The Syracuse Journal, Volume 3, Number 38, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 19 January 1911 — Page 7

Hoods Sarsaparilla Cures all humors, catarrh and rheumatism, relieves that tired feeling, restores the appetite, cures paleness, nervousness, builds up the whole system. Get it today in usual liquid form 01 ihocolated tablet* called Sarsatabs. Biliousness ”1 have used your valuable Cascareti ■nd I find them perfect. Couldn’t do without them. I have used them foi some time for indigestion and biliousness and am now completely cured. .Recommend them to everyone. Once tried, you will never be without them in the family.”—Edward A. Marx, Albany, N.Y. Pleasant. Palatable. Potent, Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken or Grip* 16c, 25c, 50c. Never sold in bulk. The tied nine tablet stamped CC C. Guaranteed to cure ot your money back. iks ’ TAKE A DOSE OF piso’S "The best medicine COUGHS E> I6ENTS-MEN OR WOMEN SroflL Make 110 a day. Live Agent* and Beginner* ■westlgata. STBOXSHOSB, BmWiS, W.PkiU4.t,kl*,P*. Suggested Too Much. Old Rocksey—Why did you quarrel with your count, my dear? Mias Rocksey—He called me his treasure and it sounded altogether too suggestive.—Smart Set ‘ Mrs. Austins Buckwheat Flour give* yer a really good wholesome breakfast. The man who is anxious to let you know that God is on his tongue usually has the devil in his heart Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets first put up 40 years ago. They regulate and invigorate, stomach, liver and bowels. Sugarcoated tiny granules. A Poultry Problem. "Which is correct” ask the summer boarder who wished to air his knowledge, “to speak of a sitting hen or a setting hen?" “I don’t know." replied the farmer’s wife, ’‘and what’s more, I don’t care. But there's one thing I would Uke to know: when a hen cackles, has she been laying, or is she lying?" In Different Parts of tne House. Caller (to little daughter of th« house) —Hullo dear? Where are you off to? Daughter of the House—l’m just going up to watch Marie do mother’s nair. Caller—Oh, dear! Then Pm afraid we shan’t be able to see your mother. Daughter of the House —Oh, yes; you’ll find her down there in the drawing room. Funds to Fight Tuberculosis. Based on reports from all parts oi the United States the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis has issued a statement Which shows that in 1910 nearly $15,900,000 was spent in the fight against tuberculosis, as opposed to $8,000,000 spent in 1909. The largest item of expense in 1910 was for treatment in sanatoria and hospitals, $11,376,500 being expended for that purpose, or more than double the amount for 1909. The anti-tuberculosis associations spent $760,500, and the tuberculosis dispensaries $889,000. The special municipal and state expenditures aggregate $1,750,000. The statement declares that the most significant fact in the survey of the year’s work is the increase In the percentage of public money spent While In 1909 53.5 per cent of ths total expenditure was from federal, state, municipal or county funds, 62.6 per cent came from public appropriations in 1910. The actual amount of public money spent in tuberculosis Work this past year was $9,267,900, or more than double the amount from this same source In 1909. This fact Indicates, the national association declares, that anti-tuberculosls associations ar a gaining ground, by securing increased appropriations from public ’ money.

For Breakfast ??????? The Happy Reply— Post Toasties A crisp, dainty food that pleases young and old. Wholesome Economical Convenient Serve with cream or milk (hot or cold). “The Memory Lingers” POSTUM CBRBAL CO„ Ltd M Battle Creek. Mich.

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VOGUE OF HANDBAG INDISPENSABLE SINCE POCKETS WENT OUT OF FASHION. Girl With True Sense of Value of Detail In Dress Will Have Bag to Match Each Gown. Pockets In women’s dresses went jut of fashion so many years ago that we are really beginning to forget that there ever were such things, and to :arry one’s belongings, purse, handkerchief, etc., in a handbag has almost become second nature. The shape and size of these bags change from year to year, and their infinite variety is only equaled by their number, for the girl ivho has a true sense of the immense Beaded Bag. value of detail in dress will have a bag to match each separate gown. And it is just in this way that the girl with clever fingers can make herself Innumerable pretty and dainty bags at very small cost. Thereby, too, she may save uncounted shillings, the price of buying the bags in a shop. Os course, for morning use, to carry when out shopping In a coat and skirt, the bag must be of leather. This at first seems an Insuperable obstacle from the homeworker’s point of view, and it Is true that the big leather bags with square gilt mounts, which have been so much seen of late, must be bought readymade, but there are other designs which are every whit as useful. Lengths of soft suede are nowadays to

