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1-,lhn Bassett Mloor(., Unlited Palace lit The lI ngtie, where the co, Walles. 3-l'resisdenlt Ilar1ding s1in NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Airship Roma, Bought in Italy, Is Destroyed With Loss of Thirty-Four Lives. PROBABLY WAS DEFECTIVE Senate Reservationists Busy With the Four-Power Treaty-Movement to Postpone Soldiers' Bonus Leg islation-Irish Factions in Three Months' Truce. By EDWARD W. PICKARD T 1IRlTY'-FotUlt 1111Ire lI %ves hav e bween sm for foreigii-hilt irhships4. If we imust have these cralft. 1.s It nlot n1houit tinte we relletit onl oltr own d(,signers, mtid conlstuctor's for themn? U1tilexx thle InI formasltion nyilable ait this writing Is istendIng. (he disaster Ihit heel the Iroi near Biinton tnd hist seek will De foyd to be. In Its (.811 o parable to that of the ZUt-2 fin King and st A igist. Bi oth eW, th parently, there were -itl defects i construction Sof leh tho builders were cognizant. So far os investigtion his rIent d, the fall of the Itimn was due It, (he brenking of the contros tct re gult ed yt liinte of fhe irship. E A WspiPt the hermle efforts if, heA avimignirs t ni the frantle caisting overbna of 111 halist by the fr.w, th huge halbus 1 plunged downiward frotn I lihight of about 4O fee(. As she t rlinshed against the ground shte broke sotno high ftn Sion electric wirs and at the saile minendti tet i astie tak bursllt. Inribthe tesutng xpin and- lii rei monst ticit melit ai merciftSliily nstant. deth.r 0ene it theIt'fmat had cntstruck the1 41 wi(Iiay arm bailrsr wee ol.uite.e gh ne h vsse' fa s ia nstee In114 framevwoul he brn o 144' th,-for Wthe gasoline114 baert a' losie hhine fr th sinrgoft orinr thel gas14 I' 1 inteiii Itm )4inted ofthe linnbe he ii ium 44 vgs, de- : veloped by the arevie. Aiii 'lli'the hliuinth donr widCiia i' teI to-' th's grugn she was' given1)4 hg 4ria loter the cotry nxt~ anmt e 82t was dr~an ot and thb oiar g a4(l~( nls l'sb Aithoug44'th. G venal I iel he4ad oftt thet Uted StatliesW r svc, now i 'ii in 5'' ielii Ins, the l144ma was perfect,131 144 thern e reon 41 to b 'eli thave is. m&44isaken.114 Lati tumefr thennethg L.' ortsili itnei gs Ia theItmonsftrtion flgof the halI~t~IIillon eiuIgals o terhe byid been isold xtoi~i Alnerien, nhelm wrot for '014 13 ~' I the It o 1v nIng 11'ot in stoeilry bftht 1 ilgh n1 1'l wherct e brouht ou I4't tsuer pItWs drTha t 1 the has iwer gad subd ttte;tadh. tlhn atdaei PAletlyg fengthl Mhel othea ofn the ocn, ( the4' ar beig reo quit there;I t4ihat 144he ' ship er14d, buced, a fttiene i a cyclolhl' ne; h t he sh a 0hight vt448(tII l'itis rate oioped llugit oi1n 4 the 11nneellatin ofthe lordery infermany. Genera444'l MhIt itcelsay tndhi c rt st under' way, S "beenuse3 1'i' wh the14 inerous)4 deuthese between These tlicltis centere on4 whether Ale n thalgt the b418~'itet typ orl) an ord sty'e tIf Am~r tey wa~ts83 the lltst the ententee mout p'erits Ge) marnly o bid irs 1'hips, whfc the Vr -tiers tittrey f'rrs." ~ l ve te((lS4DICT ir llDIG norm uet thelme that he courard, botcom-, pl fwithr its 1 requet' fo ththe rcs, ,t ah four-per tenty, heenuse( most Ifth conv' erthis an dIscussr Inre .wre qIteosd the conernce.lto ftl ord fora epithout reord Hne'rtu todded "I'11 thi crt elev iot tober comatibecwith en b1i( lnteet ioArcitn wlith the Y - - - ..* Sittles llleInb r ' 'r(If I u1111114-l1l 0' urt o' i11 Itt opelle. 2-Burmese hnImt crews rucli *ig the co-operit ie I Ietigl lisLt Il o , 11 ametvities of litternatioinal negotlitifin 0to nIt'liapt to repv al 11int'r11111t4at n : I coll14iblttini cotiversalio s ior llsetis si8ons1 of wleh)o r!oId was kep, or' 14 to ii b it tentative siggestA ioli s or i nl fortio proposilis1,1j w il t wleh lilt ar1. ial lit <esirnlt liltte n1t1 11114 I -1 11t ' <lerstait nct' lings watilt he en1idert'd ill likely If not intpIossible." Mr. 11iIt4dig, however1., let114h llet I'ly fissuired thle set' le tha11 thore wevre nit concle d4 l unlersiltai ill) 4a'11414 11 me cret exIlu'inc'ge1 ts not14s. 11111 lIt lt h 11 - recon a11111l" ena l1tors a r lie no! Sil - flet 1ti 11 . 