The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 23, 1937, Image 2

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    SEEN
and
HEARD
arbund the
NATIONAL
CAPITAL
By Carter Field
Washington.—Frank R. McNinch.
the new chairman of the power com
mission, is apparently trying to
frighten the electric industry into re
ducing rates. Which is rather cu
rious, for if the electric industry
should reduce its rates sharply, as
a result of McNinch's warning, the
almost inevitable result would be
that there would be weakening of
public support for the Norris seven
TVA’s bill which is supposed to be
passed at the next session of con
gress. And such a culmination
would be most unsatisfactory not
only to Senator George W. Norris,
who has come to approve of Mc
Ninch, but to President Roosevelt,
who appointed him.
After pointing to the record
breaking figures for sales of elec
tricity in the first seven months of
1937. McNinch remarked:
"This revelation of unparalleled
growth and prosperity is the an
swer to those devotees of that an
cient superstition of hydromancy
who gazed at the water of a few
hydro plants the government was
building and predicted the destruc
tion of the private power industry.”
‘‘It is both interesting and signifi
cant,’' Mr. McNinch said later, “to
note that, as electric rates have
gone down, production and con
sumption have gone up. It has been
and is a short-sighted policy to keep
electric rates ‘as high as the tariff
will bear.’ Such false economy holds
down the ‘traffic’ and hurts the pow
er industry as well as the public.
It has now been demonstrated be
yond all cavil that the public wants
and needs more and more power in
industry, in commerce, in the home
and on the farm. Only those who
see through a glass darkly now fail
to understand that the interests and
prosperity of the power companies
and of the consumers alike look in
the direction of electrifying Amer
ica."
With all of which, incidentally, the
utility executives agree, though, un
fortunately for their own good, too
few of them probably will heed the
warning about high rates soon
enough.
Worth Watching
Incidentally, McNinch is an in- !
teresting figure in politics—well
worth watching. He was an up and
coming cog in the Furnihold Sim
mons machine in North Carolina,
years ago. Then he angered the
boss, and Simmons retired him to
outer darkness. For years he found
every road leading to anything po
litically barred by the relentless
Simmons.
But then came 1928, and the nom
ination of A) Smith by the Demo
crats. Simmons sulked. Hat in
hand. McNinch called on his old
chief He agreed that Smith should
be beaten. Simmons encouraged
him, first secretly and later openly.
McNinch led the North Carolina
Hoovercrats, and carried the state,
with aid from Simmons and the nor
mally impotent Republicans, by an
overwhelming majority.
But mark this. Of all the hun
dreds of key Democrats, including
many far more important than Mc
Ninch, who revolted, McNinch is
the only one who has ever succeed
ed in getting to first base since!
Simmons himself was defeated on
that very issue in the next primary.
All over the South the same thing
happened.
Normully, in a rebellion, the lead
ers get short shrift. But in a revo
lution they come into power. In the
South the fellows who won, back in
1928, and who carried Virginia.
North Carolina, Florida, Texas,
Kentucky, Tennessee and Oklahoma
for Hoover, had their reward in po
litical banishment and popular dis
like. All but McNinch.
Herbert C. Hoover seemed to feel
no gratitude to any one in the South
who had risked his political future
for him. With the exception of
McNinch! Maybe Hoover figured
that most of these Hoovercrats were
just fighting Smith because he was
a wet, or a Ta.amany politician,
and therefore didn’t deserve any re
ward from him. And. of course, in
a way Hoover—on this one thing—
was right.
But how about McNinch? How did
he persuade Hoover that he, alone
of all the southern bolters, deserved
reward? And how did he convince
Franklin D. Roosevelt that his pow
ers should be increased? That man
has something.
Boland Has Something
Patrick J. Boland, Democratic
whip of the house, is not as well
known to the general public as he
deserves. The title carries the idea
to most folks of a sort of sergeant
at-arms, or call boy, who rounds up
the congressmen for a vote. Sounds
like a leg job rather than one in
volving leadership.
Actually, of course, it .s rather
an important place, which gives its
■f holder the privilege of sitting in on
the party councils, and at least
the opportunity of demonstrating
his ability, if any. Add to that the
point that congressmen get to know
each other pretty wen. and usually
form rather accurate judgments of
each other's ability, entirely aside
from any previous records, and it
becomes obvious that Mr. Boland
has something.
