Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 10, 1923, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

- PAGE TEN. , HOSTS THRONG _ | PARNEY coocie. | NM ARION TO DAY =F Nau. SPARKY, Look AY NOUR FRIDAY, AUGUST 10, 1923. Bv Biliev De Rech’ ‘A Cirree PAL DOWN HERE AND OREN YouR GIG GROWN EYEs «IN FINE MINUTES Youce Ge At Q@"smau vox tues *~ - “Lavoie ScYs eiseucrs” see Ka ne’ ihe $5¢ Bat FOR LA ST RITES (Continued from Page One.) No man knew with exactness how many thousands had wa'ked through the modest room where the casket lay and gazed a moment on the peace- ful face under the glass. There was @ hush of mourning about the dark streets despite the hundreds waiting to enter and the other hundreds stream:ng slowly away, talking with hushed voices of the neighbor and triend whose greatness they hal ac claimed. They had seen him in death as they had known him tn life. The calm, kindly dignity that marked him in his hours as president remained with him even when life had ceased. He was the same Warren Harding some of them had known for years and seemed only to sleep as he lay there. It was hard for them to real- ize that this old friend was dead. The last day before the tomb shall claim these “hallowed relics’ began peacefully and with no stir of march- ing legions to join in last honors. Here and there on the streets walked men of the Ohio national guard, but they walked for the most part un- armed and merely to ses that the peace and quiet of the skeper was| not disturbed in thoughtlessness. They would not go with him to his tomb Again today the stir of movement of life in Marion was hushed in honor of the dead. The great mills that surround it were silent and deserted Ne rattling traffic of commerce broke the quiet of the shady streets. On ths raflroads, long trains came in to add new thousands from distant places to the throng already gathered but no whistle blew and the clanging| of the bells was stilled. ! Except for the multitude that grew| hourly to fill the sidewalts with mov- Ing humanity, Marion was a city of silence in her sorrow, a silence that would not be broken until the simple funeral train gathered Jate in the day to bear the dead president to the tomb) that awaited him. Then here must| come an added stir and movement| that could not be avoided, then would voices be raised in prayer or sacred melodies as the Inst rites were said. But the morning hours were peaceful | Ineton and calm and as untroubled as the sleep of the man thus honored. Another president was riding to- ward Marion during these morning hours, coming to say farewell to a. man he loved and a chieftain to whom. he had been loyally devoted in public service. Arrangements for reception of the special train bearing P-esident Coolidge from Washington had been completed long before his arrival and tor once the first coming of the na- tion's chief executive to an American community would be marked by no cheering or clamor. Before darkness falls, the presi- dential train will be speeding over the rails again to Washington for the bus- iness of the state cannot wait for more than a brief moment of sorrow, however great the loss. Then also will Mrs. Harding have turned back to the dreary task before her at the White House, leaving her heart in the tomb at Marion, Eventually she will come back to lve here, close to her dead, as her plans now are known. But tomorrow in Washington she faces a new and terrible ordeal when the intimate family treasures, cherished by her dead husband and herself, must be dispersed to new surroundings that the mansion can be made ready for the new president. President and Mrs. Coolldge have assured Mrs. Harding days ago that she might continue to consider the White House her home but she would not have it so for more than the brief time required to ship away the per- sonal things that surrounded her there during her brief time as first lady of the land. In her decision to leave for Wash- immediately after the vault had been closed upon President Hard- ing’a casket, Mrs. Harding gave fur ther proof of the dauntless courage which has brought her the admiration of the nation in these hard days of trial. Her spirit would not brook de- lay in facing the task she must do. The every day things of life must go on, however, sick the heart. ———_——_—— R. B. Dakon of Castle Rock, Colo., is in the city for a few days. | AUDITORS | DOCTORS Cc. H. RELMERTH THE CASPER PRIVATE Certified Public Accountamt HOSPITAL oF i a 208-11 Oil Exchange Bldg. Phone 000 Hallie M. Bille 58 [new tama Enea pert, Ol ee ing’ rial Dy TS sues 4. F. O'Donnell, M. D, *, Dally Star, strangely enough, was fe pot ARCHES “ty PHARMACIST on home coming. It appeared on ‘| “DUBOIS & GOODRICH, Arcamiects | i).