. Nearby towns through which thousands of motorists passed on their way to Mari on also were decorated. ‘When they arrive tomorrow Presi dent Coolidge, Chief Justice Taft and members of their parties wil make thefr headquarters on board the speci- al train that brought them and that will carry them back to Washington. They will start on the return trip to the national capital immediately fol- lowing the brief services at the ceme- tery. Mra. Harding will return to Washington on a train leaving Marion at 6 p, m., Friday. Among other noted visitors who are expected to arrive this evening wil be Henry Ford, Thomas Edison, Harvey 8. Firestone and Bishop Wil-| ‘Ham F. Anderson, all close friends of Mr. Harding. Last summer Mr, Hard. be Casper Daily Tribune San Francisco’s Farewell to Harding Ohio ing spent several days camping with them. The streets in front of the Harding home and near the cemetery that have been in a state of decay were hurriedly repaired yesterday. Special carpeted walks were laid from the street to the Harding home. Several huge white pillars were erect ed at the entrance of the cemetery. As the funera! train entered Murion county this morning and until it came to a stop at the station here all of the church bells of the city tolled. It was a sad welcome home and in severe contrast to the happy, nolsy welcome accorded President Harding on his last visit home to attend the Marion centennial on July 4 a year ELKS TO ASSEMBLE AT 0 FO ROESSION All members of the Elks are re- quested to meet at the club rooms at 12:30 p. m. tomorrow to participate in the funeral procession and me- morial services for the late president, Warren G. Harding. The Elks will form in a_ body, march in the funeral procession and attend the memorial exercises at the America theater. — Traffic Violator To Be Arraigned On Many Counts (M. McHealy’s car would run, but it had no right to run, didn't know where {t was going after dark, and couldn't stop when it got there, according to the charge placed against the owner on the police records last night. Mr. McHealy is charged with driving the car without having first procured a license, without having any lights on the car and without having brakes. MOTHER EFC. P. BRODIE DIES IN QENVER TODAY Mrs, M. A. Brodie, 70 years of age, who prior to going to Denver to live, made her home with her son C. P. Brodie, in Casper, died this morning at 11 o'clock in the Colorado city. She had been in failing health for several years. Mr. Brodie, is leaving tonight for Denver to take charge of the remains which will be taken to the old family home in Toronto, Canada. Burial will be im the family plot there. tracted oe he scouts CALEDONIA, Ohio, Aug. 9.—The funeral train bearing home the for two minutes at this village which for ow minutes at this village, which was the boyhood home of the Into president. Approximately 709 people had waited since daylight to watch the train pass through. Most of them personally knew Mr. Harding. Casket with body of nation’s president being borne to funeral train in San Francisco for the start of the long journey which ended today In Marion, PAGE FIVE. RODEO ASSOCIATION DEFICIT IS In the face of a deficit approximat- ing $13,000, resulting from ita first annual show here last week, the Cas- per Rodeo association has requested: the board of directors of the cham- ber of commerce to assist in adjusy ing its affairs so that an immediate and eatisfactory settlement may be made, A detailed financial statement of the association's Habilities and-assets had not been fully prepared today by Mr. Beal, auditor of the organtza- tion, These figures are expected to be given out sometime within the next two days. C, A. Bell, secretary of the asso- ciation, stated today that while the deficit was in the neighborhood of $13,000, the total assets and capital investment of the Rodeo corporation exceeded $30,000, or were more than NEAR $13,000; LOCAL CHAMBER OF COMMERCE TO GIVE ADVICE twice the sum of the outstanding lia bilities. The assets include the grand- stand, bleechers, race track, barn: miscellaneous buildings, fences, cor- rals and chutes, etc., and none of these are mortgaged or in any way Involved. Re-organization will probably be resorted to in order to stabilize the present status of the association's af: Zairs. This matter is in the hands of its attorney, Alex B. King. The wild Arapahoes were persuaded to pull their freight and make their way back to the Wind river reserva: tion today, after having been pro- vided a grub stake. The problem of paying them off has peen turned over to the Indian agent,* who will secure the money due from the show people and see that the Indians get it in a lump sum. ONE LEGION POST In confirming the rumor thot there was a petition being circulated for the purpose of organizing a new post of the American Legion, C. H. Reimerth Commander of the George W. Vro- man Post expressed considerable dis- appointment in