Illinois News Index

Libertyville Independent, 9 Aug 1923, p. 15

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. Suddenly and totally without warning there was a ~~~slump in the half reclining figure on the bed. >A scarcely > audible noise, something of a moan, yEt not a moan, came .. from the president.~ There was a startled exclamation--from _ _Mrs. Harding, a sudden rush from the nurses to the bed: _ side; then one of them dashed: the few feet into the hall-- _ way. ; is hss * E. "Doctor Boone! _ Doctor Boone!"' she screamed, calling _' the name of the naval 'doctor who has been constantly on _ night duty since the president first became ill. _ PRESIDENT HARDING DIED IN SAN: FRANCISCO THURS-- DAY NIGHT OF . APOPLEXY "--~'.' FEW NEAR AT TIME l # 'There -- were . few.. about' on the $ : of the hotel at the time. | pe 4 , which have' been jam-- j . _ mmol ) the coming and going of ;i»f 'constant crowds for days, were al-- ~ most deserted.> It< was the dinner <*'_ hour. Members of the cabinet and ~ --' personal friends: of the --president : who ; have. begh his constant com-- :nm on the 'Alaskan. tour were $ rs, dining.© Only® the | usual secret nrvlco' _ a " few | casual newspaper corru;q- ts, thoir _... gllance relaxed because of the . u* . im optimistic bulletines on the Py m.-'-fim-. convalescence were about ; #> ».J';' . 'eustomary dinnher throng, gay,, hap-- i Tham To the sccompaniment. ohoak nt t z* Into this crowd-- there -fl ~_sdazhed frantic beliboys, paging -- § se of ~the cabinet, the .members [ & . "Of -- official party, but londest of x *' SAE ' Aoctors. ® ,fii + causes commoTion [X'_"-- Dr. mn'.tho naval oflm whose ho co first to lips of ge «w .a-m .J" terrificd-- nurso, was 'y. ~~ O With>--General John J.~Porah: _\. dng. He was out of the dining room '=' and ~mcross the lobby Into the elevat-- START BACK TONIGHT _ At about the same hour tonight, 7:30 p. m., there will start from this far western city a funeral procession across the continent such as the nation has never before witness-- ed--a funeral train bearing--the body of a president of the United States across three thousand miiles of desert, plains The immediate cause of the president's shocking death was officially announced today to be cerebral apoplexy--a rupture of a blood vessel in the axis of the brain near the respiratory center. . . o * 3 pgis 4e _ He was half--reclining in his bed at the time. A few feet from him was Mrs. Harding, reading to him a magazine article. In the room were two nurses, no one else. 'The president died quietly, easily, and with a sudden-- ness that was shocking at 7:30 o'clock last night only a few hours after the physicians who had been hovering over him for days had issued the most favorable news yet of his brief "Get all the doctors quickly, for God's sake!" she s in a voice that was not a scream, but which penetrated ev corner of the quiet eighth floor of the Palace hotel. .DR. SAWYER RESPONDS 'Across the corridor was Dr. Chas. K. Sawyer, who has been the presi-- dent's family physician for-- many years, and who was acting as chief of the president's medical taff. He heard the commotion and leaped across the=few feet into the presi-- dent's bed chamber. --~ "Warren! Warren'!" said Mrs. Harding.: It was the name she most frequently used in addressing the 'Across the corridor was Dr. Chas.| E. Sawyer, who has been the pnd-' dent's family physician for-- many years, and who was acting as chief of the president's medical taff. He heard the commotion and leaped across thefew feet into the presi-- | dent's bed chamber. | reverently in--its grief today, the body of Warren G. Hard ing, twenty--ninth president of the United States, lay in state ly simplicity on the topmost floor of a great hotel, thre thousand miles away from the capital _ . = _ president. ~ +> * SBawyer grabbed the limp ham!,.l bending over the bed. 74 The Fresident of the United States-- was uead r on gremenRetsarsie 1 Without a groan; withou} a CIY¥; without a struggle, he had passed away in that one brief instant when half--reciining on the bed> his great figure had slumped, |---- _ _ _ _ _ No word "psa _ passed his lips to give those n_th_e room a wmh:g. Something had snapped in his brain. The doctors say it was, prob-- ably the instantaneous