The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 10, 1944, Image 6

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I-WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS-,
Nazi Crisis Heightens as Allies
Break East-West Defense Fronts;
U.S. Tightens Net on New Guinea
- Released by Western Newspaper Unlen. ■
(EDITOR'S NOTE: When opinions nr* sxpressed In th*s* eolnmns. they are those of
Western Newspaper Union's news analysts and not neeeosarlly of this newspaper.)
Normandy——Having extinguished fire which destroyed ammunition
track at left, Doughboys reaume charge under fire near St. Lo.
EUROPE:
Yank Break-Through
With the harassed Germans hold
ing down British gains on the east
ern end of the Normandy beachhead,
U. S. troops unloosed a powerful as
sault on the western sector to break
through the Nazis’ first-line defenses
and force an enemy withdrawal along
a 40-mile front.
With heavy bombers preparing the
ground for the big offensive with an
earth-shaking attack that buried
many of the German soldiers and
showered dirt over their guns, U. S.
armored forces then rode into bat
tle to exploit the breach in the de
fenses. As the enemy pulled out,
U. S. fighters and fighter-bombers
swooped low to shoot up the retreat
ing columns.
On the eastern end of the front,
Nazi Marshal Rommel threw in a
succession of counter-attacks to cur
tail the British advance south of
Caen, with fighting see-sawing as
one side would go into action when
the force of the other's initial as
sault had been worn off.
As Lu Gen. Lesley J. McNair, 61,
watched the ground forces he had
built up in action in Normandy, he
was killed by eucmy fire.
Renowned for hat ing reorganized
the old “square” dilution of 20,000
men into the modern “triangular"
unit of 15Jl)00, and one of the lead
ers in the development of powerful,
mobile anti-tank guns to combat the
armored battle-wagons, General Mc
Nair had received Gen. George Mar
shall's praise as the “brains of the
army."
A soldier for 41 years and veteran
of the Mexican campaign and World
War I, General McNair was com
mander of II. S. ground forces be
fore being sent abroad recently on a
secret assignment. While observing
the North African fighting in 1943,
he was wounded by shell fragments.
Near Warsaw
Capital of old Poland and deep
inside the Germans’ defense lines,
the ancient city of Warsaw rever
berated to Russian guns as the
Reds pressed their offensive on the
central sector of the 800-mile east
ern front.
While the Russian spearheads
pointed almost halfway across old
Poland, Allied troops drew up in
Italy for a grand assault upon the
enemy’s “Gothic Line,” first of his
defenses guarding the northern
plains. Taking advantage of the
mountainous terrain on the ap
proaches to their new fortification
system, the Germans resisted stub
bornly In heavy delaying action.
As German lines stiffened on the
northern end of the eastern front,
and Hungarian troops slowed up the
Russ drive in the Carpathian foot
hills in the south, the full weight
of the Reds’ advance was thrown
Into the central sector, where the
open plains gave the Nazis no natu
ral cover.
DROUTH:
Partly Broken
Although varying rainfall broke an
extended drouth in the Ohio and
middle Mississippi river valleys to
help bumper plantings along, the
eastern coastal sector from New
England to Maryland suffered from
continuing dry weather.
With corn tasseling and new ears
appearing; soybeans starting to fill,
and pastures drying, the wet weath
er arrived in the Midwest at a criti
cal time.
Although the rainfall pushed the
corn along in Kansas, an important
part of the estimated 207,918.000
bushel wheat crop was threatened
with ruin by moisture as it lay in
the field because of a lateness in
harvesting and shortage of facilities
for moving the grain to market.
PACIFIC:
Japs W ilt
Bringing all of their superior fire
power into play, U. S. forces in the
far Pacific continued to tighten their
foothold on Japan's inner ring of de
fenses around the Marianas islands,
while farther to the south in New
Guinea desperate enemy detach
ments tried futilely to crack the iron
ring General MacArthur has been
fastening about them.
As big U. S. naval guns tore into
enemy emplacements inland to sup
plement heavy artillery fire, U. S.
troops bore down on Tinian island in
the Marianas, while other American
units broke up frantic Jap counter
attacks to consolidate their hold
on Guam, one of the first U. S.
possessions to fall to the enemy
after Pearl Harbor.
