The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 25, 1944 Page: 2 of 16
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THE NEW ULM ENTERPRISE. THURSDAY, MAY 25, 1944
----WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS------
Allies Continue Gain in Italy;
Farm. Help Shows 4% Decrease;
Japs Strengthen Hold in China
— - 1 ■■ ' ■ —— Rcle.Md by W.M.rn Newspaper Union. ———----—---
(KDITOK'B NOTE: When eyleleM are I. (keen oolaeeas.Uiey are Um. at
Weatera NewapaMr Valoa’a aewn aaalysia an« Ml aeaeeaarUy »TU1. aewapapor.l
CONSUMERS' GOODS:
Clothing Pinch
Unless a sudden change in the
war occurs, supplies of men's and
boy's fall and winter apparel will
continue to be tight.
So discovered merchants gather-
ing in Chicago's Merchandise Mart
for the annual clothing show, with
their allotments for pajamas, sport
and dress suits, sweaters and suits
ranging from 50 to 75 per cent of
last year.
Any increase in production, it was
learned, would be entirely de-
pendent upon the availability of
labor and goods and the extent of
Reflecting the swiftly changing con-
ditions was the War Production
board's recent order reserving the
spinning of worsted yarn solely for
the government.
With a fairly early possible return
to civilian production, merchants
sought standard items which would
immediately come into demand in-
stead of substitutes.
Electric Irons
Despite delays principally occa-
sioned by manufacturers’ pleas for
higher ceiling prices, the War Pro-
duction board’s electric iron pro-
gram came closer to its announced
goal of 2,000,000 units for 1944 with
authorization so far for an output of
769,338.
Although surplus materials are be-
ing released to manufacturers
whose operations will not complicate
the tight labor situation, deliveries
of irons in volume cannot be ex-
pected until the fall, it was said,
since many of the requests for ma-
terials had not been cleared.
In asking for higher prices, manu-
facturers reportedly pointed out
that OPA ceilings were based on
prewar conditions, which have
since been considerably altered by
increased wages and material costs
amounting to 25 per cent.
CHINA:
Ominous Rumblings
With Japanese troops strengthen-
ing their hold on eastern China, Gen-
eralissimo Chiang.
Kai - shek ordered
an offensive in the
southwestern part
of the country in an
effort to open up a
new supply road
from Burma.
As the Chinese po-
sition deteriorated
with ominous rum-
blings that the coun-
try might not be
able to continue war
much longer with-
out concrete assist-
ance from the Al-
lies, Vice President Henry Wallace
prepared to fly to the Far East for
conferences with Chinese leaders.
In attacking to the southwest, the
Chinese aimed to hook up the Bur-
ma road with the
Ledo road, which
Lieut. Gen. Joseph
Stilwell’s mixed
forces were hacking
out of the jungle to
extend communica-
tions from Allied In-
dia to China, par-
tially offsetting the
Japs’ stranglehold
on the country
_____ through their con-
Wailace tro1 of Chinese
seaports.
FARM HELP:
4 Per Cent Drop
With hired hand help showing the
biggest drop, farm employment on
May 1 stood at 10,068,000 persons,
4 per cent below a year ago and 9
per cent under the 1938-’42 aver-
age, the department of agriculture
reported.
Some of the decline was attributed
to the inclement weather which pre-
vented field work in recent weeks,
but this condition soon promised to
be reversed, with farmers needing
all available hands to get the crops
in during the shortened season, es-
pecially since many operators were
reportedly switching their acreage
from small grains to row crops,
which require more labor.
Although all the geographic re-
gions showed declines in farm em-
ployment, the largest decrease oc-
curred in the west south central
area, where the number of family
workers dropped 3 per cent and
hired hands 18 per cent. As of May 1,
80 per cent of the agricultural work-
ing force was made up of farm op-
erators and family help.
Italy—Air force servico groups load I
bombs for d.livery to bombers on flam-
ing Italian front.
EUROPE:
Smash Ahead
As the Nazis' Gustav line shook
and crumbled in southern Italy be-
fore the charge of U. S., French
and British troops, Allied bombers
continued their round-the-clock bom-
bardment of vital communications
in western Europe to complicate the
enemy's plans for countering the .
invasion.
