The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 26, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 23 October 1924 — Page 6

, in HRbi. father J<®£ Best for Colds Bronchitis, Asthma and all throat troubles. Builds new strength. NO DANGEROUS DRUGS owe SIXTY-4tm< YCARS OF SUCCESS ’77 / TOfWOFFOMn I Alright I ID • I I 1 ****Si^J “*"* I II ZU*to /or m*r// 11 yoytan II 1 |vStSS3SHEE3B|/ I Ows efftUOM Block i ZlAfi\ m jusisss- \\ f( Mr L uto * *• 11 I OoMMri th. w I I I U* <"•*■ M*d« °i SS W w sa ® e mgrw®»wowß» m m II tMa eanSy «mmC > < Unsold »y vw* Good Kidneys Meaning Life Keep Them Clean and Free from Poisonous Waste with Dr. t Garey’s Marshroot Pre- ~ acription No. 771. 6 Ounce Jottie, 75c No Drags — Jost Roots sad Harbs — Aad Money Baek If It Don't Help You Woodsrtally. When back aches and puffiness shows under the eyes, it means that your kidneys need cleaning—need to be built up. it may mean much more if quick action isn’t taken—your very life may depend on what you do today. Dr. Carey's Marshroot Prescription 777 is for kidney and bladder troubles and for that purp»«e has been used w ith what might be called phenomena) success for w years. It has helped thousands and has saved many lives. It is rigidly guaranteed—if Lt doesn't help you in one week’s time, money back. In tablet and liquid form at all real druggists everywhere. Price 75c. If your local druggist hasn’t it. he can get it from the Carey Medical Laboratories at Elmira. N. Y. Ttie universe is full of magical things patiently waiting for our wits to grow sharper. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION cSW U-ANS Lt fof* Bi Hot water Sure Relief Bell-ans 25< ANO 75< MCXASES EVERYWHERE The friendship of a child is the brightest gem set upon the circlet of society. The plea of ignorance will never take away our responsibilities. Are You Weak? Nervow? Rnadowß? Rocky Comfort. Mo.—“l can recommend Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescript »tr few women who are tn a nervous and JMEMP*Ek rundown state. uB When 1 had be1W come weak, runIwW down, and in a W nervous state 1 |k 7/ took Dr. Pierce's ) Favorite Pre- / scription sad \ v found it very helpful in giving x me strength and quieting ray nerves. The ‘Favorite Prescript io®* is b splcTiditi buiMtsoW” up tonic."—Mrs. Earnest Kimbrough. If you want to be well, ask your dealer for this Prescription, mb tablet or liQuia wcm. note ur- rterce, Buffalo. N. Y, for free advice-

