The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 24, 1921, Page 12

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PAGE 13 IST VETS 800 Buddies of Battlefront Assemble on Anniver- sary of Zero Hour Just three years ago today the untried Wild West division “stepped off” in the Argonne— and the result is history. On the third anniversary of their entrance into the MeuseArgonne ous Powder River division poured im Seattle to attend the second an mua) convention of the Sist Divis to number more than 500, began to arrive early Saturday morning ‘Comrade ted comrade as they mingled in the Butler Hotel, con ‘vention headquarters, and stories of chief event of the reunton will be the sero hour banquet to be the Masonic club rooms . W. J, Coyle acting toastmaster, stunts such as enlivened the life of in the days of the BE HELD SUNDAY baseball club Saturday afternoon Sunday morning memorial services be held for the dead comrades, in the afternoon the visitors Bremerton; Muir, commanding Camp Lewis; W. Davis, of Idaho; Lieut. J. Coyle, of Washington. “ex-buddies” of the Sist di- bospitality.’ DURAND SECOND _ TRIAL STARTED EVERETT, Sept. 24.—For the sec- time in one month, Dr. W. 8. Prominent Everett physician AN IS BURNED IN EXPLOSION stove in a flag sta- of Columbia st. ex- at i was partly paralyzed and unable to leave the building Where his injuries are sald to be GRAND JUNCTION, Colo., Sept. 24.—Jimmy Gordon climbed a paint fay Jimmy will never look the ame again. Charley will finish the job in @ month or so. Private dancing lessons all day at Bright's, 1604 4th, cor. Pine —(Ad.) ail Butternut ads. When you get enough big letters to spell Butter- Nut, send to Seattle Baking Co, with Rame and address—and you'll get revent, IN REUNION | fitted them to offensive the members of the fam-| fon Association BATTLE FRONT BUDDIES SWAP YARNS ‘The visiting delegates, expected) nd a series of soldiers’ | “The members of the association | ‘with be the guests of the Seattle) HERE’S MORE MAHONE ABOUT under my supervision.” De. Lumber Clark said his office was In the Rxchange building, where the and identified | lower false teeth as those Mra. ey bad worn Dr. Frank Wood | nd fitted to This the doctor did. Mis explanation required a good half hour *} took thene appliances (teeth) and Of the body 0 & woman in the morgue, They fit abeo- | lately. {would say that the jaw of the body in the morgue is absolutely the Jaw Kate Mahoney No two people In the world are abso ly alike In the same [way no two fi are exactly Jatike. 1 wow nat po | two aith + am) positive this Is the work I did for Mra Mahoney On cross-examtnation ted that any other deat 1 ng on her honey Dr. Wood Kate Mahoney allve utor saw her alive again.” Gus Johnson “This defendant is the same man that | the three days in April. rd. hand 2th. Me was ree @ hotel there, I saw him pay fh tleket back to Seattle with ore checks, Before he left he take me to the Dempsey Carpe fight.” The travelers’ cheeks by the witness and put in letter recetved by Joba honey had returned to Seattle, was ro te the jury, Tt “I arrived sat frente, and my $3,500 In the nai 4 lots of tt. Your old friend, E. Mahoney ,409 Denny way, Beattie” "s “Indifference” at the trial appeared, when court closed Friday, to be as much a mask as his “insanity” was a few weeks ago. He was pale, but ft was prison) pallor, and he yawned cavernously, but the yawn seemed not genuine, | when Prosecutor Douglas emptied | three sacks of clothing and rags out | upon the courtroom floor late Friday | afternoon. Deputy Coroner Frank Koepfti was on the stand. IDENTIFIED AS TRUNK GARMENTS One by one he identified the gar: | ments as those that had been taken | from the alleged murder trunk when it was recevered from Lake Union, August §, and the lid opened. One by one, later, these same gar ments were identified by friends and acquaintances of the dead wo LOS ANGELES, Sept. 24.—Fifteen | man as those of Mrs. Kate Maho ney. The body that lies in the morgue in ice was identified, too, while Mahoney's eyes roved | « | tionable, positive. ‘The state brought into ine éam- aging testimony just before court closed Friday, calling witness after witness, ae follows: Detective M. J. McNamee ‘Testifies 5 rs he had been given the stomach | of the dead woman at the morgue and | had taken {t to Prof. William Dehn, University of Washington chemiat, third of the stomach contents in my anaiyeea™ F. 8. Bourns “1 am a physician and surgeon. have treated many morphine potsontn, id give half « era) s) 4 be dangerous. Death morp! thra the mouth; would result In from siz to 12 hours } im no case wouls ine. There ts m that would produce a Frank R. Ki “Ae deputy coroner I was there when | T have an in- (The witness enumerated and ident!