rupture of a blood vessel, flooding the brain with a sudden gush of engulfing blood. _ Death, they believe, was instan-- taneodus. . This is the story of the presi-- dent's'death, as gathered from. the few who are in a position to know. The first bulletin of his death saig, that _"Mrs. Harding and the two hurses, Miss Ruth Powderly --end Miss Sue Dausser, were in the room at the time." Later= a eorrection was fssued on this bulletin, stating that General SBawyer also was prés No sudden climax ever conceilved by <the brain of a-- dramatist 'coutd have equailled that of the passing of the president. Only a few hours before the doctors had reéported him gaining rapfdly and stgadily <on the eombination . of illnesses that only five days ago forced him to abandon the most epochal trip ever under-- mby a president of <the United and which was more: than half concluded at the time of --his breakdown. > Tess ioh & TIENT WAS.--O San Francisco, Aug: 3--While a: great nation SsTORY OF DEATH ' Shortly word came < down. | president was dead. [ _ . q# -- ors while the 'boys were still run ning between the tables. § 'Then. commotion broke loose in the hotel. Every one <knew that so:uuu was wrong. No one knew what. . The desath, of the president was aunounced in exactly the same way as the bulletins on his condklu?'.have been issued every day since his ill-- ness. Judson C. Welliver, chief clerk of the White House, went to the presi-- dent's --apartment to find out what was "wrong.": As a member of the White House staff --he was permit-- ted < to go beyond the "deadline" which was established several days ago, and veyond which newspaper correspondents were not allowed. ._ Assues Death Builletin Shortly he returned down the cor-- ridor. . "There will be a bulletin in a few minutes," be said to the < waiting reporters. He went into a stenog-- rapher's room -- and there was a clacking of . typewriters. When he ~emerged he silently When he ~em hpanded out this: "August ?2, 1923, 7:35 p. m.--The president died instantancously and without warning apd . while convers-- ing with members of his family at T:30, p. m.~ Death was apparently due--to some--brain. evoivement, prob-- ably an-- apoplexy.> &rm the day he had been free from discomfort and there was every justification for anticipating a ~prompt recovery." It was signed by the five physi-- cians who have been constantly in attendance--Dr. Sawyer, Dr. Boone, Dr. Work, all of 'Washington, and Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur, president of the American Medical Association, and Dr. C. M. Cooper, an eminent heart specidm of San Francisco Cabinet Members Gather _ The cabinet officers present, Sec-- retaries Work, Hoover and Wallace, and Attorney -- General -- Daugherty, meanwhile had gathered in a' room adjoining that where the ident's body lay covered with a zhéet. 'rev-- erently drawn over it by the crying t;xurno. They bad a duty to per-- orm. * It consisted of the following tele gram to Vice President Calvin Cool idge now by the whim of an inscru-- table fate, the chief executive of the greatest republic in the world: Each of the fout signed it silently w--the attorney general with fingers that trembled. His eyes were wet. Those who knew of the almost bro therly affection between Warren G. !l.'fl and Harry M. Daugherty did wonder at his emotion, Few mmcrlm public life bave beén r to each other than were "Warren" and "Harry." By some, Daugherty was considered the A who had. been largely in-- a tal ; in -- lifting Warren G t 8;- his -- editorial chair into , tcgme. \ QOrlef Was Pitiful .: Hi# wrie? was pitiftul. He seemed ;'"zfit t&. and theroe was none Wwho saw his grief satricken fig-- --"The president died at 7:20 p. m. from a stroke of cerebral apoplexy. The end came peacably and without warning." -- hssy i. none who saw his atricken wm;a-r lg:""blll but felt a wave of sympathy saun. ginxe! o piIIUdl, P10 SUOMESM EOO dpllls ~£ the and.there war| Here the Président was put to bed. r' 5 tgl.f stricken fig| Me spent the 36 hours prior to his ' ) hall but© who | arrival here in bed aboard the train, It a of sympathy. but when he reached San Francisco By a strange freak of fate Daugh he dressed--but it proved for the last @ AT HUS-- iG TO HIM END CAME hP t\ n bowed m en Hard-- | ®as