SOFT HATS WORN BY WOMEN Made of Ratine or Velours In Black or - Seal Brown and Are Very Becoming. Some smart, odd soft hats are being worn by older girls and women to whom they are becoming. They are made of ratine or velours, usually in black or deep seal brown, and lined, either with quilted silk or sateen Interlined with sheet wadding. They are about ten Inches high and are made of a single strip of the chosen material seamed at one place only. The top portion is brought together like a cone, by means of four evenly placed flarts, and all the seams are pressed and steamed so that they are scarcely perceived. The cone point is then pressed down like the crown of an alpine hat, and a single quill Is stuck In the back of the hat, pointing forward. The lower edge of the hat may be rolled up or not. Generally a slight roll Is given to the side of the front. —Harper’s Bazar. For Sewing Room. With the new net scarfs an applique >f small velvet flowers is very pretty. They are both in terracotta, the flowers in a border, narrow at the sides and wide at the ends. In padding a button-hole edge or a design for solid embroidery, the white padding shows through the color that is afterward stitched under It In many cases. This is especially disagreeable tn a dark shade. The problem has been solved by doing the padding in cotton as near the shade of the silk as possible. The result is satisfactory and is not extravagant when it is considered that cotton costs only a few cents a spool. A sharpened-down orange-wood stick is a good piercer tor embroidery. This makes a nice, clean hole and does not tear the material. Many needle-workers prefer the orange-wood sticks to the steel or ivory implements. Dolly Varden Hat. The Dolly Varden hat in its new guise is more fascinating than ever, and becomes the young girl to perfection, pale-colored soft felts and the new ironed beavers having vivid linings under the brim, which give a most piquant effect. Another shape which, however, is not so kind and becomes only the woman with regular features, is between a Dutch bonnet and an aeroplane hat. It fits the head closely, completely hiding the hair; the front and sides to the ears are rolled back irregularly in rather big and not strongly defined curves. A band of ribbon with one flower is all the decoration that is vouchsafed. For «bto bait, too. the contracting lining to used on tbs brim with q tossing

be bought in every imaginable ohad« of color, and these are not difficult to make into bags of the shape that is known by the name of “Dorothy.” Cut a strip of suede, the width of the bag and twice the length or depth, and with further strips, one-eighth of an inch in width, join it up the sides, over-sewing it through tiny slits cut for the purpose with a sharp penknife More slits are made round the top a couple of inches from the edge, and through these an inch-wide piece oi ribbon or strip of suede is passed tc draw it up and carry it by,-and the bottom may be finished off with a leather fringe. For afternoon use beaded or velvet bags are exceedingly fashionable, and these may quite well be home-made Gilt mounts may be bought for verj little, and sometimes beautiful old silver mounts, are to be picked up very cheaply In curiosity shops, these latter, of course, being more suitable foi a velvet bag. Beaded bags are made of fine canvas, and may be worked 1b any cross-stitch design, flower wreaths, such as our grandmothers worked in Berlin wools, being very popular. The work Is done with strong, light-col-ored thread, one bead to each square of canvas, and the bag lined with silk to match, whilst a fringe of loops ol the different colored beads will be found to make a pretty and effective finish. Novel Ornament. A very pretty gown seen recently was of gray chiffon over soft silk, simply cut and practically its only ornament, besides a gold-colored silk yoke of Chinese chrysanthemum embroidery, was an enormous ribbon chrysanthemum at the belt Each petal oi the flower was a strip of narrow rib bon, with a triangular fold in the middle of it, that turned it over and gave a little heavier portion to weigh it down. These folds were ironed heavily into the ribbon, and then the in, numerable petals were sewed in chrj* santhemum shapes at the waist linfl with gold thread (the ribbon itself was gold color). Nearly all the petals were allowed to droop and fall in the natural way, only enough being tacked back to give the fluffy flower effect. And that ribbon chrysanthemums made all the difference between simply a charming gown and a really stun ning gown.

