Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 38, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 June 1921 — Page 3
END CLOTHING DRIVE JUNE 30 FOR POOR KIDS City to Be Canvassed—Substations Opened to Receive Contributions. The campaign for clothing for the children of Europe is to be extended to all parts of the city next week in an effort to bring the drive to a close by June 30. This announcement was made today by Mis* Martha Carey, chairman of the Red Cross committee on relief for foreign children, who stated that about one-third of the Indianapolis quota of 11,000 garments now is in sight. In order to make it possible for householders to contribute clothing with a minimum of effort, forty-three drug stores in all parts of the city have been designated as receiving stations. The druggists will receive the bundles of clothing, which will be contributed by persons in the vicinity of the stores and will hold the deliveries until collections can be made. Letters have been sent to Indianapolis clergymen requesting their cooperation during the closing days of the campaign. These appeals state that there is enough cast-off clothing and materils from which garments might be made in Indianapolis homes to more than meet the city's quota of garments. It is explained that no requests are being made for contributions of money. In addition to the receiving stations hereinafter named, clothing is being received at the Red Cross shop, on the fifth floor of the New York store, and garments will be received at night next Monday, Tuesday. Wednesday and Thursday at 405 Chamber of Commerce building. The night receiving station will be in charge of Miss Arda Knox. Miss Carey reports that 1.500 garments have been shipped and that 700 garments await shipment. Approximately 1,000 unfinished garments are on hand. The following druggists have offered their drug stores as receiving stations for garments for the children in Central Europe: Theodore Althardt, 4034 East Washington; Barnhart Pharmacy Ciempany, Fairfield and College: Binkley & New. Forty-Second and College; Wood’s Pharmacy, Twentieth and College; James M. Breeding, 2502 North Capital avenue; Stevens Brothers, Thirty-Fourth and Central; Louis W. Carnefix. 1012 River avenue; Carskadon Pharmacy. ThirtyEighth and Illinois; Case Brothers 2152 Central; Clay A Emmons, 1532 North Alabama; A. W. Cochran. 2402 Central avenue; -Conner & Hargift, 5422 East Washington; E. M. Crawford, 540 North Pennsylvania; Crescent Pharmacy, 124 East Twenty-Second; Deal's Pharmacy. Tenth and Central; W. G. Miller, Thirtieth and Bellefontaine; Guy L. Doggett, 3002 North Illinois; Frank Erdeimeyer. 921 North New Jersey; Gus Ferger. Nineteenth and College; Frederick Fisher, 2880 Northwestern avenue; J. W. Fleming, 2802 East Washington : Charles W. Friedman. 1002 South Meridian; Otto H. Frits, 1202 East Tenth; Glads Drug Store, 838 Ft. Wayne avenue; Glads Drug Store. Central avenue and Twenty-First; L. C. Hinchman, 2701 College; Illingworth Pharmacy, SOI South East; Arthur
' Paved Street, on All Four Sides
FOREST MANOR
“THE ADDITION SUPERB” Own STOP Your Home ]£s-°trv i'.o mm£2> THAT RENT by our easy, simple, JL-Jtf & & w CJ? i/ MM kM £ W &4. or sto P complaining =oll= today and TOMORROW-COME If you live 137 HIGH CLASS LOTS TO BE SOLD AT BARGAIN PRICES and on very easy g| 1 Secures * a source of great terms. Start with a homesite here. End with a home. There will be many buyers HI/ a Homesatisfaction for each lot, so come early. * 81 1111 PRICES: $250—5350—5495-$625 1111 -- ALL HIGHER PRICED LOTS HAVE BEEN SOLD -d if vou die $ B A We€k Pa y s an estate and security TERMS • $lO Cash Then $1 t 0 $L5 ° Weßkly ' N ° interGSt for ° n6 I xr™ for your family * l year. No taxes until 1923. No payments while 1 Homesite sick or unemployed. Liberal discounts for cash in full. iin nrr Jl?*™ $ 25 FREE Hundreds Have Bought Twenty-five dollars free to those who buy now. (38th St.) -which passes the north end continue to increase by leaps and Ask sa | eS men. Already 237 lots have been purchased In this of Forest Manor. The sonth boundary bounds. You know real estate is safe. fine addition. is 34th street, the east boundary is It can not burn np, blow away or ONLY ONE FOREST MANOR School street, and the west boundary ... „ ~, . . _ There will never be another Forest Manor. It 137 choice large high lots, near city car, school, Sherman drive. All four of these ‘bust.’ Forest Manor is beckoning i 0 „ 0 i streets are paved with asphalt and you. Bea land owner in this superb u o n. Already purchasers in the First Section and conveniences are still available at prices and All inde streets are cinnew North Side addition. Resolve here have resold their lots at handsome profits. In- __ terms within reach of all. Many lota front on "ZZZIL HOW TO COME and now to shake off the renter's vest your dollars here where they are safe and- Daved streets . Two fine phade treeß planted on Br AUTO _ DrWe north to 38th street, shackles and start out toward Inde- —— sure to bring you big returns. ——- r . . , —— then( . e ens t, crot <is Fair Grounds bridge, pendence and success, start with a Homes are already springing up in this addi- each lot. xseautliul bricK and cement entrances. jog sou th to 38th street, thence east to Homesite and end with a home. Now tion. We help to finance those who wish to build Over 60 brick ornamental columns. Reasonable Sherman drive. is the opportune time. Forest Manor now. This is truly a superb addition, and the restrictions. Lots sold to white people only. PA Hne Vh^r?Aur r, fd^ o meet a you° is the place. prices are so low and the terms so easy. Come There is a reason for this wonderful lot sale. or walk four short squares north iJ and see for yourself. Forest Manor. I COME DON’T DELAY. INVESTIGATE ACT AT ONCE.
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IyfIOVIELANp Lillian Gish MILLIONS LOVE HER q. jPg^
This is the final instalment of the synopsis of “Maggie Pepper,” which is an excellent example to study if you want to write for the screen. In the meantime, Ada has been arguing with Darkln, who has grown suspicious of her and tells her she's stalling. She runs away from him into Maggie's flat, and tells Maggie that Darkln is coming —that she’s afraid of what he may do. At this Maggie sends Ada into the room with Claire and pushes Joe into another room—tells him that Darkln must not see him there. Darkln comes In, demanding his wife and Claire. Maggie tells him that he cannot have them —he tries to pass her to get to them and they struggle. Maggie is getting the worst of it and cries out, when Joe, who has been listening cannot stand it any longer—he flings open the door and comes in. Joe grabs Darkln and sheves him out of the wayDarkin pu ls a gun and fires at .. oe. Joe is wounded—staggers, and falls. Darkln, frightened at what he has done, runs to the window and jumps out. A policeman sees him and gives chase. Darkin fires, wounding the policeman, and is himself wounded by the officer. Darkin runs on, thinking he has killed the policeman, comes to the river—nearly all in—sees a boat within his reach and wades out toward it. Just as he reaches the boat his wound overcomes him and he drowns. Meanwhile, back at Maggie’s fiat, they have been able to get Joe to bed and give him some asistance. He is not seriously wounded, but for fear of the scandal which may result through his having been wounded in Maggie’s flat, they all decide that he must stay there until he is well—he is only too glad to do this, for he knows now that he loves Maggie. The papers are full of Holbrook’s disappearance. A body is finally discovered floating in the river, and, while it is apparently not recognizable, the police think that It may be Joe Holbrook and begin looking for Darkin. They watch Maggie’s house and discover that there E. Johnson. Thirtieth and Clifton: Koehler’s Pharmacy. Thirtieth and Central; Langdon Pharmacy. 383d East Washington: Bert C. McCammon, 1740 East Tenth; McCammon & Raslco. ThirtyEighth and College; George M. Melvin. 2802 North Capitol avenue; Charles A. Mueller, Forty-Ninth and College; Charles C. Mueller, 2184 Talbott; Janies W. Neidhamer. 2102 East Washington; Oriental Pharmacy, 1336 East Washington: James R. nois; Reich's Pharmacy, 3201 Central; Mellwain's Pharmacy, Forty-Second and Boulevard place; J X. Stuckmeyer. 1353 Madison avenue; Weiss Drug Company, 3404 North Illinois; C. L. Zlmmermaun, 2032 East Tenth.
