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* South J Pocket IV Beat( T houig h t Hts Flash In Battle Was ani Order From the Great Spirit. FIRST USE OF SMOKE SCREEN Apache Kid Used 11. Says Noted Ran ger* i Reai of Story of His Eventfu' Life-Has Remarkable E xperiences as Ranger. t ia- iirre l i ' 1:( l W 1rsen i lt . Ili$- f:111141114 h el:ul.;11:4t.h A1p:14-11m Kil hli l t11h. tir..t at . . ,-riln re oh- inl this hPifaockety No w 1:1 : ra-I lItis t itl It is I'll er vow hily, boliwt*o huster, petty express. rider~l 1Tiart1 Ill Fliii Wi \ tst piijrsulits, including thlos. o)fGrniu asd he Mi, inOder Frte therto her Ki reeltal of Is Ife, which as be t't- i lnle10 full (of Stloy o tIf Hi - row esalpeis that rend like 1te. assag fron illn 4 1h I ilune n leovil . I Fred Owen-is. Mwn nine years old, was missing fron2 ht; 4''ie in e1a Ingsburg. Ky., 1r,0. ring inl 18.9. lie hnld gonle \\'l i At elightfenii. lir- ini 1-1N. he i eenn ai Texas :11n1ir i inll' s uch ai I sark for hi s, 11 44lf 111th hi- wN\1( o to) 1 1the Cl'e in i tl at ol' hi spu w it I ler rang rs to i reporesent1 f t. 1 .n1e1114, Slar Stat l. I SXn t-7 itll l-' I,-w was dv Mans It'.snd, foi the 2'lli eritory.4 lie was eve behIl up bt 'ny ire ruIro a is bent~r'i :4 onia iein hthe' valuainrs he car'r''ied. 'icSu In2 l.Ii1u 7i nilk h sIl nen'' in as (11214'n 1.i 1(. the * ntst wiIIl 14hi'rf that 'nt i *;'r2n'l..'s I22pturie in thel hills boek~i \1' of ( hun hn. Myx2iof i'loS l' sit. AnIl he tels :4 -try (If the Inl dInll's 411.1.st ieretha lInla lhe 1~ i4ntiof the4 recordl'11 of the' \\'::14departinent. 01n'e ' of the'e C'%w. In :ifi er .\entis ,h-r''uhan 4 t44h1lilhun 12!if it i ' story of the' iian'iis super'l tii a 4l (4:414ur'e. 'h rel4 14114's pmursulE'lS 14utuber'44'I :llnonlI thern~ 2 ('(lIpinIn lIIll neto t'im illIs 2414 11 t Iiihsi' bieine hot4. IIlI'4Ib l'ri411 4'4(ninat11il was1 4'rnwlV (')11( 14(r t ern, (4oward the redskin'ts fgrh n ('lit ht s111f4he1.e o Pocket Mirror Saved Him. were resourceful 11nen1. A' Irivate in the advancing Il'line had14 1 seen a44h point41 41 of vatatlge n11nd thoutghit his eny~ltnInl should know111 of It. T1o, move( or enn( would1 revea'tl Ihis 1"oesition11 to te in. dians, yet 1h4 must get the lit ltnt o'f Captini iI4elbraiei. Ta'king 1a Kiull rays 44f th 1im.The reflec'(td on1 thd e o4'41f ilbrnde then inl inuni-) tient 41h1inge4r of 4ih'irunknol1('M rifle4. Ittit the flash heoat thel 1Inin's tigge'r fini * ger. lihe saw1 thle wonerfui(l''1 briight light a nd t houghtrl iIt 1 mlessallge' froml henven to I denty Can f indeb01 11 4orandl s thie GireatI Spirit. 4' ;roimol 1 ran4 I upI)li his flag of t rile,4' mere'Ily 4 tiplating thajt he shld~( not1 lhe 1hun2.g 4r shot4 for is outrarges I h44 sulrreIered14l''. I IIs in 1884 the ~IllE A Inehe h. t hlf-br1'eed futlaw,' and ih iIs hand11 (I''11 weeIllraudl~i lt wes4't Tfexas. TIhe~ A 'ne'he K(14 was of the 511me4 tr'ibe, but1 11ot re'Ilted4 14 eronhno~l4. Ye't 11e possessed1' Il theiI 4 Wiis an rd sa vnge ('ruel'1ty of hIs (Ihler ~an. Co14lnei 4'we'ns 11114 hiIs fellows , agers were sent after1 tile Ajpnehle ~he chase was a hot one. The' african Rebels Ae C 1 x: -it -tf .with tkfrien,. wh lch was the cenlt h y' troops. [Ilirror xeronimo A plhe Kill knew horses, and1 from ''t niln tit''41pt rellnss Ii) oni tie fast es iifreshests hor sem inl corrals hie asdl. The2 rage'rs itigged aI long o( 1th01r annaM pon11its. Buit they followedl the4, I ill Io list talit they drove the .