The Lord of Thunder Gate

CHAPTER XVll—Continued. —2o——a night I said. ’Bob. don’t <o out again tonight. Think of your ancle at home—’“ He was warm to Sis work now. Sanderson could hear no more, and without a word shuffled out of the room again. The sound »f his footsteps, so lagging and dragging and hopeless, startled Williams for an instant. Bob’s feet bad made the self-same noise when he left Fualilkt. Shu-shu-shu down the hall. It was uncanny. A fancy came to the old man tn speak with the Japanese lord, it would not do to press him for facts until evening, for he hud already said that he was tired. Perhajw he would enjoy a view of the city and the bay; many had said that this was very restful. Sanderson knocked at the door. "It will please me greatly.” Wells agreed. “Also my wife, who has never men a great city.” He clapi»ed his hands, calling. “O-Hnna-San I” With Sanderson preceding them, they walked up the spiral staircase wntch led to the tower room with Its many windows. Lord, the times he’d gone up those stairs to the tower r«MHU. that had been his room. Well* was thinking. The warm nights he had gone higher up the stairs, to the roof! Wells, the moment that he was in the room, was oblivious to Saniler»<»n's comments on the broad bay. the city below. Uncle Jim had kept the -••••it, it* a ftirinv-- there were old iw»sters on the wall, class pictures, even a stilt he'd worn the last year at college and left behind as “worn out.” A bureau drawer was partly, open, and as Sanderson carefully closed It. Wells saw linen —all of his old stutf. And he had thought that i'ncle Jim had been "through with him!’’ Ou tlie dresser he saw an old photograph of a man. a young man with smiling face, who was wearing that selfsame suit. Had Klien seen It? He'd better get her out of the room —out quickly, mighty quickly— Elleq hud seen it. before Wells. Had she ever seen the original, ever, anywhere? There was something familiar, distressingly familiar, yet she could not say what It was. Had Wells net been no anxious to hurry her out c-f the room, site would have thought no more about It. But there came to her remembrance of a sleeping man's face on the ship, a face from which the bandage had fallen and which without It bad seemed surprisingly youth ful—- • • • • * • • Down at the docks a cabin-boy, with shore leave, had already found out where this San’son lived, and that In the employ of this tnuch-too-ricb white man was a servant in sjtnpathy with the radicals. Not a brave man. but one willing to help when at no danger to himself. The cahln-boy walked with railing sea-acquired gait In the direction given him. Suppose, his Inflamed mind taunted him. supi>ose KayainaSan were to leave this city? The cabin-boy, having little gold, cotdd not follow him. If the robber of the poor was to receive his reward. It must be done at once, tonight if possible. The cabin-boy found the house, an I slunk down the areaway. There was a brief conversation with the cook’s heljwr. Ylss. the cabin-boy had nixtin in house, could sjamk wlss. preeze? The “cousin.” when brought to the doof. must be ccmvlnced in hissing Japanese that no danger but much honor would come to himself: honor, and the month's wages of the cabin-boy. It was soon agreed upon. -You will ow along rhe stone path ax you did now” the "enusln” directed him. "You will And a door. That is to the basement. Hide yourself securely. I will be unafde to see you. for there Is to be a great dinner. Much depends up<m me 1 will polish the sliver, ami peel the potatoes, anti even cut the radishes Into shapes as la done in the poorest houses in my village, but none here understand thia art. After the dinner, the master, the mistress, the Japanese lord—what Is hla name again?—and his woman will spent! tlie evening in the room of books and will not be disturbed. I will Inform you when the dinner begins. You may then slip np the back stairway. which I will show you. And secrete your*elf in the lord’s roam.” “Which is the lord’s room? You win show me?*' -1 will not. Some one might discover me with you. It la to he remembered. brother, that should you be detected I know nothing of you. I receive excellent pay here, and will shortly leave for a ranch which 1 will rent." He smiled. “There—l talk t»>o much. The lord's room? There are two. One for him. and one for the white woman. 1 do not know which is which. Y«m must—! have It!—wait tn the IlHle closet In which tln.-n is kept. It Is the first door on rhe left, and opposite the two rooms. Tell me.” eagerly, “you kill the lord for hl« fields and money that he has taken from the poor? Ho! I know better. He has taken a maid whom you admired, or perhaps your wife." -No. Never that—! have no wtfw l! is for the cause! The leader has said that one who strikes earns all the delights of Heaven.” “1 do not believe." slowly, scratching hta heavy Jowl, “that you have courage enough for the purpose. Yon will steal In the house, and I will be blamed. No. 1 do not believe I will let you In." The cablo-boy trembled with earnestness, and pleaded his purpose; the other was adamant. Killing? Yea, he could be In a remote portion of the house, where his every act would be watched, hla presence observed. He would be unsuspected. But theft—here was another matter, and be might be accused. The cabin-boy frit that some proof «u needed. “I—this fit not the firri.

By SIDNEY HERSCHEL SMALL .(Copyncbt by Ths Bobbe-Merrill Co,) "Aell It was you? Did- he struggle?" “With all the strength of Jtls thirty well-fed years! He nearly overcame me. but —” “Thirty !* shouted the other. “He had a straggly beard like the Sacred Goat.” “No . . . not like a goat. Not as thick as a gout's. Yes, of course, straggly. Yes ... I was thinking of some one else who Is marked for destruction.” "Did you kill him or did you not?” "1 told you.” “What color was his blood?" "Black!" “I saw rhe nobles at sword-play. One was cut. He bled red as a dog's tongue. I think you He!” A voice from the kitchen, calling . . . Notn’d’n uom. where wus that accursed boy, with all of the work before him . . . "Come —I will not permit you—" “Then return the money which 1 have paid you. or 1 will tell of It to your employer, the honorable cook! I know that money. I cun tell It by a mark." The houseboy stroked tils pocket thoughtfully. “1 still think you he.” he jsiid mournfully. “But —well —you will not steal? —no?—very well. I will assist you. as the money will go far with me. You have It all clear?” It wns all dear. When, summoned, the cabin-boy vanished up the stairway, crept Into the linen closet, leaving the door a bit o|»en that he mighr hear and see. One band he kept on the knob that he might close it if necessary. The other w hetted an already keen knife on the sole of Ids shoe. **«•••• Alberta was proud of her arrangement for the dinner. It was really Ray's home<x»niing dinner; that Kayama and his wife were there was an unpleasant incident. However. Uncle 'RI 1 ’lly 11 Ellen Was—as He Had Imagined Her—. Just Ellen.