PARTY DRESS FOR A GIRL Good Material for This Pretty Little Gown Is Cream Liberty Satin. Cream liberty satin is a very good material to use for this little dress. The bodice is cut in one, the neck and edge of the sleeves being trimmed with cream lace of vandyked pattern embroidered lightly with silver thread. The skirt is trimmed at the edge with deep lace to match that on bodice. A sash of soft blue satin ribbon is passed round the waist; the ends are drawn to the front and knotted. Materials required: Three and onehalf yards satin 44 Inches wide, 1% yard wide lace; 1% yard narrow lace, 3% yards ribbon. Suede Gloves. When women stopped wearing the chamois gloves they did not altogether abandon this type of glove, for the soft mocha and velvety sued* auem to have quite taken (heir place These skins are so soft and fine, so exquisite In texture, that It is small wonder a dainty, fastidious woman enjoys wearing them. Black is always wanted, of course; white is quite fashionable, and delicate champagne shades, pearly grays and soft fawn caters are equally modish. Two clasps to the vogutoh fastentag oo Hmm dainty handoavertngs.

WOES OF AVIATION JUDGES Like Umpires at Baseball and Football Matches, They Have Their Troubles. Judges at aviation meets, like umpires at baseball and football matches and others in positions of great responsibility, have their own woes. The men who figured in the recent tournament at Belmont park, New York, certainly had their share of trouble. In addition to the special harassments connected with the work of supervising the contests, there were others. This story is told in connection with thef affair: Their duties, however, would have been rendered far less arduous had it not been for the multitude of requests that came to them over the telephone. The bell in theli stand rang almost incessantly and in many cases the interferers with the workings of the judicial mind were women. One morning while the judges were considering a stock of protests that filled the available space in ths tower the telephone began to jingle and James A. Blair, Jr., dropped a f ncument he was reading to the others and sprang to answer it. “Are you there?” came over the wire in a highbred English accent. “Right here,” Mr. Blair answered in effect. “Is this the judges’ stand?” “Yes." “Oh, 1 aave been trying to get you. This is :he Countess of Blank. Will you order 'uncheon for six at the. clubhouse at ialf past 1? I want,” went on the tele phonist, without giving Mr. Blair a jhance to recover from the first shock :o his judicial dignity, “a hors I’oeuvre,, some soup, fish”—Bang! went the receiver. What Mr. Blaii said to the outside air may not be re lorded. But if the countess got her uncheon that day she must have sent tier order through in another way. RAMESES, A GREAT EGYPTIAN Was Inordinately Vain and Ostentatious, but a Courageous and Determined Fighter. ■ Raineses’ superb statue In Turin is proven by his surviving body to be a faithful portrait, showing us at least the outward man as he was. In person he was tall and handsome, with features of dreamy and almost effeminate beauty, in no wise suggestive oi the manly traits which he certainly possessed. For the incident at Kaflesh showed him unquestionably a man of fine courage with ability to rise to a supreme crisis; while the Indomitable spirit evident there is again exhibited in the tenacity with which he pushed the war against the great Hittite Empire and carried his conquests, even if not lasting, far into northern Syria. After his nearly fifteen years of campaigning, in which he more than redeemed the almost fatal blunder at Kadesh, he was quite ready td enjoy the well earned peace. He was inordinately vain and made far more ostentatious display of his wars on his monuments than was ever made by Thutmose. * With his name perpetuated in vast buildings distributed at all points along the Nile from the marshes of the northern Delta to the Fourth Cataract, Ram'eses lived on in magnificence even surpassing that of Amenhotep 111. His was the sunset glory of the venerable line which he represented.—Breadsted’s "A History of Egypt.” Real Jekyll and Hyde. Honest by day and burglar by night was James Coombs, a man of the lekyll and Hyde type, who, at Southimpton pleaded guilty to several iharges of burgiary and one of unlawfully wounding. Some hundreds of reys were found in the prisoner’s louse, and so numerous were the stolen articles they had to be removed tn a van. Coombs used to preach at Methodist chapels and Salvation Army meetings in the district. By day he Forked on the docks and at night burgled, chiefly unoccupied houses. In defense it was urged that the prisoner's acts amounted to monomania on his part, and that he led two lives, one respectable and the other criminal. The judge said the prisoner was a flanger to society, and might have done, well if he had applied his ingenuity to better directions. A sentence of three years’ penal servitude was passed. Dollar Bills From All Over. "That dollar silver certificate you have there has been gathered together from all over the world,” said the bank cashier. “Part of the paper fiber is linen rag from the Orient. “The silk comes from Italy or China. The blue ink is made from German or Canadian cobalt. The black ink is made from Niagara Falls acetylene gas smoke, and most of the green ink is green color mixed in white zinc sulphite made in Germany. “When the treasury seal is printed in red the color comes from Central America.” Samovar of the Romans. The samovar seems so distinctly a Russian invention that it will be a surprise to hear that it was a Roman invention. In the Swiss city of Avencbes, which was the Roman Aventicum and before that the ancient capital of the Helvetia there has just been dug up a bronse Instrument that has all the internal mechanism of the samovar. The jar itself is of a different shape, but the use of charcoal was clearly infllcated, and the ornamentation ■howed that it was meant for keeping trine hot