By establishing beachheads all
along the northern New Guinea
coast. General MacArthur succeed
ed in trapping thousands of Japa
nese troops in between, and many of
these were attempting to upset the
American lines before the steel noose
could be drawn around them tighter.
U. S. LAND:
Disposal Program
Government decision to auction off
8,000,000 acres of surplus farm land
originally required for war pur
poses, has created a mild tempest in
Washington, D. C., with the Farm
ers' Union insisting on the Farm Se
curity administration’s handling of
the disposal as part of its tenant
purchasing program.
Under plans of Surplus Property
Administrator William L. Clayton,
the Reconstruction Finance corpora
tion is to supervise the program,
with appraisals submitted by local
experts; sales made as promptly as
possible without disrupting the mar
ket; former owners given opportuni
ty to repurchase sites, and tracts
broken up into individual units.
Spearheading the Farmers’ Union
opposition, President James G. Pat
ton declared that Clayton's plan
would lead to dominance of the pro
gram by the Notional Association of
Real Estate Boards, with control
over permanent resources by big in
terests.
Of the $59,004,006 worth of surplus
property disposed of up to mid-July,
no real estate was included. Air
craft and aircraft equipment made
up the bulk ef the sales, the RFC
reported.
CIO:
Political Power
Prepared to raise up to $3,000,000
for the forthcoming elections, and
Sidney Hillman
planning to organize
neighborhood politi
cal groups with the
assistance ot union
members, the CIO’s
Political Action com
mittee looms as a
powerful, influenc
ing factor in the
1944 campaigns.
Headed by Rus
sian - born Sidney
Hillman, chieftain
of the Amalgamat
ea Liotmng Workers Union, the
CIO's Political Action committee
calls for: All-out aid to returned
servicemen; full employment after
the war at fair wages; good hous
ing; medical care and schooling
for all; equality of opportunity, and
an adequate social security system.
First objective of the committee is
to register every eligible voter for
the fall elections, and it reportedly
has spent a substantial part of $300,
000 in this work, with another $400.
000 available for immediate use.
“Love thy neighbor—and organize
him!" says the committee.
HIGHLIGHTS
. . . in the week’» newt
HOTELS: Service in hotels, al
ready below minimum peacetime
standards, will be still further re
duced by order of the War Man
power commission. Hereafter ho
tels must be classified as "locally
needed," to obtain the WMC's help
in finding employees. Furthermore
hotels may not employ men under
45, except in special cases, the WMC
ruled.
MARRIAGE BY MAIL: As far as
the army finance department is con
cerned, marriages by mail are valid
if the state in which the contract
is made recognizes them as such.
The comptroller-general gave this
opinion in a case involving a wife's
allowance payments. He cited many
legal opinions on the subject, dat
ing back to the time of the first
World war.
GOOD NEIGHBOR:
Not So Good
Charging the present Argentine
government with offering friendly
■upport te Axis establishments and
scotching the solidarity of western
hemispheric opposition to the ene
my the U. S. government reasserted
Its non-recognition of the new re
gime.
Indulging in no diplomatic double
talk, the government, through Sec
retary of State Cordell Hull, brand
ed Argentina as a "deserter to the
Allied cause," then went on to
charge that the new regime assisted
Axis subcontractors to bid on work
utilizing American material, and
also allowed distribution of imported
newsprint to Axis papers attacking
the United Nations’ cause.
TIRES:
Less Heavies
Because of the army's increased
demands, and a shortage of man
power in manufacturing plants, ci
vilian allocations of heavy and small
truck and bus tires for August were
sharply reduced, while the quota for
passenger use remained unchanged.
Although the War Production
board recognized that the present
grave truck and bus tire situation
may result in a curtailment of es
sential transportation, it revealed
that the army refused to consent to a
diversion of its earmarked stocks to
civilians.
In tendering his resignation as
Rubber Director, Bradley Dewey de
clared that U. S. plants were now
producing synthetic rubber at a rate
of 836,000 tons yearly, and that fu
ture manufacturing costs may even
tually be cut to 12 cents a pound.
U.S. SENATE:
Neiv Faces
When the next congress convenes,
Senators Ellison “Cotton Ed” Smith
(S. C.) and Hattie
Caraway (ArkD will
not be among the
members.