- fied a rug, portieres, checked apron, ® quilted mandarin coat, several other coats and jackets and other articles of women's apparel and cloths as the things found in the trunk.) The jury craned necks as Dougias picked each article from the floor, where he had shaken it from three vags. Ma honey looked sidelong at the jury, and eyed the garments. His sister's mouth stood agape. His mother’s lips drew up in a tight line, His little 12-year-old niece, Margaret, ‘s0ked askance from one relative to the other and at the jur and the clothing that was ‘still stained with the dead woman's blood. It was a tense, nerve-racking half-hour. | “Was there anything else in the trunk?” asked Douglas. “Yes, a body; the body of a woman. It was nude. The knees were drawn up as much as, they 1 WIN A PRIZE—Cut out and save! could be, The arms were crossed on the breast. The head was bent down on the chest, a little to the left. There was a hole in. | temple, as if it had been struck a blow with some blunt | Instrument.” “Anything else?” asked the prose: | eutor. “Yes—a wedding ring was in the trunk. Over the face was a white substance I took to be lime, The! hole in the skull was about the size of a dollar, Parts of the fingers had ten away and the f£ recognizable.” NERVOUSNESS OR JUST INDIFFERENCE? Mahoney yawned a great, cavern ous yawn, and settled back in his| chair, The witness fished from his pocket a set of false teeth. “These,” he said, “were in the} trunk, There were no teeth in the} lower jaw of the body. These are a} set of lowers.” Dr. Willis H. Corson Tertified that he is the coroner, and cor. borated Koepfil, He said he found ions tn the skull of the woman, which made it appear that she hed been de three own. ‘The | hands and feet, he small, The hands, measured nds are measured | for gloves, were 6% inches tn etr- | cumference, t wured 8% | inches in length. iteelf was! that of « 1 It weighed, | dead, and with at moved, 86% | pounds Douglas held up, one at a time, | three black slippers. “Would these,” he asked, “fit the foot of the dead woman “Yes,” replied the witness, wo! omach rei “4 | her. fice for STARTS ON PAGE 1 Y TRIAL tried them, to see.” ‘The three black elippers were ad mitted in evidence. Hermine Papinean, an élderty woman, was called, She had teat fied cartier that she had known Mra. oney 17 years and lived under neath her at 409 Denny way “pia see the body morgue?” ghe was asked. “I did “Do you know Kate hands and feet?” “Yes, I She this.” The witness held up a hand and crooked it over, Mahoney shift ed in his chair, The witness con tinued “The fingers were stubby-tike and crooked, The hand was short and the index finger was bent. The ends of the fingers were stubby.” “Would you say the hands of the body you saw in the morgue were Mrs. Mahoney's hands?* “I'm sure they were the hands of Kate Mahoney.” “Aren't any elderly woman's hands apt to be like that? quizzed counsel on cross-examl on. “Yes,” Mrs. Papineau agreed. Prosecutor Douglas came back, emphatically: “Are those hands you saw tn the morgue the hands of Kale Mahoney, or are they not?” you in the Mahoney's had hands lke ‘Yes. I'm sure that’s the hana” Just as positively Mra, Papineau identified certain articles that had heen found in the trunk as the weartng apparel of Mrs. Mahoney IDENTIFIES APRON BY STITCHE “Why, yes.” she said, “that checked apron ts the one I sold Yea, here's the stitching that we do in cur shop, It was made in the store. I sold that to Kate on May fl. That green cape be longed to Kate, She sometimes put it wround me when I went up 0 une her phone and she thought I would be cold.” Mrs. Madeline Kleete (Another clore friend and near neigh bor of Mra Mahoney, whe had been re called & second time to the stand.) Ive seen her wear that coat more ones.” she maid, identifying another tha article from the contents of the trunk. | And this cape-—that's (he cape she had om when I looked in her w t of April 16. is quilted robe. This ia her half It's the of Kate Mahoney nee Dellewe It is the honey The feet are feet Kate Mahoney stubby, hard working short, stubby fingers onlar but she ha eed, foot with a beautifat aren Mrs. Nora Mahoney wiped face with a handkerchief immediately after the is brought in and taken out.” said the judge. ° It was agreed that the trunk should be brought in when court opened Saturday morning. Dr. J. P. “T am & dentist tn the Lumber Ex change bulidi Tam acquainted with 4 Dr. Wood in my of Mahoney. Yea, sir, this Mra lower plate and th ne Up the teeth’ intros Attachment (hold weed by Koepfii) f ere made for Mra. Mahoney in my flee No other work exactly like It ever done in my office.” Big Tacoma Mill Adds Third Crew TACOMA, Sept. 24.