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Show - rAUB a fwtn ii mi nvu - News Review of Current Events the World Over St. Lawrence Waterway Treaty Rejected by tlie Senate Despite President's Efforts Revamping of Air Mail in Progress House Passes Bonus Bill, . Colonel Lindbergh aroused Interest by visiting Washington for two days and conferring with Secretary ties seeking to ixrsiiude them to of War Dern. Soon after the secrerole for ratlnca-tlo- tary named the colonel, Orvllle t of the Si. Wright and Clarence Chamberlln waterway on a commit tee to Invesiigata the treat;, the (tact was army carrying of the air mull. defeated In the senLindbergh, however, declined to vote of 40 serve on the committee, repeating ate tiv (f to 4. Thus the af-'- - In his letter to Secretary Dern his y --i flruiatlve vote was severe condemnation of the plan to far below the re--I have the army carry the air mall. of Mr. Dern urged him to reconsider. fl"lred Meanwhile, the colonel appeared those voting. Part the senate post office comlines were dlsre-- before p..ytmittee to testify concerning permaTwenty-twgnrded. Senator Lewi. oted nent air mall legislation. lemocrut, General Foulois has been working against ratification, along with 20 Republicans. In favor of the pact on a plan by which army flyers could Join with commercial pilots were 81 Democrats, 14 RepublicIn receiving training. The step folans and 1 Farmer-I-aborlte- . Mr. Roosevelt, It was said In lows a suggestion by Mr. Roosevelt "because military lessons have Washington, was decidedly vexed that been taught us during the last few by the defeat of a major adminisarmy aviators should train tration measure, and he began prep- weeks," those who "later on will fly the arations to resubmit the treaty at with mull" In "night flying, blind flying a future session of congress. Senaand Instrument flying." tor James Hamilton Lewis of Illinois, Democratic whip of the senate and one of the leading oppo- TpWO hundred and thirty-onDemocratic members of the nents of the rejected treaty, predicted that Cnnada would soon offer house kicked over the traces and, the United States a substitute with the aid of 59 Republicans, the Patman bill calling for treaty. This may be true, but dis- passed Immediate payment of the vetthj In at reveal that Montreal, patches bonus with erans' greenbacks. The was least, the defeat of the pact balled with Joy because business President has repeatedly expressed men there think the project too ex- his opposition to the measure and Indicated that he would veto It If pensive to be undertaken at this It got through congress. Its passage time. The President's warning that Canada would, on its own Initia- by the senate was un.ikely. There were only two reasonable watertive, build an way seems to be met by this news explanations for the revolt of the Democrats. One was put In words from Montreal Representative John T. Brown Chicago and the Mississippi val- by of Kentucky, a Democrat, who was are Mr. blamed Uoosevelt by ley for the rejection of the treaty, and in opposition. He said: "You are veterans' votes. You are there Is no doubt that their buying out this piece of bait to get arguments against the proposed holding restriction of diversion of water veterans' votes this summer. There from Ijike Michigan to 1.500 cubic Is not a man In the house who befeet a second were potent This lieves this bill will ever become a and yet you sit here and vote amount, according to Senator Lewis law, and other Middle West senators, for it for your own political wewould be wholly Inadequate to lfare." The other explanation was that maintain navigation In the Mississippi waterway. The Atlantic sea- many of the Democrats are resentboard senators, too, were almost ful of the "rubber stamp" label that has been put on congress and welsolidly against the treaty. If the treaty Is resubmitted, the comed an opportunity to break away clauses concerning the sovereignty from dictation and, as one of them of Lake Michigan and the Chicago said, vote as their consciences didiversion may be omitted ; but Sen- rected. ator Lewis said : "So far as I am concerned and I believe I speak TN A new revolt against the ad- ministration policy the house Inalso for several others 1 shall not be satisfied with a mere omission, sisted on adding more than in veterans' benefits and but shall demand that Internationalization of Lake Michigan and government pay to the federal outthe limitation of the sanitary dis- lays In the next fiscal year. How trict diversion shall be specittcally ever, this was a compromise, for the amendment adopted by the house Inrenounced by Canada." volves a total annual expenditure WAGNER of New York, of approximately $00,000,000 for SENATOR of the national labor veterans as compared with the board, has put forth a warning that $118,000,000 called for under the unless "misconstruction" and "eva- veterans' amendment