Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, December 15, 1907, EDITORIAL SECTION, Page 7, Image 15

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    B
TFTR OMATTA SUNDAY MKK: nrci'KMHKK 1."), 1007.
f
(
"Sanla Claus"
will show the host judgment
If whfn plvlriK a prost-nt to
the nif-n, he glvps a pair of
Onimod
Slippers
A pair of our
Kid Slippers
Is a bh'sslng create a love
for home and the family fire
side. Get brother a pair. He will
enjoy them, bo would father
or Bweetheart. You cannot
beat them aa an Xmaa pres
ent Remember the ,
Onimod Shoes
are sold direct from maker
to -wearer.
ecJBJlt sos
SHOE S S.5HS7.
For Christmas.
The fountain pen with
no loose parts or leaky
joints. Filled and
ready to write in
stantly by dipping it
in the nearest ink-well
and pressing the
Crescent-Filler. This
means that with
CONKLIN'S
Self-Flllln4
'Fountain Pen
there's a "barrel" of Ink always
ready. Such comfort, too, in
writing. Glides over the paper
lik a swallow skim
ming through the air.
No blots, scratches,
skips or balks. It is
"nib and holder"
above any other foun
tain pen made.
Thl It the retrains
Conklln o( world-wide
fame, "Thafen with the
Creacent-Filler," mule by
Tub Conklih Fun Cck.
Toledo, Ohio. Call ana
see tiil wuuderful eu.
Omaha Stationery
Company
1GOT Farnam St.
Tel. Douglas SOS OMAHA, MB.
'E-Z" Walkers
for
Hard Workers
m SoM Inrfttm-M Sboaay Atrwtm.
Adequately represents the quality of oar
E-Z" WALKER SHOES
far Farmer and Mechanics. This line ol
hoe has proven a remarkable seller with
US and the demand steadily increases.
"S-Z-1 WALKERS are msds in both
plain and tip toe and in widths from C to
Double E, thus enabling the foot to b
perfectly 0ttd. "E-Z" WALKER shoe
ax so evenly balanced aa to wear out
completely before firing away. Made
for hard knocks, wear and service.
Tell your dealer you want "E-Z"
WALKEKS. If he has none, write us.
We'll learn why and tsll
you where to gt them.
You can't "to wrong" in
these shoes.
F. P. Kirkendall & Co.
Omaha, Nebraska,
Wttltra Mede
for
Hearers Tredr
CHRISTMAS IN MAM LANDS
Pen Pictures of the World-Wide Fes
tival in Different Settings.
CLIMATE PROVIDES THE C0L0B
Kamons Aathnr anil Traveler Sketches
Christmas rrnra in Frigid aad
Tropic Countries Aronnd
thr World.
Amnne; thn Inter contributions to litera
ture from the run of Sir Edwin Arnold,
author of "Tlie Light of Aula." wan a
perspective view of Christmas customs In
the many lands traversed by the famous
writer ami traveler. It was written a few
months before 111 death In 1P and forms
a fascinating addition to the literature of
Christmas. It follows. In rart:
If we could take kinematoirraphs of our
lives, or Ret them taken for us, how In
teresting It would be, at any rate to the
Individual himself; and what trouble It
would obviate In biographies and auto
biographies! In such a case not many peo
ple, I suppose, would like to set the entire
series In motion from beginning to end,
without suppressing a filrp here and there,
unless the exhibition were only for the
most friendly eyes.
Hut memory, with her magic, ran per
form for each of us something resembling
what I have suggested: especially If we
tHke some particular day of the year and
allow recollection to make the recurring
anniversary of that special date mark the
subject of our thought. I have been try
ing this at thn present Christmas season,
allowing myself to bring back, without any
straining after strict chronology or exact
sequence, the Christmas days spent abroad;
and the effect has been not without a cer
tain charm and amusement, so different
at the scenes which the mind can conjure
up again and so vivid the associations re
awakened. Home Recollections.
There is one home recollection Which
comes tlrst, because It was a typical Christ
mas day In the old style. There stands
on the bank of the Thames, midway upon
Its stream, a mansion, whero the host was
a well known city magnate, and I, then
a youthful schoolboy, one of his happy
guests. He gave us. In his great hall, a
fenst In the antique manner. We had the
Yule log dragged In, with mummers. and
masiiuernders. to blaze gloriously In the
spacious hearth, with a "Ixird of Misrule"
and his retinue fantastically equipped.
