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THE NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY. S. C. Bird Feeding Stations Attractive in Gardens WORKSHOP PATTERN SERVICE Drawer 10 Bedford Hills, New Fork -• — r%ne. DUE TO COLDS For soothing relief, rub on. Morton (salt IT Costs on(y2^ aweekfcrthe arerage femilyl ROB OH""" sion or CHILD’S CHEST COLD A “rub’* feels best to your child when a chest cold brings muscle aches and coughs. Pene-tro gives fast 2-way relief. Rubbed on chest, throat, bade, it warms, soothes achy muscles as medi cated vapors soothe irri tated breathing passages, |ase cough, qiean. white. Qufck Acting Rub a soonrns OKSStn i wrMOROLINE "V PETROLEUM JELLY H*H A Three Days' Cough Is Your Danger Signal Creomulskm relieves promptly because It goes right to the seat of the trouble to help fp loosen and expel germ laden m and aid nature to soothe and raw, tender, inflamed bronchial membranes. Guaranteed to please you has or money refunded. Crcomulsion stood the test of millions of users. CREOMUESION Cold*, Acuta Broach!Ha ARRESTED A Htadacha bn* To Cnstipatlon BUT LANES kit TOD'LL LIKE THEM TOO' IERATI0N *«« GENERATION Has nstd LANE’S PILU f Halp Stir «S A Lasy Utov. I Chile Produces Some Of World's Best Wool Three-Fourths of Crop Is Shipped to U. S. ■PHE birds that do not go South ^ for the winter tyill enjoy one of these feeding stations. These de signs are easy to make. Just trace the irregular parts on to the wood and cut out with coping saw. Pat tern 208 gives detailed decorating directions. Price 25c. He Was Right And then one day she turned and saw that he was smiling at her! She smiled back at him! No, he didn’t turn away, he didn’t dis appear—he looked at her more in tently than before! “Smile like that again,” he said. She blushed and dimpled. And he laughed and laughed. “Just as I thought,” he said. “You look like a chipmunk.” You're Welcome She—“Thanks for the hug.” He—“Oh the pressure was all Speechless .He—“What would you say if I fussed you?” \ She—“I wouldn’t be in a position io speak.” \The huge English Marsh Romney will produce 12 kilos of long staple wool, or 30 pounds. This type wool Is often called the best in the world. The industry specializes in the famous English Marsh Romney sheep which produces, according to many experts, the finest long staple wool in the world. Today, Chile has a total sheep population close to 7,000,000 head. Three quarters of the nation’s wool crop—about 15,000 metric tons—goes to the United States. England gets the remainder. Farm Worker Crop Output Triples in Fifty Years Fifty years ago a farm worker produced enough food for himself and five other persons. Today the crops raised by a single worker are sufficient for 15 persons. Although machinery has had much to do with this spectacular produc tivity record, a major factor is the expanded use of fertilizers. The na tion’s farms last year consumed 18,346,132 tons of soil food—six times as much as in 1901—at a cost of $744,000,000. At the turn of the century 265 mil lion acres of crop land, tilled by 13 million farm workers, were needed to supply the crops required by a population of 76 million. Now 10 mil lion workers produce from 345 mil lion acres of land the food required by twice as many Americans, as well as thousands of persons in oth er countries. Agricultural authorities say that the use of fertilizer is responsible for roughly one-fourth of the vol ume of all crops. ( The use of fertilizer is expected to continue upward for an indefinite period. Seed Beds It Is a long time from plant ing seed beds, bat gardeners and farmers might spend some of their spare time daring the winter months making one. Seed beds* with plastic covers are hailproof, shatter - proof and light in weight. A plastic-coat ed wire mesh, weighing less than glass, passes on to the plans most of the son’s ultra violet and infrared rays. This material is available at most farm equipment dealers and hardware stores. Poultry and Egg Eating Increases, Experts Say Poultry experts report the Amer- ican family is consuming more poultry and eggs and predicts the increase will continue during the rest of 1951. Forecasts indicate the average American will have eaten 30 pounds of chicken by the end ot 1961, 10 per cent more than last year; 406 eggs, slightly more than in 1950; and about five pounds of turkey meat, approximately the same as last year. Crime in America By ESTES KEFAUVER United States Senator Nine of a Series Kansas City: Jungle Law The small American farmer has learned from experience just how profitable a small flock of sheep can