Dean of the sen
ate with 36 years of
service and famed
for his champion
ship of the farm
ers, “Cotton Ed”
was defeated for re
nomination for a
seventh term by
Gov. Olin D. John
ston, former textile
worker. Besides his
ardent support of
agriculture, Smith
also was known for
his opposition to tar
ms, his upholding
Senators 4'ara- 0f states’ rights and
way and Smith hjs advocacy of
“white supremacy” in the South.
Only woman member of the sen
ate, Mrs. Caraway was fourth in
the Democratic primary in Arkan
sas, where Representative Ful
bright’s failure to win a majority
of the votes necessitated a run-off
between him and Governor Adkins.
ON THE HOME FRONT
To prevent the diversion of ma
terial into higher priced clothing the
War Production board ordered man
ufacturers to channel about 50,000,
000 yards of cotton fabric into cheap
and moderate clothing during each
quarter of the year.
• • •
At the same time, the WPB
considered a further reduction
in the release of refrigerators
since 55,000 remain out of an
original stockpile of 700,000 when
production was stopped in 1942,
and the present supply would
be exhausted by the end of this
year.
With milk production in seasonal
decline and the demand for export
able dairy products rising, the War
Food administration ended the July
ice cream holiday by again limiting
manufacturers to 65 per cent of the
milk they normally used and ZZ per
cent of their milk solids content.
PRODUCTION:
Army Sets Pace
With the war department declar
ing monthly war production goals
were not being met, and output of
materials was $400,000,000 behind
schedule during the present quar
ter, the army service forces set the
pace for increased delivery by put
ting both its npilitary and civilian
personnel on a 54-hour week in all
establishments with unfinished work.
There was no indication of how
many of the army’s 1,250,000 em
ployees in arsenals and depots would
go on the extended week with the
civilian personnel paid time and a
half for all work over 40 hours, but
the order was expected to affect 50,
000 persons at all headquarters of
the service forces.
Army plants operating on three
shifts were exempted from the or
der. Where compliance would re
sult in a surplus of labor, workers
would be transferred to other jobs.
MYSTERY STORY
Publishers report a nationwide de
mand for mysteries—detective fic
tion and horror and ghost tales. Av
erage sale of a mystery book has
risen from 3,500 to 8,500. Stories by
widely known authors are selling up
to 20,000 copies each.
Psychologists believe the mystery
books come into greatest favor dur
ing times of strain and crisis be
cause “they provide the purest kind
of escape-mechanism.” They enable
the reader to forget the war for a
little while.
Washington Di^estj
Japs Still Powerful, but
Position Grows Weaker
Shipping Losses Reduce Flow of Material;
Efficiency of Pilots Suffers From
Poor Tactics in Combat.
By BAUKHAGE
/Vpmjs Atudytl and Commentator.
WNU Service, Union Trust Building,
Washington, D. C.
Paradoxically, on the eve of what
may be the greatest land battle
America has ever fought, this coun
try is turning its eyes eastward.
The nervous Berlin radio has al
ready announced that the war in Eu
rope may be decided In three
months. That statement lends color
to the hints that General Rommel,
the one Nazi commander who seems
to see eye to eye with the Fuehrer
and yet is apparently permitted to
work out his strategy according to
military science and not Hitlerian
Intuition, is going to fight it out, win
lose or draw, along the outer edges
of Normandy. What effect the events
following the attempt on the life of
Hitler will have on the internal situ
ation in Germany—or what the in
cident indicates about Germany
within, remains to be seen.
Whether the German collapse
comes before the leaves turn, or
after the snow flies, the next weeks
will see emphasis placed on the Pa
cific campaign. It is not beyond
the realm of possibility that peace
can be wrung from Japan well with
in the current 12-month. The fall of
Tojo and his cabinet indicates the
gravity with which the Japs are
looking ahead.
First, let us examine the material
upon which Japan counts to make up
her sinews of strength.
She has managed to keep her
main battle fleet "in being" as the
phrase goes. Like Germany, toward
the end of the last war, in spite of
heavy losses in auxiliary craft, she
still has enough of her big war wag
ons to stage a "battle of Jutland,"
or at least to attempt it.
Second: Japan still has a large,
well-trained, well-equipped army.