WE WILL EXPECT YOU The GATES-KINNEAR Company “THE FIRM THAT HUSTLES,” SOLE AGENTS. 760-62 Bankers Trust Bldg. Phone—Main 1409 The Security Trust Company, Trustee, 111-113 N. Pennsylvania Street. This strong financial institution signs all contracts and deeds and protects your interest.
is a man there. They decide that it is Darkin, and that Maggie is shielding him because of his relationship to her. They decide to raid Maggie's flat, but she hears them coming and pushes Joe into a back room Just as the police break Into her home. They tell her she is shielding Darkin—ahe laughs at them—but when she sees she can no longer keep them from finding out that Joe Holbrook i there, she throws open the door, calling to Joe, and the police are dumfounded t Holbrook’s entrance. They go away, leaving Joe, Maggie, Ada and Claire together. The telephone rings and police headquarters notifies Ada that the body taken from the river has been identified as that of her husband. Hargen and Alice get the news and come to find Joe, but be declares he means to marry Maggie, and 'Alice and Hargen leave, discomfited. Joe turns to Maggie, and tells her that she'll have to marry him now—that she's hopelessly compromised him. She laughs happily and tells him that she thinks she'll have to make good. Copyright, 1921 by the Wheeler Newspaper Syndicate. CHILDREN SEND SUITS TO POOR I Dr. C. D. Royse Carries Outfits to Bible Lands. When Dr. Clarence D. Royse, Indiana director of Near East Relief, sails for Constantinople .Tune 30 on a tour of inspection of conditions in the Bible lands, i bis trunks will carry four outfits of new clothing for four Armenian orphans. When the Sunday school boys and girls of Rockville, where Dr. Royse resides, heard ho was going into the midst of Armenian distress, they be.-ame very active and soon raised enough money to buy four little suits of clothes. These the director will carry overseas with a message from the donors. Dr. lioyse has promised to take photographs of the children who get the clothes and present them to their Rockville friends. Dr. Royse left for New York last night. He will daily chronicle events that transpire in the land of sorrows. State headquarters of Near East Re lief, 403 City Trust blilding, is planning to launch its used clothing campaign early in July. The date of "Bundle day” will be announced in a few days. South Bend recently completed a clothing drive which brought an accumulation of 10,000 garments. Mead A. Kelsey, secretary of Near East Relief, expects Indianapolis to contribute a car load of clothing.
FREE SUGAR—Tomorrow THE FIRST section of Forest Manor was sold out in a very short time to satisfied and discriminating purchasers, some of whom have already re-sold their lots at a handsome profit. This heavy demand for Forest Manor lots has caused us to offer the second section of 137 lots at once. We want you to see this superb addition of homesites and We will give absolutely free a two-pound carton of pure Domino granulated sugar to every white adult who visits Forest Manor Sunday, June 26th, and registers his or her name and address. We expect this souvenir to cause the memory of the sweet, pure air found at Forest Manor to linger with you.—COME—BRING YOUR FRIENDS WITH YOU.
SECOND SECTION
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 1921.
Bad Home Influences Cause Child to Be Bad City Probation Officer Says Poverty Is Chief Reason for Crime .