such a movement. “I am not opposed to the idea of more than one post although {it has proven the best solution to the ex- service man’s needs in the larger cit fes of the country, for the, primary purpdse of the American Legion is to help and serve our more unfortunate buddies and experience has taught us that this can be petter accomplished |through one agency rather than a |number of agencies with limited means. ‘Further that {t would be a great injustice for the state commander to grant a charter to another post in Casper while the old post is building up its fences whict. were sadly wreck ed through the result of re-establish- ing the men returning from overseas, ‘The local pust during its existence has given and loaned to ex-servico men in the neighborhood of $5,000, and this to those who were only in.absolute need. The post has staggered under |this for the past few years for the llargest part of this was borrowed money which had to be returned. There were various methods sug: gested to Haquidate this debt which | were employed but which never met with the general favor of the mem- bership. It helped reduce the debt but in doing so brought down the disfavor of the public. A movement was start- ed at that time to organize a new post but the real true legionnaires first TEST ORDERED IN SPEEDING UP AIR MAIL SERVICE ACROSS U}.S. MITCHELL FIELD, NEW YORK Aug. 9.—(By The Associated Press)— A five day test of the 28-hour trans- continental air mail service which the government proposes to inaugur- ate between New York and San Fran- cisco will be made beginning August 12, under orders received today from Colonel Paul Henderson of the Post- master general's department at Wash ington. Hight newly constructed airplanes: with powerful motors and specially de. signed apparatus and equipment, will be flown for the first time in the tests, according to J. E. Whitbeck, | superintendent of this station. They will leave Mitchell Field with New York mail at 11 a. m., eastern standard time, August on a ache dule which would bring them to Cres: m. sy field, San Francisco, at 4 p. western time August making hours in the air and allowing 20 min- utes stops at each of the six tnter- mediate stations. Re-fueling and ute will inelu¢ Cheyen| postal Clevela 6, Salt I stations d, Chic ake Cit en GANSERVE SERVICE MEN BEST-REIMERTH considered the obligation they owed the community and the merchants who were carrying their accounts and that it was up to them to take hold of the post and try to put it in its feet, It would have been a very nice thing to orgunize. our own little post, free from any debt, with a clear name and g0 our own sweet little way, for we haé! no hand jn the accummulating of | tue debt nor the unsavory reputation that some were willing to give it The Job of the present officers was nO easy thing to awsuming such re. sponsibilities as which confronted! them, when there was plenty enough | who would be glad to ha signed a petition for a charter for another py and would have been willing to le the old post go its own way with its low. .If there was a petition for « charter submitted after the old organ izatfon was for once in the clear, J coul® offer no objection but I truly feel that the obligation of those who would organize a new post is as much theirs as it is ours and for that rea son, if the matter should bo submitted to me for my opinion, I would have to disapprove the idea for the prow ent With the limited funds we have had at our dispogal in seven months we have liquidated our debt by $1,000, built up the membership from 290 to 420, have tried to take care of the needs of the exservice man in procur ing! hogpitaimtion, training, compen- sation and have found employment for close to 700 men. We have carried out @ program of Americanization larger than any other post of the state and have tried to make our selves a unit which would reflect credit on the community. I am sure our band has been worth while all thé effort made in organizing it, From the type of men I understand that are back of this movement the local post would be greatly enhanced by their membership and we need them in Legion work for there 1s stil! con siderable to do with but a very few hands, I am giad to hear tht they have offered no criticism of the local post but if there were any and it wns constructive I would be thankful for it. IT am sure if those who are respdn- sible for such a movement and the facta were weighed the would see their real obligation by excepting the invitation to become active members of the local organization oe w. R. Hin from I neher came down vinit nder.and. w here 'WXILIARY. TO. VETERANS BE OMGMNZED. TONG |Haines ‘Arraigned ‘The preliminary of W. FH. Haines charged with assault and battery was held in justice court this afternoon before a jury. Haines is charged with beating up his wife on the night Jof August 6 at about Second and Lincoln stre The trouble is sup. SECOND LEGION POST