1sst 11111 llatt' r t i'ilio4 'ths he hedg-Ied ithout withl consulerable reservatIon. Although l'siden lir'4 d ig 1 'lihe lc tc'il s posil oti Ih' l it ) reservation w as nieces'sii ryh ilt flora i-nll revintiols co. nli te1 e wauis , itlied that he woild not obj' ct to co 1' ' I o flt by 41t t1111o l ra d114gve i11' it w s' d4-ir i best thuls to fitellitalte ratiilaion. This reservation readis: "Te 'l ' tvi d States o )in h-stlal iI lhat fil it i I nes o blil tionl i e r .ch It-igl or mor11. nl o caruninain till right. lt1 1e la t'io (4 (111 t Ihhstliar pi slssi l s or In(stihir do Itih lt'ion of fnly. o tll other high en t rioheig mritis tul thit tOe consent of, the cognress of the t' I It ed ( SItles shakI ll e InIec essar fy to any la djstme111n'ts rill 1 r11141ie andi ngs under. nrticles ()ne( andi twvo by whlehI tih'e United Staitien Is o be olnild lit fill.%y way, adlig that lere Is nit) obl gn - tIhont eiter legal . mlorail to give much coltsell .lfr Naturally, Senator Johnson of Call orni) was not satis4l ed even w%.fith thils, ani I ofTered iot her in tre rtasi Ie reservi l lol . Buti t'If(he fIdmflinst rt'in I senajtors said the Braindegee resolution wIts 114 f$lr' a they would Consent to go, anaIl the(- "sinia1s," like Kellogg and New, idin't wtit' (o mit' Ike any cotn vessions lit fill. Then Senlator. Iodge, : 11efer $'oterring with the 'residenit, lferedt it substiti te reservat 4tio(afe-lI guarinig (.oftgressol 4 a tilhior-ity overl lttist, of armed force. T was not wiede byiC~lle l thre adical' 11ember't. C"I)I """"^""gne 1'" is' s t'a""it Voltiguuho th suchflers'X hot'ltuswast gIivecnleraItn by a subcomWInit-) Ptee oflte hoous egaslatn manstogln-e reac11 he.4~~l ertaryofthe freasury61) Met~ll~isonwa nlled on fori' futer the lziandestfor the sti3'll f helitvesu bonu' foegn tin tosoul dc post onern-u thaet kuf a' hill i t bev passed heif woud proeier soepforml) ofu 1(x ns against the gsunnji of boneder, 11111ai that al)3 4111'tiio iloptio tho a sao~l tar whorea ciruotediabIn the sevie.k Tn wRefreIgneby t leamsto meeny one hunred oued becuted o te a mc overn sginng heedway00 to Uothondou Ileist laie altonethe untIol the newly apitale fore debt chlans fosre the pamnfintreofthby Deorecnrationd thd detldedh conen intet( funing uoft ott foregdbt toe cong~iolo terhecrtes Apinmer of wel now n mertn.hv se h a N onl lieulcorclbtoppoeh gran1 tigoft a freea onus '':olI halth soerc who~ cant'show alrle wouy the wowas n~iro diablein te serv' ice." HEfoegndetcomssion men-Il111PttVtt l o 11 1 rdrtio aova rnamored ty I1real of seate. Ilgheslt scalryear 1the TreasuQWr Melln et of Comfo ~o~ ixsr Iece Hootsve tieatornleedSt of)0) $18000000and ( Itepresnatvey iutn ofsi Ohteo, The sactn thal ble $28e0 Re ucansly hale nropsed tie If te 1920.cbuts aond telatterve tht ennt declarhed Ine wo1 dno08t.fr h Thmoot usn Burn. ttn cmm N W a snesfr h'nm,.nvy ('uriaollilnal .Justice, onl steips of Peace ig for eitertaInment of Prince of ((.P, iI one f its ecoloiiical I 1spasi, re111e1d the(' estiiites Of the Depart uent' o' Coinmerce to tihe extent of $:1.ss 1 and those! of the Depart ment of Labor by $1,227,712. P NENIIIrIM LLOYD GEOIRGE AND l'4>UNCAltlC miet privattely In V1i ance Sunday for the purpose of ar rIanlging the agelnda for the Genoa con frv3't4et ()nt tie eoloomilc afind fillaiial re'etrie'in I (if Ilrope. Therare fir re pjiris ItI tie eonference maiy ble post 11o111ed 1*41,' several weeks. Of course the l3i lurpiai 111111uons fire exceedingly dt-sirmus t11ht the United States slhalli tftke pll tr. in the Inerting, but this trw 3VS1n1r unlikely s t ime11 passes. Serletary Iloover, in t Wasilhigt(oil's bilii y 1a1idilress In Chicago, gave whalt rnight be Considered fin uno(1IIial expressn1411 (of (lie a(m111111instration's vivs )it this inttler. ithotit becom li:. 