in state-- ::'."': tel' m to__tl The Then the undertaker--and big as-- sistants came in and the room which shall forever be historic was --closed while they.zonn their work of pre paring the body for its long, sor rowfu) journey across the continent The same party that accompanied the president from~Washington on that memorable June day six weeks ago will make the return jJourney on the funeral train. In addition there will be. Attorney General Daugherty, General Pershing and Mr. and Mrs E. E. Remsberg and their daughters. Take Shortest Route The route to be followed will be the quickest -- San Francisco to Reno, Ogdeéen, Cheyenne, Omaha, Chi cago, and thence into the Capital. No stofs will be made other than those necessary in the operation ~of the train., R ordinary type 'of .observation car.. At night, flying: through the miles of desert, plain and mountain that lie between San Francisco and the Cap-- ital, it will be liih}od; and~ at all times two-- soldiers and two' sailors will stand at attention as a guard of honor about the casket. . ; _ Trip to be Fast. -- Sixteen enlisted men and two of-- ficers from both the Army and Navy will comprise the last. guard for President Harding. Mrs. E. E. Remsgberg, sister of the president, who had come up tmmmms.:?aluonr a few days ago to ber brotner for the first time in two years, as sisted her to her room. She, too, was crying, but as the president's sister : she 'undertook to give a few difections. a . . ago--had been despaired of, and who suffered one partial collapse on the present trip, was led from the room, biting hber MHps and clinching her erty had not seen the president since his arrival in -- San Francisco.. He gould have----bilt he said no,> that he dida't <want to "bother" him. Now. he was dead, and Daugherty Ba w "tu:mn the half open door the | e of the man he loved-- In the death room itself prepara tions were shortly begun,. to make the <pbysical arrangements necessary for the Airansporting of the body back to the --Capital, where it wili ay in state while a great nation pays . tribute. -- The president's remaing will be borne on a rear .car, probably the ~The trip to Washington will be a fast one. Sixty--five hours to Chica-- zo and twenty from Chicago to the Capital was the forecast tShight as ) rations were being made to .up the train. " Until it is borne reverently to the train tonight, the body of the Pres+ dent will lie where life expired--in the Presidential Suite atop the Pal-- ace Hotel. Brief. ang ; simple serv-- ites probably will be held there be-- fore the body is remmoved. ame hanhds to restrain the emotion <bat welled within her and which she was controlling only by the most visible effort. She was crying, but she did--mot collapse, earlier reports to the contrary.. _ At the Capital, the body will be borne fo the rotunda of the Wapita! according to present plans, and there it will--lay in.etage for a public funer-- al. Interment will' be at the Presi-- dent's old home in Marion, Ohio from whence be came eight yea% ago to the United States Senate. _" . _ Apoplexy Caus®d Death. \ It ts--officially recordg!; that the President died of. a cérebral apo-- plexy -- "somgthing snapped in his brajn"--is the commoner way of ex-- pressing it, but by --many of those who knew him intimately, his 'death will always be regarded as due to over-- work .at a period in life when most men in business--~begin to slacken the 'pace--the same refusal to do which drove his immediate prede cessor in the White House to retire-- ment a>broken, shattered man. for-- ever doomed to a life of semi--: in-- validism. 3 '» -- w tvabal . C ALD Galamih t Seemed to Feel Good. Mr. Harding appeared to be in ex-- cellegt health when he left the Caui-- tal. He was keenly anticipatory of the trip and hehad labored hard, oftentimes far into. the night at thv1 White House during the hot days of early June,-- preparing the speeches he was to--make enroute to Tacoma. He planned these speeches carefully, for they were to write the Republ"q can platform for 1924, at least to chart the course on a dozen issues. 