ORGANIZED AT GATHERING Application for Charter Filed; Officers Headed By Wm. H. Mernll. At a meeting at the home of Gar- rett King, 655 South Park street, Wednesday evening, a second post of the American Legion in Casper was organized. Officers were elected and the organization is waiting for its ap- plication for a charter to be acted on by the national organization. The post is starting off with a member- ship of slightly less than 50 men. The officers chosen for the first term of office are William H."Merrill, commander; Wallace A. Sawdon, vice- commander; Frank M. Blehr, adju- tant; E. EB. Hawley, sergeant-at-arm: Harris T, Dodge, finance officer; E win J. Zoble, historian and Clyde C. Brewer, chaplain. ‘Tho post {s made up largely of new- comers in Casper who have been drawn together through buainess and personal associations. The meeting last night was addressed by C.’ H. Reimerth, commander of the George W. Vroman post of the legion, ex- tending an invitation to the group to Join the Vroman post as a whole. OF FOREIGN WARS WILL This evening at 8 o'clock at the Knights of Pythias hall, the organi zation meeting of the auxiliary of the Powder River post of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, will be held. The or ganization is for wives, mothers and sisters of ex-service men. ‘The charter membership roll will be made up tonight and other neces sary business transacted. A social time will follow and refreshments will be served, Any women wishing automobile transportation from their homes to the meeting will be accommodated by calling Dr, Robert N. Grove at his office, telephone number 2220. On Assault Charge posed to have risen over the custody of their child — HILLSBORO, WL, Aug. 9.—~ One man was shot and seriously wound- fd and three deputy sheriffs were badly beaten in a battle between deputy sheriffs and strikers of the American Zine com; near the entrance to the plant at 6 o'clock v Assurance of co-operation sanitation here, was received t the Rockefeller Foundation. representing one-sixth of the amount necessury maintain the work in this county will be borne by the foundation, the balance being taken care of by the city and county admin- istraticns and the, school board, The elty and county will appropriate $6 000 each toward the work, and the school district will give $2,500. A com- plete personnel of medics, nurses, lab- oratory technicians, and other experts will make up the new board of health. to *'The following letter widressed to Dr. Andezson ‘presents the matter as it stands at present. “Dear Dr. Andersun: Your valued communication of July 17 and July 20, were duly recetved ang held pend- ing my return from the west, “The officers of the board will re quest the executive committe. to grant you authorization to enter into ROCKEFELLER FOUNDATION LENDS AND TO HEALTH WORK IN COUNTY Promise of $2,500 Annual in Maintaining Full- Time Board for City and County Received Today; Program Is in Making. svat h in maintaining a full-time board of health for Casper and Natrona county, directing its combined skill and efforts toward promotion of health and Oday by Dr. G. M. Anderson, state health officer, from the International Health board of Twenty-five hundred dollars, Dr, Covingtem for Natrona coun! We shall review the List of prospec- tive health officers and laboratory technicians and keep you and Dr Covington fully advised. As roon as @ qualified health officer can be found who will be mutually acceptable to the state and local authorities an 1 to our board, we shall hope to be in a position to have the arrangement be- come operative, I shall keep you ad- vised of developments. “Trusting you will succeed tn ge ting an efficient organization which will win and buld the confidence of the public and incidentally contribute to the development of a sentiment in the atate favorable to tho devolop- ment of an adequate health servic I am, 4 “Yours very truly, “JOHN M. FERREL, “Director of International Health the arrangement proposed by you and Board for the United States.” ON BOARD HARDING FUNERAL TRAIN, CANTON, OHIO, August 8— (By The Associated Press)—The fune ral train bearing the body of the late President Harding to Marion was stopped for one minute at Canton today as a mark of respect to William McKinley, often called the political mentor of Mr. Harding. Later another stop of one minute was planned at Caledonia where the late chief executive spent his boyhood day! The train arrived in Canton at 9:25 a. m., nearly two hours be- hind schedule. The train passed through dense crowds of persons who had waited hours to see it. ROCHESTER, Pennsylvania, Aug. S—Three sllent figures, clad in the rainment of the Ku Klux Klan and bearing a large cross of red carn tions paid tribute to the late presi- dent Harding when the funeral train passed through here today. As the train moved slowly through the station, one of the klansmen ad vanced with the cross in the hope that it would be taken aboard. There was no one on the platform of the funeral! car and the floral offering was not taken aboard. * As the train disappeared the klans- men ho'ding the cross upright, stood t attention. They were whisked away in an automobile, PITTSBURGH, Pa. The Associated Pre: another sad day in the life of the na- tion was breaking when the funeral train of President Harding passed through Pittsburgh. The dawn was of the day which would see all that is morta! of Warren SUMMARY OF NIGHT REWS STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Calif. —The chair of Psychic phenomena at Stanford Univeraitp received a bequest of $400,000 from the estate of Thomas Welton Stanford, Me!