\ ih 11141 1d a i hanIiidS to i field ' 1fwer corrails and iliore desperate strails. They 1urrOlld lipthe 111 han( at Sti ni ill, WElls, Si-tnlli'4 frot tie Suli)Iurl fulks that rIP4 frotn its pit. As the w 4liel ilosed1 Ii the Alnelic T(l 111 Ill* f a .:iloke screen. Tle wh01l was lwillnt from his hand to wniril lr fill, rangrs. The 114111ils fired I1w 111r1irh10. TiEn. unde41cr CON'ver of the st1ioke. livy broug4h1iIlt. dIown-It s41ie of the Colonel Is Wounded. ('0111nt (1wen-4 lid 1n4ot O.i11npe. Two f theI' WVoll ys with wio2 ii ile h hd 1.4-l4v whenl ho fir't (eltne to Texals fell in tih. ri-ll. fire. ('oloniel (Owels draggedl then4it triu11gih It anlid retirniIed to get his h he. Then he rode Into a bullet Ihit 41night him in i lhe left thigh and :llthr killed his horse, which fell on 11h v4ilonel, erlslied his eiiest, and left bim lnl(conselo'. 'When lie cntne to linlslif it. was seveni iiles nearer vivilization. biving cnrried (iln the back (if a frilndly 2luw. The \olff boys Were Sa 1vel. Itecniperaling hle nealtin took lip the else ilid helped to muake It moerry for the Aalhe Kid until Iltt outlaw was riln Ill eover lii Itear ellnyol on ihe Pecos river, aid died from a ran ger's bl41let. Ie then lroke 1.1 horses to w-ork wihotit lino, irhdir or lilt. ail their Iper'fi rInnliet was presented th4 1le firs*' 44m244 ( wengs went b'ackc to lTexas2. 1I4' added4'i t( his st rring of "to1k rac ~teers."' a 1lthey wi'ee't nlhi I, and1 41reentedl t hiimi forl two4 5(easons4 with the Har liull & lHni ley cirlres. Then lhe sold thI Ca~~ O th11 (4it f compan.. N rtturnled to Te'xt and11( took up thle trall of Bass Seott and11( hIs hand oif enittle rulstlers. ThIs *'rowd was ex t('-ihut ed 10(0 iles from Fort Stock 144n, lbu tbefore the4I r etnd Colonel Owens'1i had4 I'( reil a terrIble wiounid thait ('ruI'h4d in h Is left side. 1,000 Head Were Dead. Th'ils 11lai imi lil for some14 titme, hut he' wentt (on thle lust '"hig dIrive" of ('at OWNS FAMOUS NECKLACE i .'ret't 1411414dge of41 tart PoIn . 144 let~ n rI h ido of the . not. Tmior Emufoe tuire'r 8he Is tihe Irest.'I (owne.ir of thle pentrI neek lne-'. voo- I n~Ist .%2r,o00 -1nce the proper-ty of l1tmpress *l.'athit er-Iine of 5tuiinSl--the 511 i' of whtichi e'nsedl a tiwsuitl betw"een two big jew. edry houden. Dnquered' 7A Qer of tie recent (isturbanlces created h3 Gives Beating to Wife Who Wouldn't "Doll Up" lhIi)I Magarino, twenty-five year:11's toll, it llototrlan of Brook- I a 1ynI. N. Y., Is differelit fronm most g Ilishiln(is, for h4e not only d44es 1 not 11objet to ils wife uin'lig cosI *ltres, hill hle insists sh 414) . * H ratlise lldelen, his sp 1)1s', IT- I A1844d to Its(" roulge andn powdler, I Aligatrlin , levor-diig it t I (.hn r1ge, helt t her.. \\'henl .\[n is f rat.t I.1loilt hleatillf the untisll m (lit for l ag rilI's 'tIIege l Iwllting of his w\Ife,. hit, ordered he n innI placId Oil prba4 iII * tion, per ling it flr-thter ivestliga n---........ ........... ..a Ill froii T4'xas. There were 5.0) hi 1 ill (lit' herl0 . In1 SteveIs Sau r TexWs, sit elled hrauISe. (Ihe htills fofrn i glint Sn1i-er. it ciote harked 1nit a (mwhoy fired a shot at it. Whe;14') the staiipede1 was o0vr Onle 11ltost14: helad of cattle we're dtead and twenty. live i unIredIl wPre lost. lIt irnI Ig to cIvIlI Izatoin, Colon0 Owelns hwenrd of a midget broncele ponly born on the trail. He bought this little nhiinal, which was the great trick poniy "Cleo." Ile traIned "Cleo" and tihe animal was taken around the wirld twice by Colonel Owens. "Cleo" diled in 1918. Colonel Owens then left t' roari. Walit is thought of h-im 1b)y showmen 1N evblened by his Initial, amd since aultolinitie electionls as 0haln of their club. Ile can still take the