Which makes his recent state
ment about next session more im
portant What Mr. Boland said was
that the Norris seven TVA’s bill
(eight if you acid in the modifica
tions of the present TVA) would be
stripped of all its phases concern
ing power before passage next ses
sion.
Now President Roosevelt very
definitely wants power included in
the seven TVA’s legislation. So does
Senator George W. Norris, daddy of
the original TVA. So do all the New
Dealers. All of which spells out
that there will be a real fight on an
unexpected front in the next ses
sion, to be added to those already
on the sure list—taxes, wages and
hours regulation, and, unless Mr.
Roosevelt is kidding the legislators.
Supreme court enlargement again.
It was right after adjournment of
the last session—the only one so far
since March 4. 1933, when any im
partial referee would not give all
the rounds to Mr. Roosevelt—that
Attorney General Homer S. Cum
mings took the public into his confi
dence on this—holding that the Su
preme court issue must be settled
and settled right.
Listening In
Now, of course, all the senators
and representatives, whether at
home or taking a holiday, are en
gaged in their normal between-ses
sions function of holding their ears
to the ground. They are busy find
ing out what is the safest thing for
them to do in the next session.
At this stage, Mr. Boland, Demo
cratic whip of the house, takes a
public stand against the President
and the New Deal on an issue which
most observers and members of
congress thought was going to slide
through next session without a real
struggle.
Mr. Boland proved himself an ac
curate judge of what is the shrewd
thing to do in politics in 1930, und
has demonstrated it several times
since.
In 1930 there was a vacancy in
the Scranton, Pennsylvania, congres
sional district. Largely a hard coal
mining district, it should, on cold
logic, be wet. Henry H. Curran,
president of the Association Against
the Prohibition Amendment, was in
terested. He sent this writer down
there to investigate.
It developed that no one of the
candidates for the Republican nom
ination waS really wet politically.
The Republican leaders thought it
was not safe—thought the dry senti
ment still too strong. Over in the
Democratic primary, generally re
garded as futile because the district
was so strongly Republican, Pat Bo
land was running as a wringing wet
against a dry. This writer urged
support of Boland as the only
chance.
But a little later Boland decided
to enter the Republican primary as
well as the Democratic. The Penn
sylvania law permitted that at the
time, though it has since been
changed. He won both primaries!
And has been re-elected three times
since! He has something.
Looks Like Surrender
Foreshadowing events in the next
session of congress, particularly as
to the cleavage between President
Roosevelt and the New Dealers, on
the one hand, and the conservatives
on the other, the surrender of the
President in signing the sugar bill
cannot be exaggerated.
Bitterly as President Roosevelt
objected to this bill, as expressed
not only in private conversations
but in writing, there is just one ex
planation for the signature. Hud he
vetoed it. it would have been nec
essary to call an extra session of
congress to pass some substitute,
as the present quota law expires on
December 31. The President had no
particular objection to the extra ses
sion. In fact, he was undecided for
some time whether he would call
one, entirely irrespective of the su
gar situation.
But he was finally convinced that
not all the strength the administra
tion could bring to bear would re
sult in passing the kind of sugar
bill he wanted even if he vetoed
the present bill and called an extra
session.
Most convincing on this was Vice
President John Nance Garner.
All Know Story
The importance of all this now is
that every member of both house
and senate knows the whole story.
They know, in effect, that the Presi
dent was badly beaten on two issues
very close to his heart—sugar and
Supreme court enlargement. So
they will be less fearful of opposing
any of the President's "must"
measures from now on. Which
bodes evil for the Roosevelt pro
gram in the next session.
The conflict of personalities is al
so significant. It was Pat Harrison
who really led the fight for the pres
ent sugar bill, a fight which came
to a boil during the struggle of the
Mississippi senator to be elected
Democratic leader in place of Joe
Robinson. Everybody knows that
It was President Roosevelt's influ
ence that beat Pat, and elected Al
len Barkley, of Kentucky. So Pat
lost the honor he craved, but the
President lost a fight in which he
was more determined than on
any measure this session except the
court bill.
it9 Bell Syndic."!* WNU Service.
Streamline “Ship of the Desert” in Tunis.
Visitors from Other Lands
Find Tunis Very Attractive
Prepared by National Geographic Society,
Washington, D. C.-WNU Service.
TUNISIA, its fertile vineyards
and olive groves clustered be
tween the Sahara and the
sea, is an African suburb of
Europe. Lying across a strait from
Sicily, it almost divides the Medi
terranean into two great lakes.