4 sap a vitality As magnificent as any mian ever took into the Presidency. He showed the % but he cheer-- fully went along : his programs. Streneous programs they were, and ones which taxed men on the trip who were years younger than Mr. mnnng I Intense heat greeted the President throughout ~the m}"ulutppi Valley, and the heat, the constant travel the great crowds that everywhers greeted him, the strain of throwing his volice great distances, the con-- stant changing food and water, the lack of exercise in the stuffy Pull-- mans--all these things combined to '_ Mad Strenuous Sch*dule. Through St. Louls, Kansas City. Hutchinson, Denver -- and-- the :rvor reaches' of the northwest, Mr. Hard-- ing \went, daily mesting and : going through ~with schedules that wore too strenuous. * i Mrs.--Htarding -- Brave life a year THURSDAY. AUCUST 9, 1923; Alice Elizabeth Yeddo was born in Chicago and lived there until seven years ago, when her daughter moved to Libertyville. From there they mov-- ed to Prairie Viww a littl more than two years ago. ~She was a very kind and loviMk wife and mother, was al-- ways hopeful of getting well, very courageous 'during her seige of illness and had absolute faith in God. She leaves her husband, Leonard Charles Yeddo and one daughter, Mrs. Lily Degner, her son--in--law, Stanley Deg-- ner, Sr.; and three grandsons, Stanley, Jr., Leonard and Edward; also three }nsteu and two brothers: Mrs. Lily Baxter, Mrs: Pauline Scovillie, William Barrett, John Barrett and Joseph Bar-- Father and mother she met in the Great' Beyond. ~Her last words were "Good bye, good--bye, everyone." ALICE ELIZABETH YEDDO .-- ~CHARLES KICK ~ Charles-- Kick was born in Othery, England, October 16, 1885, and passed There was general toxemMia with fever and leucocytosisa: A central broucho -- pneqgmonia soon developed on the left side. It was accompanied by short circulatory cellapses with cold sweats and an irregular pulse. _ "We all believe," concluded the official account of his death, "that he died from apopjexy or a rupture of the blood vessel near the regspira-- tory center, his death came after re-- covery from acute illness was in process. . The President was considered by his pbhysicians to be responding very well to treatment, he was yery weak, but this was accounted for by <the arduous trip that he had underwept and the fact that he had purged his system with an idea of getting rid of the poisons that were at the root of the stomach ailments. Apptared Much Better. Today he was utterly free of fever. and of pain, and was consivered to be well on the road to complete re covery. He was Considered so well that the doctors began to loosgen., their confinement of the week and take turns at getting some fresh air. time. He walked--probably less than a bhundred steps from the train to the motor from the motor to ~his Buite on arriving at the Palace. Consultation Sunday. & Sunday evening a consultation was called because Ris temperature had rizen to 102 and hbis pulse and res pirations were abnormally rapid. "It might have occured time. » © "One of hig.sisters died suddenly in the same manner." . away at the Victory Memorial Hospital July 16, 1923, after an operation for ulcers of the stomach a(bd appendi-- citis. On October 4, 1911, he was unit-- ed in marriage to Gladys Meade, who, with three children, two boys and one girl, girl, Edwin L. Kick, E. Lois Kick, and Kenneth -- A. Kick, are left to mourn his loss. One son, Meade Chas. Kick, died in infancy May 5, 1915. He also leaves an aged mother in Bridge-- water, England, and two brothers, A)-- bert, of Lake Villa, and Allan of Wads-- worth. He united with the Episcopal Thurch of England at the early age 'ot thirteen. ' Most disturbing of all was the rapid ang irregular breathing sugges tive ot arteric--sclerosis of the brain vessels. (None of the daily medical oulle-- tins from the President's sick room mentioned arterio--sclerosis.) -- He came to the United States April 26° 1905, and since that time had re-- sided on his Lake county farm, with the exception of three years, 19190 1922, that he spent in Los Angelés, Calif., where he worked as a carpen-- ter. He was laid to rest in the Mill-- burn cemetery July 20th. i i CARD OF THANKS _ ~~We wish to thank all the neighbors, friends and relatiyes and all who help-- ed with their--kind assistance in the death of our dear hysband and father. Mrs. Chas. Kick and Children. PREDRRICK -- S. W ERER © 1 COOndat--~ °+ wWaEgnog