- bourne, Australia, brother of the late Leland Stanford, founder of the institution, and the fund will be used for sclentific experimenta tion in the fleld of spiritualism. VICTORIA, B. C.—An earthquake of moderate intensity was recorded on he selsmograph at the Gonzales observatory, indicated to be about 4,600 miles away, lasting two hours and belleved to be in the vicinity of Japan SANTA BARBARA, Calif—The fire which has been raging in the Santa Bargara forest for nearly a week was reported beyond control and raging along a 15 mile front with more than 30 sections having been burned over and no hope seen of checking the fire, although near ly 200 men are fighting it. CANTON—Btudents of the mil! tary situation in South China ex Pressed the belief that the regime of Sun Yat Sent, southern Consti tutionalist leader, is destined to be short Mved and it is reported that Sun's Yunnanese troops have eva- cuated their positions on the North River and are proceeding toward the East River section Let us show you our fall and proposition on a real tailor mad 243 S. Center this morning. Officials announced they would request the government to send troops if the sit a had not changed the better this for by evening, Our tailoring wi “TIME TO THINK ABOUT THAT FALL OR WINTER SUIT” THE COMMERCIAL TAILORS EXPERT CLEANING AND PRESSING PRICE AND STYLE FUNERAL TRAIN HALTS MINUTE AT CARTON TODAY IN RESPECT | TO THE MARTYRED M’KINLEY G. Harding taken home to be with friends and neighbors he loved best. Despite the early hour, about a. m,, there was an almost continuous tribute paid the memory of Mr, Hard- ing by the people of the Pittsburgh istrict, The silent throngs were not so great as on Tuesday when the funeral train passed through the city on its way to Washington, but the tribute was just as reverent and ex- pressive of the nation’s sorrow, ‘The crowd at the station was not large, although it filled the Open spaces outside the os and over- flowed into the adjacent streets, Buc at every suburban station and every street intersection across the clty the people bad been gathering for hours and the police estimatea that fui 100,000 persons saw the traln go sluw- 4y by. it wae the same reverent, uncoy- sred crowd Whien stood tor mwre Lina Seat Gay in the breiing sua wali, tor OA opportunity ke pay bomage the uead executive, thousands crossed the tracka in the steel suburbe Of Messemer and Min. dock, where workmen wn thew so tue midis Were Joined by workin. on thelr way heme, au tv pause iv # litte whiie untu ihe CCA Of tie train, They overflowed on Wwe travn and delayed the progreas of the trai. Similar seenes were enacted in the eleetrie towns of Wiuimerdin anu Hast Pittsburgh, which is the res.- dence section of Swissvale, Hast Liv- erty and Shady Side other thousanus stood slently by. From Hast Liberty well jnto the city, the rajlroad passes through a deep cut, «panned at many street intersections by wide bridges. These were densely crowded with men, women and children. $< CROWDS POUR © INTO MARION MARION, Aug. 9.—(By The Ass: clated Press.)—Since daylight toda roads leading into Marion have been pouring people into the city. Long before daylight crowds started to assemble at the Union station where the body of the late president was tv arrive. All along the line which the funeral cortege will take from the ation to the home of Dr. George ‘T. Harding, father of. the president, on East Center street, people were crowding and jamming the sidewalk No one is permitted on the streets, troops constantly forcing them to re main outside the curb. Eyeryons was orderly and there waa littie noise, Military officials in charge patrolling the roads leading into Marion said today from present 17 dications more than 100,000 people be here before nightfall. |Milions Left To Good Causes CHICAGO, Aug. 8—(By The Asso- ciated Press.)—More than one million dollars of the $8,896,000 estate of the late Mrs, Nettie Fowler McCormic widow of Cyrus H. McCormick, j ventor of the reaper, will go to church, educational and charitable stitutions, it waa disclosed here when the instrument was filed for winter models and make you a e outfit, Phone 1149-W Il surprise you in Se A. Tw

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