Overnight steamers run from Tra
pani, Sicily, to Tunisia’s capital,
which has more Italian residents
than all Libia.
No mere group of palm-draped
oases is this warm, sunny land. Its
wine and oil challenge the growers
of France, Italy and Spain. An
other Punic war, this time econom
’ ic, is on.
After an absence of 13 years a
teacher returned to Tunis, which
brings the oriental life, the Moslem
veil, shady souks, and peaceful
mosques within honeymoon distance
of European capitals.
But Tunis, no mere curiosity shop,
lives in the present. At the corner
of the Avenue Jules-Ferry and the
Avenue de Carthage — tree-shaded
Times square of the Tunisian me
tropolis-part of the city's 46.000
Italians watched red, white, and
green ilaglets mass closer on a map
of Ethiopia. Representatives of the
33,000 Frenchmen of Tunis saw. be
hind bulletin board news flashes,
German feet goose-stepping back
into the Rhineland.
Down in southern Tunisia, motor
trucks were rushing oil and grain to
Ben Gardane, whence silent-footed
camels, forgetful of “sanctions,”
carried provisions across the Libian
frontier toward Tripoli.
Neither the Casino, nor the elec
tric cars to Carthage, the Viennese
lady orchestra in a cafe, nor the
animated promenade along the tree
lined avenue held you for long. You
want to mingle again with the lean
and slippered Moslem: Berber, Bed
ouin, and Zlass.
Buy Jewelry in the Slave Market.
Strolling through the Porte de
France at Tunis, from the European
quarter of hats and shoes into the
native precincts of fezzes and slip
pers, you enter another world. Out
side is the cathedral; inside is the
mosque. Outside, tables of machine
made merchandise, soliciting trade
on the sidewalks; inside, tiny shops
which entice possible patrons of
handicrafts with the insidious hos
pitality of the coffee cup.
In the heart of the souks, where
concentrated perfumes and hand
carved candles, bright slippers and
brighter silks, mellow carpets and
lustrous copperwarc hide the naked
ness of mere holes in the wall, you
seek out a little square with red
and green columns, falling arches,
and an optimistic array of coffee
tables—the slave market.
In the former slave market of Tu
nis, you watch American visitors
buying jewelry.
The United States was the first
Christian nation to win immunity
from the depredations of Barbary
corsairs. The Philadelphia ran
aground on the Tripolitan coast, and
William Eaton made his spectacular
march of 600 miles across the Lib
ian desert, trying to re-establish a
friendly Bey in Tripoli.
Tripoli's name formerly appeared
in the legend on the colors of the
United States marines, and still is
familiar in the song, "From the
Halls of Montezuma to the Shores
: of Tripoli.”
Another point of pilgrimage is the
burial place of John Howard Payne.
“Home, Sweet Home” doesn't
stand translation, for the French
don’t write songs about their homes.
They stay there.
Payne's body at last came home.
On the simple monument in the
cemetery of the little English
church at Tunis are these words:
"In the tomb beneath this stone,
the poet's remains lay buried for
30 years. On January 5, 1883, they
were disinterred and taken away to
his native land where they received
honored and final burial in the city
of Washington. June 9. 1883.”
Silk Shops and Noisy Cafes.
Visit the sun-slashed Souk and
the shadowy shop. Here a bearded
l M isler i gares at a chromo of a fair
skinnetl g,rl. There a veiled woman
fingers a sequined gown, draped
from a hanger shaped like the head
and shoulders of a bobbed-haired
blonde.
Machine-made silks hang side by
side with a tapestry, hand-woven
by some Zlass tribeswoman genera
tions ago, and passed down from
mother to daughter until hunger
turned an heirloom into a curio.
Cafe habitues, formerly enter
tained by lively hips and shrill
voices, now solemnly listen to the
metallic falsettos of a loud-speaker
like a flytrap, or a "phono” horn
shaped like a morning-glory.
Above the screeching of orange
sellers, klaxons, and street car
wheels in the Place Bab Souika,
camellia-white domes rise like bub
bles.
Through a mere alley cluttered by
the barrows of vegetable merchants
and baskets of those who sell spin
ach, ground Vienna, or red pimiento
dust, you return to the Place Hal
faouine. There, during Ramadan,
Moslems fast and sleep by day and
gorge themselves by night, glimps
ing naughty puppet shows or play
ing dominoes.