be to his general farm pro gram. And in the western part of the country great flocks are main tained by producers. One of the greatest producers of wool, now selling at a record price, is Chile. The industry is valued at $170,000,000 and employs more than 10,000 people. Chile’s first sheep were brought from Spain by the Spanish con queror Pedro de Valdivia over 400 years ago. In 1877, 300 head , were brought to the Punt^ Arenas area from the Falkland Islands. My first impression of Kansas City was of a place struggling out from under the law of the jungle. It was a staggering example of a prosperous city, blessed with many industries and the same type of good citizens found every where, but which, through civic inertia, had fallen completely under the thumb of vicious criminals. The mob, led by men high in the Mafia, had run the town—and milked it: A federal grand jury in Kansas City found that the illegal gambling business had grossed more than $34,000,000 a year. The mobsters could do this because they were able to “buy” many small and middle-sized officials, and to influence some big ones. Actually, the Kansas City police department was headed by a good chief and included some officer* who made an excellent impression on the Senate Crime Committee. In the county, however, it was dif ferent. There the committee found Sheriff J. A. Purdome “notably lax.” One fantastic facet was that Pur dome permitted a racketeer. Wolf Riman, juke box and pin-ball king, to hold a deputy sherifT* commis sion and to operate a car equipped with siren and red light. Riman was murdered and Sheriff Purdome married his widow. No responsible person condones murder as an instrument of social justice, but 4 there seemed to be a moral lesson in the violent end met by Charlie Binaggio, Kansas City’s reigning evil genius. This conniv ing, particularly courageous gang ster, a fixer rather than a muscle man, was murdered in his political clubhouse. Dead beside him was his lieutenant and “enforcer,” Charlie Gargotta. If ever a human deserved the title of “mad dog,” it was Gar- gotta. His record showed 39 arrests on charges ranging from attempted burglary to murder. Once he killed a man in cold blood on the streets, but a corrupt police officer switched identification tags on the murder weapon, and Gargotta beat the homicide charge. Binaggio, Gargotta, Tano Lococo, Fat Tony Gizzo and grizzled old Jim Balestrere, reputed Mafia chieftain in Kansas City, were known as “the Five Iron Men.” These five and their henchmen controlled most of the important gambling in the Kansas City area. Binaggio & Co. would spot a profitable gambling opera tion and decide they ought to be “invited” in. If the operators were not smart enough to issue such an “invitation,” their places of busi ness would be bombed, robbed or otherwise harassed until they got smarter. Among ether Binaggio properties, in partnership with Gargotta, Lo- coco, Snag Klein, and Eddie Osad- chey, was the Last Chance Tavern. The Last Chance was an intriguing establishment on the border be tween Kansas and Missouri, with a thin wall right on the state line. When cops from one state would come to “raid” it, the gamblers would shift over to the other side, and carry on. Cops from both states never seemed to arrive at the same time. Osadchey, Gargotta, Lococo, and Klein muscled in on Simon Part- noy’s profitable ^w ire service in Kansas City after the Chicago-Ca- pone syndicate set out to take over the nationwide race news racket. Another time, Osadchey and Klein, without putting up a dollar, moved into Iowa to “muscle” themselves 50 per cent of a Council Bluffs gambling place called the Stork club, in which the original owners had invested $90,000. Eddie insists that there really was no “muscle.” It was merely a case, he explained, where, after he and Snag offered to “buy” the whole club for $20,000, the owners countered with a proposition that they take half of it for nothing. • • • Jim Balestrere, the old Sicilian- born mobster identified as one of Kansas City Mafia leaders, played dumb. He represented himself to us as a poor, old jobless fellow who lived on a little income from a piece of business property (once rented to a gambling house) and on a few dollars given him by his children. But he didn’t impress us as dumb at all People in Kansas City rack ets used to say that “Balestrere has a piece of Binaggio.” We delved into the question of how—and through whom—he car ried out his political machinations. The gangsters themselves, of course, did their part. Eddie Osadchey testified that “Charlie told me” to travel around