thmIIb, fore and mhidle tingers of li plisttl o, ll and crimp ni eignrette hlit wboys vay, in spite of tIle fact that th'se4 three fingers are marred by thll nulrk oif at bulllet that qhot the gull oilt of his hand. (.otlone1l Owents is still a Texas Ran ge'r. Itte has never resignedl, lhe has neave'r been dlischarged. Ile is a1 man8 itf t<iult 11nien, and14 to mee'(t haim one wouh~tillnever1 rea'liz h74'le was onie oif the va1 lint en that c-aried4( h lawid order C to and over the front ie.rs. SHOT 102 TIMES, BUT LIVES~ Sergt. Samuel Joseph of Kentucky Has Record for Stopping Ger rnan Lead. Le'xinto n, Ky.-Sergt. Alv In T. divit'le oos ftr ti'apt uring or dest roy In Gernmnt-ia s duiiri ng the Wuirblt wttr. hut at the Goi d Samaflr~ th hospital In this cilty is an1 Ams-'ritan sergeant wvho probab.liy 0topped1 .:ore hulle-ts rhhan any "'h.-r -onit-r in~ Unrtie Samn' arm1!y,:ar'd. .-houghC h:- me'rits are un with thr--.I,/ Y'rk tndWoofr'. 7r -/ -: - ' 1g n wa.. h s i nust.i f:- a -, *.A'b oper atin o.' % r. A' 'gf~'r o:;, t>, Ii bu wit Vrek on :'r.i - y, '--/:- : s'rs haid tik' ara .i -i r, yW. > iiix~ rhe v'u--div oii 4t.i i .e-, i, a'' 45 ria g in te fr(ttt frli- - f :a ' th C: 35 mnnusfont witou 'ot I c frru c-ri 1, rythn''n oiut wasr ~gt I:nmr at ( G.~'a 'Itenthi InfthAry, gorilnb(' ort pwh r in r'te'v atr of l(luntig:'y, helpted a sta nd take .\ionell itir was in the1 g',reatc' drivegtn flting~ 111Il lieth e(b mane' front unr tprt ig t l in teI.uiay fg t Yng tCaEa Thperry y Cin thenAr g Anedorts, Glahers on rAdved of t 1f heis wounds, wo u an wsit1"o aknt toa Fort'i 2t -onts heraie i tsoetilI1 the gu Youi' ng Ext-Em per of1(I C in inally Adopts' Glasse or fAviceh ofo l'taki ngT wuar "spe" or nots t BRI NEWS NOTES WHAT HAS OCCURRED DURING WEEK THROUGHOUT COUN. TRY AND ABROAD EVENTS OF IMPORTANCE Gathered Prom All Parts Of The Globe And Told In Short Paragraphs Foreign Vatican officials said recently that the report circulated that Pope Plus might address a note to the heads of tle delegations to tho Glenoa confer once were without iny foundation in fact. Two children were wounded during the Belfast disturbances and later died. A tramcar depot in Fals Road was raided. The cashier was bound and robbed of 550 pounds sterling. The employers lockout of forty seven engineering unions apart from the Amalgamated Engineers' Union, of London, .vhich was to have become effective on April 5, has been suspend ed pending negotiations between the employers and representatives of the unions. Acceptance by the British govern ment of the equity of the American views pertaining to the maintenance costs of the American army of occu pation, as expounded in the recent note of Secretary of State Hughes to the allies, has been informally con veyed to the American government. although a formal note officially con firming the acceptancec has not yet been dispatched. An official dispatech from Vladivos tok to the Japanese war office states that the commander of the Chita army in Siberia notified the commander of the Japanese garrison at Spassk. 