—For the first time in history, the big St, Paul mill here will operate a third shift, The new crew of 65 men will work a late night shift, beginning Monday, Altho the lumber business has shown a marked increase in the last month, the employment of the addi- tional men in due to another cause, according to mill officials, The shift is being put on to clean up a lot of inferior grade lumber that must be cut at once, it was sald, Goes Further ‘Into Ku Klux Probe WASHINGTON, Sept. 24.—Attor: ney General Daugherty today went into the operations of the Ku Klux Kian in a conference wtih District Attorney Hayward of New York. The attorney general discussed with Hayward some phases of the in quiry in the Kastern state, which of. ficlais believe may lead to action by grand juries. Seattle Chosen ter Veterans’ Next Meet DETROIT, Mich., Sept. 24.—Seat. tle today was chosen as the 1922 con- vention city for the 23d annual ni tional encampment of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, The veterans have been in session here all week. Think Attempt Made on Restaurant Safe When Patrolman L. P. Applequist entered an alleyway behind a restau rant at 904 Howell st. Saturday morning, he discovered what police believe to be an attempt to blow the safe in the building Police are investigating on the theory that John Sells, suspected mafecracker, who was shot In the foot by Patrolman Moore Friday morn ing, may be connected with it, AY BE HARD HIT, AT THAT DENVER, Sept. 24—Julius Ep- stein and Louls P, Pardue were found guilty of keeping a gambling house, They were sentenced to at tend church every Sunday for six months. CLEVELAND, O.—Salvatore Cala, confessed slayer of Daniel N. Ka ber, wealthy publisher, was found guilty here Friday and sentenced to life imprisonment at the Obio penitentiary. ow at 620) THE SEA TENNANT GRILLS “MYSTERY MAN” D. L. Atkinson Has Fifth Day of Confinement The fifth day of imprisonment dawned for D. L. Atkinson, 29, In jetty jail urday, leaving him deep. er sunk in mystery than on any pre Atkingon is still held on unable to commu friends, at It te a ques ceding day Jan open charge, nicate with his family, |torney or anyone eb tion whether he knows why he is he’ | Friday afternoon Atkinson was taken from his cell to face a grilling lby Captain of Detectives Charles 1. |Tennant, Atkinson's face was lined 4 worn when he was take® from olitary cell in the jail and de The his the corridor to Tennant's offire grilling lasted two hours. Tennant did not caso, and Atkinson's connection with the Mahoney case, if any, is being carefully guarded, Police and de tectives today refused absolutely ‘to confirm or deny the stories that have connected) his fate with James Mahoney, now on trial for his lite ccused of murdering his aged wife Kate Mooers Mahoney, April 16. According to an authority connected with Atkinson, police are searching for a “mystery woman supposed to be Atkinson's sister, maid to haye been closely asmociated with “ closely and who has since completely dis appeared. This theory has been con |firmed in part by Lee Johneton, at |torney for the accused man. | White admitting knowledge of At kinson, Prosecutor Douglas would say nothing concerning him. Woman Shoots Down Woman; Suicides NEW YORK, Sept. 4.