Beyond the enemy’s tattered Gus-
tav line in southern Italy lay his
equally heralded Adolf Hitler line,
a network of deep set steel machine-
gun nests anchored in concrete, and
hinged on the towering Aninci
mountains on the west. Banging
through the Gustav line to the west,
U. S. and French forces already
were bearing down on the Hitler for-
tifications.
As the invasion approached, Ger-
man bombers were sent over Eng-
land in strength, with fleets of 300
attacking seaports and military in-
stallations on the southeast coast.
As the zero hour neared, Britain
was agog with reports that the Ger-
mans were preparing to drop para-
troopers into the country to wreck
vital communications and other
strategic installations the moment
the invasion fleet shoved off.
PACIFIC:
Widespread Action
Fighting see-sawed in India, with
the British regaining ground in the
vital Assam-Bengal railroad line
area to the north, and the Japs
launching a new drive into the coun-
try to the southwest.
As the fighting raged in India,
U. S. bombers ranged over the
length of the Pacific, hammering
Jap installations in northwestern
New Guinea guarding the ap-
proaches to the East Indies and I
Philippines; blasting isolated enemy
strongholds on the Marshalls, and
hitting the Kurile islands at the tip
of the Japanese homeland. At the
same time, U. S. bombers pounded
Jap supply bases on eastern New
Guinea and New Britain islands,
where an estimated 150,000 enemy
troops have been encircled by U. S.
amphibious operations.
The Japs launched their new drive
to the southwest in India after
British and native troops fought off
their steady advance toward the
Assam-Bengal rail line, which would
be an important link in any new
supply road to China through
northern Burma.
STRIKES:
60,000 Idle
Sixty-thousand workers were on
strike in Detroit, Mich., many as a
result of the walkout of 3,300 fore-
men seeking recognition of their as-
sociation as a bargaining agent, con-
trary to industry's position that they |
are a part of the management.
Because the navy’s bureau of
aeronautics refused to accept any
more of its output because of a lack |
of foremen’s supervision and inspec-
tion, the Briggs Manufacturing com-
pany closed its Mack avenue plant,
and later the Hudson Motor Car
company announced it shut down
some of its assembly lines for the
same reason.
More than 4,000 workers were idle
as a result of the CIO opposition to
the delivery of soft drinks into the '
Highland Park plant by an AFL
driver as the two unions fought each j
other in organizing chauffeurs for
beverage concerns. Other squabbles
concerned production rates at
Buick’s aluminum foundry at Flint,
Mich., and a protest against a War
Labor board ruling at Graham-
Paige’s Detroit plant.
MISCELLANY:
OLDEST: The oldest person in
the United States, according to the
census bureau, is James W. Wilson,
negro resident of Vidalia, Ga., who
has just reached his 119th birthday.
• • •
GRADUATE: After 12 years of
part time attendance, Mrs. Joseph
Montone, 69, and the mother of
aeven children, has completed gram-
mar school in Newark, N. J.
YANKS ABROAD:
Beer
One of the worst complaints of
U. S. seamen, according to vice-
| admiral H. K. Hewitt, is that they
can’t get ashore often enough for a j
drink of bear, and he added, beer
would be available to men on all
naval vessels if he could have his
way. AU alcoholic beverages are for-
bidden on ships of the U. S. navy
since World War I. The British navy,
by contrast, issues the daUy rum
ration.
FOOD:
Large Holdings
Despite the removal of meat from
rationing, storage holdings totaled
1,215,501,000 pounds on May 1, the
highest for that date since 1920.
Of the meat holdings, 781,392,000
pounds were in pork; 282,291,000
pounds in beef, and 16,671,000 in
lamb and mutton. Poultry stocks
totaled 129,988,000 pounds. On hand
were 123,364,000 pounds of cheese
and 69,533 pounds of butter.
At 12,802,000 cases, holdings of
eggs on May 1 were the highest for
that date. Other large stocks in-
cluded 130,855,000 pounds of fruit
and 105,417,000 pounds of vegetables.
Meat Rationing
Despite the record meat holdings,
OPA Administrator Chester Bowles
told the house banking committee
that rationing may be resumed in
“30, 60 or 90 days, or maybe it wiD
be January and February.”
Resumption of rationing depends
upon the flow of hogs and cattle to
market once warehouses have been
partly cleared of bulging holdings,
Bowles said. Much of the shipment
will depend upon the feed avail
able, he declared.