Such pleasures palling, you ride
out to the Bardo museum, once the
secluded women’s quarters of the
palace of the Beys,
Where the Bey's womenfolk
lived “like birds in a gilded cage,”
visitors marvel at the unique treas
ures of this collection of Punic, Ro
man, Christian, and Arab art
This priceless hoard of historic
loot would disconcert a modern
archeologist, for scant records were
made of the exact places and con
ditions where the relics of long
gone centuries were brought to
light. But there they are, in breath
taking quantity and excellence.
Crops and thistles now grow on
sites whence these ancient stones
came and companion pieces of these
matchless mosaics, here polished
and protected, now crumble under
careless feet at Dougga, Thuburbo
Majus, Bulla Regia, and Sbeitla.
Sponge Diver Found Yulia’s Loot.
Petrified footprints made by
Rome’s seven-league boots in Tu
nisian sands have here been mar
shaled in a setting of rare charm.
Surely not even the chosen ladies of
the Bey ever graced these halls as
do the gods and goddesses in mar
ble and bronze.
Thirty years ago a sponge diver
off Mahdia came gasping to the sur
face, his eyes dilated with fear. In
the shadowy depths he had suddenly
met face to face with a mysterious
monster. His sceptical comrades,
forewarned, dove down. Ignorant
though they were, they came up
swearing secrecy. For the “mon
ster” was part of the ancient booty
which Sulla shipped home from the
sack of Athens. Wrecked off Mah
dia, this hand-picked art collection
never reached pre-Christian Rome.
One bronze figure at Le Bardo is
a replica of Praxiteles’ Eros, and
this love is truly blind, for the eye
pits lack pupils. The original, known
and described by Callistratus, is
lost. And this glorious figure, res
cued from the sea 20 centuries after
its shipwreck, dominates a series of
halls in which Sulla's shipload of
loot is now displayed.
Sharp sand proved kinder to the
Pentelic marble than the surging
sea. A smooth hip, which rested
for 2,000 years on a bed of sand,
still has a glasslike polish. But
where the water, like an acid, pitted
the smooth skin, no semblance of
the original lines remains. The
chaste curve from shoulder to
breast, over which some Greek
sculptor labored with love, gave
way to pock-marked decomposi
tion.
The bronzes suffered less. Danc
ing dwarfs still are grotesquely
amusing, and a virile figure with
stormy hair reaches out to grapplo
an adversary with the lifelikenesa
of a slow-motion movie.
In what was the Bey’s banquet
hall, a colossal head of Jupiter, it
self as tall as a woman, looks down
on Neptune’s cortege.
A mosaic showing the Cyclopi
working under the direction of Vu>*
can makes Polyphemus seem like
a modern, pictured on a poster
twice life size.
'Way Back When
©
By JEANNE
FAMOUS SONG WRITER WAS
NEWSBOY
—
PEOPLE who are able to help
others express happiness and
those who amuse us always have a
chance for success far out of pro
portion to circumstances of birth or
environment. So, rightly, the world
| sees to it that persons who can
drive away care have no financial
worries. <
Irving Berlin was born in Russia
in 1888, the youngest of eight chil
dren. His father, a cantor or psalm
singer in the village synagogue,
brought the family to New York’s
East Side tenement district when
Irving was four years old. The boy
loved to sing, but his first jobs were
as a newsboy, and a telegraph de
livery boy. His was the depressing
life of the slums child, street-fight
ing, swimming in the dirty East riv
er, dodging traffic in the streets at
play. At fourteen, he left home to
sing in saloons for pennies the pa
trons tossed to him. He was in the
chorus of a musical show, was a
waiter in a Chinese restaurant, and
a singing waiter in a couple of
night clubs.
Up to this time, the happiness
Irving Berlin brought to others was
limited to the few people who could
see and hear him. His voice was
not unusual enough to bring him to
the top rank of entertainers. Then,
he s'arted writing songs. The first
one brought him only 37 cents, the
next, $25; but thereafter he ad
vanced rapidly. He worked often
until two or three o’clock in the
morning, and by the time he was
thirty-six, 300 songs had been pub
lished under his name, including
such world-known hits as “Down on
the Farm,’’ “Everybody’s Doin’ It,”
“My Wife Has Gone to the Coun
try,” and “Alexander’s Rag-time
Band.”