14141 spelv lic I t(-.e 11111 e it pianiiII that 1ho 'nidted 8111.s co(tid not be ex p'vti I Etal assisataice to tle lutiolns (if' Europt until they had woriked out so1me of' their present pressing prob klems, inicludling "Iibialanced budgets, 3oveirtaxied peoples, lirge armies an11d fin unbe11araible debt, both domestic find externaI-nl bearing their fruit of in fibtion and inst b1i)llity." Mr. 1I nover ad1ed: "We find our selves much torn between an earnest desire to be of service and a rightful desire to kee) ourselves free from inutters to which we aire not a party and1 which we cinnnot remedy ; partiel 'n1i lin which, nevertheless, would uidermnine our strength, our influence ind ou1r ability to render real service in the future." R UCI 1111 been agreed upon by the Tiirreling lrish-Free State sup porters (311 one side and republicans oil tilt other. Ard Phels, the convention of the Snn Pein, onl Wednesday ad Jiurned for three ionths, at the end of whleh11 perIod th e Ieol'.e of the is 1hnd4 illl lie (alled( 01n to vote 0on a consititultion, and( also0 0on accptan~ce of the tren1ty' with IEngland. No election is to be held( untIl aifter that referen dumii. M1chael' Collins~ annioluniced lie wou3ld~ reslgn the chlairmnanship of the pris3 iona~lll governmulent if in tile thtree moncuths thle oppositioni gained control of tile Dauil ltIian. His majority i13ow is exce(edinlgly siender~i. 0110 thou 51and( membIlhers of the Sinn Feinniet wvithI 13' Vleral'l and1 formally organl izedl te repulican tll parity, and p1lans wVere 11n13 forl at camipiaigni In every c.oun~ty alganast tihe Fr'Iee Stalte and the pr1oplosed3 conistitultion. T il rsgnto of Judge Kenesaw M. Ladis from the federal be'nch oif the no(rthierni Illinois diStrict is ('1111e for sinc(ere regret, except per haps onS th Ile par~t (of baseball fans. Th~loughi ofteni spectachlanr in miethods and14 speechli Jiudlge Landis w~as alwalys fearlness, just and1( imlpeccaly hlonest, and1( he 1had( 11n unennnlfy ability to get lat the truth and1( a commendlable tenden'Icy to ignore unimportant tech nientil1es. If these latter qulihties we re shlaredi by3 the lesser judicIary Of (lie regIon whier'e Judge Landis has beenl exercisinlg his alctIyitles there wo3uld be less cause8 to complain oIf the prevalenc1(e (of cr'ime there and of mis catrriages of justice. RICPICICSICNTATIVIDS of 16 railway uniionis and1( of the United Mine WVorkers of America met In Chicago fand entered into a (defensive alliance, but there will be no sympathetic rtail strike on AprIl 1, wh'len the coal mIners atre expeLcted toI quit work. Tile agree meat,- moreover, does not become op (erative until1 it has been ratified by all the organiiiatIons. If any of the labor unions embraced in the agreemenit "is made(1 the~ victIlm of uinwarranlntedl at tacoks, or its tintegrity is jeopardized," waysi3' an d means11 willI be consider'ed, aniy faction to 1)e approved by each of the 17 ('rganlizationis. An execuitive committee, composer of the chief ex ecuitives of a111 the unions11, ill make the necessairy recommnend~ation~s. W IA I' may dlevelop into a new lilticl party was horn In Chi cago last wieek whlen severa'll hundi~redl farmers, Socilists, uniiioh labor leaders1 and1( others started a movement folr the election to congress (of men1 andt wvomen of tihe working Class5. At present the participaInts in this movemnent are pledged to .nonpartisan political fac tion. Rtadicals of manny types and de grees, were present at the conference, but I, W. W,' were 'not admitted, BRIEF NEWS NOTES WHAT HAt' OCCURhED DURING WBEK THROUGHOUT COUN. TRY AND ABROAD EVENTS OF IMPORTANCE Gathered From' All Parts Of The Globe And Told In Short Paragraphs Foreign Pope Pius announced the appoint ment of Monsignor John J. Swint, of Weston, W. Va., as auxiliary bishop of the diocese of Wheeling, W. Va. The Genoa conference will open March 15 or 23 instead of March 8, as originally planned, it is announced it Rome, Italy, because arrangements have not yet been completed. Lady Feodora Gleichen, unmarried daughter of the late Admiral Prince Victor of -ohenlohe-Langenbu rg, died recently in London. It is stated in dispatches emanat ing from Dublin that the Irish fac tions have come to an agreement whereby it is hoped that peace will be established. Several persons were wounded at Belfast in a fresh outbreak of firing on the East Side,.said to have resulted from a vendetta against saloon keep ers of that section having Sinn Fein sympathies. Military guards were sta tioned at all the saloons in York Street District. Nearly 12,000 miners in the Penar roya