Concerning feed, midwestem sen
ators meeting with War Food Ad-
ministrator Marvin Jones pressed
for an early relief of the govern-
ment's prohibition of private sales
of corn in 125 counties in the mid-
west, claiming that industrial
processors already have sufficient
supplies to carry them into the fall,
whereas farmers are short on ani-
mal feed.
MOSCOW MISSION:
Jig-Saw
Back in Springfield, Mass., after
a whirlwind visit to Moscow where
he conferred with Josef Stalin about
plans for the reconstruction of a
democratic postwar Poland and
Communist cooperation with the
Roman Catholic church, Rev. Stan-
islaus Orlemanski had an unsettled
homecoming.
Boisterously greeted by several
hundred of his parishioners includ-
ing exuberant youngsters, Father
Orlemanski later was served with a
notice of the suspension of all of his
priestly privileges by his superior.
Parishioners Greet Rev. Orlemanski.
Bishop Thomas M. O’Leary, for
leaving his pastorate without per-
mission. The suspension was lifted
when Father Orlemanski, near a
nervous breakdown, promised to
conduct himself according to the
rules and policy of the church.
Observers who remembered the
recent assertion of Russia's late
Orthodox Church Metropolitan
Sergei that the bible did not sup-
port the Pope’s position as vicar of
Christ, tried to reconcile the state-
ment with Father Orlemanski’s
presentation of a paper purportedly
signed by Stalin, professing a belief
that it was possible for Red Russia
to work with the Pontiff on ques-
tions of religious freedom.
BALL BEARINGS:
Diplomatic Incident
With their armies locked on bloody
battle-fields, diplomats of the great
powers crossed their own kinds of
swords in an intense, dramatic fight
over possession of the ball-bearing
output of Sweden's great SKF manu-
facturing company.
If money’s the only object, the Al-
lies have a good chance to win the
fight, since the U. S. dispatched a
special representative to Stockholm
with a blank check to bid for Ger-
many’s share of SKF’s ball-bearing
production.
The U. S. representative went
overseas to dicker directly with SKF
officials after the Swedish govern-
ment turned down demands that it
renounce its ball bearing trade
agreement with the Germans. The
U. S. purchase of SKF’s entire
output would, in effect, leave the
Swedish government without any
ball bearings to deliver.
To help the Swedes make up their
minds, U. S. agencies reportedly
were considering taking over SKF’s
plant in Philadelphia, Pa., as repre-
sentatives of the Treasury and For-
eign Economic administration in-
vestigated the company’s books.
President of SKF’s U. S. business is
William L. Batt, vice chairman of
the War Production board.
Surgery
Amputations may be reduced by
half in this present war because of
a new way of splicing arteries which
has been devised by three New York
scientists The War department has
approved the method for battle-
front use. although special equip-
ment wiU be necessary to preserve
segments of blood vessels.
The method briefly, is to bridge
gaps in arteries with sections of
veins.
Washington Di9CSt
II. S. 'Scouts and Raiders'
Make Warfare History
Specialists in Guerilla Tactics Practice Blood-
less Raids in Preparation for
Big Battle to Come.
By BAUKHAGE
Newt Analyil and Commentator.
WNU Service, Union Trust Building
Washington, D. C.
"Halt—who’t there?"
This sentence, barked out in one
startled exhalation, stopped the
stealthy form which had suddenly
materialized out of the shadow of a
plane. His dark wet suit stuck to his
lithe form. His hands went up as
the sentry's bayonet stopped just
short of his midriff. There was no
moon. The two figures, hardly
visible to each other in the black,
froze for a second as the sentry’s
nervous trigger-finger grew a little
more steady. He called the guard.
There was the crescendo scuff-
■ scuff-scuff of hurrying feet and a
moment later, the sentry was patrol-
ling the airdrome again very much
i on the alert. . . .
“For the fifth time, I ask you
I where you came from,” the angry
! colonel demanded. For the fifth
I time came the same answer from
i the prisoner in the wet jungle suit.
“Private, first class, James
O'Fallon, Serial No. 3030496.’’
“Take him away,” said the
colonel finally, “he can stay in the
guardhouse for the duration.”
The guards hustled No. 3030496 off
to the hoosegow where he stumbled
I over an assortment of “AWOLS"
and other bleary-eyed offenders. He
saw three other men lying peace-
ful.y on the floor arrayed like him.