adopted by sion" of the collective bargaining the senate. Briefly summarized, the house provisions of the National Industrial Recovery act are checked, "we measure as sent to conference provides : may expect to witness a vast swelln 1. That all war ing of Industrial unrest with the be restored to the pension veterans of spring." coming rolls on a basis of 75 per cent of Secretary of Labor Perkins joined what they received prior to enactwith Wagner and other witnesses ment of the economy bill last sesbefore the board in urging the passion. sage of Wagner's bill which would 2. That all World war veterans create a permanent labor board and service connected disabilities outlaw employer Influence over the with be restored to the rolls on a full of Repreemployees. organization basis. sentatives of the American Federa8. That World war veterans with that demand tion of Labor employers be forced to recognize the unions presumptive disabilities be returned and predict general strikes espe- to the rolls on a 75 per cent basis. In addition, it eliminates pensions cially In the automobile Industry unless prompt action is taken to for emergency officers, pensions for the widows of the men lost In airsatisfy the men. ship disasters, and knocks out the Borah amendment limiting of the President, BYallDIRECTION restoration of the federal pay air mall operations by the the to cut less than army air corps were suspended by $0,000 apersons receiving year. Maj. Gen. Benjamin D. Foulois, chief of the corps, whose and the drafting of SAMUEL INSULL, ordered by the Greek new schedule that government, his ticket bought and would Insure greathis train selected by the officials, er safety for the vanished from his residence In flyers was begun. Athens between midnight and mornWhen the news ing, and for hours the police of the reached him of the country were frantically searching deaths of the ninth for him. Then It was announced and tenth army that the fugitive had been arrested mail carriers withaboard the Greek freighter M exit Is, in three weeks Mr. : which had been pursued by a torRoosevelt sent out Gen. B. . Insull was word : "The conpedo boat destroyer. Foulois bound for Kessy, Egypt, near Alextinuation of deaths In the army air corps must stop." andria, and presumably was headHe ordered that the carrying of air ing for either Persia or Afghanmall cease except "on such routes, istan. under such weather conditions and The Athens police learned from tinder such equipment and personthe Insull household nothing of the nel conditions as will Insure, as far way In which Insull escaped from as the utmost care can provide, the city. They thought he was aidagainst constant recurrence of fatal ed by 'International crooks." The accidents." whole matter was causing great disGeneral Foulois, Rrlg. Gen. Oscar turbance In Greece nnd a cabinet Westover, chief of air mall opera- crisis was threatened. tions, and various Post Office department officials built a revised gunboat Fulton, known as THE "grief "safety" route with the ship" of the American line from Newark to San navy, caught fire during a storm off Francisco as the main line, other the China const and had to be abanroutes feeding Into It. The Intendoned. The crew of IS" officers and tion was to reduce the number of men was rescued by two I'.ritish trips on all schedules and to per- vessels and taken to Hongkong. mit less night flying. Only three men were Injured. fuot that President plumed personally to a number of senators of both parn Ijiw-reoc- . two-thir- Spanish-America- d trans-continent- tttm Thursday, March 22, a uinn w w -- - . J. CCMMTNGS, chslr V V man of the Continental IUInoli Bank and Trust company of Cblca go. Is the new treasurer of thi Defiiocrutlc party. The place wai first offered to John 8. Cohen, At lanta publisher, but he rejected It Mr. Cummlngs' first task will Im the raising of funds with which U help along the election of Demo cratlc senators and rongressmei this full. Supposedly he will alc raise the money for the next Presl dentlul campaign. JULY 1 the University of )Nllnols will have a new dent In the person of Arthur Cutti Wlllard, now dean of the college ol engineering In the university. Mr. Willurd, who Is fifty five years old Is a graduate of the Mussacbusettl Institute of Technology and Is Internationally known as an authority on heating and ventilation. CRIMINAL action for alleged of the federal Income tax law was ordered by Attorney General Cummlngs to be brought Im mediately against eva-slo- ' i former secretary of the treasury and one of the world's wealthiest men ; T. L. Sldlow of Cleveland, law partner of Newton Thomns son of financier r D. S. Baker; Lainont, the noted Thomas W. and a member of the J. Mellon P. Morgan banking house, and James J. Walker, former mayor of New York. Mr. Cummlngs announced that the Department of Justice had conducted a secret Investigation of the tax affairs of