district went on strike recently in consequence of an announcement by their employers that they intendetl to reduce the miners' wages 25 per cent. The strikers' attitude so far is quiet but they express determination not to return to work, declaring it is in possible to live oil diminished wages while every article of consumption is increasing in price on account of the new customs duties, says a dispatch from Madrid, Spain. Peter Veregin, head of the Russia religious sect known as the. IBuckhob ours recently confirmed reports that he had suggested a plan whereby the children of the colong under ten years of age, together with the aged and in firm, be drowned as a protest against alleged exorbitant taxation. Once rid of those unable to travel, Veregin pro posed that his followers abandon their farms and wander over the country, preaching the coming of Christ and liv ing as the "vagrant working class." A London dispatch says that Amer ica joined in the praises of A. J. Bal fcur, head of the British mission at the Washington conference in his wel come to f le homeland, when the Amer ican ambassador, George Harvey, ad dressed the Pilgrims' Society dinner at which three hundred persons were present. The duke of York represent ed the royal family and the others included ministers of the cabinet, civil and military leaders and official and unofficial represenatives of the Amer can community. It was a "personal welcome" for a great pilgrim, accord ing to Lord Curzon, in contract to the official wvelcome accordled Mr. Balfour by' the government luncheon recently, Washington The senate failed to decidle what it wouldl do with the resolution of Sen ator Heflin, dlemocrat, Alabama, p~ro vIdling for an investigation in allegedl political activities of the Federal Re serve bank of Atlanta, Ga. DUrtoni E. Sweet, Republican mem ber of the house from the third Iowa dlistrict. announces ho will enter the Republican primaries in June as a candiidate! to huccess Senator Kenyon, who will become a federal circuit judlge. A movement to establish a prohi bition bureau as a separate govern ment agency distinct from any of the departments was understood to be gaining favor in officials circles, Leg islation to the end, it was said, might be introduced in congress in connec tion wvith the consideration of the pro posed1 scheme for the reorganization of the admilnistrative departments of the government. Consideration was continued by hoth the war department and the house mil itary on the question of disposing of the government's power and nitrate projects at Muscle Shoals, Ala., to pri vate enterprises or completion' and operation. To write in the proposed contract a definite guarantee to produce fer tilizers in their finished form at a given annual minimum tonnage; to capitalize the operating company which is to be created for the purpose of su pervising the Muscle Shoals opera tions; to revise the language of the so-called farmers' clause In order to Insure the delivery of fertilizers from the producing plant to the consumers at a profit not exceeding 8 per cent based on the cost of manufacture. These are the three changes that Hen ry Ford agrees to make in his bid for the Muscle Shoals property. Preident Harding has informed the senato that lhe cannot comply with Its l request for records of the four-power I Pachife treaty negotiations because no such records ever existed andh because< hie considered it incompatile with the public inter-est to reveal "informal and I cojufidontial conversations." A resolution dhesigned to bring about the recall from Englandl of Ambassa. dor Harvey was introdulced1 by Repre sentative Ryan, republican, New York. t The measure proposes a congressional I investigation -of Statements spade by f Iac ambassador while abrad, Administration leaders in the son. ate cleared away many of the obstac les in the pathway of the four-power Pacific treaty by indicating that they would accept without a fight a blank et reuervation drafted to cover the ob Jections of those who oppose unre servos ratification. L.derences between the Republicans of the ,jnato finance committee and the hou-- ws;a and means committee over tariff valuation principles were recently Jred at a three hours' secret conference without any tangible con crete result. The joint congressional service PAY commission completed its work recent ly and ordered favorably reported to the house and soenate a bill providing a new basis of l'ay for the personnel of the army, navy, marine corps, coast guard, public health service. and the coast and geodetic survey. Tihe mens ire, its framers hope, will save the government ultimately a total of $28,. 