\°; RS. Lothian, Ph. G, Juty 5, 1922, Income Tax Service 401 0-8 Bide. Phone 767 HARRY F. COMFORT Auditing and Accounting Phone 2008 Suite 18, Daly Baas. R, ©. VAN DENBERG Certified Public Accountemt Income Tax § joe Phone 148 pe) ee GUARANTEE REGISTRY CORP. Auditors and Accountant Registrar and Transfer Agents Rooms 11-12, Townsend Bieck Casper, Wyo. Phone 440 WM. J. WESTFALL, Architect Suite 5, Daly Bufiding ee BAGGAGE and TRANSFER eepenneetne ee ee SEARLES TRANSFER Office Phome 313 988 Seuth Durbin—Phone 273 Wemen's and Chiidren's Hospital 542 South Durbin—Phome 406 STAFF SURGERY, GYNECOLOGY AND ‘Yim Post - Ive THousand BueKs «oT A RIGHT On NOuR ARLE AND LAST EDITORIAL OF HARDING ON HOME COMING Comment on Celebration, o = est RICS lomer hrop, M. D., F. A. ©. & Victor R. Dacken, B. Sc. M. D. EYE, EAR, NOSE and THROAT ee Stanton, M. S,, M. D. SKIN X-RAY TREATMENT GENITO-URINARY DISEASES G. B. Underwood, M. D. 7 Hii, BOENTGENOLOGIST Of Centennial Told | xf Again Today. MARION, Ohio, Aug. 10—(By The| Associated Press}—Warren G. Hard-} “While Marion is celebrating the centennial of the city’s founding,” wrote Mr. Harding, “it is fine to re- foice in the coming together again to find happiness in the exchange of sentiments born of homecoming, to recall the pride in things accomp- Ushed and above all else, appraise the BETTER START OUT AND LOOK ABOUT HERE.ANO THERE HASNT BEEN ASIGN OF THEM —EEEE ANT® N@LD! -TH' StK-Sox MAKESS ARE ALL PEEVED STARS Pass. 4 in Review: RAFTER THe }. VERY AND DOC SPENT (VE GOT IT! WALT KNOWS HE'LL HAVE TO PROPOSE To MRS. BLOSSOM IF HE SHOWS UP .HE'S JUST GIVEN THE WHOLE DAY LOOKING FOR & CLUE BUT FINALLV HAD TO GIVE UP, WALT SEEMS To HAVE VANISHED WITHOUT A TRACE ! CHICAGO, Aug. 10.—Hogs — Re ceipts 86,00; fairly active; better kinds around 10c lower; others off more; ness of maintaining and keeping storage warehouses for the storage and deposit of goods, wares and merchandise of al: kinds and de- scriptions, and the conduct of all ‘business pertaining thereto, includ- ing the makifig of advances on goods stored and deposited with it, the giving of security for the proper CONNIE TALMADGE - WHEN, (T Omes To Classy QBS- SHE'S & SWEETMEGT. ed into Two Hundred Fifty (250) shares of the par lue of One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) each. The term of existence shall be fifty (50) years. The affairs of the Corporation shall be managed \ by a Board of three (3) Directors and the Directors for the first ir and untiktheir successors are elect- ” Res. Phene 87W a 7 Seine rae i Aree bulk desirable 180 to 230 pote aver- | pe. (sr of its SESG) = bars Ce and lified pre ack. a Gantt, io MARSHALL XEITH, D. | qua of men and measures whic! ages $7.85@7.95; top $8; bulk 250 to|age warehouse operator, an e, Edna A, Gantt and James W. er- } Transfer, Storage and Fuel| HERBERT }. HARVEY, M. D. | made up what we are today. The lat- -s P ' Wh Natrona Co., J. L. Biederman, Prop. Pheme 948 825 pound butchers $7.45@7.75. procuring of insurance of any kind ‘ Office 208 South Center—Phone 30 | ter is essential to the preparedness Cattle—Receipte 400; slow, uneven;|as may be desired by its customers the pringtpal office and place of : Hospital, 612 South Durbin| for greater progress in the future. better kinds beef steers, yearlings, fat)or necessary and desirable for its! business shall be at 239 East First 5 BATTERIES Practice Surgery Obstetries| “sturdy men pioneered the way to cows and heifers around steady; some| own protection, with power to bor-|street in the City of Casper, Na- °——-__- RATTREX TOOTDIES LA’ ERS early settlement—and sturdy women others lower; best matured steers at|row money, and mortgage and en-|trona County, Wyoming, and else- OASERE TTER} Phe WY too. They blazed the way of develop- $11.85; bulls 25c to 60c lower; vealers|cumber the property of the corpora-| where as the directors may deem , $19 East Fi AMBROSE HEMINGWAY