—P*hysicians at Long Island College hospital to day were doubtful about the recovery of Miss Mildred Hanan, shot down in a Brooklyn «treet by Mra. Grace Lawes, who then committed suicide. ‘The heiress of the millionaire shoe manufacturer ts in a “grave condition,” it was said. Mrs. Lawes’ secret infatuation for Jobn 8. Borland, Mins Hanan's com panion, or by Mra, Lawes’ fear that her intimate friendship with Miss Hanan was about to be broken, in- vestigation did not disclose, Oil Strikers Will Continue Picketing BAKERSFIELD, Cal, Sept. 24-—- “Picketing of Bakersfield highways by the strikers’ law and order com mittee will continue,” Walter Yar row, official adviser of the striking loll workers, told the United Preas to | day. “A statement that the pickets had “Private cars will not be stopped, but we reserve the right to follow cars we suspect of carrying strike telephoned from the Puget Sound |™*r K~ owned by F. 8 Lesrow, and breakers or boosa, The law and order! tron and Steel Co. that he had been |OUFr Leder, owned by C, B. Irwin. committeemen have as much right on the highways as anyone esa” Murder Verdict Out of Battle in W. V WILLIAMSON, W. Va, Sept. 2 —J. C. McCoy was convicted of murder tn the first degree today In connection with the three-day indus trial battle here last May. MeCoy will be sentenced to life im- prisonment. McCoy i» a grandson of Randall field-MeCoy feud. |be convicted of murder in conn He is the first to oo go county Se ttle Day Brings Pep to Yakima Fair YAKIMA, Sept. 24. — “Yakima, we've come to play with you; Yaki |ma, we've come to kill the blues,” sang the Seattle delegation to the Washington state fuir here yester- day, and then they sprinkled the business district, the fair grounds and the byways with all known brands of Seattle pep. It was Seattic day at the exposition, and the visit- ors from the Sound metropolis were liberally entertained by the Commer. cial Club here. County - Pay Less to State This Year According to an announcement made Friday, King county will pay $41,208 lems in state taxes thie year | than it did Inst. Last year’s asnens. |ment for the state taxes was $3,995, | 796, while this year it reaches only $3 Suntches Woman’ Purse and Escapes Mra. N. Holmes, 6729 Jones ave., lost her purse containing $8 to a purse snatcher while walking along First ave. Friday night. The thief disappeared in an alleyway before police could be summoned. Eastern Bankers to Arrive Today More than 600 New York and Ohio bankers were scheduled to reach Se attle Saturday, en route to the 47th annual convention of the American Bankers’ association, in Los Angeles. KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. —~ Be cause he nearly froze spending one night in the open, Tom Capener, one of the six prisoners who es caped from the local jail Wednesday, returned to the sheriff and surrendered. FRAGRANCE \betokens the Famous for ni} omment on the | Mahoney before the alleged murder.! “Caprice Ardonne, said to be one of the best interpretive | Whether jealousy was aroused by” McCoy, leader of @ clan in the Hat-| | Uon with the mine warfare in Min-| Butler Enter Big ‘Show to ' en A A A TLE CSP OT es tainers He re % dancers on the coast, and Walter Emerson, who will be lead- jers in “The Show of Shows, | entertain patrons at the Hote { Five principal entertainers and olght of the will members chorus |be the Butler hotel cafe's big draw: | ing card, as a result of the recent trip of John E. Savage, proprietor, to producing centers from which he culled his performers. He announces as one of the chief | attractions, Caprice Ardonne, | 7, | booked by John E. Savage to} Butler cafe. | j known a» one of the best interpre | tive dancers on the const Walter | Emerson, also an entertainer of note, will have general charge of | cing the change of programs t the season. | “The Show of Shows” ts the title of the Butler's bill, It will make | itn first bow to cafe patrons Sunday | evening. HERE’S MORE ABOUT CONFESSION STARTS ON PAGE ONE } jby the Puget Sound Iron and Stee! company, VanAmburgh forced Rust to write « letter to his father de manding $25,000 ransom. The kidnaper then filled Arthur’s | ears with cotton, strapped his hands | together, wrapped a blanket over his | head and drove back to the city ‘The letter was given to a measen ger to be delivered to the elder Rust. He got it at about 10 o'clock in the morning, procured the money and started for the place designated. He retu office and learned that hi ned to his is son had leave the money. released. It » supponed that when Van Am- burgh heard Rust had started for the tide Mata, he left the kidnaped boy, expecting to find the money at the | Dlace designated. | CALLS FOR HELP THRU HOLES IN BLANKET | Left alone in the garage, young | Rust struggted with his bonds, but could not free himself, He chewed The jury recommended mercy and|* *mall bole in the blanket which |_ | covered his head and called for help. |The workmen, attracted by his calls | for askistance, came