HiJ------SDt---- ZEHK Frederick 8. Weber was born April | ";'rh":im 2M Coohdge . hesnly 23, 1894, at Wrentham, Mass., ADd | grceseq and rushed downstairs where passed away at the Waukegan hospital |yisitors already had begun to gather. July 20, lm, lftel' &A .hm 'llnm' .M. anr_ c""d'e '.m '?he .xe,"m following an operation for appendicitis. ; to the International ewp -- Service Sept. 12, 1917, he was martied to Var-- ; correspondent: . -- lie Jones, of De Tuniah Springs, !"ll.,l '"Poor Mrs, Harding, I do feel sorry who survives him. Hé was the second | [0f her. She has been so hbopeful and son of Mr. and Mrs. William Weber, who also survive him, together with his brother, William and one sister, Mrs. Margaret Hussey. He seemed to be recovering nicely from the operation and conversed with members of his family on several matters nearly up to the time of Ris death, when suddenly he became 'wone and passed away in the evening. 'The funeral was held from the late home on Thursday, the Rev. J. Hastie Odgers, of Rogers Park M. E. church, assisted by the Rev. Mr. Kean, of Lake Villa conducting the services. Mrs. Badacre of Waukegan sang, accompa-- nied by Mrs. Steele, also of Wauke-- gan, The pall bearers were 'aix cous-- ins--Edward and Harold Wegner, Ru-- doiph Bausch, Earl and George Cald-- well and Frecrick Schroeder. Relatives and friends from Pensa-- cola, Fia., Union Grove, Wis., Forest Park,. Waukegan, Chicago and Rvans ton attended the funeral. Interment was at Millburn, where the family has a lot. -- i To®the family of this young man, cut off from life just at the beginning of 'his business career, we offer our heartelt sympathy. -- Tenst That Tolls "A man," observed Uncle Rera, "am #ampin' like dis yerse halft--dollar--bes way to Aind out w hat kind 0* metal he am made of is ter salnm him dows hahd "--Boaton Evening Tranacript, OBITVUARY ; W ; a 1 s sil B t ts in ce e in ut esn N00 .A .. s ce ieigt ies thainc. w4 ) O y at any With no other visible form of emo-- tion save the paleness of counten-- ance, Mr Coolidge stood beside a lit-- tle table with his hand upraised as his aged father read the oath. . _ Takes the Ooth. "I do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the office of--presi-- dent of the United States and will, to the best of 'my ability, preserve, protect _ and defend the constitution of the United States." CALYIN COOLIDGE 30TH PRESIDENT.OF UNITED STATES Word had been received of Presi-- dent Harding's death at midnight and in the interval until the oath of of-- fice was administered there was a tragic air of solemnity in the little idge, the new President's father. The elder Coolidge is a notary public which qualified him to offciate at this momentous event. The proper form of cath was not at hand and.an urgent telegram was ;:Ilt to Washington, D. C., to obtain In the deep silence which followed Mr. Coolidge safid: * "I will, so help me God." Mr. Coolidge immediately began preparations to leave for Washing-- As President Coolidge took the: oath, his wife stood nearby. Mrs. €oolidge, like her husband, wore. black. Others present were Congress-- man Porter H. Dale, L. L. Gane, presk dent of the railway Mail association: of .New England;--Joseph L.--Fountain,-- editor of a Springfield, Vt., newspaper In a dimly lamp--lighted room in the old Coolidge homestead, in the midst of the Vermont hills, and.in the pres-- ence of only few witnesses, the oath was administered by. John C. Cool-- farmhouse. Plymouth, Vermont, -- Aug. $.--At 2:47 this morning (eastern standard time) Calvin Coolidge became presi-- dent of the United States. and E. G. Geisser, assistant tecre tary to Mr. Coolidge.: : --..:=* * The new 'president hastily packed up and departed by auto for Rutland to take a~ 9:35 o'clock train for Washington. | _ a' 8 T By the time he departed--from the Coolidge home, news of the tragic event had spread over the. country-- side and many persons had gathered Oath of Office is Administered by His Father, a Notary Public, at 2:47 A. M. Immediately after news of. Presi-- dent Harding's death was received at Washington, secret service -- agents were detailed to protect the new na-- tional executive. « They were to meet the Coolidge party and, in accordance with law and custom, take him under their guard. & ; at