That army has never been subject
to the wear and tear of sustained
battle with an equal. It is true that
there are many retreats which we
*have read about when the Japs have
staged what was advertised as a
big offensive and which petered out
with the flag of Nippon back where
it started from. However, it is gen
erally agreed among military men
that, except perhaps in the recent
abortive morale drive into India,
and in Burma where General Stil
well and the Chinese armies are
moving to a junction, the Japs have
usually done just about what they
expected to do and could have done
more if they had made up their
minds to it. For the most part they
have not tried to win territory and
hold it. They have tried to wear
down the Chinese army, contribute
to the impoverishment and the weak
ening of the Chinese government.
This they have accomplished to no
little degree. They have likewise
reduced the number of actual and
potential American airbases in Chi
na. They have made a possible land
Invasion of the Chinese coast hard
er for the Allies. Such an invasion
is considered inevitable and essen
tial to Allied victory.
On the debit side, there are these
Items:
First, is one word written in the
boldest hand because of the thing it
Bymbolizes—SAIPAN.
U. S. Planes Within Easy
Bombing Range of Japan
The capture of this island base
within easy bombing range of Japan
means rr^any things. It tends to
neut.alize what heretofore has been
Japan’s advantage in destroying
American bases in China. It brings
the war figuratively, as well as lit
erally. close to Japan. It registers
the success of a strategy which has
■mashed Japan’s outer defenses, her
great Pacific island empire. It
proves that "island-hopping” is un
necessary. This means that the re
maining Japanese strongholds such
as Truk, and other outposts do not
have to be knocked off one by one,
they can be by-passed and starved
out, if necessary.
Saipan in American hands means
also that the B-29’s which have al
ready sounded their warning to the
Jap home folk will soon be in ac
tive operation on a scale hitherto
unapproached.
Germany, like Japan, has at this
writing a powerful land army
But Japan, like Germany, has a
vanishing air force. Note the corol
lary and see how it applies to Ja
pan. The Allied air force crippled
the German air force. And as Nazi
fighter-defense dwindled, so the
weight of sheer numbers reduced
the effectiveness of German anti
aircraft defense and offense, due to
the bombing of her plane factories
and plane-part factories and to the
destruction of her pilots. Germany’s
next greatest weakness is lack of
gas and oil. This has been caused
by the destruction (by the Allied air
force again) of oil wells, gasoline
refineries and synthetic oil plants.
Proofs of the effects of this bomb
ing are not limited to photographs
showing the effect of Allied air raids
on ball-bearing plants, on the Ploesti
oil wells, on the synthetic oil plants
and the refineries. It is shown in
the German tanks and other war ve
hicles in perfect condition aban
doned and captured because they
ran out of fuel.
Raids, really shake-down cruises
of the giant B-29’s directed against
Japanese industrial plants, hare just
begun.
Japan is already suffering from
shortages of essential materials. Her
great stolen storehouses of the Phil
ippines and the Dutch Indies are a
long way from home. The trans
portation problem is a terrible one
—Japanese shipping has been sub
jected to terrific losses by our sub
marines and planes.
Distances Shrink in
Far Pacific Warfare
Is Japan in any better position to
resist air attack than Germany?
The answer seems to be “no.” Her
greatest defense is distance, and dis
tances in the Pacific theater have
shrunk at a speed far greater than
most people dreamed was possible.
Japan’s next defense — fighter
planes—has suffered in greater pro
portion than was expected. The
quality, as well as the quantity of
Jap planes has fallen off so that
Japan has become stingy in her
use of fighters as the Germans. The
quality of her pilots has greatly de
teriorated. And this point blends
into another. Japan simply has not
the strategic know-how of aviation.
When she does send her bombers
and fighters out in great numbers,
they are no match for Allied power,
man or plane.
There is no question that as Ja
pan's resistance weakens the Allied
striking power is increased. It is
impossible to mention details, of
course, for security reasons and it
would be unwise to assemble known
facts and figures concerning the type
of material manufactured and the
disposition of forces which, taken
together, would indicate clearly
enough how the weight of Allied
might is being distributed.
We can quote the statement of
Prime Minister Curtin of Australia,
for instance, who says that “this
year” British forces in great num
bers will be transferred to the Pa
cific theater.