But no sign of recognition on their
blackened faces.
Bloodless Raid
Private first class O'Fallon and
his four comrades (although the
colonel didn’t know it at the time)
were the only men captured out of
a raiding party of 40. The rest had
slipped catlike over the whole air-
base, chalked their initials on
planes, sketched the location of the
radio room, noted the position of the
antiaircraft guns, estimated the size
of the garrison, checked each rock
and sandbar in the shallows
through which they had crawled be-
fore they reached the beach.
Of course, this was only a prac-
tice raid like dozens of others, the
preparation for which I have wit-
nessed. But real bullets had twice
that night whistled out over shad-
ows and set the big grey Snauzers
yipping and the flashlight stabbing
into the black sky above the base.
The unwritten story of these spe-
, cialists will all come out some day.
' The Japs did this kind of thing at
the beginning of the war and we
thought it incredible. The British did
it later with their brilliant “com-
■ mandos.”
The old name for it is guerilla
warfare . . . fighting behind the
i lines, or in the more official lan-
| guage of an article by Douglas
' Smith in that trenchant military
publication, the Cavalry Journal, “a
phase in trained armed warfare that
concentrates on destruction (the
raiders destroy, the scouts merely
get information) of enemy person-
nel and equipment in the enemy’s
own territory.”
Back in the French and Indian
wars, the ancestors of Douglas
Smith began learning these tricks;
Captain Smith, an American citizen
and later of the French foreign
legion, has put on paper some of
the principles he has adduced from
his own experiences in World
War II.
Excellent Result*
“The usual method of attacking
an airdrome,” says Captain Smith
in recounting one of his experiences
with the guerillas composed of Brit-
ish and French in Libya, “was for
i the men to leave their cars (the
i rubber boat of the desert) and go
! on foot up to the airdrome at night.
I When possible, they passed the sen-
tries without detection and put their
' bombs on the airplanes (chalk
, marks when you just rehearse) then
! left the airdrome and got suffi-
1 ciently far away before the bombs
went off.
“Of course.” says Captain Smith
laconically, as the descendant of a
good Indian fighter would, "this was
not always possible and many times,
sentries had to be killed in hand-to-
hand fighting by a sudden attack
with a knife. . . ” Although the Ger-
I mans made every effort to protect
their planes against such attacks,
approximately 300 enemy planes
were destroyed by this guerilla unit
in a single 12-month span.
Captain Smith, writing in the
early days of the war, says, “in case
of the invasion of Europe,” the
benefits derived from guerillas
would be “of the greatest assistance
to an army opening a bridgehead.”
Well, not only the land guerillas
but also the men who come up out
of the sea by night are of “greatest
assistance" whether you call them
by the romantic name of "com-
mandos” or the more prosaic
American designation of “scouts and
raiders.” The French have their
land guerillas who are already play-
ing a vital part in the battle of Ger-
many. The part our Scouts and Raid-
ers have in the same epic event
will some day be sung in appropri-
ate measures.
But let’s get back to our personal
history. The day after the bloodless
“raid” which I described to you, a
captain from the raided airbase was
visiting at "raider” headquarters.
Said the captain, after his third
coca cola: “About your raiders run-
ning hog wild over our joint last
night. We caught them all—four of
them. They walked right into the
sentry’s arms—and darn near got
drilled.”
The raider officer who lived his
part and looked it—he was still un-
shaven—got up and picked up a
rifle, shining like a schoolboy’s
morning face, that was standing in
the corner.
The Colonel Err*
“Take this back to your colonel,”
he said, “and have him check its
number. He knows it stands in the
rack right outside his door and if
you have an inspection worth a
nickel, it’s been missing about nine
hours.”
The captain cocked an eye.
"Yep,” said the raider, "I
plucked it from the bush and would
have had the name plate off the
skipper's door too if I hadn’t heard
a step in the hall. Want to see a
sketch of your layout?" He tossed
a sodden notebook on the table.
Yes, it was just "play.” But the
young officer who had been pushing
the pigskin around for one of our
storied gridirons only two years ago
had played at more serious games
in Africa before he came back to
be an instructor—he had landed on
more than one enemy beach, wig-
gled past sentries, human and can-
ine, just as he had when he worked
his way up to the commandant's
door, stole the rifle, inched his way
back to a clump of bushes, dug out
his deflated rubber raft, blew it up
and paddled back to safety.