mart in Oblo\andlesntimany. atrtbatt 50c ot Tbe lower; bulk to packers/tion, and to acduire all kinds of real! advsiable. Mack H. Gantt shall be sa CHIROP’ CTORS ste) gons and daughters to the peaceful around $11. and personal property in connec-|the Agent in charge of said office. ; RA eons Ser widg,| conauest of the greater west—the Sheep—Receipts 4,000; later fat|tion therewith, and to do all things|GANTT HARDWARE COMPANY, DR. J. H. JEFFREY DR. ANNA GRAHAM JEFFREY Suite $18 Midwest Bldg. Phone 706 NICHOLS @ STIRRETT 8309-10-11 O11 Exchange Bldg. Mississ!pi and Missouri valleys. Reso- lute and able men made secure the social order here, and simple and courageous men blended determina- lambs strong to unevenly higher; bulk to packers $11.75 to $12.25; best to city butchers $12.50; westerns aroynd 100 lower; bulk to packers $12.60; few convenient to carry out effectually the objects of said co Its capital stock is Fifty Thousand Dollars oration. me Hundred ($150,- EDNA A. GANTT, Secretary. Publish Aug. 9, 10, 11, 1928, " me 2 DR. B. G. HAHN ———____——_"_| tion with genius and tiade the indus: to’ city butchers $12.70; sheep scarce,|000.00), divided into three thou- RESOLUTIONS ~~*#iR : ‘Chiropractor JAMES P. KEM be ing. They had little of steady, .-..... |sand (3,000) shares of the par val- Adopted by W: 6 the eee oe Phome 423| 408 Consolidated Royalty Bldg. | Wesith tur they wrought mesithy out ue of Fifty Dollars ($50.00) per aor Crear M. BE. HARNED, Chiropractor 162 North Kimball 8t. Phone 1457 | DR. I E. BERQUUIST Attorney At Lay 225 Midwest Bids. gf HAGENS & MURANE of opportunity. Only a few knew their struggles, their sacrifices, but honesty, simplicity, industry, capacity and determination are known to have been the chief essentials of their suc- HONOR PAID — HARDING BY re. Its term of existence is fifty years. The number of its directors three, and those who are to manage is Mooseheart Legion WHEREAS, death claimed |the chief magistrate of this nation, | Warren G. Harding, who but a short time since had been selected by his = oh 1757 Lawyers ke fi the affairs of the company for the | since eae con Pa to ister Bldg. one cess, These make for success any- i np ‘s bs Zutterme! 3 : 2 206-207 ON Exchange Buildt: hare eat ane apsdasaa to aliwhe REICHST AG first year are H. L. Harvey, Guy/which a citizen of this land may Li Bast Bovond Brest WILLIAM 0. WILSON sare. f Methe Sperations of the; auld com-|" WHERGAS, in the death of Dus: 7 i a A mm » in ie deat our Palmer Attorney-at-Law Tat’ MREan De peeete | SeStn wmoon ae pany shall be carried on in the City Office Phone 2220 Res. Phone 17133 Suite 14-15-16 Townsend Bldg. lesson of the yesterdays and resolve to go on, adding to the stride in in-| Lilies and pulms wereitributes to the-late President Harding placed of Casper, County of Natrona, and president, our country has lost an earnest and able leader, and the DR. ©. I. ARNOLDUS VINCENT MULVANEY dustry and commerce, and determined tn’ his crepe-hung vew>at:'the.CalvarysBaptist-Chureh *where~he “wore eaten tereas= worse 06 "president es ay Mdina rape pek ot bet bee Vermeil ss, tgp Cia Osteopathic and Chi lc oT ner ston that every enlargement. in material! —-shinned-whila:in7Washington/ 3 - Harding's death waa officially com-|and in the United States as the of-| WHEREAS it is fitting and ' 810 0-8 Building Phone 1754 Midwest Building Srowth shalll retiest lensec, prowress| municated to the refchstag Wednes-| ficers and directors may decide. er that ail honor be done the mer G. A. THURSTON. D. ©. 210 0.6 CULBEE & ADAMS a loommnuntty worth true whe rtit day by t Loeb. The house! Its principal place of business is| ory of our departed leader, and ‘ Chiropractor, 08 Building Phone 2917} Counterpart to the city of material cy ela tele ese ELE Been our’ hearts ay fo 1383 S Wolcott one 2305W 01 asper, Natrona County, yo-| of sympathy for the sorrow e ee DONA OLE Lorre || ree oe ees ee Fn ea ae a Pear imine, and fe, agent in. charge) bereaved widow and relatives in ‘ F 4 ereof is D. W. ee. eir irreparable loss, able employment, worship of God fa- “the world’s mightiest and most influ- WYOMING BONDED WARE- g 7 r THE SERVICE CLEANERS OSTEOPATH cilitated, a civic, conscience and a ential republic would render mankind HOUSE CORPORATION, ED, by Gage Chapte eae t Rallrond at Jackson DR. CAROLINE 6. DAVIS community soul, by vouchsafing its cooperation in the By H. L. Harvey, President.) 