Finally, there is a third factor
which seems to be a hastening of the
end. It is difficult to speak of “mo
rale” in connection with Japan since
the people are told how and what
to think. But the tone of the official
utterances has taken on a decidedly
gloomy note. Even as to the shifts
in command—the fall of the Tojo
cabinet — which might have been
hailed with a cheerful fanfare, the
phrases were grave and grim.
It is also reported, from sources
in touch with Japan’s inner poli
tics, that the Jap militarists are
waiting hopefully to see if the Allies
grant enough leniency in their terms
to Germany to justify surrender on
their part. Although it was em
phatically denied in Tokyo it is still
believed here that the Japanese rep
resentative to the Holy See laid a
tentative peace offer before the
Pope.
Briefly, then, as the conservative
ly optimistic observers in Washing
ton look at the picture rapidly form
ing in the Pacific, they see several
factors which heretofore worked to
ward a long drawn out struggle in
the Far East either removed or al
tered. First, the theory that the
Allies must fight their way to vic
tory. sea-mile by sea-mile, island
by island, has been completely ex
ploded. Second, Japan’s air force
has been measurably deflated.
Third, the strategy of a blow at the
heart of the empire rather than
attrition at its perimeter is now
considered a reasonable certainty.
B R I £ F S . . . by Baukhage
The Tokyo radio makes a point of
accenting the friendliness of Japan's
relations with Germany but Japa
nese films make it clear that the
Axis pact can be carried only so
far, and no farther.
• • •
Seventy-five American Red Cross
iome Service scholarships in ac
iredited schools of social work now
irs available.
Unlike American movie heroes,
the Japanese film hero usually
doesn’t win the heroine in such a
way as to live happily ever after.
Japanese movies have a tendency to
end on an unhappy note of sorrow
or frustration with the hero and
heroine being torn apart by some
incident that exalts family duty and
sacrifice above their own personal
desire.
Hog Cholera Can Be
Properly Treated
Vaccination and
Care Essential
Hog cholera is a serious con
tagious swine disease caused by a
virus, which is a substance so small
that it cannot be seen through a
microscope. It costs a loss of
$12,500,000 annually to swine grow
ers, according to a report issued
by Clemson Agricultural college.
The symptoms of hog cholera are
loss of appetite, high fever, and
either constipation or diarrhea. The
affected animals usually remain ia
the bed, but when forced to move,
walk with a wobbling gait. The sick
pigs usually die within six to ten
days but may linger three to four
weeks before they die.
The virus which causes hog chol
era is present in the body tissues,
fluids and excretions of hogs affect
ed with hog cholera. Therefore,
feed, water, bedding, and soil be
come contaminated very quickly
with bladder and bowel eliminations.
If this infected material gets
into the digestive tract of suscepti
ble swine, these animals will de
velop hog cholera in a few days.
Hog cholera is usually spread by
moving sick hogs, by moving unvac
cinated hogs in contaminated trucks.
Saugus, Calif., “blue blood,” test
ed and ready to be shipped east
to aid in strain improvement. Bar
bara Williams, 3'4, whose father
raised the boar, gives it a farewell
feeding.
by dogs, buzzards and other ani
mals, by mud and manure carried
from infected to noninfected farms
on the shoes of individuals, on
wheels of farm vehicles, by careless
handling of hog cholera virus, by
feeding table scraps and garbage
which contain hog bones and un
cooked pork trimmings and by im
proper disposal of the carcasses of
hogs which have died of hog cholera.
Hog cholera can be prevented by
vaccinating healthy animals with
adequate amounts of hog cholera
serum and virus produced by a rep
utable laboratory. They should be
vaccinated when six to seven weeks
old.
Corn Cobs Come
Into Their Own
In competition with wood flour as
a plastic material, corn cobs should
bring the farmers about $20 a ton.
While transportation will be the de
ciding factqr, it is planned to estab
lish small mills throughout the coun
try to manufacture the plastic.
While commercial organizations
have become interested in research
work with corn cob plastics the lead
u'as taken by Dr. O. R. Sweeney of
Iowa State college. This work was
with waste corn stalks, corn cobs
and other waste cellulose in the
forms available on every farm.
Estimates indicate a market for
a billion tons of plastic material
annually when the wrork is fully de
veloped and machinery made avail
able. A new drying and grinding
plant has been perfected. It takes a
supply of four to five thousand tons
of corn cobs in a radius of six to
eight miles to make an investment
in a community drier and grinder
practical.