600,000 annually in the pay of the six servic.es based oil the present strength of each. The condition of the wheat crop dur ing the first half of February ranged from "generally good" in the East ern section of the country to only fair in several of the middle Western states, according to a report by the department of agriculture. Conditions in the far Wesern states were said to be favorable The state of the winter rye crop was reported as geneally good. Investigation by a special senate commillittee of Ils charge that officials of tile Atlanta Federal Reserve bank and of the federal reserve board, had been resi)onsible for a movement to curb his attacks, was recently pro posed in a resolution ,introduced in tihe senate by Seenator Heflin, Demo. crat of Alabania. Domestic Governor Lee M. Russell, in a special message to tile loistature at Jackson, iss., charged tile old line fire insur ance coinpanies \wilicll withdrew from the state last year followilng histitiu tiol of anti -t rust legislation, With fos terling the $101,00e; seduction suit fAied against him by Miss Frances Hirkhead of New Orleans, his former stenog rapher. 'The Roia, largest semi-rigid air craft in the world. imade a careening SWooP doWn flroI tile (lou1ds. She shuddered as her lige bag came into contact with high-voltage electric wires 200 feet from the earth. Then there was a deafening roar and a tow ering sheet of flame. The giant turn ed turle and, keel in the air, crashed to earth at Norfolk, Va. Thirty-four of her human cargo-army officers and a few civilians-were thrown in to or about tile blazing wreck-and perished. Eleven others, some of them terribly injured, survived. Of the survivors three were not hurt. Such is the story of the greatest dis aster in the history of the American arm) air service. As in the case of the fatal explosion of the ZR-2 over Hull englan, last August, the airship was one purchased from a foreign govern ment by the United States. The ZR-2 was purchased by the navy from Great Britain. The Roma was s1o(d to tie army by Italy. Milton Drury, former cotton mill worker, of Winona, Miss., a son of Mrs., Ada Drury Converse, whose par tially bulrnedi body was found near Hlazlehurst, about ten days ago, is being sought by Sheriff H. E. Ramsey, of Copiah county, for questioning in connection with the crime. With the arrival of four companies of Rhodle Island coast artillery at Paw tuicket, following the most serious riot ing of the New England cotton mill strike, the city was very quiet. Chief of Police Talbert arrested1 a man at Concord, N. C., suspected of b~eing Edward F. Sands, who is want ed in connection with the willing of William Desmond Taylor, the movie director, in California. Judge Morris, in the United States dlistrict couirt, Wilmington, Del., recent ly grantedl a dismissal of the com pilaint, with costs to the petitioners, for a receiver for the Columbia Graph ophone Manufacturing company. The wife of Rev. Thomas N. Denny, Jr., aged 33, dean of New Orleans Col lege, Delaware, Ohio, has preferred charges against him for non-support. HeJ disappeared last July, and she thought he had suicided. When she round he was alive, she filed charges af non-suipport agaifist hiyn. The Nebraska board of education las decided that instructors in any 3f the Nebraska normal colleges here ifter will be refused leaves of absence to study or attendl the Universities of columbia, Chicago and Northwestern, 'because it has been shown that stu lents at these institutions smoke ciga rettes, especially the wornen." Supreme Court Justice Mullan of ~ew York denied application of Edith Kelly Gould for an order vacating the livorce dlecree obtained in Paris some ime