the state and line up his “friends” for Gov. Forrest Smith. Rumors were prevalent that Binaggio had raised sums as large as $150,000 to the Smith-for-Gover- nor campaign, but we were unable to secure any tangible proof of large-scale contributions. STIRRED TO ACTION Cohn told as that Milligan and Farrell were “credited to the Charlie Binaggio group.” There fore, It was necessary for the Binag gio interests to line up either Col onel Chambers or himself. Cohn testified that he was approached several times by Binaggio and other emissaries “who suggested that I be on their team and to follow through the program they had planned.” But all efforts to bring either Cohn or Chambers into the Binaggio camp failed. The pay-off for the entire board came after the murder of Binaggio and Gargotta on April 5, 1950. The eyes of America were focused with disgust on Kansas City, and decent citizens there did not like it Governor Smith reacted by call ing for the resignations of all the Kansas City police commissioners. Milligan and Farrell resigned, but Cohn and Chambers refused to do so, forcing the governor to “fire” them; that was their intention, they laid, as they felt they were clean and did not want to be in a position of quitting under fire. The present Kansas City police board, our re port noted, “is made up of four men of undoubted integrity,” and the citizens of Kansas City have helped drive for better law enforce ment by forming a local crime commission. • • • As for Governor Smith, it seemed to the committee, after he had testified before us concerning the various allegations against him, that he either was a much lied about person, or a man of exceedingly bad memory. Smith said he didn’t even know Binaggio by name until around November, 1947 (though Bi« naggio’s name by then was a by word in Missouri political circles.) Smith explained that Binaggio just walked up to him in a Kansas City hotel lobby and said “he hoped I would run for governor, that he was going to support me.” “When he told you those things,” Counsel Halley inquired, “did you ask him who he was?” Governor Smith re plied: “I did not.” The governor did recall that Bi naggio visited him several times at the state capitoL Next Week: St. Loots, Where Gambling la Big Business. Condensed fron the book, “Crime In America.” by Bates Kefauver. Cpr. 1051. Pub. by Doubleday. Inc. DlsL General Features Corp.—WNU. Kentucky Studies Anti-Bribery Laws LEXINGTON, Ky.—The 1952 Ken tucky General Assembly is expect ed to enact legislation covering bribery in a sports contest. State Senator R. P. Mahoney, majority floor leader in the upper house, said that he had made a careful study of a law enacted in New York in 1950, and felt it would be adopted without change la Kentucky. _ Support for the measure was offered by Governor Lawrence Wetherby, who said he “would be in favor of a law which would make it tough on persons bribing athletes.” The education committee of the Kentucky Chamber of Commerce also adopted a resolution urging the legislature to- consider enact ment of “appropriate legislation.” BY DR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN SCRIPTURE: Exodus 5-15. DEVOTIONAL READING: Exodus IS: 13-18. A People Delivered Lesson for November 11, 1951 The committee had a session with Roy McKittrick, former state sena tor and attorney general of Mis souri, concerning his knowledge ^ the alleged tie-up between Binag gio and Governor Smith. In January, 1948, McKittrick de cided he would be a candidate against Smith. Q. Did you have any conversa tion with Charles Binaggio about your candidacy? A. Yes, sir . . . He wanted to discuss what he thought the chances to win were. It impressed me what he meant was the importance that he had to have a governor. Later, McKittrick continued, the Kansas City boss told him he ought to get out of the race. McKittrick told us he said to Binaggio, “If you have made up your mind, I think the race is over right now because you are going to elect whoever you support for governor.” Senator Hunt asked the witness why he placed such confidence in Binag- gio’s ability to dominate an elec tion. McKittrick: He had a lot of friends and supporters in St. Louis, and he was the controlling factor in Kansas City. He had good alliances at St. Joe. He was very active. He was well supplied with money. Binaggio, McKittrick said, told him, “I have made a deal with Smith.” The Kansas City police board was composed of four men, R. Robert Cohn and Colonel Hampton S. Chambers, both holdovers who had been appointed by a previous gov ernor, and two Smith appointees, Jacob