Milkweed in Demand
The extraction of edible oil,
chemically similar to soybean oil,
is the only one of the new uses
to which this weed has been put as
a war measure.
In Canada, the milkweed has
proven a good source of rubber. The
leaves from one acre will yield from
200 to 300 pounds of rubber gum.
The floss of milkweed can be con
verted into a substitute for kapok
which is in much demand for life
preservers and linings for flying
suits. This floss should be picked in
early September after the seeds turn
brown and before the pods open up.
Plans for Wintering
Satisfactory wintering of beef
cows on forest ranges of the south- I
east is possible if they are given a
daily supplemental feed of two j
pounds of soybean or cottonseed I
meal per head. This type of feed !
has been found to stimulate appetite I
and make for better use of native
forage. Although meal feeds are on
the scarce list, it is pointed out
that the supply required is small in
proportion to the quantity of beef :
produced.
HOUSEHOLD
niriTsffi
Is there an old blackboard
around the house that the children
have “outgrown?” If so, why not
draft it into use as a bulletin
board for the family? Place it in
the kitchen and use it as a re
minder of household chores, dates
that must not be forgotten, or
notes to the family when called
away.
• * •
One should keep a small bag of
fine sand in the kitchen if coal oil
or gasoline stoves are used. In
case of an explosion or fire, the
sand can be thrown over the
flames which will probably extin
guish them and save the destruc
tion of the home.
• * •
When you have an old clock that
refuses to run any more, it can
be used in a sick room to tell when
it is time for the next dose of
medicine by moving the hands to
the time it is to be taken. This
makes it easy to remember.
• * *
When having difficulty in open
ing a fruit jar with a metal
top, place it upside down in hot
water and leave for a minute or
two and try again. The metal top
will usually expand and loosen
readily.
• • •
Mending the frayed edges of a
rug is easy with glued tape.
Simply ravel back the yarns until
one strand is continuous across the
rug, then turn under the raw edge
and press on the tape. A strip of
burlap or heavy material may be
sewed on if the press-on tape is
not available.
Labor Shortage, So Toy
Train Is Put Into Service
No waitresses to be had, a near
Detroit sandwich shop employs a
toy train to serve patrons at its
oval-shaped counter.
The proprietor takes orders in
person, then retires to the kitchen.
Soon, the train engine speeds from
the kitchen drawing several flat
cars loaded with sandwiches.
Operated from the kitchen by but
ton system, the train travels a sta
tionery track which follows the in
side edge of the counter.
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
■Jf
CREMATION
FOREST LAWN CEMETERY
• OMAHA •
CREMATION
o£ the most modern type
Write to us for booklet
Stove & Furnace Repairs
nrnu ■ DC for any stove
IftlrMllfd FURNACE or BOILER
Prompt Shipments Since 1883
Order Through Your Denier
Compliments
OMAHA STOVE REPAIR WORKS
OMAHA, NEBMASKA
B E A U TY SCH0 0 L
DON’T BE A SLACKER
Pe Independent while the men folks are In
the f* rvice. Enroll in Nebraska's oldest
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from $25 to $75 weekly. Write
CALIFORNIA BEAUTY SCHOOL
Omaha, Nebraska
Do You Hate HOT FLASHES?
If you suffer from hot flashes, feel
weak, nervous, a btt blue at times—
all due to the functional "middle
age” period peculiar to women—try
Lydia E. Ptnkham's Vegetable Com
pound to relieve such symptoms.
Taken regularly—Plnkham’s Com
pound helps build up resistance
against such annoying symptoms.
Plnkham’s Compound Is made
especially for women—it helps na
ture and that’s the kind of medi
cine to buy I Follow label directions
LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S ccSroiS^
WNU—U 32—44
That Nawins
Backache
May Warn of Disordered
Kidney Action
Modern life with its hurry and worry,
irregular habits, improper eating and
drinking—ita risk of exposure and infec
tion—throw* heavy strain on the work
of the kidney*. They are apt to become
over-taxed and fail to Alter excess acid
and other impurities from the life-giving
blood.
You may suffer nagging backache,
headache, dizziness, getting up nights,
leg pains, awrlling—feel constantly
tired, nervous, all worn out. Other sign*
of kidney or bladder disorder are some
times burning, scanty or too frequent
urination.
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