By LAUREL C. THAYER, City Court Probation Officer. “Why blame the bad child? He is ihe product of i “Bad health, physical or mental; “A bad or unwise home; “Bad associates; “Bad employment; “Poverty." No, these are not the words of a sentimental woman. They are part of the array of pictures, charts aud diagrams forming a State board of health exhibit which has been shown all over Indiana. If I were making the above catalog, however, I would give "poverty" the honor of first place. This tauy not be “scientific,” for we are told that among a dozen causes of misfortune, poverty comes fourth, but it would be my contribution to science. POVERTY CAUSE OF riOCIAL ILLS. Poverty is the great unlerlying cause of most of our social ills because our lives are set against a background which is economic. In other words, in order to live, we must have money, a quite obvious fact. The board of health states graphically facts known to every person whose person brings him face to face with human- : ity “as is.” | You must become a social worker, paid |or volunteer, if you wish first hand | knowledge of the causes of delinquency. I Otherwise you will have to be content j with cold second-hand Information. I Os course, ministers, physicians and | lawyers know much about individual I cases which have como to their personal experience. But you must go into the homes of the unfortunate day after day: | you must sit down at the table of the J working man’s family ; you must rock | the cradle of the widowed mother while j she goes to the grocery : you must bathe I the fevered brow of the factory worker •while you wait for the public health | nurse to come; you must hear Johnny tell | the attendance officer that he couldn't i go to school because he had no shoes—these are the things you must do even , to touch the fringe of an understanding of our "neglected neighbors.” ] INFLUENCES AGAINST YOUTH. 1 However, if you wish a short cut, stop the next social worker you happen to | meet on the street, and he or she will tell | you of ship-wrecked lives gone on the rocks because of bad health, bad home. | bad associates, bad employment, bad finances. For good measure, your social worker will add a hundred other causes not lo obvious, but equally as potent, in explaining why, In our beautiful world's garden of flowers, there are so many, matry “broken blossoms.” Here comes one of them now. I see
her merry, dancing eyes, her tousled blonde hair, her physical frame, large and strong. I hear her laughter ringing down the corridor of the city hospital where she was detained by the board of. health. Here is what the hospital record says. | Just a moment! Before reading, please forget that you find her in the deten-; tion ward of a hospital as a forced j charity patient. The record reads: “Patient Is 17; mother has been dead four years; father was married eight months previous to her entrance to the hospital; each had been married before; mother bad six girls and father had three boys by previous marriage; patient is the only child by the second marriage; she has .been working at a restaurant as a waitress at $7 a week and board. Paid $5 a week for room. “Patient was placed in a State insfltution when a child on account of. iucorrigibility. Later, the father took the girl from this institution, thinking that he could take care of and control her. She then secured factory work at sl4 a week, paying $3 a week for board and room. Worked five weeks, then ran away. Was found living with strangers and arrested. “Court record states that she Is one of the worst girls they have ever had. She has no moral sense whatsoever. She is very large for her age, and attractive | looking. Does not appear to be lacking ! mentally, but very much so morally." ; BAD GIRL HAB ! TENDER HEART. 1 Here the hospital record ends. | A group of girls were sewing gingham dresses which they were to wear when | completed. They sat near the open windows of one of the hospital wards. It was easy to see who was the life of the little party. It was our "iucorrigibie.” i "Gee,” she was saying, “isn't Mrs. S. sweet? I Just love her. Wisht I was her daughter, I'd love her to death." And there was no doubt of the genuineness of this love shining from sunny eyes, all too familiar with tears. “Do you know, girls, she brought me some hairpins and p jme crochet cotton and a crochet needle yesterday without me ever asking for 'em. Said she knew her (laughter would want 'em if she was out here. Oh, dear. If I’d had a mother like her I'd never be here." . i “Ain't you got any mother?” asked one of the group as she folded the hem \ of her new gingham dress. “Yep. but she’s no good. She sets my father against me After my father married again, the children were always fighting, aud that made her cross. She ! had to wash and iron nearly every day > to keep the kids in clean clothes for | school, and at night she was tired and i cross. She never had time to talk to me.
HERE IS YOUR
And she wouldn't let me have company at the house. Said they was in the way, and the kids had to go to sted'p. Father is a working man.” “How’d ye git arrested?” asked an Inquiring member of the group. “Oh,” she replied, “I met some girls who had fellas, and I went out to Ft. Harrison with thepi. One night I didn't go home and the cops got me.” Here one of the sewers added a bit of local color by the remark that “my beau’s gone to France, and I don’t care if he ‘don’t never come back.' ” The conversation was interrupted, a child's voice demanding that her dollie have anew dress made' from a scrap of the gingham. Mabel, our “incorrigible,” volunteered to drop her own sewing until dollie was provided for. This was characteristic. The big generous heart of the motherless girl was the first to be appealed to by every girl In the ward in times of trouble. MABEL OFFERS AID TO OTHERS. It was Mabel who shared her Sunday dish of ice cream with Gracie, the ward’s 6-year-old; it was she who wrote the letter to the mother of one of the girls too ill to write; it was she who loaned her Sunday dress to Margaret the day Margaret was permitted to go to town with a social worker who was helping her to find a place to work; yes, and it was Mabel who led In the local theatricals the night the ward was turned into a playhouse, and the girls staged a scene from Robinson Crusoe. When there were favors to be asked of the nurse, or when some sacrifice on the part of one girl for • the sake of the others was needed, Mabel was the one called upon. The following day the city court committee was in session in the nurses' reception room at the city hospital. Mrs. S. was three—the same Mrs. S. who had brought Mabel's hair-pins. “It's a shame club women don’t know what these girls are up against,” one member was saying. "Why, 1 never dreamed there were so many homeless girls iu Indianapolis until I came out here.”