to hin rescue. There was a quiet search of some weeks, then the arrest of Van Am {burgh. The latter was a popular high school youth, who had gone |thru the war and come out the most decorated private, it was said, in the | world, his decorations coming from jarmy, navy and marine corps. | He had served during the latter | part of the war as a motorcycle dis. patch rider. His decorations and cf tations number seven, and came from the Belgian and French govern- | ments, as well as his own. | THOUGHT RUST PLANNED HIS OWN KIDNAPING ‘The trial gave Tacomans one of ithe sensations of the year. For the | young war hero's defense, out of a | clear , was that Arthur Rust had | connived at his own kidnaping, Rust | had been in need of money for some | secret purpose, #0 ran the tory, and had suggested to Van Amburgh a | fake kidnaping, in order to frighten | a large sum out of hin father, who is | deeply attached to Arthur, his only son. | It was in vain that Arthur Rust and his father denied this story; the | jury apparently was impressed by ita plausibility, and perhaps swayed by | Van Amburgh's war record, Then, too, perhaps there was just peared to be a controversy between a | rich man’s son and the son of a me- chanic in the amelter which the rich man once owned, in favor of the poor boy. Anyway, the defendant was | promptly acquitted. A great mass of |Tacomans naturally believed the “frame-up” story, and Arthur Hust has been under a cloud ever since, So deeply did his mother feel the in- |Justice that she considered moving the family home to California. The elder Mr. Rust, however, declared that he had lived in Tacoma since its village days and did not propose |to be run out by an untrue and un just reflection that had been cast on |the family integrity. The affidavit today comes as an jequal surprise to large numbers of |persons, It says: “Arthur Rust was tn no manner |a party to his own kidnaping, either |before or after getting into the auto- here | mobile with me, or on the day of the | Friday night kidnaping. He had no acquaintance His with me before that time. —The aroma of “SALADA' iT =I A. erfection of the leaf. ears, Salada never varies the excellence of its quality, e | ot being matinfied that he had| been called in in untrue,” he asserted. | found the right place, Rust did not owned by Eddie McCarty; Grayson, ‘ROUNDUP DERBY | FEATURE TODAY, Four Fine Racers Ready to} Start | PENDLETON, Ore, Sept, 24—The Roundup Derby will be today’s roundup feature. The event, over six furlongs, or three times around the track, is of jfered this year to bring out four fine racers that are here this week. The purse ts $500, $250 to the winner. ‘Tho entrants are: Mysterious Girl, jowned by George Drumheller; El Mysterious Girl, with ber track record, is the favorite, Twelve riders are entered tn the |semi-finals in the bucking contest to- day, seven in the steer-roping and 10 tn the bull dogging. Tho semifinals in an elimination contest follows, from which three or |four riders will be picked to enter the finals later in the afternoon to com- pete for the world’s Utle and a $750 pure, testimony at the trial was true and in strict accordance with the facts) in every respect.” | Shortly after hia acquittal, Van Amburgh married a socially prom. inent Lincotn high schoolmate. It is reported that they have gone to some distant place, which will be! kept secret for the present, to make & hew start in life. | | Tastes Here Vary, | Liquor Raids Show Three men are held under arrest Saturday on booze charges. One pre- ferred bonded whisky, the second jhad beer, and the third was in pos- [session of the common but danger- | ous grape, police say, | Those arrested were Russel Col.’ jbert, 28, engineer; Rudolph Klavein, 43, Ironworker, and Yaga Nygani 37, hotel proprietor at 210 Occidental ave. | Used Hats Bought | PHILIPPINE DUNTAL BALIVAG ONLY GOOD PRICES ASSESSED AND PAID C m it, marking It e Goods.” ‘This is the first an@ enly firm in id doing this business. | the ow ye | PATRONIZE it as tt helps y reduce the H.C. @f Ly, EXCHANGE PRODUCTS Co, 19 PLAZA CERVANTES MANILA, P. 1. Real Painless | Extraction Free Daily In order introduce our new whalebone) plate, which is the | lightest and strongest plate known, does not cover roof of the | mouth; you can bite corm eff the cob; guaranteed 15 years. f Ly Al rk guaranteed for 15 year: Have impressions t in the morn. ing and get teeth « pation