these four men and had turned the Information gathered over to United States attorneys In New York. Cleveland and Grand Jury action In Pittsburgh. each of those cities was expected to result Cases against more than a score of other men were being prepared by the department's tax division. Mr. Mellon was quick to place his case before the people. In a long statement he denied ever having failed to pay his proper Income taxes and said that In the last twenty years he had paid more than $0.00,000 In this form of rates. He characterized the attorney general's action as "politics of the crudest sort" lie continued: "I feel very strongly that before the attorney general of the United States should bring a charge of this kind against me I, like any other citizen, should be given proper notice In the manner provided by law of the government's Intention to assess additional taxes and should have been afforded an opportunity to meet such charges In the custom- Andrew W. ary way. "In all my years of experience in the administration of the tax laws I have never known of a single Instance In which such unfair and arbitrary action has been taken." By order of the President a new income tax procedure was put In force, designed to break up "negligent" evasion of taxes. All tax returns which the government suspects of embodying willful evasion will be referred to grand Juries for Investigation of possible fraud. B. EASTMAN and the JOSEPH ' Interstate Commerje commission have Joined In recommending to congress legislation that will place under "the guiding hand of government control" the transportation agencies that use the highways and waterways of the country. Their report, which was submitted to the President, declares that regulation of motor and water transportation Is necessary "if a threatening chaos Is to be transformed Into order." Such regulation, they said, should be concentrated In the Interstate Commerce commission. In proposing changes In the Interstate commerce act, the coordinator and the commission recommend liberalization of the long and short haul clause forbidding a railroad to charge less for a longer than a shorter haul, except on permission from the commission. This clause Is held by middle western Interests to have damaged them substantially by preventing traffic moving by rail to the Pacific coast, and Its repeal is now being sought T A LIBERTAD, most Important seaport of the republic of Salvador, was almost destroyed by an explosion of dynamite on the docks and the resulting conflagration. It was believed at least 150 persons were killed. Japan's new torpedo boats, the Tomozuru, 527 tons, was wrecked mysteriously off the Snsebo naval base and It was believed most of her crew of 113 men were lost The vessel was completed only February 26 Inst and was a new type, carrying the heaviest armament ever glvee. a ship of Its size. It was considered a triumph of Japanese Several others naval architecture. of the same type are under NE of r vote of 15 to 8 a District or Columbia grand Jury refused to return Indictments In Its Investigation of an alleged conspiracy to del fraud the government on War r Y A purtment contracts. Q by Western Mwwapaw VI Ion . v. n Andrew W. Mellon, IN THE RECORDS OF EVERYDAY LIFE Unpleasant things may be pleasantly remembered and. In a sense, gloried In. Among these are hardships overcome, dangers survived and sacrifices that bear fruit. So It was held by Aeneas, who assured his comrades that In days to come they would rejoice to recall their trials One can readll ind tribulations. tnough understand this. It la onlf the treasons that It Is unpleasant to recall. There can be nothing painful In the recollection of difficulties masd tered. An old philosopher was that the gods rejoiced to see a good man in difficulties, for that Involved a conflict In which It Is possible for a strong character to What Is pleasant to remember Is loyalty to truth and right. Browning makes this very clear In one of his poems. The thing that stings Is the recollection of failure and cowand pettiness. falseness ardice, Shakespeare's counsel "to thine own self be true" cannot be Improved on. the point from A man's future, which he looks back on his Journey through life. Is determined by what he does and thinks every day. If he would have happy recollections, he can have them, but only by filling his life with things which he would rejoice and be proud to remember. Memory may be one of life's bless ings or one of Its greatest curses. To return to the gloomy phase of the subject. Lady Macbeth suffered from and because of things "rooted In the memory," which Is a very solemn thought If evil Is rooted In the memory it Is very difficult to get rid of. Indianapolis News. Wireless Power? When When Earthquakes Come So, Britain Builds Air Mail Teaches Ua TV Shipment of Alabama Cotton. room hang cotton towels and wash cloths, and a cotton shower curtain. On the