GIRLS HAD NO MOTHER. "And that Isn’t the worst,” added Mrs. S., “Yesterday, after my shopping trip for the girls, while I was giving them the little toilet articles they needed, 1 had a heart-to-heart talk with every girl up there. And my heart breaks to tell you that not one of those girls had a mother who told her the things that would make her strong and self-reliant in her struggle out In the world. All those girls need Is mothering." “I don't think to,” came from another member of the committee. “I think they need discipline.” While these good —omen are arguing the matter, let us tell you of another party Mabel managed. The city was startled a few weeks after by a newspaper story to the effect that three girls had left the city hospital
Carnival Week Begins July 3
at night by way of the fire-escape. Odj of them was Mabel. The editor peimitting, we will tell yon next week what became of her. A statement of Dr. Kenosha Sessions, superintendent of the Girls’ School at Clermont, may partially explain Mabel. Dr. Sessions says: “In a goodly per cent of the cases where the mothers are not bad they are most inefficient, often indifferent, poor housekeepers, poor wives, poor mothers, weak in will power, helpless in discipline, the kind of mothers whose children soon override their feeble desire for them to
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Statement of Condition or THE Southern Surety Company DEB MOINES. Register and Tribune ltd*. ON THE 31st Day of December, 1920. O. S. COBB, Fresiden’. E. G. DAYIS, Secretary. Amount of capital paid up $1,000,000.00 NET ASBETS OF COMPANY. Cash in banks (on Interest and not on interest) $1,003,045.00 Real estate unincumbered.... 452,039.21 Bonds and stocks owned (market value) 995,933.03 Mortgage loans on real estate (free from any prior incumbrance) 780,615.74 Accrued securities (interest and rests, etc.) 7L939 90 Other securities 63,903 32 Workmen’s compensation reinsurance bureau funds 64,770.22 Miscellaneous assets 180,504.83 Premiums and accounts due and in process of coUection. 1.049,797.94 Accounts otherwise secured.. 24,750.00 Total net assets $4,067,299.35 LIABILITIES. Reserve or amount necessary to reinsure outstanding risks $1,757,990.09 Losses adjusted and not due. 841,521.90 Bills and accounts unpaid.... 27,300.81 Other liabilities of the company 75,000.00 Commissions, taxes, etc....... 887,917.20 Capital and surplus..... $1,577,560.26 Total liabilities $4,007,299.35 Greatest amount In any one risk $L400, 000.00 State of Indiana, Office of Commissioner of Insurance: I, the undersigned. Commissioner of Insurance of Indiana, hereby certify that the above is a correct copy of the statement of the condition of the above mentioned company on the 31st day of December, 1920, as shown by the original statement, and that the said original statement Is now on file In this office. In testimony whereof, I hereunto subscribe my name and affix my (SEAL) official seal, this 30th day of April, 1921 T. S. McMURRAY. JR., Commissioner.
Statement of Condition or THE Zurich-General Accident and Liability Insurance Company Limited CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. 17S West Jackiea StreetON THE 31st Day of December, 1920, ARTHUR W. COLLINS, Culled State* Manager and Attorney. JOHN A. DIEMAND, Aaaistant United States Manager. Amount of capital paid up..} 450,000.00 NET ASSETS OF COMPANY. Cash In banka (on Interest and not on Interest) 8 520,73017 Bonds and stocks owned (market value) 5,703,337.50 Accrued securities (interest and rents, etc.) 83,891.68 Funds in hands of W. C. reinsurance bureau 177,204.97 Premiums and accounts dn* and in process of collection L 550.576.35 Total net assets 8,035,746.57 LIABILITIES. Reserve or amount necessary to reinsure outstanding risks $2,064,705 79 Losses unadjusted and in suspense 3,463,902 75 Bills and accounts unpaid... 56>46.23 Other liabilities of the company L 191.405.89 Capital and surplus 1,230,032.91 Total liabilities $ 5,035,746.37 Greatest amount in any one risk 20,000.00 State of Indiana, Office of Commissioner of Insurance: I, the undersigned. Commissioner of Insurance of Indiana, hereby certify that the above is a correct copy of the statement of the condition of the above mentioned company on the 31st day of December, 1920, as shown by the original statement, and that the Bald original statement is now on die in this office. In testimony whereof, I hereunto subscribe my name and affix my (SEAL) official soal, this 30t- day of April, 1921. X.i. McMURR> f, J... isl Com .bjioner.