PRESIDENT WAS LAUNDRYMAN
WORK is a habit, and to those
who acquire it it becomes fun,
relaxation coming through the kind
of work done. In analyzing the lives
of successful men and women, we
usually find that they got the work
habit early in life and never lost it.
Herbert Hoover was a worker. He
was born in 1874, in West Branch,
,owa, the son of a blacksmith. His
father died when he was six years
old, his mother when he was nine;
and he went to live with an uncle
who operated a Quaker academy in
Oregon. Herbert earned his board
by doing odd chores, feeding and
currying the horses, milking cows,
and tending the furnace. All of
this was in addition to his regular
school work and, as if this were not
enough work for a young boy, he
studied English literature and his
tory outside of school hours. Later
in Salem, Oregon, Herbert worked
as an office boy for his uncle, and
went to night school until he had
enough credits to enter Leland Stan
ford university. He worked his way
through by acting as clerk for the
registrar, and handling and deliv
ering the San Francisco News on
the campus. Later he started a
laundry agency, calling for the bags
of soiled laundry and delivering the
bundles himself.
In '893. Herbert Hoover got a job
with the United States Geological
society. He had natural ability at
engineering. That together with the
habit of work, gained rapid prog
ress for him. He became nationally
known as a successful engineer and
a business man. In 1928 he became
President of the United States.
Herbert Hoover was born with no
silver spoon. Orphaned early, he
had to fight for every bit of knowl
edge, for every opportunity. But
Herbert Hoover was born with the
habit of work, and he had the good
luck to keep that habit. His re
ward was success.
©—WNU Service.
Farm
Topics
SEASON FAVORABLE
FOR COVER CROPS
Seedings Will Supply Feed
for Farm Live Stock.
By D. R. Dodd. Extension Agronomist,
Ohio State University.—WNU Service.
Farmers are advised to take ad
vantage of favorable weather and
crop conditions this season as a
means of establishing increased
soil-conserving grass and legume
acreages on their farms.
Not only will such seedings even
tually provide live stock feed and
forage crops, but they will supply
a valuable land covering for the
winter months and prove of advan
tage to farmers who intend to par
ticipate in the 1938 Agricultural Con
servation program.
While summer seedings of le- !
gumes and grasses are not general
ly the preferable practice, good
stands can be attained on lands
from which an early crop has been
harvested, on land which has been
summer-fallowed, on land which has
produced an emergency forage crop
this season, and on land which failed
to produce a stand of conserving
crops seeded in the spring. In hilly
sections there is danger of serious
erosion and the breaking of long
slopes as a unit should be avoided.
Such slopes are best handled in
strips and on the contour.
' A fine firm seedbed with a good
moisture content to plow depth and
a good supply of available nutrients
are essential. The seedbed is best
completed by use of a cultipacker.
The seed may then be broadcast
and covered very lightly. Usually,
a 2-12-6 or 0-14-6 fertilizer, at the
rate of 250 to 350 pounds per acre,
should be used before seeding.
Winter cover crops are particu
larly valuable, serving to hold win
ter snows on the cropland, conserv
ing moisture, reducing leaching, re
tarding runoff, and reducing ero
sion. Lime is a first essential and
must be used where needed.
Horse Deaths From Heat
Can Be Reduced on Farm
Giving the farm work horses as
much consideration as possible dur
ing hot weather will go a long way
in preventing horse deaths by heat
prostration, states H. G. Zavoral,
extension animal husbandman, Uni
versity farm, St. Paul.
Ordinarily many horses die from
heat prostration during the season,
but much of this can be prevented
by proper feeding and /manage
ment. To reduce some of this loss,
care should be exercised in keep
ing the horses in good physical con
dition. Keeping plenty of fresh salt
always available and giving each
horse a bran mash once a week or
adding about 10 per cent of bran to
the grain ration will help keep the
horses in good condition. Hay should
be fed, for grass alone is too ma
tery; at noon, however, hay should
be fed sparingly. After feeding at
night, horses will rest better if
turned out on pasture.
Watering the horses often is es
sential during extreme hot weather,
every hour or so in the fields if pos
sible. Water can be taken to the
fields in barrels or cans. Horses
that do not sweat should be watched
carefully, for the danger sign is
out when sweating ceases on hot
days. Washing the horses' shoul
ders with salt water once or twice
a day will add much to their pro
tection.