100 miles north of Vladivostok, on April 2. that the Chita forces intended to occupy a line of neutral territory and to continue a further advance south ward. The Japanese commander ig nored the note. The state prosecutor has ordered the seizure of all newspapers which pub lished the legitimists' proclamation proclaiming Francis Joseph Otto. eld est son of the later former Emperor Charles, as king of Hungary. The proclamation read: "With the death of Charles, Otto II is king of Hungary, although temporarily prdVented from coronation." It was signed 19 aristo crats, headed by Count Albert .Ap ponyi. After a twenty-year search extend. ing to all parts of this continent, Mrs. Louise F. Lesueur, of Boston, recently found her son, Everett, now a mem her of the Canadian mounted police at Ottawa, Canada. A car containing mail from England destined for Italy, was broken into be tween Paris and Laroche and thirty bags of English mail matter were stolen. Intermittent earth shocks are report ed in the northern part of Serbia. The heart of former Emperor Char-les of Huangary 'was removed and will be sent in a glass jar to Austria. The present intention is to send the body13 to H1ungary'. The motion attacking the coalition presented in the British house of conm mons b~y Sir William Joynson-Hicks, Unionist, has attracted considerable attention in newspaper circles. Washington By a vote of more than 3 to 1 the house recently passed and sent to the senate a bill authorizing the dleporta tion of aliens convicted in state or fedleral courts on charges of l'aving violated the narcotic and Volstead acts. The seismograph at Georgetown university recordls an earth movement of pronounced intensity, centered about two thousand miles from Wash ington. Actual wojrk on the new negro hos pital for negro veterans at Tuskegee, Ala.. should be unc'er way by the middle of May, as the contracts for the mechanical eqiuipmnent and build ing work (on the institution should Ibo let by May 10. Increased employment ranging up to 28 per cent over the precedling month was reported to the employ mernt service of the department of labor from 43 of ?5 representative r:ities for the month ending March 31. The automotive and allied indus tries, iron and steel and their prod ucts and lumber headed the trades showing improved activity. The net increase for the country, figured on reports fronm 1,428 firms was 2.5 per cent. For the third time withirr a year the house was thrown into an uiroar, with Representative Blanton, demo crat, Texas, the object of attack. in a fiery ten-minute SPeech, Represen tative, dean of, the Texas delegation, dleclared that Mr. Blanton was "as common a liar as ever- spoke a wordl of ianglishu in this country." Trho house has put its foot dlown on a. proposal to pay salaries of $35,000 to four shipping board officials, r-efus ing to approve the conference replort on the independent offices apprilopr-ia tion bill. Comlmunicattons addlressed to tile state -depar-tment by A mbassadlor Riccl, of Italy, appealing agalinst the use of the 1910 .cenisus figures asa basis for fixing tihe three ih ' cent( quotas under the immigration 'estie-| aon' act, have been forwarded by Sec. retary Hughes to Chairman1 Johnlson, of tile house i'mmigration ,.lnmtte Demand for investigatlon by tbo'h partment of justice of charges that. Anti-Saloon League of America! as failed to report mmpaign expenditutes as r6quired under the corrupt pfctloes act has been made in the house by Representative Tinkham, Republican, of Massachusetts. A congressional effort at settlement particularly as It involves the bitumi nous fields, has been begun. Chairman Nolan of (lie house labor committee has been authorized to telegraph inv' tations to a number of representative Operators and officers of the operators' association in the central competitive field to attend a meeting with the miners' union leaders in Washington April 10, and attempt to reach an agreement. War contracts audited by the war department to (late show approxi mately $45,000,000 due the govern ment. Of this sum, it is stated, more than $26,000,000 is iII proces of col lection