L. (Tuck) Milligan, a boy hood friend of Governor Smith and Sheridan E. Farrell, a Kansas City hotel man. It took three votes of the ‘four-man board to effect any important policy or personnel changes. • • • O NE of the strange truths about God—strange when we are not used to it—is that he can never be seen directly. No man has seen him nor can see him, the Bible tells us (I Tim. 6:16). God cannot be photo graphed nor tele vised. The disc has never been made that will record his voice; it will not be heard on any tele phone. Then how do people know God? By the eye of faith, the ear of faith. The Bible suggests that it is God himself who opens men’s eyes to his presence, opens their ears to his voice. Dr. Foreman God in History I T is so when we speak of “God in history.” The historian can tell us what happened; but why does it happen? The last, the final, the all- inclusive Why? is religion’s ques tion; and religion’s answer, faith’s answer, is always: God. Take, for example, the well known story of the Exodus, when the Chil dren of Israel got out of Egypt where they had been slaves for about as long as the Negroes were slaves in America before 1863. All historians agree (1) that Israelites were in Egypt; and (2) that they got out. But the history books do not read like the Bible. Jn the “Cambridge Ancient History” or in any history of the ancient Middle East, you can read the account of the Exodus with the miracles left out. Furthermore, the historians never bring God into their tale. All they can tell us is what you could have caught with a mov ing picture camera or a record ing machine. But God cannot be caught that way. The story of the Exodus, in the Bible, has another slant. The Hebrew folk never said “We escaped” or “It was a lucky break” or “Moses took ns out.” They al ways said, “God brought us out.” If you had been there when they crossed the Red Sea (the original Hebrew in Exodus does not use the expression “Red Sea” in this story, and it may have been one of the Bitter Lakes or even an arm of the Mediterranean—it makes no dif ference), armed with your camera and sound-recording devices, you could have caught the roaring of the wind and after long hours of the hurricane you would have seen the water level going back and back till finally solid ground appeared. But when your pictures were developed you would not have seen God. God in Our History TT would*not do us much good, in- ^ deed, it would only make us jeal ous or bitter, if we thought that God had a hand in the history of Israel, but took no interest in the history of other peoples. Many centuries after the Exodus, the prophet Amos said that God not only brought the Is raelites out of Egypt, but he also brought the Philistines out of Crete (Caphtor) and the Syrians out of Kir. In the history of England two of the most famous events are the de feat of the Spanish Armada, and the retreat from Dunkirk. In each case the English people were to all appearances helpless, just as the Hebrews were helpless at the Red Sea; in both cases, as at the Exodus, “the weather came to their rescue.” A great wind swept the Spanish navy to destruction; and a great cloud-cover kept the Nazi airforce pent in until the British army had escaped from Dunkirk. The weather, say historians. God, say voices of faith. Are not both right? Side of the Free I S God on the side of the little na tion? Not always. But taking history as a whole, Christian people have reason to believe as the people of the Bible did: that God hates oppression and vio lence, and his “hand is against” nations that live by such means. On this Armistice Sunday it is well to remember that. If our cause is just it is not because we never lost a war. Our cause is just if and only if it Is the cause of human freedom. We have no assurance that God will stand by us otherwise. (Capri-lsfat 1001 by the Division •< Christian Education, National Ccnncll •f the Chnrchca of Christ In the United Stages sf America. Released ky WNU Featsres.) S <S> f? JL2-S Those Seasonal Pastries Are Made to Order For Luscious Deserts THINK OF the word pie about this time of year, and some of the most luscious pastries come to mind. Can’t you almost smell homemade pumpkin pie, for instance, with its spicy golden cus tard baking in a tender crust? i There’s apple, the most favored of all pies, with so many differ ent kinds of pie apples in season right now. Custard types and mince meat pies are in for their share of the attention, too, and they’re all delicious if you make them cor rectly. Pie making can be easy if you use a pastry mix on hand on the pastry shelf. If