FLAX IS PROFITABLE Wonderful Paying Proposition In Western Canadian Prairies. So much is heard of the wheat, oats and barley grown in the prairie lands of western Canada, and so much has been told of the wealth to be made out of the raising of cattle on the succulent and rich grasses Jf those fertile plains, that a most Important product has been almost lost sight of, Flax. Recent press reports adviso us that on one of the last boats to clear from Fort William (at the head of Lake Superior) for Buffalo, there were 241,000 bushels of flax valued at $583,220, and on another boat leaving the same day there were 288,000 bushels valued at $720,000. There has been a big demand for Canadian flax this season, and the lake movement has been very heavy. Flax is always a sure crop, and gives to the farmer who is anxious for quick return after getting on his land, the chance he is looking for. There is opportunity for thousands yet, on the free homesteads of 160 acres, and many of these are available within short distance of the lines of railway that are already built or under construction, either on the main line or branches. Besides these free grant lands there is an opportunity to purchase from railway and land companies at reasonable prices. The display of western Canada’s grains in the straw as well as threshed grains and grasses recently made at St Louis was an excellent demonstration of what the country can io. It proved splendid as an illustration of the resources of that vast prairie country, which during the past year has again proven its ability to proluce excellent yields of wheat, oats ind barley—and flax. Not only this, but the splendid herds of cattle are a, source of large revenue. There is a fund of information to be had by reading the Canadian government literature, copies of which may be had tree by applying to your nearest Canadian government agent TOO FREQUENT. /ua v)iT si Connie —Why did you quarrel with Dick? Grace —Why, he proposed to me last night. Connie —What of that? Grace —Why, I accepted him only the night before. STUBBORN ECZEMA ON HANDS “Some nine years ago I noticed small pimples breaking out on the back of my hands. They became very Irritating, and gradually became worse, so that I could not sleep at night. I consulted a physician who treated me a long time, but it got worse, and I could not put my hands In water. I was treated at the hospital, and It was just the same. I was told that it was a very bad case of eczema. Well, I just kept on using everything that I could for nearly eight years until I was advised to try Cutlcura Ointment. I did so, and I found after a few applications and by bandaging my hands well up that the burning sensations were disappearing, ( could sleep well, and did not have any itching during the night. I began after a while to use Cutlcura Soap for a wash for them, and I think by using the Soap and Ointment I was much benefited. I stuck to the Cutlcura treatment, and thought if I could use other remedies for over seven years with no result, and after only having a few applications and finding ease from Cuticura Ointment, I thought it fleserved a fair trial with a severe and stubborn case. I used the Ointment and Soap for nearly six months, and I am glad to say that I have hands as clear as anyone. “It is my wish that you publish this letter to all the world, and if anyone doubts it, let them write me and I will give them the name of my physl. elan, also the hospital I was treated at" (Signed) Miss Mary A. Bentley, 18 University St., Montreal, Que., Sept 14, 1910. Companions In Misery. Ella— For all sad words of tongue or pen— Stella—Forget It; I’m an old maid myself. MBNT fan* to cure any case of Itching, Blind. W'rt-tlng rrPmtmrilng PIIm In Itn UdaV*, Ko. Tour tracts to the Hottentots may count for little compared with your acts to your own washerwoman. Mr*. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup. ForcMldren teething, softens the gums, reduces lutMnwCnri allay* pain, cures wind colic. 2&c a bottle. Ever notice what poor care other people take of their health? Mr*. Austins Buckwheat Flour gives you i really good wholesome breakfast. Don’t make the mistake of claiming tub mtst make one.