bathing beach cotton bathing suits and shoes are seen; In the cotton reduction at boxing matches boxers swing cuuipulgn, 1,138,457 acres, repre- cotton-paddeat football senting a portion of the holdings of games, cotton-line- d gloves;shoulder pads 100,000 land owners who have signed movies contracts with the government to protect the players; at the view pictures projected eliminate the acreage of cotton pro- spectators from cotton-madfilms; tennis playduction. wear cotton shoes; on golf links ers Cotton prices, cotton surpluses, on every green; and cotton production, consumption and cotton flags fly cotton-covereat the baseball export figures, and new uses of cot-to- u bags mark threepark, bases of the diaknown best America's keeps fiber constantly in the public eye. mond. Cotton bagging for cotton bales Why the greut public Interest in is taking the place of Jute bagging cotton? to a slight extent In some parts of Because about of the the cotton belt ; builders of cement population of the United States, and roads are "green" cement many more millions of people on with cottoncovering Instead of burfabric every continent, depend upon cotton for a livelihood and, because lap; engine builders use cotton packing; oil refiners and chemists It Is Indispensable to modern civemploy cotton filter cloth ; and cotilization. ton conveyor belts are popular In the Go where you will, by any means and confectionery Industry. baking of transportation In the civilized One who holds in his hand a world, and cotton will be your travof light, fluffy cotton, will eling companion. Step Into an au- pound tomobile and you are supported by find it difficult to realize that about tires containing cotton fabric. You 12,000,000,000 such handfuls were sit on upholstery that probably con- produced on the world's cotton plantains cotton thread, and are protect- tations last year. Pressed Into farmers' bales, these handed by a top to which cotton confuls would make about 24,000,000 tributes. Or go yachting. Your ship, no bales. Laid In contact on the doubt, will be equipped with cotton ground like gigantic bricks, they awnings, hatch covers and "linens." would make a solid cotton "highfeet thick way" Or try to evude the fiber by climbfeet wide You will dis- and nearly twenty-eigh- t ing Into an airplane. cover that cotton fabric covers the from Boston to Los Angeles. More than one-hal- f of the highway airplane wings and that cotton dissolved in chemicals Is the "dope" would be built of American cotton, that protects the wings from wind produced In our southern states, and weather. The engineers of our and New Mexico, Arizona and Calirailroad trains wear cotton overalls, fornia. Indian cotton would build of such a highway, and the window shades and seat about Ruscovers of modern passenger cars China cotton about and sian cotton about once were a part of the snow-whit- e landscape of a cotton field. Even farms of Egypt, Brazil, Uganda, and many minor producing regions of old Dobbin still wears a cotton-linecollar, and the buggy he occasion- the world would furnish the really draws may hove a cotton top mainder. Used In Prehistoric Times. and bits of Imitation leather here and there that cotton helped proYour guess as to where and when duce. cotton originated Is, perhaps, as Cotton Used Everywhere. good as that of anyone else. MuStroll down "Main Street" of a seums display cotton fabric used In modern town and cotton in many prehistoric times. Long before the forms strolls with you. You pass Christian era the cotton fiber was men who wear cotton from their popular among weavers and wearhatbands to the linings of their ers. A book written about 800 B. C. reshoes. In white, black and all the The Romans colors of the rainbow, you observe fers to the plant cotton ties, hose, shirts, suits, col- made it popular in Europe. Columlars, uniforms, overcoats, and shoe bus noted that cotton grew abunThe feminine companions dantly In the West Indies, and other laces. of the cotton-clamen wear hats famous Spanish and Portuguese exand dresses, and carry umbrellas of plorers found it growing and in use in Mexico, Peru, Brazil and India. cotton. A glance at thousands of bolts of In Mexico It was the chief material cloth on department store shelves used for making clothing when the reveals that between the time cot- Spaniards arrived. More than forty million acres, or ton leaves the plantation and reaches the retailer it assumes many an area nearly as large as Pennsyldisguises. For instance. If you pur- vania, New Jersey, Delaware, and chase calico, cretonne, corduroy or Connecticut, combined, produces chintz, you are buying cotton. And American cotton. The seeds are the same goes for a long list of tex- planted in rows three to four feet tiles from apron cloth, batiste and apart When the plants are sev cambric through the alphabet to vel- eral inches tall the rows are hoed veteen and voile. by