Agricultural Notes
Total crop land in the country is
approximately 36,000,000 acres.
• • •
Cats, fed some mi.k at the barn,
usually take care of the mice.
• # •
Eggs generally weigh from 23 to
25 ounces to the dozen, but they
may vary from 18 to 32 ounces.
• • •
About 10 acres out of every 36
acres of crop land in the United
States is planted to corn and about
one out of each 36 is planted to cot
ton.
• • •
A serious problem of the poultry
industry is the lack of proper feath
ering of broilers in many of the
heavy breeds.
• • •
Thorough grooming of horses
cleans and thins the hair and thus
reduces sweating and prevents ex
cessive fatigue.
. . *
Milk or cream cooled quickly
after milking time keeps much bet
! ter in hot weather than that which
is allowed to cool slowly.
The most effective time to spread
poison bran bait for grasshoppers
j is between midnight and sunrise.
• • •
It requires approximately 70 to 75
million pounds of animal protein to
raise to maturity the chicks hatched
annually' in Oklahoma.
• • •
Size of the eggs is partly due to
I the period of laying, partly to he
redity. Pullet eggs are small, but
increase in size as the pullets be
1 come older until they reach full ma*
turity.
Jlsk Me Jlnother
# A General Quiz
1. What are the seven natural
wonders of the western world?
2. Where are the airplanes car
ried on the U. S. S. Lexington?
3. Since the word “sunset” is
used, why is there no similar word,
“moonset”?
4. How much more than gold k
radium worth?
5. How should the width of the
human ear compare with its
length?
6. Is it correct to say, “I de
toured my car”?
7. What colors do color-blind
people confuse most often?
8. How many white wings are
required to keep the streets ol
New York city clean?
Answers
1. Niagara falls, Yellowstone
park, Mammoth cave of Ken
tucky, Garden of the Gods, Giant
trees of California, Yosemite val
ley and Natural bridge of Vir
ginia. The Grand canyon is not
usually included.
2. They are carried below the
deck in the hangar. When the
planes are ready to take off they
are raised to the deck on ele
vators.
3. The word “moonset” is in
good usage, but is not heard so
often as sunset.
4. Radium is worth 25,000 times
as much as gold.
5. An ear should be twice as
long as it is wide.
6. No. The verb detour is in
transitive and does not take an
object. You can say, “I detoured
in my car.”
7. Red and green, and brown
and green. One experimenter
found that 1 person in 55 cannot
tell red from green, and 1 in 50
confuses brown and green.
8. There are 11,000 street clean
ers employed by the city, includ
ing drivers and sweepers.
© Ques/mr
When Preserving.—Don’t pack
jars too tightly when preserving
fruits and vegetables. Leave a
space of at least half an inch at
the top for liquid.
* • *
Washing New Blankets.—New
blankets should be soaked for half
an hour in water to which has
been added one pound of bicarbon
ate of soda. Put them through a
wringer. All the dressing will then
be removed and they may be
washed in the usual way.
* * *
Removing Tobacco Stains.—To
bacco stains may be removed
from washable materials by
moistening with lemon juice and
bleaching in the sun.
* • *
Cleaning Brass.—Never use vin
egar to clean brass. Though it
cleans at first, it soon causes
tarnish. The proper materials for
cleaning brass are oil and rotten
stone.
* * *
Treating Dry Glue. — Vinegar
added to dry glue will make the
glue fit for use aga;n.
WNU Service.
666
LIQUlt) TABLETS
SALVE. NOSE DROPS
checks
COLDS
and
FEVER
first day
Headache, 30 minutes.
Try “Bub-My-Tism”-World’s Best Liniment
WNU—U 38—37
Rnraam;iaifl
To Get Rid of Acid
and Poisonous Waste
Your kidneys help to keep you well
by constantly filtering waste matter
from the blood. If your kidneys get
functionally disordered and fail to
remove excess impurities, there may be
poisoning of the whole system and
body-wide distress.
Burning, scanty or too frequent uri
nation may be a warning of some kidney
or bladder disturbance.
You may suffer nagging backache,
persistent headache, attacks of dizxinesa,
getting up nights, swelling, pumnesa
under the eyes—feel weak, nervous, all
played out.
In such cases it is better to rely on a
medicine that has won country-wida
acclaim than on something less favor
ably known. Uso Doan’a Pill*. A multi
tude of grateful people recommend
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