Duck soup for him. He’d done it
all before in earnest — once when
there had been a quick flash of a
knife and some blood—and a sen-
try’s last groan, stifled by a hand
that had to wipe some enemy blood
from it. And for that, he wears a
little ribbon on his dress tunic which
you can’t buy by the yard.
• • •
Women and the War
What is going to happen to the mil-
lions of women who are now filling
jobs in war industries when (1)
those industries are discontinued or
converted to peace-time operations, I
(2) millions of men come home
from the war looking for jobs?
A group of women who meet in
Washington frequently, have been
hard at work for months on plans to
deal with such an emergency. They
are the women's advisory commit-
tee of the War Manpower commis-
sion, headed by Miss Margaret A.
Hickey, and they have just made
some specific recommendations to
War Manpower Chief McNutt.
The women’s committee says
that:
Employers should give their wom-
en workers notice of cessation of
work as far ahead as possible;
Women to be laid off first should
be those on the split-shift, including
mothers of children for whom part-
time working arrangements have
been made;
Women who wish to resign from
their jobs voluntarily should be
asked to do so as soon as possible;
Women who have to be dismissed
because of the curtailment of work
should be given consideration as to
skill, seniority and dismissd pay,
based on length of service;
Plans should be made for advis-
ing women who are dismissed about
such things as transferring to other
jobs, retraining for other jobs and
their social security rights.
What action the manpower com-
mission will take along these lines
remains to be seen. But at least the
women have spoken up.
B R I E F S . . • fey Baukhage
The war department says that
$465.06 is the present annual cost
of clothing, food and individual
equipment for a soldier, compared
with a total of $501.06 a year ago.
« • •
Incorrect and insufficient ad-
dresses appear on 15 per cent of
the more than 25 million pieces of
mail sent each week to servicemen
overseas.
Because of deficiencies in the
Japanese wartime diet, one in every
four young Japanese is affected by
tuberculosis.
...
The demand for rare postage
stamps as a form of investment in
Germany has sent the prices up to
such a fantastic level that the Nazi
authorities are considering impovk-
tion of ceiling prices.
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
CATTLE FOR SALE
REGISTERED HORNED HEREFORD
BULL* 1. 2 und 3 yrs. old. Rood condition,
ready for service; re sonably priced.
VN’tKHWOnn HfREFORD RANCH
Rosts I. Cat Spring. Tea. Phone Sealy VIS
WE~S AV1TSEVERAL "STAR JERSEY
BULLS" ready for light service. Their
dams have nice production records.
CARL WIPPRECHT, BRYAN. TEXAS.
AO HEAD GOOD Jersey Cows *90 a head.
Giving 3 gals, a day now. Young enws.
L. B Langeten, Ph. 70, Brackettville, Tea.
HERE FORDS
140 one-year-old Hereford heifers.
650 two-year-old Hereford steers.
L. L. PARKS Nixon. Texas.
COTTON GIN
FOR SALE, for removal, one 4-80 Murrey
gin, Diesel power, with or without build*
ings. Priced to sell. Cash or real estate.
MRS. BESSIE GRASSMAN GILL
Rente 1 •Angleton, Tessa.
HELP WANTED
WANTED
CHEVROLET MECHANIC
Out-of-town man should investigate.
Big money in essential iob. See and
call Mr. Perkins, screws as<wgcr.
SOUTH MAIN CHEVROLET CO.
2380 So. Main SL Noastaa. Tex.
WANTED—Middle-aged colored couple to
live on small farm. 9 miles from Houston.
House furnished. Vegetables, eggs, milk
furnished. Man to do general work. Woman
washing. Electric washing machine. Pay
man *10 wkly.; woman *3 wkly. Apply
Conrad Bering. 1402 Austin. Houston. Tex.
WANTED: Experienced Milk Plant Oper-
ator. willing worker, good salary, excel,
future. Plant located in San Antonio. Faulk
Creamery. 161 Ward Ave., San Antonio. Tex.
SILK BLOCKER. Experienced. Top sal-
ary and good working conditions. Grand
Cleaners, Goose Creek, Toxas. Pheno 273.