and advice free. Call and See Sampice ef Our Pilate and Bridge Werk, We Stand the Test of Time. Most of our present recommended vy our Ba custo! ers, whose work still givin ood satisfaction. Ask our cw who have tested our wor! Tr office, be au: OHIO Cut-Rate 207 UNIVERSITY ST. Vrases-Petersen te Dentists ea. BELFAST IS SWEPT BY armored cars patrofied the streets | that he withtraw trom his previous of Belfast today after @ wild night | stand in which he insisted the Irish of rioting | delegates were representatives of & y after midnight spread thruout) » oe a section of the city Gunmen nid. | sa: fen in toortare. poured ther tre SAY British Are ae, : arenes Fisting : rs ds Searching for Arms the military swept thru the streets “" : a : pact jing ne entrance with their Hotehkiss guns of all Irish ports to search for agm@ The number of dead and wound | 0% ‘ooming steamers, it was ber Neved here today Passengers ear ed could not be determined A bomb hurled in Harland st. was | TYing here reported their ships hadl the algnal for the rioting The en been searched tire Bast rifle and tion of the bomb died away tion and the river bridges. lera’s desire for a conference would | Waldron Prompt him to accept this reported | vertisement. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 NIGHT OF WILD RIOTS BELVAST, Sept %—Corpa of new proporal vs It will not ; Fighting, which broke out short | free nation. British authorities Fein was arming. They feared aq outbreak among the republicans) ave been drilling actively, Urges World Labor Demand Disarmin; claimed Sing) Bide district revolver fire seethed with an the detona-| Hundreds of gunmen in the aren of | Who Newstons road seized a railway sta They hid places of vantage and poured a en fire along the main thorofare. A izens in tramway cars became| WASHINGTON, Sept. 24—Samu panicky and fled the district, S00n|Gompers, president of the Amerte all cars were stopped. | Federation of Labor, today called o The military, speeding thru the |jabor thruout the world to streets in armored cars, fired thelr| demonstrations for \mitation «mall arms without effect, It wa*| armaments on Armistice day, Nov nly when they opened up on the! ber 11 ters with their Hotchkiss guns| Gompers addressed the following: that the revolters threw down their urms and fied. The gangs dispersed before the guns, but some of them rooted themselves in points of vant-| «, and wniped until dawn. They] wholeheartedly for fullest pousible | took their injured with them. | disarmament in interest of interna- Meth tional peace and good will. Isn't it” LONDON, Sept. 24. — Premier! posible to have demonstrations of | Lioyd-George has evolved & NEW) Iongii«h people in support of this hu- formula for settlement of the Sint | manitarian purpose with a view of Fein problem which will be accept-| having them prevail upon ours and ble to both sides, it was learned an others to insist upon the fullest | here today. |Umit of disarmament at Washing- This new formula will not nece® | ton’s conference?” sitate a compromise from the posi-| — tion of either side, it was sald. | Our Lines of Household Furniture It was believed Eamonn De Va-| will interest you. Let us show you Co., 319 University —-Ad- exram to labor leaders in Great Britain and similar cables went to France, Italy and Japan rican Federation of Labor? Date Jan. 1, 1918 Denomination $100 L. M. RICE & CO., Inc. Established 1900 Tax Secured Municipal Corporation bonds, free f taxation in the State of Washington, including ‘ax, Maturities and Jan. 1, 1928, . Jam. 1, 0 00 . Jan. 1, 1 #100 To Yield 9% Here ts an opportunity to invest your savings in a safe, high yielding security seldom offered. Call, Write or Phone Main 2765 1523 L. C. Smith Bidg. We are offerini from all forms of Federal Income wi M Prices as Follows: 00 Heond at $53.59 it ShZ24 at 681.11 SECOND AND COLUMBIA | Largest Bank in the State of Washington F Established Thirty-one Years Use Your Bank ANY services are offered at this Bank by which you may profit in time and money. Here are some that are at your command: —Checking accounts. —Savings accounts. —Foreign drafts to all civilized coun- tries. —Commercial and travelers’ letters of credit. Trade and credit mestic and foreign. Safe deposit boxes. —Bond department. —Trust department. information—do- Dexter Horton National Bank Second Ave: and Cherry St.

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