and about $4,000,000 in claims against contractors have been turned over to the department of justice for legal action. Confidence that congress in the end will ertain the army at approximately the figure asked by the war depart inent was expressed In administration quarters after Chairman Kahn of the house military committee had talked the situation over with President Har (ling. Mr. Kahn said he believed that eventually the army bill would carry an officer personnel of 13,000 and an enlisted strength of around 150,000. Senate agriculture committee mem bers have been called upon by Chair man Norris to vote on a motion to aniend the army appropriation bill when it is acted upon in the senate in a way that will provide funds -for army engineers to resume work on the Wilson dlam at Muscle Shoals, Ala., this sumnmer. Domestic Using the family axe as a weapon some one killed Theodore Tremblay, 18, hacked four of his younger broth. ers, three probaibly fatally, injured the father and set fire to the house and barn at the Treiblay farm near St. Joseph, Mo. Officers say they are without clues. The elder Tremblay could throw no light on the murder. The crime was discovered by neigh bors attracted by the blazing house and barn. Complete suspension of coal produc tion in the non-union Winding Gulf coal fields of West Virginia is pre dicted in a statement by Lawrence Dwyer of Beckley, W. Va., a member of the executive board of the United Mine Workers of America. In the New River field he says only fifty men are at work. Mr. Dwyer said the min ers in Winding Gulf number 10,000 and those in the New River field about 11.000. Arrested at New York upon his ar rival from Washington in connection with a civil suit involving the theft in Transkalkalin in 1919 of goods valued at $475,000, General Gregorie Semenoff, anti-bolshevik military leader in Siberia, was released on $25,000 bail after being held tinder guard in the Waldorf-Astoria hotel for five hours. An alleged oil fraud, said to involve the loss of $1,000,000 to investors at Boston, Mass., and possibly millions in other parts of the country, was disclosed by federal attorneys when they made public the names of 18 oil financiers in New York, Boston andl Holyoke who have been indicted se cretly by the federal grand jury for fraudulent use of the mails. IDealings in all classes of stock on the New York stock exchange recent ly amounted to about 1,576,000 shares, the largest total of any session since 1920, when marlset values were sub jectedl to considerable dlepression. The number of stocks traded in, most ly at extreme gains of 1 to 6 points, was estimated between 440 and 460 1separate issues, this about equaling the record made last March. IA reduction amounting to 3 1-2 cents per one hundred pounds in hardwood lumber rates from southwestern pro ducing territory to Central Freight association aind Eastern Trunk Line territory, has been granted by the in terstate commerce commission, it is announced in Memphis, Tonn. Bessie Sisk, on trial at Memphis, Tenn., for slaying her lover, Hor-bert Bingham, was acquitted, after te judge remarked that the imn "get what was comning to him--possibly. not in the right way, but he got it." Maj. .John WV. Simons of Charles ?ton, S. C., and Lieut. G. H. Fitzpatrick of Sacramento, Cal., were killed at Houston, Texas, in an airplane acci dent on Ellington field. While firemen were fighting flames in St. Ann's Catholic church in New York, men, women and children knelt and prayed that the flames would not spread. There was very little dam age. A United States marine is being held