The Kusa Industrial (Kusa, Okla.), Vol. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, September 28, 1917 Page: 3 of 4
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I
THE KUSA INDUSTRIAL
1
A New and Defter
Standard of
Baking Powder
Purity
AskYoat
Croomr
University of Notre Dame
NOTRE DAME INDIANA
Offer Complete Ceurae la Agricwltura
Veil eounea elm in Letter Journal Inn
library Solenoe Chamlstry Pharmacy Medl-
ArohlUotura Commerce end Lev
The men who can extract olive oil
from cotton seed should be able to
gather figs from thistle
Its Character
"He wiped up the floor with hla op
ponent
"What a sweeping victory I" '
THIS IS THE AGE OP YOUTH
Ton will look tea year younger II yoa
darken yonr agly griiily grey heira by
toeing "La Creole" Heir Drawing— Adr
Not a Dependent
"Have yon anyone dependent on
you?" asked the exemption clerk
"Well" replied Mr Meekton "Hen-
rietta ahowa me what to do with- my
money Hat he la most Independent
about It”
Spartan Women Suffered Untold Tertareo
' bat who went to be a Spartan? Take
"Fementna" for all female disorder
Price 60c and SLOO— Adv-
Some Gardener
Flatbnsh — la be embldextronaT
Bensonlmrat— Sure be can hoe
with both hands — Yonkers Statesman
Used to It
Doctor — Il'm have you ever been
ejected before?
The Don Jnan (undergoing re-exam-Inatlon)
— Oh yaaslr Little alfalra of
the heart y’know
An Elegant Translation
A Boston girl who had been taking
her first lesson In bicycle riding ex-
pressed hef satisfaction at borne' at the
result of the experiment
"The man said” she repeated "that
( had made most satisfactory progress
for a novice"
"Why did he really say that?" was
the aurprtsed query
"Well no" answered the Boston
young woman after a moment's reflec-
tion "What ha did aay was Ton’ll
do fuet rate for a new beginner I " —
Christian Register
Tee Much to Expect
We overheard on a Colllnwood car
tha beet excuse for not working that
we could ever have Imagined Flit It
for reference
One fellow said "How do you like
your Job down at the mill?”
"I ain’t workln' there no more” an
awered the other
"Oot a better Job?"
"Nope Ain’t got no Job"
"What did you quit for?"
"Well I couldn't aee no use In keep
In' on at It I Agger It that If I did
make good they’d expect me to keep
rtght on maktn good That's too mnch
to expect of anybody this kinds weath
er So I quit"— -Cleveland Plain Dealer
It Never
Disappoints
To insure clothes of snowy
whiteness on washday just
use
Rod HH Cro
Ball Bluo
88
Take no imitation but insist
on the genuine Red Cross
All good Grocers sell It
Large Package S cents
W dllTonic
Sold far 47 year For Malaria Cb'IU
ad ?fvr Alii Flee General
vlr0lbnln Iwulc ""AiVI
C
fy
SHEEP’S
CLOTHING
By LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE
mvamss Auks 1 anauwa
THt LOM WOLF” "THI MASS OWU"
Ik
tinkk I
V
CHAPTER XII I— Continued
—16
“Peter la hedging about referring to
the fact that Craven put up a very
prompt protest when you told me to
take the necklace Into the sunlight and
satisfy myself"
“Yes" Peter admitted gloomily
"Is the evidence complete enough?"
Mrs Beggarstail questioned gently
We didn't want to tell you this Betty
For my own part I'd rather you had
conspired with Tad to smuggle—'
“Don’t!" pleaded the unhappy wom-
an Bending forward elbows on knees
She stared somberly at the carpet “But
how" she asked "do you account for
that perfect counterfeit?"
"Simply Quoin replied "after that
affair of Thursday night on my own
responsibility I sent a wireless to Paris
to Cottier’s In Betty’ name The an-
swer came through Friday night say
lng that the original owner had sold a
paste duplicate to a dealer In articles
de Paris which he In turn had sold to
chance customer— definite descrip-
tion unavailable— the same day-that
the real necklace was taken from Cot-
tier’s by your sgent"
"It seema Incredible Of all men —
Tad Cravenl"
"You forget how little we know of
him" the Dowager Dragon put in
"Know of him?" Betty protested
looking up “Why everybody knows
Tad Craven I Go out among our friends
and try to find one who believes he
would do anything dishonest"
"And still I Insist you forget how
little we know of him Hark back Into
your memory my dear How long have
we known him? Twelve or fifteen years
at most How did he come to know
us? Through Introductions to a few
clubs Indorsed by Lord Evesden — who
was later drummed out of town for
card cheating and never came back
But Tad Craven stuck He didn't cheat
and he was amusing and aa long aa he
waa personable agreeable and seemed
to have money nobody bothered about
l)Is pedigree"
"I’ve been looking Craven up” Quoin
lupplemented "Listen I" He began to
read from a tiny memorandum book:
"Came to New York In 93 with a Bru-
sh musical comedy company Hla wife
Letty Craven fell 111 during the run of
the piece and died In a public hospital
of quick consumption After that Cra
ven got a Job with some show which
perished on the road When he turned
p again he was training with a gang
of professional sharpers with whom he
played a few turna on the transatlantic
ferry routs as capper But he dropped
that before he became known to the
police Later he was running with
gay Lord Evesden but shook him as
toon as be felt solid In New York and
those ngly whispers began to go round
about Evesden's play The rest U
mainly circumstantial damnation"
Quoin put away bla notebook and be-
gan to tick off hla potnta on bis fingera
"It may not have escaped you that
there’ve been some pretty stiff burglar-
ies among our friends In the last twelvs
years or so They weren't frequent
but they were all big hauls and every-
one was well planned and culminated
In a clean getaway And It so happens
when one comes to look Into-It that
Craven waa especially thick with all
the people victimised The biggest coup
was tha theft of the Joachim collec-
tion worth several hundred thousand
dollars Now Lydia Craven when aha
cam aboard the Alsatla was wearing
cameo from the Joachim collection
which she said her father had given
her on her fifteenth birthday Discreet
pumping on the part of Mr Beggar-
itaff has shown that date to have fallen
lust three months after Joachim was
robbed Incidentally the cameo disap-
peared as soon as Lydia and Craved
met on hoard There's a sinister thread
running all through tha history of
Yhaddeus Craven"
Ills voice trailed off Into allenA
Mrs Merrileea was eying him steadily
"You never got all that Information
together since morning?" Mrs Beggar-
staff prompted
"No" Quoin admitted "I’ve had
my ey on Craven for aome time'
"Why?" the old woman demanded
bluntly "What made you first suspect
him?" (
“Well replied Quoin “he never
rang true to me and when It began to
be rumored that be was a candidate
(or Bcttj's hand— I felt sure he wasn1'
worthy of her and made up my mind
to be sure before forbidding the
banns”
After a pause Betty looked up defl
antly “It does muke me out a hit of
an Idiot doesn't It?"
"Nonsense I W were all tuken In'
Peter protested "lexvk how I've nl
ways stuck up for Tad I But there's
one thing I WHnt to any: lie nmy be
a rotter and oU that sort of thing
mt that girl of Ids la a straight and
ine a proposition— "
"lo hush I ’el or! W all know
u re lu I )- with her But whnt la
ti’s -o tor? ' Retie pretexted with a
i t- i-H hype you're
i i I h' i e '( on set’ oM
o ' '-tint me?
To you aU old friends I can talk
about thla terrible thing But what
about the outsiders? My name linked
with that of a common criminal's— oh
am ashamed ashamed 1”
Unknown to her the Dowager Drag-
on waa nodding vigorously to Quoin
This last rose awkwardly and spoke
with a hesitation uncommon In him
“If you’ll leave It to me Betty" be
suggested almost timidly "I think I
can arrange matters with Craven and
recover your necklace tonight quite
without publicity And”— he glanced
at hla watch — “It's a quarter of eleven
If I’m to do anything I have no time
to lose"
t’
CHAPTER XIV
True to her Instinct for the dramatic
moment when the telephone Interrupt-
ed Mrs Beggarstaff answered with no
apparent emotion and nothing more
than a noncommittal "Yes?" followed
at a brief Interval by "Yes' If you
please at once” Then hanging up the
receiver she aet herself artfully to de-
lay Mrs Merrllees "This Is all very
well” she announced with complacent
determination "but I want to know
what real evidence you have got
against Craven"
“Nothing” Quoin admitted "beyond
circumstantial evidence which how-
ever well grounded wouldn’t hold to-
gether a minute under the analysis of
any ablebodied criminal lawyer”
"No actual proof?”
"Not a whit You may be sure Cra-
ven never took an active hand in any
of these affairs: merely engineered
them with his inside information and
superior Intelligence Be sure too
that whenever a Job was pulled off he
was always conspicuously somewhere
else"
"Then what do you propose doing?"
“Why — Betty permitting — scare him
silly and run him out of town I don’t
think we want more than that — aside
from the necklace"
"That will content me" Mrs Merri-
leea affirmed
Here a knock fell on the door and
the Dowager Dragon for all her pro-
tested Infirmity rose with the spryness
of youth
"No don’t go yet It’s only some-
thing I've been expecting And I want
one word more with yon — about the
girl Lydia Whatever you do under-
stand I won’t have her run out of
town or annoyed or frightened or
Ill-treated in any way"
With this she disappeared down the
hallway Followed a sound of voices
murmuring
Quoin and Mrs Merrileea lingered In
doubt and alienee the gaxe of each
seeking the other’s while to one side
by these two forgotten Peter Traft
waited watching some little sadness
and envy In hla heart
Not that he grudged Quoin the guer-
don of a lifetime’s unselfish devotloq
but be felt quit Justified In envying
them the hupplnesa that was to be
theirs If he could ever hope to see
Lydia Craven look up Into hla face aa
Betty Merrileea waa Just then looking
up at Quoin—
Betty In a melting humor and
gown representing the finest flower of
the Rue de la Palx to Peter's fancy
cut a figure that filled your eye And
In snch matters Peter esteemed him-
self a distinguished amateur
But once Lydia Craven bad entered
the drawing room Peter no longer
cared to look at Betty A fellow’s got
only a certain limited amount of eye-
sight after all and It's no good wast-
ing It on anything he isn’t really crazy
shoot
In the severity of her street dress
the girl's figure had a graciousness that
even Betty's couldn’t shadow And
Lydia's face set against the darkness
of on of those trim Uttle beta which
In those days were Just beginning to
oust the art-nouvean-coal-hod enormi-
ties — Lydln’s ruddy hair the transpar-
ent pallor of her brow tha fine glow
In cheeks fresh from tha rainy night
her dark and animated eyes brighten-
ing with surprise and bslf-tlmld plea
ure— taken altogether Peter thought
Lydia’s fairness was to Betty’s as sun
to candlelight
But with delight apprehension was
mixed In hla mind There were still
some phases of life Peter hadn't fath-
omed for ona the antagonism within
tha sexes— within the sex rather for
U was the attitudes often adopted
toward one another by the most ami-
able and delightful of women that per-
plexed his understanding
Now with real provocation on her
side what would he Betty's attitude
toward thla rival beauty?
Uls solicitude waa wasted Either
ha underestimated the generosity of
Betty or Lydla'a Ingenuousness dis-
armed Constraint was absent from
their meeting: they went at once to
each otber'a arms
"It's so good to find you here Betty
Oh good evening Mr Quoin— Mr
Traft good evening TU best part la
I thought you were stopping here and
was In despair when I found you
weren’t”
"It's dear of you hut — "
"I was so anxious to give you — this I"
Aa aha spoke the puzzle box left Lyd
lu's keeping finally and for all tlin
Betty Merrllees utterod a low cry
'This?' she questioned In a atrange
voice “What?"
"Must I say?” I) (11a laughed "I
don't believe you really want me to—'
"Not my necklace!" the womun
gasped
“There 1 I didn't tell— did I Mrs
Beggantaff?"
"No dear child but w knew all the
lime"
Incontinently Iydla waa over-
whelmed by a very unexpected un-
culled (or motherly aud protracted
emhrnce which while It didn't lack
trec'lim served us well the most dip
lomatic purpose of preventing the mri
from noticing Betty’s half-hysterical
attempts to open the puzzle box and
that the Dowager Dragon was making
significant faces at Quoin over her
shoulder
“Permit me Betty” Quoin suggest
ed "I think I know the trick—"
In another breath the box was open
the necklace In Its owner’a hands
"Merely my foolish delight to see
you again so soon my dear" A hand
patted affectionately -one of Lydla’a
flushed cheeks as released breathless
and wondering she stepped back to
readjust her hat
“You're awfully good to me Mrs
Beggarstaff But I can't atop a minute
I’ve another errand to run for father—
he’s very busy tonight — "
"Another errand I” Betty Merrileea
parroted out of a mind perhaps par-
donably confused
“Yea— I sha’n't be long Fattier
asked me to bring that to you bnt
promised to call for me within an hour
So I was to attend to the other errand
first and watt here with yon for him
But my taxicab broke down and—”
"Craven coming here?” Betty Inter-
rupted Incredulously hut checked sud-
denly at a look from Quoin
"As soon as he can get away" Lydia
affirmed "I mean of course wher-
ever you're really stopping — ”
“The Plata" '
"That's Just across the way Isn’t It?
It's odd of him to make such a mis-
take He said the Margrave distinctly
But TU ask for yon at the Plaza In
half an hour If yon don’t mind"
"Mind ! On the contrary" Mrs Mer-
rilees said pleasantly "I'll be delight-
ed Tad too That will be fun—
rather I We’ll have sapper together—
all of us"
"And so— good night for thirty min
utes" Lydia laughed "I must hurry"
"Walt a minute" Peter put In “I’m
off too you know and going your way'
"How do you know yon are 1" Lydia
demanded smiling back from the door
way
"Because that’s the way I'm going"
"But I don’t want yon now Mr
Traft — though I shall hope to aee you
again In half an hoar Good-by"
The ball-door closed leaving Peter
as dashed as Betty Merrileea was
thunderstruck as Quoin was thought-
ful as the smile of the Dowager Drag
on was satiric
There waa a Uttle pause
"What" Peter demanded “what dt
yon know about that?"
"After her yon loon" Quoin snapped
waking np with a start "If Craven
told her to go somewhere else first
be sore be never meant her to bring
that necklace here Don't yon see?"
“Aas!" Peter groaned smiting bli
forehead "Why didn't I think T" Seis-
ing hat and coat he threw open
the door even as tha elevator gat
clanged
The car had dropped from Bight bo
fore ha reached tha abaft Planting a
thumb on the push-button h educed
only a thin persistent grumble from
the annunciator belt steadily dimin-
ishing in volume as the car continued
wilfully to descend
Infuriated the young man commit-
ted the soul of the elevator attendant
to the nethermost depths of damnation
and turning to the stairway plnnged
down the flights In breakneck hast
three atepa at a time
Across the lobby he -aped aa on
hounded by furies and gained the car-
riage entrance barely In time to see a
taxicab pulling away from the curb
Peter gave chase affording midnight
wayfarers the diverting spectacle of a
beautifully arrayed yoong man— coat-
tails flat to the wind and rain top coal
streaming wildly from on arm th
other brandishing the dernier crl In
toppers— In mad mat pursuit of a
self-contained taxicab proceeding stol-
idly about Its business
Happily for Peter Its business in-
volved observance of traffic regula-
tions and when It paused to give pre-
cedence to a Fifty-ninth street cross-
town car Peter caught up— If some-
thing more rudely than h had thought
to Unable to check quickly on tha
greasy asphalt be skidded against the
door with a crash
"Hold hard I” he begged between
breaths "Give me a chancel"
"What the—" commented the chauf-
fear suspiciously
But at the same time Peter jerked
the door open and — a crawly oinking
sensation deserted hla midst: the far
waa Lydia after all I
She greeted this breathless appari-
tion with an inarticulate cry
"Tou forgot something" Peter
gaied In response climbing In
"What?"
“Mel” b declared settling Into tha
plac by her side then thrust hla head
out of the door and panted “It's aU
right driver Cut along— and don’t go
too fast— slippery pavement—"
“But Mr Traft — " Lydia expostu-
lated I’eter shut the door with a bang and
the car with an unobstructed way
picked up wary heel and stole on up
Fifth avenue
(TO B8 CONTINUED)
Cardiff la Prosperous
Cardiff Wulea has become known aa
the I’UtKliurgh of the British Isles Like
the A meric u city the coal mines are
largely resiMinslhle for Its boom al-
though shipping has played no small
part Roma men who were shipping
clerks two years ago now own a string
of ships and coal miners are making
$100 a week
Just to show that It bna made a lot
of money Cardiff Invested $ 150000 OU)
In the last British war loan This
works out at the rat of more than $750
a head of J")e population and la the
most remafiWble of all the contribu-
tions that cams from any one city la
tha British Isle
CALOMEL LIES YOU SICK UGII!
IT’S MECCURY MID SALIVATES
Straighten Up! Don’t Lose a Day’s Work! Clean Your
Liver and Bowels With Godson’s Liver Tons”
Ugh! Calomel make yon sick Take
a doss of tha vile dangerous drug to-
night and tomorrow yon may loan a
day’s work
Calomel la mercury or quicksilver
which causes necrosis of the bones
Calomel when it comes Into contact
with sour blla crashes Into it break-
ing It np This Is when you feel that
awful nausea and cramping If you
feel sluggish and "all knocked out" If
your liver la torpid and bowels consti-
pated or you have headache dlzzlnees
coated tongue If breath la bad or
stomach sour Juat try a spoonful of
harmless Dodson’s Liver Tone
Here's my guarantee — Go to any
drug atora or dealer and get a 60-cant
boRle of Dodson'a Liver Tone Take
a spoonful tonight and If It doaan’t
Canada’s liberal Ms? ©S
Wheat Land to Settlers
is open to you— to every fanner or farmer’s son p y
who is anxious to establish for j
himself a happy home and 1 fj
prosperity Canada’s hearty
Invitation this year Is more attractive
than ever Wheat la much higher but
her fertile farm land juat as cheap and
in the provinces of Manitoba Saskat-
chewan and Alberta
1 M An ImNiIi An iOoilr In I Srttbn
sad Ottos load UU to bva IIS to $20 fwAo
The area demand for Canadian Wheat will
keep up the price Where a farmer cafl act
near 6 for wheat end niae 20 to 45 buehela to
the acre he le boaad to auha aMwev — that’s
what yoa caa expect la West cra Canaria Won-
derful yields alea of Oats Peeler aad Plan
Mined fermle In Western Canada to fully aa
praStabtoan
The eseellaat gteeem fell of aotritloa are the only
food reonired etther for heef or dairy porpuooo
Ooodachoele thH(cbasortaooarMtntlioiu
orooUoot Thero le do enoaoel Seemed for form
labor to vppleee the naayroeaf 01 who ho TO
oolnaioorod fur too eor Write for nmrotoro oad
oonleolom os to reduced rollooy tamo la Sopo of
lmtolf rouoa Uuawo Caa Mia
O A COOK
2012 Mala hU Kumc City Mo
Ctatdlti Oovdnmtnt A feat
A Treat far Dad
One day someone sent me up a box
of cigars from the cigar store down-
stairs Arthur my office boy brought
them In and stood near my desk while
I unwrapped the package A a I opened
the box I said to him Jokingly — as he
waa too young to smoke— "Will you
have a cigar Arthur?" And Arthur re-
plied : "I don't smoke hut my father
does" So 1 said: “All right take one
for your father"
lie picked out a cigar and put It
away tn hla Inside coat pocket As he
started away I aald to him more out
of cariosity than anything else : “What
does your father do Arthur?"
Arthur remained silent and blushed
deeply It made me more curious than
ever
"Come speak up" I urged
"He k-k-keeps a cigar store" stam-
mered Arthur aa he bolted off — Fuck
YES! MAGICALLY!
CORNS LIFT OUT
WITH FINGERS
You say to the drug store man
"Give me a small bottle of freeaone”
Thla will cost very Uttle bat will
positively remove every hard or soft
corn or callus from one's feet
A few drops of this new ether com-
pound applied directly upon a tender
aching corn relieves the soreness In-
stantly and soon the entire corn er
callus root and aU dries up and can
he lifted off with the fingers
Thla new way to rid one's feet of
corns was Introduced by a Cincinnati
man who says that freeaone dries In
a moment and simply shrivels up the
corn or callus without Irritating the
surrounding skin
If your druggist hasn't any freesooe
ten him to order a small bottle from
hla wholesal drug house for you — adv
N Slacktr
Witty One— Corporal Strutt enlist-
ed In April lie's the most patriotic
recruit l'v met
Pretty One— How' that?
Witty One— He's highly Insulted be-
cause his father sent him some money
by draft — Town Topics
Qualified
Motorist— Do you know all about
automobiles? Applicant— Yea air I
used to he a traffic cop
SAVE A DOCTOR’S BILL
by keeping Mississippi Diarrhea Cor-
dial bandy for all stomach complaints
Price 25c and 50c — Adv
Both Way
"Do you think Russia will come
hack?” “Yea and she'll come bock by
going to the front"
It Is well to honor pretension by si-
lence Grunkltj Eyelids
Maw I Fveg Evfnrt4md by
I J j jSdm WkJBQukkly
V ViiwnlbyMurtfiB Try It la
lUlIrt LUjNkSMrtiMECMM
Startne Cy Remedy
Mo ft tv 10 Tirtto bd rlaat its Am — f n
Ask Kurina Ey Kaasedy C-( Chleao a
straighten you right np and maka yon
feel fine and vigorous by morning I
want yon to go back to tha atora sad
get your money Dodson’s Liver Ton
Is destroying tha sal of calomel be-
cause It Is real liver medicine entire-
ly vegetable therefore It cannot sail
vats or maka you sick
I guarantee that ona spoonful of
Dodson's Liver Ton will put your slug
glah liver to work and clean yonr bow-
els of that sour blla and constipated
waste which la clogging your system
and making you feel miserable 1 guar-
antee that a bottle of Dodson's Llvar
Tone will keep your entire family feel-
ing fine for months' Give It to yonr
children It la harmless doesn’t gripe
and they Ilk Its pleasant taste— Adv
Small Gam
"Your son la a great fisherman Isn’t
her
"Calls himself such He' just back
from vacation Caught a bunch of
measly trout when he might have
caught an heiress"
Whenever Too Need a General Took
Take Grove’a
Tha Old Standard Grove's Taatalaan
chill Tonic is squally valuable as a Gao-
arol Tonic became it contains tha wall
known tonic properties of QUININE aad
IRON It acts on thn Liver Drives ant
Malaria Eoricban thn Blood aad Baildn
ap thn Whole System U cants
Compliments of tha Day
Soldier have to do their own mend-
ing when It la don at all and It ap-
pears — although few persons would
have guessed It— that ths thoughtful
war office supplies them with outfits
for that purpose Otherwise this Joke
from the Journal of the American Med-
ical association would be Impossible
Everything was ready for kit Inspec-
tion the recruits stood lined np ready
for the officer and tha officer had hla
bad temper all complete U marched
up and down the line grimly eying
each man's bundle of needles and soft
soap and then he singled out Private
MacTootio aa the man who waa to re-
ceive hla attentions
"Toothbrush?" ha roared
e s air”
“Raiorr
"Yea air”
“Holdall r
"Yea sir"
"Ural You're all right apparently
growled tha officer Then he harked
"House wife?”
"Oh very well thank you" said the
recruit amiably “how's yours?”
Seaweed Is made Into a composition
to take the place of bon for handle
of cutlery
— i
A GUARANTEED REMEDY FOR
HAY FEVER-ASD
It fotr iranki
J OMS BOS Willi
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BUM hV tloUol Us GIIGOM PI BlniiikUSSlit
nciis:x7na:n n
STIKIADOU
AND A8THMADOH CIQARKTTKt
BMltlTBly tT INRTATT MUir Bftff Mi
ODd $104 ptrBANBIkf urv4 UkOUBOIldB who hM bB
Nai4oro4 IscarablB of lor hovlof irlod oer? otlef
oons of PDiiRf to VOID AMhnaUD bDoniA ovoil
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driifgiit My o lEevot f - - - - " -
ckuB ob4 yiwNt Shi
Onuu ixOMriRt tu yur dfronGisS Too oil) ho lb
oia jodtfto OB bo NkMlwr ? DfO kMflt4 In4 iho
ftrupMlBt Will f'YG FUG hock Jinf OONf If yG krt
Mot Wo 4o nob I bom itt oa 9 foirot prohualUoD
vhioh VOOUG14 Nhko IhJ
R ScMttman Co Proprietor St Paul Hla
livery Woman Want
WVQ?
b OR PERSONAL HYGlLhE
Dwaolvad I wotor for dowel a atop
palvie catarrh alcaratla ad tafless
tolia RmowbmsM by Lydia E
Ptokham Mad Co fav taw yaor
A baa ling waadar far Hwl catarrh
throat aud ora ayaa Praei— Iral
DrMoI fttoWDT
N W
prtofrtol Maa
W N Oklahoma City No 3fr-1917
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Hunter, E. H. The Kusa Industrial (Kusa, Okla.), Vol. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, September 28, 1917, newspaper, September 28, 1917; Kusa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2335180/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.