you prefer your own, and bake many pies, keep a quantity of mix on hand which needs only the addition of water. Cool fall weather calls for a hearty dessert such as pie, so start today with some of these delightful pastries: Custard Pumpkin Pie (Makes 1 9-inch pie) 2 eggs, slightly beaten 2 cups canned pumpkin 303 can) 94 enp sugar 94 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon cinnamon 94 teaspoon ginger 94 teaspoon cloves 194 cup evaporated milk or light cream 1 unbaked 9-lnch pie shell Combine eggs and pumpkin. Mix sugar with salt and spices and add to pumpkin mixture. Blend in milk. Pour into pie shell. Bake in a hot (425°F.) oven for 15 minutes. Re duce temperature to moderate (350°F.) and continue baking 45 minutes or until knife inserted in center comes out clean. (No. A CHIFFON TYPE of pumpkin pie has been achieving popularity for sopne time now because it’s a light dessert suitable for a heavy dinner of traditional turkey or chick en: Pumpkin Chiffon Pie (Makes 1 9-inch pie) 1 9-inch baked pie shell 1 tablespoon unflavored gelatin 94 enp cold water 4 egg yolks 94 cup light brown sugar 194 cups cooked or canned pumpkin 94 cup milk 94 teaspoon salt 94 teaspoon cinnamon 94 teaspoon ginger 94 teaspoon allspice 94 teaspoon nutmeg 4 egg whites 94 cup sugar 1 cup whipping cream 2 tablespoons confectioners* sugar 1 tablespoon chopped nuts Soak gelatin in cold water 5 min utes. Beat egg yolks and brown sugar until thick; add pumpkin, milk, salt and spices. Cook in dou ble boiler until thick. Add gelatin softened in cold water, stirring un til dissolved. Still later on in the Bible God’s hand is said to be leading the great conqueror Cyrus of Persia (Isaiah 45:1-4) > even though Cyrus knew nothing of it. God was there, bat the eye of faith was not. God is always there; and sometimes the eye of faith is there to see him. Cool. Beat egg whites until stiff; add 94 cup sugar. Fold into custard. Pour into baked pie shell and chill. Whip cream and add confectioners’ sugar. Spread over pie. Sprinkle with chopped nuts. SQtlASH PIE is much like pump kin pie in texture and flavor, and is Can you imagine the cheers of delight from the family when yon serve this sweet and spicy pumpkin pie wreathed with whipped cream around the edge? Tender crust and correct spices contribute to the good ness of pumpkin pie. LYNN SAYS: Here are Ways to Perfect Your Cooking of Meats Broiled steaks and chops are best when they're seasoned with salt and pepper after >browning. Kitchen shears are excellent to have on hand for dicing bacon or cooked meats for casseroles and salads. Beef, veal, smoked pork and lamb do best when roasted at a constant temperature of 300°F. Fresh pork is best roasted at a temperature of 350°F. Pumpkin pie can come to the table in several different cos tumes. For a hearty dinner sim ply sprinkle plain or toasted co conut around the edge. It gives a lacy appearance but does not cost as much as whipped cream or make the pie quite as rich. LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU Apple Juice Pork Loin Roast Mashed Potatoes Buttered Cora and Lima Beans Tomato Aspic Cora Sticks ♦Squash Pie •Recipe Given preferred by some to the lat ter. If you have squash available in quantity, you’ll enjoy us ing some in this way. ♦Squash Pie (Makes 1 8-inch pie) 94 cup brown spgar jl cup milk 94 teaspoon cinnamon 94 teaspoon allspice 1 cap chopped pecans 194 cups squash, cooked and mashed 94 teaspoon cloves Beat eggs, add spices, sugar, milk and squash. Add nuts last. Pour into pastry lined pan and bake in a hot (425°F.) oven for 10 minutes, then reduce heat to mod erate (350°F.) for 40 minutes. Apple Pie (Makes 1 8-inch pie) 2 cups sliced apples 94 teaspoon salt * hup sugar * 94 teaspoon cinnamon 1 tablespoon batter Few gratings of nutmeg 2 tablespoons cold water Mix together apples with salt, sugar, cinnamon, butter and nut meg. Sprinkle with cold water if the apples are dry. Place apple mixture in unbaked pastry shell and cover top with pricked pastry. Seal edges. Bake 10 minutes in a hot (425 , ’F.) oven and then reduce heat to moderate (350° F.) and bake for 25 to 30 minutes or until apples are tender. Homemade Pastry Mix (Makes 8 single pie crusts) 7 caps sifted, enriched flour 4 teaspoons salt 194 enp lard for soft wheat floor, or 2 caps lard for hard wheat flour Add salt to flour. Cut lard into flour and salt with a fork or pastry blendor until the crumbs are about the size of small peas. Cover and store in refrigerator until ready to use. Mixture will keep at least a month if refrigerated. For a single pie crust, use 194 cups