uinder observation at tfie barracks here in connection with the ceath of Mrs. Ruth Mercer, whose body was found on the beach at Ocean View, near Norfolk, Va, A plattfor a general jail delivery at the Raymond street jail in Brook lyn, where Miss Oliva M. P. Stona charged with murdering Ellis 0. Kin kend, is confined, was' illustrated rx' cenitly. Olivio M. P. Stone, former trined nurse, was fouind not guilty of the murder of Ellis Cl. Kinkoaud, formier corpor-ation councel - of Cincininat i, whom she shot to decathi on thet plon that lhe hadl abaindoned her after mitk lng her his commion'law wife, by at jury which reported after nine hourti delibporation, Tae Mastin's Ye Vitam, Tablets- T,.. The Skin and Po. n Firm Flesh Esy and Eenilcal Resuts Qk Of what use are fine features with an ugly, mottled skin, flabby flesh, sunken cheeks, pouches, under this eye, or a careworn, sickly-looking face? If you want to quickly clear your skin and complexion, put some frm, healthy flesh on your bones, increase your nerve force and power and look and feel far better, Pimply try taking two of MASTIN'S tiny yeast VITA MON TABLETS with each meal and watch the results. MASTIN'S VITAMON TABLETS contain not only the purest form of concentrated yeast vitamines. but all three vitamines scientifically com bined with specially pre)ared organic iron for your blood, e necessary lime salta and other true vitalizing brain, bone and tissue making ele ments which Nature provides to pro duce real "stay-there" flesh, clear skin and increase energy. Under their purifying influence, many embarrassing skin eruptions seem to vanish as if by magic, leaving the skin and coinplexion fresh, clear and glowing with ruddy health. To protect yourself against imita tions and cheap substitutes INSIST upon MhASTIN'S to get the original and genuino VITAMON TABLETS recommended by physicians and usW by millions. At all good druggists. USE SLOAN'S TO EASE LAME BACKS Y OU can't do your best when Jyour back and every mnuscle aches with fatigue. Apply Sloan's Liniment freely, with. out rubbing, and enjoy a penetrative glow of warmth and comfort. Good for rheumatism, neuralgia, sprains and strains, aches .and pains sciatica, sore muscles, stiff joints and the after effects of weather exposure. For forty years pain's enemy. Ask your neighbor. Keep Sloan's handy. At all druggists-35c, 70c, $1.40. SloawV Linimenjd ol AT mHE JOINrs FsOi1NEISC H-ave yous R H EUM ATISM Lumbago or Gout ? Take RIH EUMdAVIDE to remove Ihecause and drive the poison from the system. "RRBURCiAcD 0N THE 1161DE PIsI Bin5UNATiBu ON TRE OUTSIhu" At All Druggiste Jsa. Baily & So., Wholesale Distriksters Baltimore, Md. IN USIC FOl 33 YE~ARS The Quick and Sure Cure for MALARIA, CHILLS, FEVER AND LA GRIPPE It Is a Powerful Tonie and Appetimew Wilt cure that tired feeling, pains In back, limbs and head. Contatn. no quinine, arsenie or bit-forsning ingredient. Hackett'. Gape Cure IT'N A POWJI)Elti AND) INFALLIlBLE The ehtoks inhaule the dust. Kills the worm an weil a thie (Germ--saves the chicks. MAKR ES POUI/rRVi ItlilNO ROT h PROF. ETAiItlt ANNI IPLEASANT Your i t/N returned inot a nTAID Minuipa, Miuney Order or Coin. HIAORF/Pr (APEI CI'ltE CO, D~eptsrtmesl. Ii - Hlillsboro, Md. soreinflmedsmart-U ngees with power lsafe remedy is Sbt25 cents ..ll dsugIsta ARE'S HAIR BALSAM hiefmovesflanerugg-Stopsiair~Fll Beauty to Cra andle gla 6 lioo.Chsnet iork at arusit W. iili L t. 'OMP'ANV, iuMERoiT Wandad Young Men le Leara WneUd .h mJRBER TRADE. Bt'mt college In the Souath. WrIte Charlots. Barber College, Charlotte, N., W, N. U.. CHAntaTTKt hNO a.. 19