hand, and healthy plants 12 to 18 In a typical American home, cot- Inches apart are left to develop. At ton has earned the right, to be maturity the plants are virtually called king of textiles. Step over sturdy trees three to four feet high. the threshold and your feet may The cotton flower is snow-whit- e alight on a cotton rug; pictures when the bud bursts. Later it hang on walls covered with cotton changes through pink to red. The red petals fall, leaving at their base cloth ; you relax in a chair upholstered with cotton and listen to a a little green boll slightly larger phonograph record which contains than a pea. The boll slowly swells cotton, playing a recent "blues" song to nearly the size of a golf ball. inspired by life In the Southern Then It ripens, bursts open, and In cotton belt. Within eyeshot are a day or two becomes a mass of cotton draperies, window shades, fluffy white cotton, ready to pick. soft cushions, and chair and table Practically all cotton 13 picked by hand, but experiments are constantcovers. In the dining room perhaps the ly being carried out to develop matable "linen" Is cotton or part cot- chinery to perform this work. ton, and cotton wicks protrude from Seed Now a Valuable Product. artistically designed candles. In the Cotton seed was waste of the inkitchen one may discover a cotton dustry until after the Civil war. It bag for crushing ice, a cotton mop, was burned, thrown aside to rot, or cotton wiping cloths; and perhaps shoveled into rivers. This former cotton has some part In the manuwaste material now Is worth about facture of the linoleum on the floor $200,000,000 annually. The seeds and the oilcloth on the table. Open are "ginned" again so that the tiny the pantry door and again you find bits of cotton or "linters" cotton. One of the newest meth- adhering are removed. Cotton seed meal of small ods of packing quantities makes cattle food, fertilizer and oranges, potatoes and onions is by flour, and meat substitutes for huOf man the use of mesh cotton bags. Cotton seed oil course the housewife long has is usedconsumption. in shortening and an ingrecotIn flour and salt bought sugar, dient of some sonps, cosmetics, artiton bags, as well as cheese with ficial leathers, oilcloth, roofing, butcotton covering. ter substitutes, candles and waxes. Bedroom Is Full of It It also is burned in miners' lamps, and Perhaps the bedrooms contain used by packers of fruit, olives, sarmore cotton than any other room dines and vegetables. In the home. From linters are made bakelite Cotton sheets, pillow cases, quilts, and blankets for beds for radio panels, are widely used, while in men's and glass, rayon for dress goods, stockwomen's wardrobes are handkerings and underwear, and a long list chiefs, underwear, nicht clothes, of other products that chemistry has lounging and bath robes, and house given to world commerce In recent In the bath years slippers of cotton. A 3,000-Bal- e Prepared by Nttlonal Oorpblo Soclttr. Wuliln.tou. L O. WNU Srvlc. DATE the federal bus rented In Alabama TO d e d one-tent- h 1934 i MEMORY'S PART THIS WEEK. ,"rff ' -- BRISBANE rf ? presi- o e timtrn mta tfrnni m r ALTER By EDWARD W. PICKARD DESPITE the n--i H-:vii-Yg -- Every day brings new, amazing things, and a million yeara from now there will be as many, perhaps more, marvels, some of them coining from neighboring planets, with which we shall have learned to talk. Boise City, Ok la. Informs you that scientists hope to drive a railway motor car 42 miles from Boise City to Clayton, N. M., with power sent Into space by a short wave radio broad cast. The Santa Fe railroad expects to make the experiment within ten days. This may be one step In what will be the greatest of all Invention! In connection with transportation-wirel- ess transmission ef power. When flying machines, on their way across the continent can pick up, by wireless, power from Niagara and other stations as they pass, carrying no fuel with them, or pick up power from power stations esthe flying tablished In problem will be solved, mld-oceu- This old earth, that ceased being Incandescent, then red hot. then bubbling In spots, only a few hundred million years ago. Is still settling and shifting a little, like the crust of a pie fresh from the oven. There are contracting and expanding, geological slips and slides, and In the earth's Interior volcanic disturbance, sometimes caused by Inrush of salt water Into deep, red-hcrevices. Therefore, men read on the front page, "Earthquake Rocks Utah Citto Disturbance ies, Extending Idaho, Wyoming, Nevada and California." A slight shaking anywhere on earth's surface Is terrifying. But It Is only part of the normal adjustments of a planet still (n Its Infancy, having, according to science, at least a million million more years to go. Ferry's Seeds are sold only In fresh dated packages. When you buy Ferry's Seeds you are sure of the finest quality available. Adv. ot