Wanted—FARM COUPLE for country
place near San Antonio, woman for house-
work, man outside work, 3-room rock
house, wood, electric light, milk, eggs fur-
nished and *75 00 month. Steady work in
a good home. F. J. VAN DELDEN. *28
Nogalites Street. San Antonio. Texaa.
Motion Picture Films
1LMM. SILENT motion picture Alms for
rent or sale Write for details. Peek Film
Exchange. 204 Houston St.. Yoakum, Tex.
FOR SALE
Must Sell at Once
M—3 and 4 year old Hereford
Cows and Calves...........*100 06
20— Pair Cows and Calves...... *3.00
25—Subject to register 15 mths.
to 2 yrs. old Heifers........ 70.08
20—3 and 4 year old Hereford
Cows, all heavy springers. . . 85.08
tG—Young registered Hereford
Cows. 4 have calves, others
springing.......... 135.08
*— Registered Hereford Bulls. 12
to 18 months old. big bone,
marked perfect, none better
in Texas <»................ 200.08
CO—3 to 5 year old unbroke Bulls 65 no
10—Cow Ponies................. oo.oo up
Can show cattle easily. They are In small
open pastures. Trucks available for haul-
ing. Buy some of these good home raised
cattle. Will sell any number, fronf one to
any amount. Have four good farms and
ranches on school bus line, electricity,
telephone, paved roads, from 50 acres to
1500 acres, priced *15.00 no. Write
O. D HEATH
Madisonville. Texas or phene ML
HOUSES FOR SALE
YOU CAN BUILD YOUR OWN HOME
without experience or your own capital. If
necessary. Save Vj to M$. Write today! Be
ready! Information free. No obligation.
Address Wil.LIAM II JACKSON. A. B-.
1713 Hflwarl Street. Pert Haren. Michigan.
_RANCH—CATTLE
3OS7-ACRE WILSON COUNTY RANCH.
42 miles east of San Antonio; 1 house, high-
way front, all fenced hogproof. 4 wells, 8
tanks. 4 lakes, good grass, lots of deer and
turkey. Price *15 acre. Also 300 head cat-
tle for sale B. B SAWYER. Phene 274.
Fleresville. Texas.
*tt8-A. Ranch. Hood Co. Improved, white
face cattle. Sell with or without stock.
II H. Watson. Tex. Bk. Bldg.. Dallas. Tex.
______SEEDS______
GARDEN AND FIELD SEEDS
Mall list seed wanted and amount each.
Will quote you delivered price.
EMPIRE SEED COMPANY. Temple. Tex.
STEELTANKS
FOR SALE Sxl2 heavy steel tank. 3.000
gallons capacity Cheap. O. O. LUTER.
Kt. *. Bos 47S, SAN ANTONIO. TEXAS.
OPPORTUNITY
MAKE I P TO *25 WEEKLY In spare timu
at home. Full Instructions Folio 25c.
UNIVERSAL SERVICE
•I* N. St. Mary's St., Man Antonio 2.Texas.
Salary From Salt
The word salary comes from a
Latin word meaning that part of a
soldier's wages he received in
salt.
CUIk! IRRITATIONS of
OWIIX EXTERNAL CAUSE
Acn. punplm. ecw>ma. factory derma-
titis. mmplo nugworm, tetter, .alt rln-um.
bump., (blackheada), and ugly broken-
out .kin. Million, relieve itching. burn-
in. and aorencwi of theM miacric. with
•iniple home treatment. Goe, to work at
once. Aid. healing, work, the antuwptie
way. Um Blank and White Ointment only
a. directed. 10c. 25c, 50c aim. 25 year.'
■uccrM. Money-Imrk guarantee. Vital
in ck-anmng is good imp. Enjoy fa-
taoua Black and White Skin Soap daily.
WNU—P 21—44
When Your
Back Hurts -
And Your Strength and
Energy Is Below Par
ft may be caused by disorder of kid-
fl"y function that permits poisonous
waste to accumulate. For truly many
people feel tired, weak and mieerable
when the kidneys fall to remove eicem
acids and other waste matter from the
blood.
You may suffer nagging backache,
rheumatic pains, headaches, distinct*,
getting up nights, leg pains, swelling
Rometlmee frequent and aranty urine
tion with omartiftg and burning Is an
other sign that something la wrong with
the kidneys or bladder.
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The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 25, 1944, newspaper, May 25, 1944; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1208048/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.