306, Women of Mooseheart Legion, a 5 une Apai ts, Ph. 888 ° Fy lay of August, » ry g CHIROPODIST = Street Railway COURT PLUNKETT IS FREED the adoption and ‘spreading upon CORINNE E. O'BRYANT Scouts See eet TODAY BY FREE staTe| NOTICE OF INCORPORATION. | the minutes of this resolution we 5 Ne ao ayes eA amcor neonate Physician Is sin Mone The articles of Incorporation of) give formal, though feeble, evidence oe. Book ae west Bldg, Phone 1030 Lo g Vs DUBLIN, Aug: 19—(iy The Aaso-|the Gantt Hardware Company were of our sympathy and sorrow with pan 2 ot ° Press.—Count Plunkett, the|filed in the office of the Secretary|the bereaved low and relatives I DOCTORS PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER Bus Is Winner ciated | Freie leader who’ was|of State of Wyoming on the 6th| of the departed president, in ful = ETHEL ©. LYNOH Lw elected @ republican deputy from cee of August, A. D., 1923. consciousness of the inadequacy of DR. A. MEYERS Public Stenographer and N o Roscommon, was released from the ‘he objects of said Corporation| our words fittingly to express our Physician« and Surgeons ‘Public jotary ps wee. PR al military internment camp at County|are to conduct a general hardware| sentiments, and ————— TT | 200 O-S Bldg. Office Ph. 699 Res. 746) ARGER Nose and Throat Glasses Fitted. tt 133 5. We DR. I Physician Phone 113 PHRYN F, T. SMITH and Sargeon—North Ons- per, Formerly at Corner of H. and rbin. lizman Apartment, 724 Madison Phone Later. Nine Years in Legal Work 301 Consolidated Royalty Bullding Phone Office 203 Res. Phone 5533 SHOE REPAIRING —_— ______ NORTH CASPER SHOE SHOP All Work Guaranteod Ben Suyemateu 235 East H SIGN PAINTER DR. W. W. YATES Specialist Nose and Throat 112 East Second SIGNS—J. ROY BITLER 183 8S. Wolcott Phone 2305W TAILORS CONNELL, D. ©, Ph. ©. 8, Daly Blidg. Phone 8491 A TROY TAILORS AND CLEANERS 148 BE. Midwest Phone 963w Casper Bus & ‘Transfer company, which recently instituted motor bus service to North and East Cheyenne, is making money, while the Cheyenne Electric Street Railway company, which serves North Cheyenne, West Cheyenno and Park Addition, also Fort Russell, is fosing money, and has been a losing enterprise for a long time, according to testimony given at @ hearing before the Wyoming Pub- lic Service commission on the appli- cation of the Bus company for per- mission to extend its service to the territory served by the Street Railway | company. The commission reserved decision. ag Ss sisi ‘This might have been photographed in any American city.: It wag taken in Tokio where fire gutted the former_offices of the Nippon Yusem Kalsha opposite the city. ball, Kildare. Hoe was arrested last April when he was enroute with Miss Mary Mc8winey, to the funeral of Liam Lynch at Clonmel. No other releases ‘were reported. LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE OF INCORPORATION. Wyoming Bonded Warehouse Corporation was incorporated in the Cheyenne, Wyoming, on the 28rd day of July, 1923. : e objects of the said corpo' tion are the engaging in the bu: office of the Secretary of State, at! | business in all its branches; to buy | and. sell automobile accessories and supplies, sheet metal and metal tanks, gas and coal furnaces, roof- ing, spouting, plumbing, heating, lighting, ventilating, electrical and builders supplies, and all other ar- ticles of merchandise necessary and incidental to the conducting of a general hardware business; to hold, sell and convey real estate; and generaliy to do any and all things necessary, proper and convenient to |carry out and effectuate the gener- al purposes of the Company. ‘he capital stock is Twenty-Five Thousand Dollars ($25,000), divid- BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the emblems and banner of our order be suitably draped, as a visible expression of our sense of the tremendous loss which has be- failen us, and BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the members of this Chapter be called upon to wear suitable em- blems of mourning, and to yartici- pate in the public ceremonies to be held in honor of the memory of our late lamented president. ZENOBIA A. CLARK, GRACE ELMORE, Committes. BETTY MUCHOW, {

Other pages from this issue: