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to Have Fling Jackson Barnett Will Sample City’s Luxury With His Bun dle of Oil Money. IS RAO AT FIVE MILLION Lived Simple Life While Milllone Were Accumulating — Invested Many Thousands In Liberty ^ Bonds During the War. Muskogee.—Jackson Barnett, Okla homa's richest Indian, has gone to Kansas City to have a fling at metro politan luxury. If' he Unds that he can stand "It, Barnett will make it permanent—with the consent of the United States government, of which he is a ward. Burnett until recently lived in a two room block house at Ilenryetta, thirty miles from Muskogee, wore cheap clothes, smoked cheap tobacco and didn’t even own a phonograph— which is an odd way to live for one rated as worth $5,000,000. While at Henryetta Burnett was well satisfied in ids two rooms, and let his guardian, attorneys and agents of the Indian agency In Muskogee and Washington worry about the millions flowing from oil wells on his property. Ills wants were few and the money went Into the banks of Oklahoma on deposits made by the Indian agency to his credit. Bought Libsrty Bonds. When the war was on thousands of dollars of his motley went Into Lib erty twnds and War Savings stamps. Contributions were made to Instlto- tions of learning, and Jackson lived the simple life, never going mure than a few mile* from his cabin. Then he met Mr* Anna Laura Lowe and they married. "Kidnap ing. M Is what Barnett'a agents called It. Barnett w>» held under restraint until Victor IL Locke, Jr., became •uperlntendent of the Indian agency In Muskogee I.ocke decided; “A wealthy Indian has as much light to kpend bis money as a arealtby white man. - * Harnett and his wife and her daugh ter sought to make a dent In the $>*>.- •MOeisi pWe. Mrs. Barnett said her husband needed a change, and the government consented to a raeath«fl la Canada. After that vacation the ladlau was unhappy for the tirat time In his life and refused to go hack to the cabin und cheap clothes. Let Indian Decide. "We are going lu let the Indian him •elf deride where he wants to live." ttui»erinten«lent Locke said. “If he want* to live In Muskpfee, »U right. If he chooses some other city we have nothing to say In the way of object ing, for he has the right to make his own decisions.** r If a suitable residence can be found in Kansas City it will be purchased by the government for Its wealthy ward. Otherwise, a house will be built. “There’s no truth In the report that we are going to spend $200,000 for a residence for Jackson Barnett,” Locke said, “but we are going to see to It that he has u house in keeping with his wealth and one with which he will be satlsfled.” GIVE UP FREEDOM FOR MERCY Prisoners In French Train Wreck Do Rescue Work Instead of Fleeing. Lyon, France.—Handcuffed In pairs and In charge of four gendarmes, 12 French military prisoners, en route to Algeria to serve sentences ranging from five to fifteen years, were aboard the Strasshurg-Marselllea express when It Jumped the track at -Les Echets, a few miles from here. Forty passengers were killed and seventy Injured. None of the prisoners was seriously hurt, but three gendarmes were killed and the other, pinned under the wreckage, lay seriously wounded. All semblance of authority and or der had disappeared. Went to Bury Wife; . Found Her Remarried George Doering, a McKUchtn * (Kan.) farmer, went t® Hueblo, * Colo., to arrange for the burial # of his fohner wife, • who had J r written Doering a letter, he f t said, Intimating that she woald J * be dead when he. arrived, and .0 asking him to take care of their boy Wilbur, eight years old. .* Arriving In Pueblo, Doering read in a paper of her marriage to Fred Montes the day be ar rived. Doering went to the home of his former wife and her nevyly acquired husband, and took charge of the boy, but his former wife failed to explain her letter to him. •LESION* were free, but. Instead of running away, they pulled the wounded gen darme out of the tangled mass of wood and iron and laid him on the grass. During the night they' rescued 81 In jured passengers. Then they gave themselves up. They have since left for Algeria to serve their sentences, but It Is under stood that the minister of war Is studying the case, and the opinion la expressed that. In due course of red tape, they will be pardoned. New Way to Preserve Applet. Vineland, N. J.—Joseph Schlooser found two apples that got hidden In a basket of sweet potatoes In the fall of 1920, and were perfectly sound when the potatoes, which had sprout ed long vines, were thrown out. The apples had been buried In the sweet The prisoners potatoes all last winter and^^ummer. New Species of Fish Revealed Eruption of Mauna Loa in Hawaii Responsible for Remark able Discovery. . SIX FROM DEPTHS OF SEA Or. Oavtd Btarr Jordan Claa Specimen* gent From Honolulu— Lav* Stream Bring* Strange Specimens to Surface. Honolulu.—Varieties of flab hitherto unknown were discovered as a result | <>f ib** eruption of the volcano of Muuua Uiu two yenni ngu. This fact haa Jual l»eeii announced by 1W. David btarr Jordan, cbancellur riuehtua of Tahitians Protest Against Taxes * 0> .4 rrji; OC * v r - ; sa sy frm w Nr .#• vV *, ilntcnuhonal Even way down in Tahiti, the French l.slands In the South Pacific, the people have been walling about high taxes, and recently there was an incipient revolt which was suppressed by soldiers. The citizens of Papeete, the capi tal, are here shown gathered in front of the governor’s mansion to voice their protests. Leland Stanford Junior unlveralty, Cal ifornia. a noted Ichthyologist. The columns of lava burrowed deeper Into the ocean then man bad been able to penetrate, and thousand* of flab of strange and fantastic shape and color were killed and washed up on the beech by the tidal ware caused by the lava Bow. Among them were found six varieties hitherto unknown to science because their habitat was presumably lower to the water than artence bad been able to oh serve. Amateur Irhtbyoiocists In HIU* Ha waii, selected species which were un known to them and sent them to Doc tor Jordan fur examination. The re sult was that the six new species were classified. Discovery Important **t consider the discoveries, from a scientific viewpoint, to be among the nx«t remarkable and Important on record." Ihictor Jordan mid when be me tie public the Ha unifies (Ions here, while he was attending the sens Iona of the Pan-Pacific Educational con ference. Khyacanthla* Carlsmlthl. named for Cart A. Carlsmlth of Hilo, who sent many of the species to Ihictor Jordan. It Is a deep rose red In color. Rhechlas Armlger, a conger eel with hooks <>n Its snout resembling black berry thorn* and la solid dull black In color. Nyctlmaster Reinhardt, named for It Is n viiTuli •»lnrir lantern fish. •* Ignated because of the many luminous glands "T>ehln<r“Hie #yd and itarig Ift sides which gives the Impression of phosphorescence. It is a solid dull black In color. Ppristedlon Kngyceros or alligator fish of a brilliant scarlet hue which is characterized hy large bony plates of armor. Are Deep Water Fish. Each of the six 'is a deep water fish. All live In water of more than 150 feet in depth, and some as deep as COO feet. Nothing except such a cataclysm of nature as the Alika flow c< uld have brought them to the sur face. Doctor Jordan said. Rhyacnn- thias Carlsmlthl ranged at least 1,000 fhet below the ocean’s surface, he added. Doctor Jordan has sent to the Smith sonian Institution in Washington, D. C., a paper detailing the results of the In vestigation and the new classification. LEGION MAN IS LMMAKER. Sturgis, South Dakota Legislator, It Author of Measures In the In terest* of Americanism. (Copy for This Deportment Supplied by the Amerlcoa L«glea News Sorvlcs.) WHISTLE BROUGHT HIM FAME Restaurant Coek, Jones, Famous Harry Keyneton as Author of M Rose of No Man's Land.** From out the bustlinjg kitchen of a popular slimmer resort restaurant near St. Paul, Minn., there issued dur ing the vacation season lilting songs and whis tled ditties that sounded so strangely famil iar that Ameri can Legion serv ice men of the - World war de cided to investi gate. They found the musician to be one Harry Keyn- ston Jones, a flve-foot-ten Cockney, also the restaurant cook. Jones began his musical career as chef of a Winnipeg grenadier regiment during the war. Later he tended the private skillet of Gen. Sir Julian Byng at Vlmy Ridge, and more important than that, he wrote “Rose of No Man’s Land,” the war song that had a long run of popularity. A penny whistle which he bought and played for the prime purpose of amustTTg his kitchen police caused his rise to music fame, he declared. In France he was transferred to the officers’ mesa. There Lieutenant Col onel McRae, who later wrote “to Flan ders Fields," i beard the penny whis tling. and the two became friend*. turned ont the the No Man’s Land song. Jones, wounded at raobral. was In valided back to Canada. After his discharge from the hospital he began • sightseeing tear of the states, de pending upon his cooking ability for ready employment. He now baa a •nag with a New Tort publisher which he hopes to put forth soon. HEADS WAR DISABLED SCHOOL Dr. Arthur Davis Dean, Veteran #f the World War and Educator of Wide Expsrtsnc*. The first man on the Job In the morning, he further surprised legM®* tive circles by never missing a single roll c*H during the time the legislature was to session. He was a. chap lain in the army, he explained, in which well-known organization a man was either on the dot or ahead of it—or " he wasn’t! Carroll D. Ersktne, preacher-legis lator of. Sturgis, S. D., has carried what he learned In his country’s ^eyV- Ice with him, the Electorate of his state say. He left after 15 years of Presbyterian ministry on leave of ab sence to serve as chaplain of the Eighteenth Battalion during the World war, seeing 14 months* service. Af ter the armistice, while stationed at Camp Merritt, N. J., he met all trans ports at the docks and ministered to wounded men being returned to Amer ican hospitals. In appreciation of his work the men presented him a Jeweled watch. In the legislature, Mr. Ersklne was author of a bill to insure proper ob servance of Armistice day, and of an other requiring all school teachers to take an oath of loyalty to the Consti tution. He is a member of the Amer ican Legion in Sturgis, and state chair man of the boy scouts. He was born In Binghamton, N. Y., and educated at Lake Forest college, Illinois. CALOMEL GOOII BUT NEXT DOSE KMAY It Is Mercury. Quicksilver. Shocks^. Uver and Attacks Your Bones. TO OBTAIN DENTAL SERVICE Veterans, to Receive Treatment, Must Comply With the Condition# Pi Calomel salivation to horrible. It ■wells the tongue, loosens the teeth and starts rheumatism. Thereto no rea son why a person should take sicken^- ing, salivating calomel when a rear cents buys a large bottle of Dodson » Liver Tone—a perfect substitute for calomel. It Is a pleasant vegetable- liquid which will start your Uver Just as surely as calomel, but it doesnt make you sick and can not salivate. Calomel is a dangerous drug; be sides, It may make you feel weak sick and nauseated tomorrow. Don t lo*e a day’s work. Take a spoonful of Dod son’s Liver Tone Instead and you will wake up feeling great. No salts neces sary. Your druggist says If you don’t find Dodson’s Liver Tone acts better than treacherous calomel your money is waiting for you.*-Advertlsement Judge not your neighbor; he may be on the jury when it Is your tuns to face the Judge. * FEEBLE BLOOD i Dr. Arthur Davis Dooa. recently rhooen by the goveruaK-m a* school ■operintendent °t all America’s war disabled, la him self a veteran at the World war as well as an edu cator at wide ex perience and a special lat In voca tional training. During the war. Dr. Dean, a major In the sanitary corpa. worked on the physical and meuiiu of the sick and wounded as they were returned to the United States in al most all the large government hos pitals of the country. With" nine yeara’ expeiienee In vocational educa tion work lii \ t u VoHytAte,'be served SofTools In the state department of ed- UCaTTTWT 1908 to 1917. wttHTTnrbt^ came professor of vocational education In Teachers’ college. Columbia unlver alty. He directed the New York state prison survey In 1919 and investigated the possibilities of Industrial and agri cultural education In Porto Rico for the Insular government. Dr. Dean was born Sept. 15, 1872, at Cambridge. Mass., and was educated at the Massachusetts Institute of Tech nology. He is a member of Columbia university post of the American Legion. An mbUIbo of -the service men to obtain dental treatment has been prepared by the national service division of the American Lo fton. Dental treatment will be furnished by the bureau of war risk Insur ance to veterans of the World war under the following conditions: 1. Where a person has been sward ed compensation for dental disability. 2. When such treatment la neces sary for the ettre of a condition which resulted from military service and is the reason for which compensation has been awardsd. A In emergency cases which are Immediately necessary for the relief of coodltloan sadangortnc the life of the patient or causing great pain. Claimants who have not been award ed dental disability, but feel they should ha+e such doe to military service, should Immedlatsly file claim to the regular manner; whereupon they will receive an order from the district medical supervisor to report to the nearest dental examiner for ex amination and such emergency treat ment as may he required. Approval of the dental examiner’s report must b« made by the bureau of war risk Insurance. To receive the benefits of the dental iawa, claimants must pursue their case through the regular channels, as hills contracted outside of the authority of the bureau of war risk Insurance will not be paid, except where sufficient evidence Is producetbthat the esse was emergency or that the claimant was t his rigirts to tieutui treat ment. Qude's Pepto-Mangan Makes Red Blood; Liquid and Tablet Form. % MOTHER SEEKS SOLDIER SON American Legion Searching for Jamas E. Adis, Shell-Schock Victim-— Disappeared In February. Refusing to believe that her son Is dead, although she read recently a new s p a p e r ac- ONE-ARMED VET ALMOST WON Ernest Mastros, Second In Swimming Race; Wounded Buddies Winner and Third In Sprint. , GAMBUNG IS STILL SPREADING Germany in Throes of Wild Orgy of Speculation. Government Is Making Efforts to Halt the Fever, Which Hae Spread to AH Parts of the Country— Stakes Are High. Berlin. —- The government is try- lug to halt a gambling fever which has swept Germany for many months and which authorities stiy continues to spread despite hundreds of arrests, the confiscation of millions of inftrks, persons to Juil and tines. Clone ufHQHraVtto of the gambling and specuIflMHVa which appeared among the people of all classes came a horde of stock-market manipulators, racetrack touts, bucket shop pruprie- tort and organizers of get-rich-quick hatting association*, who. starting by work ing men and women, shortly were able to open luxurious gnmbllng houses. At least a dozeu such establish ments operating lu Berlin, Hamburg, Dresden and smaller provincial towns have been raided and closed by the police. Sums as high as 12,000,000 marks have been found and confiscated by the police in gambling houses which apparently were catering only to the smaller gamblers. The proprietors have been held on charges of fraud. The horse racing season, which has been unusually successful, offered* the crooked gamblers aad promoters a chance which they promptly took ad vantage of, god it is known billions of marks were wagered on alleged tips. 86me of these promoters became wide ly known as reliable “Informants" and made so much money for their clien tele that they became popular Idols. The Smith family numbers 14,000, 000 members throughout the wrerkL D’ANNUNZIO IS WINE MAKER Italian Soldiar-Poet to Produce Vint age of Unequaled Qual- * - ity, Ha Says. ■ » Gnrdbne, Italy—Gabrielle d’Annun- xio, poet and hero of Fiumo Independ ence, has become a producer of wine In his hours of quiet on the lake here. *T produce very little wine, but enough so that I can call myself one of the Italian family of wine pro ducers,” he told a friend recently. “I expect to produce a wine that will be the envy of the French and Span ish producers. 1 will give it a new name of my own coining so that It will not be confused with any of the wines at present on the market.” The remarkable volcanic region to Alaska known as the Valley of Tan Thousand Smoke* actually con tains, not 10.000. hot millions of smoking volcanic vents, besides various other wonders, such a* Falling mountain, where fall* of rack occur every few minute* The throng of spectators who watched the finish of an exciting sprint during a swim ming meet in Mad ison Square Gar den, New York, recently, vigorous ly applauded the efforts of Ernest Mastros, a little chap who brought up in second place. * Their en- thusiasm was heightened when the race had fin ished and they saw Mastros as he was climbing out of the big tank. He had lost his left arm, serving with the American forces In France, and he all but won the event by the sole power of his good right and his abun dance- of gamenesa. However, the winner of the race, William McIntyre, also'was wounded In France, the surprised crowd learned later, as was Harold E. Taylor, who finished' a close third in the same match. The trio of wounded war vet erans are members of the Metropoli tan Life poet of the American Legion, formed of men and women employees af the Ufa I—raara company who ■vqd during the World war. count of the bur ial In. Minnesota of a soldier who bore marks of Identification iden tical with those of her son, Mrs. Margaret A d I e, Lowell, Mg*l, has appealeii to the American Legion for help in her untiring search. The boy sought is James E. Adie, a wounded service man of the World war who disappeared mi February 27 last while on his way from Lowell to Boston, Mass., where v .he was to re ceive a government examination. The former soldier was suffering from a severe attaA of shell shock at the time. C With her husband’s <|*ath since the war, the mother to In straightened circumstances. Her son’s government compensation checks have been arriv ing monthly during his absence, she declares, but they cannot be cashed without his signature. To Rooeeveltto Memory. A bronze tablet dedicated to the memory of the late Col. Theodore Roosevelt recently was presented the American Legion of Kings County, New York, by the United Spanish War Veterans. The tablet was composed of metals taken from the Ill-fated Maine, the Olympia. Dewey's flagship; the Oregon, which made the trip from Ren Francisco in time to aid in the destruc tion of Cervere's fleet at Santiago and the old bettieahtpe New When blood beeomee thin end It to doe to a falling off in the number of red blood ceils. It is eerily recog nised by pallid skin or a blemished complexion, loss of appetite or unnat ural Irritability and * sensation ot weakness. 4 lg not dangerous at first. In fact, many people scarcely notice it and go on for days, thinking they will be better the next day. The great danger Is In the possibility of becoming seriously III from disease, which can work havoc in a body that lacks the endurance and real stance In rich, red blood. Taken in time and steadily, a few bottle# of Glide's Pepto-Mangan are a great help. It Improve# the quality of the blond by adding red blood cell*. They check the weakness. Improve the appetite, and dear the complexion. You can get Gude's Pepto-Mangan In Uqnld and tablet form at your drug- gist’*. Get the genuine with the name "Gude’s Pepto-Mnngao" on the pack age. Advertisement. -I I If people Would frankly admit their Ignorance a lot of useless argument might be avoided. Bcll-ans Hot water Sure Relief RE LL-ANS fc#FOR INDIGESTION ACHES AND PAINS- SLOAN’S GETS ’EM! A O VOID the misery of racking pain. Have a bottle of Sloan’s Lini ment handy and apply when you first feel the ache or pain. It ouickly eases the pain and tends • feeling tg of warmth through tba •dungpart. Sloan,'sLtuimcnlpenetraUt Without rubbini. Fine, too, for rheumatism, neuralgia, sciatica, sprains and strains, stiff joints, feme back and sore muscles. For forty years pain's enemy. Ask your neighbor. Jfcalfdruggists—45c, 70c, $1.40. -5T k * 4- JK