Verse From the lie that keepeth his his life, Bib! mouth keepetb. Proverbs 13 :3. Dr. Pierce's Pellets are best for liver, bowela and stomach. One little Pellet for a laxative three for a cathartic. Adv. Think It Over Time spent In getting even would be better spent In getting ahead. The British conclude, sadly, that war must come, and, wisely, decide to be ready. Intensified warship building begins, with 17 major warships, Including three powerful submarines, in the program. Britishers hate submarines, because Britain has so many ships afloat, and submarines sink floating ships, but if others have them Britain must have them. YOU can Zr V"'" llT'S ' one-sixt- h one-nint- d d Bright Eyes . . . No Bad Skin It will Interest our financial wlz ards, printing billions In bonds, paying as many billions In Interest, to learn that Britons feel able to build because their budget shows a surplus of more than $125,000,000 this No surplus in our blessed year. country, thanks to sending to friends In Europe billions that will not return. She learned lonif aeo bow often dull eves, inmnlv skin. nervousness and lack of pep come from bowel sluggishness and constipation. Nov NR (Nature's Kemedy) is her secret of sparkling loveliness and vital health. Ko more ineffective partial relief for hei: NR Tablets give thorough cleansing, gently stimulating the entire bowoL Millions take NR for thorough, effective reiier irom constipation ana Duiousness. uet a oc do i. All drwreists'. Pleasant safe , Next In Interest to British warand not hab-- 1 ship building comes the birth of a child in London with a "tall" two Quick relief for arid indiges-- I TIU111 JYl C" lion, heartburn. Only 10c inches long. This should have happened while William Jennings Bryan and Clarence Darrow were arguing evoluGET IN on the Year's NEWEST PLiZZLKS. tion in Tennessee. Infants with accessor to deal INSPIRATIONAL Quick money tails are born occasionally, confirm- and everybody a prospect. For samplo set and Ruled helps send 16 cents NOW to P. 0. Box 710, Pssadena, Calif. ing Darwin's belief that the small ttspoionl os coccyx at the lower end of every human backbone was tail. once a CHAPPED ROUGH SKIS There Is nothing in this to worry To relieve the soreness and dryness the proud soul rebelling against "dethe return of skin comfort scent from monkeys." Darwin never and hasten and health, apply soothing m said we descended from monkeys, only that we came up In a parallel line of development, diverging and passing the monkey on our way up. Evolution teaches and proves that every human being goes through many different lower animal forms In the months previous to birth. Yon may see that for yourself In museums. If that suits the plans of Providence even now, it might also have Pile Sufferers from Protruding, suited those plans to have animal Bleeding, Itching or Blind Piles, can now get relief from very life, as a whole, come up through first treatment by using the same process. J cross-wor- d pcu-le- s. d PILES The President, shocked by deaths among army mail pilots, has ordered all air mail service discontinued, pending reorganization on a commercial basis. The loss In the experiment of suddenly trying to make air mail flyers of army flyers, while deeply regrettable, will not have been entirely wasted. The country has learned, and the government doubtless has learned, that Improvements are called for In th arrangement of our air forces for national defense. . it is inconceivable that even a country as slow as this, when 11 comes to making Important changes, will fail to realize, after recent ex-periments and unpleasant deaths, that war flying, the air defense of the nation, should be under the President, In a separate department with a separate head. Q.R.Pile Ointment United States population last yeai Increased about 797,000, making th total approximately 120,144,000. Thii Increase should not worry you, foi It Is the lowest, with two exceptions, in the past sixty years. Also any one of the several states in thh Union could feed all the people Ir the United States. Oinnt Texas. In tensively cultivated, could feed al' human beings now on earth, ahoul l,8on.f)0rt.ooo of them. . King FnMtrt'W svndtcat, Ino. WNU Servlc Q. R. Co., Gentlemen: Inclosed find $1.00 P. O. Money Order for One tube of Q. It. Pile Ointment to be mailed prepaid to I Q. It. (Quick Relief) Pile Ointment Is a new remedy for the treatment of pile sufferers no matter how long afflicted, guaranteed to give satisfactory relief or money refunded. Before placing this pile ointment on the market for sale. It was put to the acid test In both mild and severe cases, never falling to produce wonderful re- sults. If you are troubled with piles, not experiment Get Q. K. Pile Ointment If your druggist does not carry It In stock, fill out the blank below and mall do it to Q. R. OINTMENT MFG. 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