The information -- from . Christian read: j s "Palace Hotel, San Francisco: _ , "Mr. Calvin Coolidge, Plymouth, Vt. "'The President died instantly and without warning and while wonvers-- ing with members of his family at 1:30 p. m. His physicians report that death was apparently due to some brain embolism. Probably an apoplexy. E "GEORGE C. CHRISTIAN, JJ." There is no railway line running into Notch, the seat of the Coolidge home, and soon the roads were chok-- ed with motor cars. k' ._ . How Coolidge Got News. _ Mr. Coolidge received the first news of President Harding's death from a telegram sent from San. Fran: cisco by George C. Christjian, thfute president's -- secretary. . Immediately afterward, newspaper -- correspond-- ents began arriving at the Coolidge home with the information. The elder Coolidge met the first de-- tachment of newspaper correspond-- ents at his home. +' ce Got Message by Phone. "We were in bed when the tele phone . manager | at -- ~Bridgewater rushed in here and told us he had just caught a flash that President Harding was dead," said _ John _C. "Poor Mrs, Harding, I do feel sorry for her . She has been so hopeful and brave. We are both shocked by the news, We could hardly bql%e've. it. We had made up our mind that the President was on the road to recov-- :;y. .We were astounded by the trag-- y." ) The elder of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Coolidge's sons, John, had departed Wednesday for the military training camp at Camp Devens. He did not have the opportunity until today. to learn that his father is now president of the United States _'The younger son, Calvin, Jr,, was not awakened until after the oath had been administered to his father. Issues Statement. s *President Coolidge issued the fol-- lowing statement: _ _\ p C "The world has lost a great and good mah. 1 mourn his loss. He was my chief and my friends. It will be my purpose to carry out the policies which bhe has begun for the service of the American people and for meet-- Ing their responsibilities wherever they may arise. For this purpose--~I 'shall seek the co--operation of those who have been associated with the President during his term of office." no new --President showed his\ thoughtfuiness by having a special room prepared for newspaper corte. spondents while awaiting the form of présidential oath from Washington. President coollm.oply grieved over the news of ent Harding's death, remained upon the veranda of his home during the interval, Chat-- ting in low tones with the neighbors who had gathered. _ e 4 -- "It is all so sudden one hardly known what to think," said the Pres# Wife Stands Nearby. !.dhelt:d u:'horl; We ~are afl.,w ock the sad Ant (Maipes-- + Seene is lm,rm" The actual scene "of _ swearing 4o was more Jmpressive by 'its\simplie-- Ity. The deep silence of a midaum-- mer night brogdeg over the fi?xry- glde as John C. Coolfdge, in & Tow but distinct voice. read the' oath of of-- Bee. The scene was made the more picturesque by> > with the presidential ip€uguration@ in -- Wash-- ington, great' crowdgd. gathered from al parts of the nation Plans tohold Lake Forest day on August 8, have been changed, the date having been postponed to Au gust 22 on account of the death of President Harding. The celebra-- {lon. which promises to be one of be biggest Lake Forest ever has had, will be held under the auspices of the George Alexander McKinlock post of the American Legion in that city. : . The Coolidge home is a plain, two story frame, nestling in the foothills otthe Green Mountains. Not sinces Theodore Roosevelt, while on a--~hunt-- ing trip, reeelved news of the death i simatey of umh::. a beep ormation of a p t en carried to his successor in such sim-- ple and rugged surroundings, LAKE FOREST DAY IS POSTPONED --. . Seized Their Opportunity. . ~~Having watched five little girls play-- ing together and purposely ieaving out & sixth one,'I inquired of--one of thein the cause of this treatment, to which she answered, "Well, you se€ when Matilda plays~with one or two" of us she is so bossy that when we all get to-- gethet .we try to --unhoss her." ments. You can select from our full stock of a large list _ | - of styles at the following prices: _ . 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