"Black!"

Randy would believe the Japanese; he would find that those things which Ray had hinted at in his letters were true. After that—she smiled to her self—Uncle Sandy would be himself again, would give her a free rein to do as she wished. Surely this was worth a distasteful conversation. It would make Ray secure. She und Ray —she ami Ray. Always In that order. She loved him. loved him dearly; and with her money (<»he thought of It as her own now) what couldn’t they do! Wells had chosen ns his kimono an austere silk; an unluxtrous black, which made him appear very sallow. II was unrelieved hy any embroidered figure. His forearm seemed lean as the wide folds «»f the sleeve fell away front It. He looked a fit harbinger of 111 news, a veritable death-bird. Just before the hour set for dinner he tapped at Ellen's door. That he gave no gasp of surprise convinced Wells that he would be all fee in the ordeal which was to foltow. Ellen was— as he had Imagined her. Just Ellen. Madame, the proprietress of the little Yokohama shop, had dune her work writ Bo Alberta recognized when Rlen descended to the lower hall Alberta had never seen such a silk, silk from a master-weaver of the Ta Triug K’ho, the Great Pure Kingdom, surh as was. In the old days, reserved for the Patace itself. The bluish-rioiet of the gown seemed to surge upward to meet the soft circle of Jade-green which made rhe bodice, as if jealous of the contact with the white skia

Declares Matinee Idol Is Memory of the Past

“Yea.” said the old actor reminiscently. “the matinee hl«l is a thing of the pari. He is only a memory. Tbe moving picture hero of the screen nas supplanted him. The girls and w<*men have put the film star on a pedeetai. and they gi<* him that adoration no matter whether be te in California, or Algiers, while viewing the picture. “A score of years ago tbe matinee idol was in the zenith of hta glory. People of the present day cannot real Hte how the women used to idolize thetq. There was Harry Montague. George Rlgnold of ‘King Henry V* fame: Osmond Tearle, who started tn The Silver King'; Charley Thorne, the leading man at the old Union Square theater; Harry Crisp, handsome Jack Barnes, who was Adelaide Neilson's

■ THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

above. Anil as the weaver had woven, so had the maker designed: It was beauty adorning beauty. Alberta felt eclipsed beside the ’ wonder of the gown and the girl’s own sweetness. Wells sensed this and was pleased. The table conversation was trite Wells was very grave, answering Williams' purposeless questions concern ing Japan with exactness. Alberta's queries about Oriental customs with elaborate courtesies. Sanderson sat silent through the dinner, only nodding his head when the Japanese explained some interesting detail of the All found it difficult to follow his wonts, the “I” was always “r," he spoke In singsong, almost, Ellen thought, like the girls in the Flows* Boats of China. With the disappearance of the last dish from the table, and the bringing of coffee and tobacco, all felt the air become ten.<e. Ellefi had wished tuore than once that hFr man would Include her in the conversation; she knew that under the calmness he was excited. This because of the careful way In which he spoke, the great attention that she knew he was giving to .the stilted pronunciation of each word. And she was almost sure—almost sure that She knew. “Let us go to the library,” Sanderson said at last. “I have given orders that we are not to be interrupted. It will be quiet there." CHAPTER XVIII Wells fumbled with his cigarette. He felt very cold, although the room was warm with a seacoal fire. Alberta had seen that all of the setting was ready .nicely arranged: a row of chairs edged about the hearth, with Sanderson l>etween Ray and herself, next the Japanese, lastly, Alberta's new aversion, the Japanese's wife. Williams was sunk luxuriously In his padded chair, but none of the others was at ease. The patch over Wells’ eye gave him a sinlsteriy brigandish appearance. He fastened Safiderson with the other, which seemed smaller than usual; hard, glittering, utterly Japanese. His words were soft and smoothed, very gentle and controlled. There was not even an echo of Wells In this modulated speech with its strange change of “r” for “1." “I was with the dead man when he was passing into the First Heaven,” Wells began. This, he considered, was strictly true. He patted his finger- i tips together, choosing his words with ' care; "It was in the last Prayer-Hour. I: was reflecting ujw>n the saying that ‘evil {Missions restrain the perfectness of the human heart' when a serv-! unt brought me the news. My revered father had just died, and 1 was absorbed tn devotion for him. But it is said that ’he who expts is mercy must give it’ ahd I accompanied the servant to the side of the white man." Wells felt that this was snfflclently Oriental In tone, and switched to the truth again. “Why was this man Idlled? Aaa! men have the same pas-, sions; the same sun warms us all. There was the matter of a pair of gold cuff-links.” Wells described their minutely, “which must have been seen by some thief. A knife. Zzutt! The work of an Instant." Wells heard them all sigh. This was start enough, and he awaited a question. “What had he been doing before you saw him?" Williams prompted. "There had been much brandy." Wells watched Williams’ air of satisfaction. The smug scamp! He folded his hands inside the sleeves of his kimono, fighting for the first time for self-control. “The dying man told me of hts; story. Why? Death opens-the moutii. perhaps. It is said that those who face the Invisible speak truth, as there is no longer need to He. Well. The trees were bare when this man began a long pllgrtniage. An endless journey that could have but one ending, i Before this was reached, the trees had blossopied. the petals fallen, and ripe fruit clustered on the branches Ho! this man had the gift of words. I -saw the building of a great bridge. , A disagreement: the dead nmn did not tell me what this was. nor d d I ask. He had set out npon a broad trail, a road bordered with many comforts and soft cushions, but which narrowed and narrowed, until, as the river which has lt» source at the ten- 1 pie of Jlxo. God of Travel, there was hut one village remaining to be visited. The village of death. The man could speak! I saw nights of crid and rain, when he would foolishly fortify himself with brandy. I saw days when he was a follower of the mother of beggars, scooping ancient meat like any passing mendicant. ’ saw him harried by doga.” <TO BS CONTINUKD I

The girls throughout tbe country bought his pictures and used to wear their hair in what was known as tbe Montague euri. Who that knows those days can forget when Monty, as be was known, used tn take a Jaunt flown to Long Branch, then the fashionable resort? He was tall, slender, broad shouldered, with r alight, silky tnua taehe, big, dreamy eyes, with hand w»me white teeth. Without being the least effeminate he used to wear s double-breasted blue serge mM. white flannel yachting cap. with a heavy gold cord, and was one of the first to introduce tbe low russet shoe, as they were called in those days.”—New York Sub a«d Globe. . ; . ■ . - - - . . Painter “Covered” Many Wars The famous British war artist. Frederic Villiers, who died recently in LoaaArtnwr, Tripoli, tbe Balkan wars the World war were aU covered oy aha.

VriOTQnllHil f Buildfrig Advisory Committees for Town Beautifying Ugliness Is becoming the rule in many of the extreme aspects of modern town life, the Literary Digest comments sadly. The suave writer calls it "indifference of the greater public” |to “the general artistic and natural - amenities of towns and rural areas." ' The beauty of the past is sacrificed to •' make way for modern improvements. I says the Christian Science Monitor. I voicing a plea for concerted effort at town-beautifying: j “It is when things get bad. when I they seem at their worst, that endur- : ance reaches its limit. Already in ; parts of America something has been i done toward the suppression of blll- ' boards that bade fair to conceal the ; country as completely as the smoke screen in a battle at sea shields the ; fleet, and without the same reason or i necessity. The preservation of the American amenities, if too loeel for the art commission in Washington, is i left largely to woman s clubs. The English would take more thorough measures. Architects, roused to a realization of the sadness of a land from which beauty has flown, and eager to stay Its flight, suggest the formation f of advisory art committees in towns and country both. Their function would be much the same, though on a more restricted scale, as that of the English art commission modeled after the pattern of the American. The committees would advise and interfere in their own districts —interfere when some avoidable piece of vandalism was proposed; advise when new buildings were to be put up, new streets laid, new open spaces planned. “They would have no power but. the hope is. would exercise an influence gradually growing irresistible as the public consciousness shmild awaken to a sense of the part beauty plays in life. Such, in a few words. Is the scheme suggested by the Royal Institute of British Architects for the guardianship of beauty in England.” Removed Billboards From All Highways Definite steps by civic organizations to eHmihate billboards from the highways of the Pacific coast are expected to result from the impetus given the movement by the Standard Oil company of California, which has torn | down 1,200 of its roadway signs in California. Oregon and Washington. The company removed its highway advertisements on the ground that they detracted from the beauty of the roads, and ordered that hereafter such signs should be confined to commercial zones. “There was instant public response up and down the coast.” said Kenneth R. Kingsbury, president of the company. “We have had eilitorials. let* ters and telegrams by the hundreds indicating that a keen feeling exists concerning the marring of our great highways by signs.” The Skyline boulevanl, a great highway being completed from San Francisco southward along the high ridges overlooking the Pacific ocean, is reported to he insured against biilboa~ds. Ugliness a Liability Attractiveness has been deemed an important asset in the development of such thoroughfares as Fifth avenue in New York and Michigan boulevard in Chicago. There is no question that the beautiful home in an attractive residence district has a value far in excess of the coimnonplace home in a district of uneven development. But does attractiveness pay in commercial building in general as in the ease of residences? Is it good business to put up an attractive office or store building rather than a plain, unadorned structure. even an ugly structure? It was observed in one of the large cities recently that the ugly coinmen ial building was the one most often without tenants and the structure that as a rule was the first to be torn down and replaced. Nn doubt that observation would bold in many instates, in many cities. —Kansas City Times. Make Home “Fire-Safe” The man who builds a fire-safe home la a good citizen. He Is adding soiuethUig permanent to tbe wealth of his community, and he has provided a fire barrier that in itself will rend to lessen conflagration and provide st<*pping points for them. Put a fire-safe roof covering on your home. Various kinds of fire-re-sistive roofing have been tested and tried and found to be well worth their slight extra cost. The man with a fire-safe home will generally find that ills banker will grant a larger proportion of its cost »n first mortgage loans owing to tbe added security. Gaar<f Against Fire When the house is completed you do not want the fear of tire always before you. Ti>o«e who have seen the results of large conflagrations will realize something of the tragedy of thousands of homes being destroyed and hundreds of borne owners luring their all. Even thvee who are insured never get full comjiensalion for all their losses. Many things are destroyed in a home that money cannot replace, and there is no adequate insurance against the risk of human life. One o/ the Best One way to save listening to others’ troubles is to keep up a constant telling of your own.—Buffalo Enquirer. One of Lifit Big Moments Man is seldom prouder than when he gives advice which is accepted and turns out good.—Buffalo Enquirer. WAie/b Foot the Shoe Is On The reasonableness Q f a wage depends on whether you are doing it or