since by Frank J. Gould. The ~ourt set forth that the action had not >een brought in good faith by the ac re'e andi that "the limit of her hope s to coerce the defendant." Fifi Potter Stillman, father of Mrs. tillmnan, who has been in the lime Lght for some time, dliedl in the sub Irbis of Richmond, where he had r ently gone from New York, 'rhe Nashville, Tenn., electric ligh'. ilant was recently gutted by fire, with n approximate loss of one hlundlred housand dollars, Lieut. Clifford E. Smythe of Chicago g'rote his father,7after the first trial rip of the R~omi in Washington, thaw would be ~'minal to attempt to iy the dirigie unless some improve sents we/e nae on th vssl Lift C f Vn e Doesn't hurt a b "Fereezone" on an ac that corn stops hu- - you lift it right off - T, Your druggist sell "Freezone" for a few cents, sullicient tu, remove every hard corn, soft corn, or - corn between the toes, and the calluses,. without soreness or irritation. "Only One Thing Breaks My Cold" T HE relief that Dr. King's New Discovery gives from stubborn old colds, and onrushing new ones, grippe and throat-torturing--- has made it the standard rem Time-tried for fifty more popular than'it drugs. You will soon nc loosened phlegm and eao ., Always reliable, and good for the. whole family. Has a convincing, heal ing taste with all its good medicinal qualities. At all druggists, 60 cents. Dr. King's New Discovery For Colds and Cou 0hs . The Resui iI~of C onstiya toin are sick headaches, biliousness, sallow skin, waste matter in the intestinal system. Correct this health-under mining condition by taking Dr. King's Pills. 25 rents. All lrwits.viqq D PROMPTI WON'T GRIPS r. Kind'9_s Pills Telephone on Trolley Car. Ta lk ing Iy tlellIe from a movlug troleIuy lvIl with it poluit ilmore th at t bree infe 11 stnt1rh.ty;oo place on the lines of it Nw York Filectrie Itallwity colipanly. ThIs feat wits ae comlshied1. by using the trolley wire its a narrier of another current which transimitted the inesige. SWAMP-ROOT U KIDNEY AILl There is only one medicine that real'y stands out pre-eminent as a medicine for curable ailments of the kidneys, liver and. bladder. Dr. Kil: highest for to be just upon tho Swamp-R1o cause its mild and immediate effect is soon realized in moat cases. It is a gentle,. healing vegetable compound. Start treatment at once. Sold at alt drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medi uim and large. H-owever, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr.. Kilmner & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a. sample bottle. Whien writing be sure and! 4 mention this paper.--Advertisement. Fruits From the Amazon. lF(ur nuew fruIt s-thie peplna, the tumiiho, thei neelhneta andt the rhnenche --have bieen senit fromu thle Amnazoab counry by n biologient expedItion now working th ere. Snie of thlese, it Iss hoped, may be ('ultivated for our manrkets. A Beautiful Woman is Always a Well Woman You Cannot Afford to Overlook One Word of This Latonia, Ky.-"I had a nervous break-. down several years ago, and a neighbor told me she was actually kept alive by Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription-tha, she could not get along without it. I tookc her advice and a few bottles gave me great relief. Since then I have had no occssion to try other medicines because. I always get satisfaction from the use of' the 'Faxvorite Prescription'."-Mrs. M.. W. Adkims, 3200 Rogers St. You'll be on the road to health and beauty if youpurchase this''Prescription"' of Dr. Pierce s at your nearest drug store, in tablet or liquid. Write Dr. Pierce for free medical advice. Unrequited Love. He loves a girl.. Day and14 nIght lie thinks of her. HI* mlid dIwells ever umponx her beauty. He bItes his ntails. Her presence Is alwvays wilth hIm. lHe thlinks of her the first thing ID the mornIng; he dreams of lier' In the night, when the boin screams acrose the lake. WVith all the devol lont of hIs sowl he loves her, but shte dloes not make hitm happy., For lie Is a mIser, and she Is the woumani (in thle sllver' dllar.--Rich. mond1( Tlnmes-DIsph.. A man's lot or destliiy I eal taken to men only what he has or hIs re'putaition.