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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (April 28, 1923)
Early Lettuce on Market Here ' Home-Grown \ egetahles Mak ing Appearance in Shops of Omaha. Home grown leaf lettuce, rhubarb and green onions put in their appear ance on the Omaha market this week. These different commodities arc grown in various sections adjacent to Oma ha Home grown radishes, under glass, 1 are also on the market. New cabbage from California, Mis sissippi and Texas is arriving in plen tiful supply. Quality of cauliflower arriving is fair, asparagus has ad tanned in price, and tomatoes are sea rce. New potatoes arc coming from Flor ida and Texas. The market on this vegetable is gradually growing eas ier. and tjte supply sufficient to meet Hie demand The cucumber market Inis eased to some extent. The first California black cherries were placed on the Omaha market during the present week. Strawberry market is steady, and the quality of the berries coming is very good. Very little poultry is moving. This Is attributed to the fact that farmers are busy and not coming to market, nor shipping, coupled with the addi tional fact that hens are laying ex ceptionally well at this season. Our Children I5y ANGELO I’-ATN. ({uarreliiig Children. When brothers and sisters meet they quarrel. It grieves their moth ers, who feel that the children afe learning to hate each other, that one is bullying the others, that one is given to teasing and another to'sulki ness. Mlm is astonished to discover that her children cannot live together in peace. It may be small comfort to know it, but t,he fact is children always I quarrel. The family group Is so dose in mind and body that their edges rub j and cut and as children have not had | sufficient experience to teach them re straint and control they follow their i impulses and fight. ' We are born that'way. When we : are annoyed the first impulse Is to strike out and abolish the thing that is annoying us. If a mosquito comes along anil settles down to bite, our first thought is to whack hint fiat, rub the spot until if burns again and fuss ourselves into a bad temper about the pest. » jJsperience teaches us better. We brush the pest away, killing him quite as effectually. Wo ignore the spot and turn our minds away from the annoyance. Rut that takes training through experience and a certain phi losophy attained by much reflection. Children have not the Idea. They ' 'el iciouy' when you taste them — Holsum Tea Biscuit. Delicately light and rich enough to satisfy the craving for something slightly sweeter than bread, more satisfying than cake. Get Holsum Tea Biscuit at your good grocer’s. In clean, white glasene bags, where the warmth and freshness from Hol sum ovens linger. fre./'h every day at your-Grocer/4 19 /- \y iKelasteTcDs scaled in Flavor J > Which appeals most—luscious fruit rip' ened on the tree, or fruit force ripened while enroute or in storage? The appeal of nature wins you, of course. And Puritan Ham too, will win you, for it’* "Ripened Naturally" is the Cudahy method of normal curing whereby uni form diffusion of the meat's delicious niices is promoted, not hindered. Thus Puritan is unrivaled in Qavor. And its tenderness will please you equally welL You really can’t resist Puritan. The Cudahy Packing Co U.SA. '^^Makeri of Punt an Ham-Bacon— Lard fij run have but Hie untrained impulse to strike out with tongue or haul or foot at the annoyance. The result is a family squabble. If possible let it settle itself. If it comes to fisticuffs, of course, it must be stopped and the contestants sep arated long enough to let them cool off, long enough to let in that lone some feeling that steals into the heart at the prolonged absence of a brother or sister from the family group. Of all things, don’t cuff the children because they cuffed one another. That • gives them tin*' notion that things can be settled by blows and that is a very wrong notion. Nothing is ever settled that way. As a general thing children- who have not been slapped will not slap each other, but they will strike with their tongues, which is quite as bad in its effects. Personal almso of one's opponents is « bad habit to cultivate and bitter words make long memories. It seems to help if the sharp tongued one is seated beside bis mother with some wholesome occupation, while the others go on together. Siknt reproof ami separation soon impress the 1 ■ ATIantic 3857 j STRAWBERRIES'£?19c Sugar ‘steFs* 99c ■■■ Victor Brand, Flour "issffir- $1.79 Royal Ann CherriesNo lU*”' 97c Bartlett Pears No’97c Tomatoes No62,o"’ 67c Crystal White Soap Chips P&7J9C flncola Coffee V.V 98c Chocolate, Bakers Cake— 17c Chickens Ets Lamb Legs Spring, lb.— 27k Lamb Stew sP^T- 9c Fresh Pork Shoulder 9k Pork Loin Roast 12k Choice Steer12k Rib Boil, Corn Fed p°rl 5c Sugar Cured Picnic Hams pzd 13k Sugar Cured Bacon »r 15k M ■■ The Finest Creamery 1 P Kill ID I' Made, Clark’s of /■ *| ft UUIIvl Albion, Neb., lb.— TVV ■■ _ Fresh From the Country. AA EggS Dozen— ZOC 1c extra on carton on delivery. Grapefruit ‘F 6!c Apples Fir„d*Do‘:l0c 25c Rhubarb 4 Large Bunches for 25c Filled Coffee CakBKi15c Bran Buns Doz.— 15c Layer Cake 30c CIGARS—Just Inside the Door 111 Cigarettes, large pkg. carton, 10 pkgs for. $1.00 Tuxedo Tobacco, 2 pkgs. for.25c Heldic Cigars, 50 in box.$3.00 CANDY SPECIALS Acme Creams, 2 lbs. for.25c Chocolate Cover Cherries, iarge boxes 49c Chocolate Covered Cheriics, large boxes .49c This Card Issued Only to Dairies Selling Grade No. 1 Unpasteurized Milk t ltc*t for Habics Association Rest for All Watch for This Card to Guarantee Getting This Grade of Milk offender with his fault. Scolding is useless. I hare Mo faith in the saying "The more they light, the more they'll love one another.'' I hate seen brothers and sisters nurse a life long grievance because their childish quarrels were not settled the right way. Teach them that the suit must not set on their wrath and be sure that the offender knows his fault and tries to remedy * Then the hurt will be forgiven. All children quarrel. Time and training teach them better. Copynaht, lf23. Only aliout 11 per cent of New York state’s girl worker* are members of trade unions. CLEANEST STORES IN OMAHA P. & G. "S"*10 Bars |ar 43c CORN ohioEeveegreen No. 2 8c r* g s\ g g n queen quality ' r* It JII H 48 lbs" S1.59; 24 lbs., 85c i * S— ■. ■ 12 lbs., 45c; 6 . TOMATOES "Hs 12%c HORLICK’S "sas“ 41 c SANIFLUSH -- 20c CRISCO misss 20c BUTTER1'5= u-- 43c RAISINS S 13c POSTUM . rg,T . 25c SWANSDOWN “S" 25c CABBAGE 7V2c STRAWBERRIES 22yzc POTATOES ggj 9c 1 21 CLEAN AND BUSY STORES - 21 ^Ss'Tcoug L^ttpATRIfK akes the Slavery Out of Wash Day r