of the pas try mix and add 2 to 4 tablespoons of cold water to it. Golden Nesselrode Pie (Makes 1 9-inch pie) 1 tablespoon tmflavorfed gelatin 94 cup cold milk 4 egg yolks, beaten well 1 cup sugar 94 teaspoon salt 1 cup scalded milk 94 cup cream 1 teaspoon vanilla 4 egg whites, stiffly beaten 1 tablespoon finely chopped maraschino cherries 1 9-inch pie shell, baked Shaved sweet chocolate Soak gelatin in cold milk. Mix egg yolks, 94 cup sugar and salt. Stir in scalded milk. Place over hot water, stirring and cooking un til mixture thickens slightly. Re move from heat and add soaked gelatin; stir until dissolved. Add cream and flavoring and chill until sirupy. Fold in beaten egg whites and cherries. Pour into pie shell and chill until firm. When you’re cooking meat in liquid, for stews or soup, never let the water boil. It should simmer very gently so the meat will be ten der rather than stringy. If you place meat in the roasting pan on a rack with the fat side up, no basting is necessary. As the fat melts it will drip down ahd baste the meat. When pan-broiling, always pour off fat from the meat as it accumu lates. If this is not done, you ar* frying the meat rather than broil ing it. Ain’t It So Meteorologist: A man who can look into a girl’s eyes and tell whether. Intuition: The strange In stinct that tells a woman she is right, whether she is or not. Rumba: A dance where the front of you goes along nice and smooth like a Cadillac and,the back of yon makes like a jeep. i ? . ' m S? sp / I’YHoiCt Of MILLIONS JOLIY TIM! POPCORN AT YOUR GROCERS EAT ANYTHING W! FALSE TEETH If you have trouble with ■ | that slip, rode, cause sore try Brimms Plasti-Liner. One appl makes plates 6x snugly without because Brimms Plasti-Liner nently to your plate. Relines and refits plates in a way no powder or paste < Even on old rubber plates you set six months to a year or looser. YOU ANYTHIN at Simply lay soft atrip Liner on troublesome upper or lo’ and it molds perfectly. Busy to uu, odorless, harmless to you snd Removable as directed. Money completely satisfied. Ash CAN I your ] _ CHEAPER by the 1 PLACE IN ONE SPOT' Pure Warfarin -Spot 1 with directions to make 2)4 lbs- i Here is You Rodent Made by the makers oi One- Killer—so you known's tho very i $1 at your local store or $8 p« dot. postpaid! Otoe-Spot Co., R. 22 , Jessup Kill 'em tho Safe, Quo-Spot Save Money On This Home Mixed Cough Syrup Big Saving. No Cooking. So You’ll be surprised bow quickly and you can relieve coughs due to colds, you try this splendid recipe. It rive about four times as much cough fer your money, and you’ll find it wonderful for real relief. Make a syrup with 2 cups of _ sugar snd one cup of water. No c needed. (Or you can use corn lyrupor honey, instead of sugar syrup.) Then 2H ounces of Pinex (obtained from druggist) in a pint bottle, and fill up your syrup. This makes a full pint of cine that will please you by its quick action. iils - It never spoils, and tastes fine—children love it. v This simple mixture take* right hold of a cough. It loosens the phlegm, soothe* the irriuted membranes, quickly eases soreness and difficult breathing. * S 1 Pinex ia a special compound of proven Ingredients, in concentrated, form, well- known for its quick setion lb coughs and bronchial irriutions. Money refunded if doesn’t please you in every way. FOR EXTRA CRRFERIERCE SET J REA01-MIXER. REARMO-RSE PI" “MY CONSTIPATION TROUBLES ARE “For thirty yean, 1 took so kinds of pills and laxatives to lieve constipation. Sines I eating all-bran every day, those troubles are over!” Mrs. Fred E. Rei man, S. 16th St., Bethany, Mo. Just one of many unsolic ited letters from all bran users. If you suffer from consti pation due to lack of dietary bulk, I MM ' H try this: Eat an ounce (about cup) of crispy Kellogg's all-bran daily, and drink plenty of waterl If not completely satisfied after 10 days, return empty box to Kellogg’s, Battte Creek, Mich. Get doublb YOUR MONBY BACK! FEEL AWFUL? DUE TO COLD MISERIES 666 ves TaST symptomoti RELIEI Housework Easy Without^ Nagging Backache Whaa kidney function rfowe down, folk* complain of nagging bnckacha, ioae Bs.r* •offer longer with thaee discomforts m la getting you If reduced kidney function down—due to each common < end strain, over-exertion or exposure to cold. Minor bladder irritation* due to cold, dampness or wrong diet may cans* getting Bp nights or frequent p*ee*gee. Don’t neglect year kidneys If these eondf- don* bother yon. Try Doan’s PHI*—e mild diuretic. Used aueeaaafully by million* for over 60 yean. 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