MILLIONS SYRUP oyflGS —a ELIXIRjySENNA FOR COLDS AND HEADACHES, INDIGESTION AND SOUR STOMACH, GAS AND FERMENTATION, CONSTIPATION AND ® j BILIOUSNESS. WITH MOST SATISFACTORY RESULTS. g 5 MF' ‘ CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. || IN THE CIRCLE | ON EVERY PACKAGE OFTHE GENUINE * I THE WONDERFUL POPULARITY OF THE GENUINE SYRUP ■ OF FIGS AND ELIXIR OF SENNA HAS LED UNSCRUPULOUS ■ MANUFACTURERS TO OFFER IMITATIONS, IN ORDER TO OB g ■ MAKE A LARGER PROFIT AT THE EXPENSE OP THEIR I g I ■ CUSTOMERS. IF A DEALER ASKS WHICH SIZE YOU WISH | I OR WHAT MAKE YOU WISH WHEN YOU ASK FOR J SYRUP OF FIGS AND ELIXIR OF SENNA, HE IS PREPAR- I- ! I ING TO DECEIVE YOU. TELL HIM THAT YOU WISH THE leiNT OF ALCOHOL ■ GENUINE, MANUFACTURED BY THE CALIFORNIA FIG 3 X" ’ S SYRUP CO. ALL RELIABLE DRUGGISTS KNOW THAT I■ THERE IS BUT ONE GENUINE AND THAT IT IS MANU- J ’ 'I FACTURED BY THE CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. ONLY S 1 j '■ IM i I >KI f-11 l&uiimMGswc? i PRINTED STRAIGHT ACROSS.NEAR THE BOTTOM. AND IN J• J THE CIRCLE.NEAR THE TOP OF EVERY PACKAGE.OF THE GENUINE.. ONE SIZE ONLY. FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING miniaturf pirrnef DRUGGISTS. REGULAR PRICE 50c PER BOTTLE. OF PACKAGE. » . ■ . . i . . SYRUP OF FIGS AND ELIXIR OF SENNA IS ESPECIALLY ADAPTED TO THE NEEDS OP LADIES AND CHILDREN, AS IT IS MILD AND PLEASANT, GENTLE AND EFFECTIVE, AND ABSOLUTELY FREE FROM OBJECTIONABLE INGREDIENTS. IT IS EQUALLY BENEHOAb FOR WOMEN AND FOR MEH YOUNG AND OLD. FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING DRUGGJST& ALWAYS BUY THE GENUINE. California Fig SyrupCo, W. 1.. *3.50 & *4 SHOES M Boys' Shoes, $2.00. *2.50 and ss.oo. Best in the world. If I could take you into my large factories at Brockton, Mas*.. ’k’JW and show you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes are made, the superior B-g&jf . Ma workmanship and the high grade leathers used, you would then understand why Dollar for Dollar I Guarantee My Shoes to hold their flw »>, look and fit better and wear longer than any other $3.00, $3.50 i shoes you can buy. Do you realize that my shoes hare been the standard for over 30 Ygfez/,, 1 yean; that I make and tell more $3.00, $3.50 and $4.00 shoes than any /SK ocher manufacturer in the United States ? n . - SSS.TSS:-SKsttSisr-CAUTION! nai"eandprtcestumpedonYhPbo«orn.TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE If your dealer cannot supply you withW. Maa*. SIOO.OO for an Idea Swift & Company issue every year a calendar illustrated in colors. Swift’s Premium Calendar for 1911 is entitled “The Courtships of American Poetry." It contains reproductions of four beautiful paintings—“ John Alden and Priscilla,” "Hiawatha and Minnehaha," i “Maude Muller and the Judge,” “Evangeline and Gabriel." We want an idea for our 1912 Premium Calendar. Send 10 cents in coin, or stamp*, or one t cap from a jar of Swift’s Beef-Extract, or 10 Wool Soap wrappere for the 1911 calendar so you ; may see what is wanted, then send in your idea for the 1912 calendar. For the be»t idea submitted and adopted w* will pay March Ist, 1911, $25-0° $20.00. 3rd, $15.00. 4th, SIO.OO. sth and 6th, $6.00. 7th to 11th. $2.00. 12th to 21st. sl-00. Ideas must be in by February 15th to be considered. w I Send for Swift’s Premium Calendar for 1911 to-day. You will have to have It to get the idea. Address Swift & Company 4161 Packers’Ave,Chicago,mtooh 1