CurrenJ witX/ ON HER WAY They were on their honeymoon trip in the mountains, and the bride's mother had insisted on accompanying the otherwise happy couple. Suddenly the groom let out a yell. “Phyllis! Phyllis!" he shouted. "Your mother has fallen over a diff!" “Heavens!” screamed the young woman. “Is she badly hurt?” “Not yet! Site hasn’t stopped!”— The American Legion Weekly A Bad Man Humiliated “Mesa Bill never comes back to the Gulch since he made his hit In the films.* “He’s afraid to," answered Cactus Joe. “Some of the boys hunted up the studio where he works and heard the rough way he let the motion picture director talk to him.” —Washington Star. The Same Thing The Loved One—And he said h« was willing to die for me? The Friend—Not exactly in those words, but that was the impression be was evidently trying to convey. “What did he say?” “He said he was ready to eat your cooking any time you said the word. WISE WORM —s Mo* «nnqE[ijgJg^y > —'J Chick—Don’t you want to play with I me, Mr. Worm? Worm—No, I'm afraid it might be foul play! Salad A trifle green eometimee we ere— Pathetic Is mj ballad— We have the oil and vinegar. But no one likes the salad. Not So Easy Magistrate—This man’s watch wae fastened in his pocket by a safety-pin. How did you manage tv get it ? Prisoner —Well, judge. 1 usually gets five dollars fer six lessons. —Passing Show (London). Rough Waves Pnnee Wilson—Don't you like th* sea? Tourist (at home a hairdresser)— Not when it’s marcelled.—The Timet of Cuba. Ship Ahoy! First Passenger—What’s all that noise? . Second Similar—l think I heart some one say that the captain was tacking. Profit Sharing Only—for Hei Horace —Your wife shares all youi pleasures and sorrows I suppoae? Al—Yes; she shares all my pleas ures. all right; but when the sorrow* come she goes home to her mother. UKELY TO BE CROWNED AWS “Why do you speak of him as Davit g a checkered career?" “Isn’t be always on tbe move?” Best Foot Notes Hslena Hen, the authoreee. Can equal any test; Her critics all admit her Foot notaa are the beat! A Certain Marksman ■ She—l heard you singing In your xxhu this morning. He—Oh. I sing a little to kill time. She—You have a good weapon. It Certainly Would She—Sine* our engagement has been broken off I will return the comb and brush set. He—Why? -It will make parting easier."— Tit-Bits. Yes, Why? * Mias Yoong—ln Turkey a woman doesn't know her husband until after she’s married him. Mrs. Wed—Why mention Turkey especially? A Reason -Do you mean to say you Mke this stupid play?" y “Good heavens, no!" “Why are yon clapping ss loud, then?" "To keep awake" BM Satisfied Mrs. Willis—A man marries to havo somebody to talk to. Mrs. Gillin—And a woman marries to have somebody to talk aboutI Stray Stories. 1

HN FJI Cleanses moutb and I teeth and aids digestion. gW Relieves that over- HK eaten testing and acid M mouth. Its l-a-s-t-l-n-g flavor I satlsiies the craving tor I sweets. Wrigley's Is double value in the benefit and I pleasure It provides. •jbwrw m mi 4 ujmjf . A Vi X \ flavor lasts feS ✓y pSy BMi<R ~power fl A coirpletc new set of dependable Champions at least once a year gives more power and qteed. Performance is greatly improved. Oil andgasare saved. Champion Spark Plug Co. Toledo. Ohio CHAMPION Dr,..4.11. torr, i.gt.r Radio-Reproduction Is balanced because it gives: fl. Beautiful ToneQuality. 2. Clarity in voice reproduction. * 3. Sensitivity on weak signals. 4. Harmonizes adjustment. 5. Ample sound Volume. For literature send your name or your dealer's to the manufacturer Multiple Electric w Products Co., Inc. 365 Ogdea Street Newark, New J-*ey JjSEgi"' Atlas products are guarantceil — Swim. ».r.lr wdiHi. **■*»' “fl fimteU ■■•■rafa. BW-aJaUhc. MU WMSUMri SYRUP 9 h. Mak’ a>4 CWMi'i k«s«i»Mr CMMraa stow h—tthy_sad frw gsm, ■ fton colic, diarrhoea. «•»»«>'•£ ■ eoostipetion and other trouble If Wtod ■ ■Hen !tat teethiny time. R al ware bring* romarknbteaDdsraUfyinameuUa. AtAtt AO. Kill I OeeosktSf / (Zflfll MU NYON'S paw mw PILLS for Conetipetion /AdK\ I and ether dieorder, due »• “There «a M ) ’ P.* P** T—fc Hor«“ jeuwS. k~p» »e« jw*. SanafacUon gwrvnutd money refunded Society people make as much fw* getting married as theatrical people do in getting divorced. NATURFSWARNINGS Those gse pains that come in the pit of the stomach and around the heart are Nature’s danger signals. They indicate somethmg wrong with stomach or bowels. Gas is caused by imperfect or delayed digestion. It presses against the heart and fangs. Serious heart or lung trouble, as well as digestive or intestinal disorders, no chances. If you suffer from gas, biboumess, dyspepsia, indigestion er constipation, seek immediate reltef through stme simpb, efficient remedy, such ae Jaques' Digestive Capsules. These may be depended upon to bring you qniek, sure relief. Get a bottle at once. Take at Nature’s first sign of digestive disorder. Taken regularly, Jaques’ Capeulee are a greet help even tn ebromc cases. fiO cento at druggists, or postpaid from Jnqnes CapsuteCoTPhttoburg. N. Y. W?nTU, FORT WAYNE, NO. 4V192A