do right, and whose children soon gt beyond their control and ken.” What are the women of Indianapolis doing to save girls who run away from homes like Mabel's? What are th churches doing? Where is the home open to the homeless girl? Where the ouU Btretched hand and the welcoming srnils that says: “Come, I know the road U rough and lonely, so I want to help you. Come with me.” SOME POLICE FORCE. There are 10.870 men and women ra 4 ployed In the New York City police department. ;
Statement of Condition OF THE Western Casualty Company CHICAGO, ELL. 208 South LaSall* St, ON THE 31st Day of December, 1920, A. WATSON ARMOUR, President. GEO. M. WILLETTS, Secretary. Amount of capital paid up...s 250,0002)# NET ASSETS OF COMPANY. Cash in backs (on Interest and not on interest) 4 2243548 Bonds and stocks owned (market value) 1407,51349 Mortgage loans on real estate (fro* from any prior Incumbrance) 250,000.09 Accrued securities (Interest and rents, etc.) 14,00848 Premiums and accounts due and in process of collection 64340248 Accounts otherwise secured.. 6,000.00 Total net assets $2,152,5004$ LIABILITIES. Reserve or amount necessary to reinsure outstanding risks $ 756,15248 Losses due and nnrald 17,119.09 Losses adjusted and not due,. 643402.2$ Bill# and accounts unpaid.... 8,759.80 Capital and surplus 727,016.99 Total liabilities :$2,152,56044 State of Indiana. Office of Commlsslonw of Insurance: I, the undersigned. Commissioner ot Insurance of Indiana, hereby certify that the above is a correct copy of the statement of the condition of the above men* tioned company on tho 31st day of December, 1920, as shown by the original statement, and that the said original statement is now on file in this office. In testimony whereof, I hereunto subscribe ray name and affix my (SEAL) official seal, this 30th day ot April, 1021. T. S. McMURRAY, JR., Commissioner.
Statement of Condition OF THE United States Casualty Company NEW TOSS CITY, NEW YORK. 85 Malden Lane. ON THE 31st Day of December, 1920, EDSON S. LOTT. President. D. G. LUCKETT, Secretary and Gem eral Manager. Amount of capital paid up...s 5J00,00010| NET ASSETS OF COMPANY. Cash in banks (on Interest and not on interest) $ 294,05Lgx Real estate unincumbered 250.04 Bonds and stocks owned (market value) 4,83X^41.14 Mortgage loans on real estate (free from any prior incumbrance) 239,190 (XV Accrued securities (Interest and rents, etc.) 53,118.0* The workmen's compensation bureau fund 89,024.01 Reinsurance recoverable on paid losses 10,249.61 Premiums and accounts dne and in process of coiloctlon. 763,966.44 Total net assets .$8,381,700A4 LIABILITIES. Reserve or amount necessary to reinsure outstanding risks $2,455,700.7* Losses unpaid 2,291,190.14 Estimated expenses on paid claims 84.504.70 Workmen s compensation burean funds 9.306.94 Dividends unpaid 13,062.00 Reinsurance premiums 89,206.5# Commissions dne agent* 178,455.9* Reserve for taxes, salaries, eta 152,000.00 Capital stock paid up 500,000.00 Burplus 7Q8.523.4Tj Total liabilities .$6,331,700.4# Greatest amount in any one risk * 500,000.0# State of Indiana, Office of Commissioner, of Insurance: I, the undersigned. Commissioner oft Insurance of Indiana, hereby certify that the above is a correct copy of the state-4 ment of tbs condition of the above men-' tinned company on the 81 at day of December, 1920, as shown by the original, statement, and that the said original! statement is now on file in this office. In testimony whereof, I hereunto subscribe my name and affix my (SEAL) official seal, this 30th day of April, 1921. T. S. McMURRAY, JR., Com missions*.
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