Absent-Minded. The professor had just sneezed for the thirtieth time, and it naturally attracted some attention. “What’s the matter with the profeesor?” asked the visitor. “He appears to have a bad cold.” “Oh, no,” eaid Madame la Profeesoress. “It is only his fearful absentmindedness. I left him in charge of the baby for a few moments this morning, and when he cried he gave him the pepper-pot to play with instead of his rattle.”—Harper’s Weekly. A Little Mixed. Admiral Evans, at a luncheon in San Francisco, said of a naval policy he disliked: “It is mixed and Illogical. It reminds me of Bob Backstay, who became engineer on a submarine. “ 'Bob,' said a friend, ‘don’t you find it dangerous work, this knocking about in a submarine deep beneath the sea?’ “ ‘Yes, very dangerous,’ Backstay admitted, ‘but a man’s got to do something, you know, to keep his head above water.”’ The next time you feel that rwallowing sensation, the sure sign of sore throat, gargle Hamlins Wizard Oil immediately with three parts water. It will save you day* and perhaps week* of misery. There Is always poison in the wound that is Inflicted by a friend. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAT Take KAXATIVB BROMO Quinine Tablet* Druggists refund money if it falls to cure. B. W. GSO VSU signature is on each box. Sso. Free lunch to sometimes pretty expensive food. Mrs. Austins Buckwheat Flour gives you a really good wholesome breakfast. When a woman has an eye for the beautiful she hunts up a mirror.

What Ails Do you feel weak, tired, despondent, have frequent headaches, coated tongue, bitter or bad taste in morning, “heart-burn,” belching of gas, acid risings in throat after WM WMn* eating, stomach gnaw or burn, foul breath, dizzy spells, poor or variable appetite, nausea at times and kindred symptoms ? If you have any considerable number of the above symptom* you are suffering from biliousnet*, torpid liver with indigestion, or dyspepsia. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery is made — up of the most valuable medicinal principles known to medical science for the permanent Ml l| cure of such abnormal condition*. It I* a most Us efficient liver invigorator, stomach tonic, bowel regulator and nerve strengthener. The “Golden Medical Discovery” is not a patent medicine or secret nostrum, a full list of its ingredients being printed on its bottle-wrapper and attested under oath. A glance at these will show that it contains no alcohol, or harmful habit-forming drugs. It is « fluid extract made with pure, triple-refined glycerine, of proper strength, from the roots of native American medical, forest plants. World'* Dispensary Medieal Aeooototion, Prop*., Buffalo,

The Army of Constipation la Growing Smaller Every IMyb CARTER’S UTTLE LIVER PILLS mo | X. ties. H njr*xq Hons use them for W ( SA Usafiachs, IMAU.HLL, SMALL DOSE, SMAUPRICR Gciitiino muubew SignatuT© LIVE STOCK AND MISCELLANEOUS Electrotypes IN GRBAT VARIETY FORj SALE MT THE LOWEST PRICES BY WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION 321-531 W. Adam, St., Chicago b— SO— null I iiaiaM Ml mm ■ I fell CANNING FACTORIES FOR Sill y Fer Farms, Large CemmunU tleaerTowa*. 15 sizes. Pries* L SBS to SBSO. Capacities as high si 9,000 cans tomatoes or 80,000 can| fruits in 10 hours. Tbhms: A poi laagfeait" teteaMtSTfi qe to f secured or fee returned. Frej r ATENT 558 Uth Bt., Washington; 268 Dearborn BL, UNcagg DEFIANCE STIBCH E-VES W. N. U, FT. WAYNE, NO. 2-191 L