Then there was dancing In the ancient way,
and a prodigious feast, wherein a huge
bowl of punch steamed on the crowded
board, amid boar's head, mighty Joints of
roast beef, a gigantic twelfth cake, flam
ing dishes of snapdragon, mince pies In
mountains, and a plum pudding. Immense,
generous, fragrant beyond all perfumes of
Araby, bedecked with berried holly, and
burning with blue fire like a culinary
Vesuvius. After the feast, music and more
qiadrllles, and then what makes It al
ways more memorable for me a country
dance, which seemed Interminable as It
was delightful, because It was my privi
lege to go up and down to the music of
"Sir Roger do Coverley" with a poetess for
my partner. She was Eliza Cook, quite
famous then, although, I suppose, not many
now could repeat "The Old Armchair," or
any other of her then popular pieces. As
for me, it was paradise; for, while young
enough to fall, aIesp!fterwarBT3at her
Biuc, a was uiu enuuKu io do Boie to piease
her bjr reciting certain of the verses of one
who seemed to me In those impressionable
days a sort of goddess. I must always
think of that Chrlstmastlde at Ingress ab
bey when I think of Chrlstmastldes at
all.
Anions; th Dtrtch.
What comes next? Ah, such a different
cenel A Chrlstmaa day In Holland, with
the green polders, endless straight roads,
and gigantic dikes of that amphibious land
which the sturdy Dutchmen have won from
the sea. I was at Rotterdam with two
college friends. Having outrun our ready
money It was necessary to replenish the
exchequer by finding out a certain mutual
acquaintance holding a high educational
post. Deputed to discover him, I was sent
Into the. country, and, mistaking the direc
tions gives me by a Dutch lamplighter,
found myself on Christmas evening eight
een miles away from Rotterdam, In a
little village named Nord Vykt Nobody
I met could speak English or French, and
I had no Dutch. Hungry, w;ary and half
froien, I met a local "predikant" who un
derstood Latin, and the language of Cicero
took me safely under his guidance to the
great house mentioned, where I found a
grand old Dutchman, gray bearded, ,ith
his wife, stately, stout, and richly dressed,
wearing spiral gold earrings, and bearing
rich family Jewels on her ample bosom,
with her little son In holiday attire of
black velvet and lace collar, preparing to
It down at a glorious supper table, In a
spacious paneled room.
Mynherr laid aside his long clay pipe,
the lady gave me a warm padded Jacket,
the nice little Dutch boy himself brought
a chafing dish on which to place my be
numbed feet, and I had a royal Christmas
tide, after all.
Th. Festival la India.
Then the Indian Christmas days come
Into recollection. The hallowed epoch es
tablishes Itself only In an artificial manner
in that tropical country, amid landscapes
which nowhere lend themselves to the old
associations. Tet we keep It resolutely,
and the household servants, recognizing It
as a "burra ro" a great day of the sahibs
decorate the bungalow with what the
"mallee" Imagines to be most like holly
and mistletoe. Hut on the dinner table the
roast beef Is the hump of a sebu, the pud
ding has been Imported, and even the mince
pies. At night you hear no better Christ
mas carol than the never falling yells of
the Jackals, but, instead of wintry winds,
the soft air of the Indian night breathes
gently through the feathers of the palm
trees.
Then how ran I forget that winter sea
son In Corsica, when we had exchanged the
sleet and mud of London for the sunny
ranges round AJaccIo, and those slopes
covered with aromatic shrubs, which till
the air with fraarance, but Inhabited by a
people who for the first time explained to
me Napoleon? Small girls and boys there
took boundless delight In watching the
killing of pU'S in the public street, and
their "sportsmen" shoot every thrush,
blackbird, lark and finch found In the
maauls.
F pr- sal America.
What year It waa exactly when I pass'-d
another such anniversary at Cairo I forget,
but we were sitting at table d'hote In
Ehepheard's hotel when the sad news came
of the disaster to the Scotch express at the
Tay bridge. I remember my Christmas
tide in Egypt all the more because I tiiat
day enjoyed a conversation upon the rub
Ject with Nubar Pasha and Sir Richard
Ilurton. to find at the end of It that the
keen Armenian statesman and the re
nowned explorer and orientalist, though
proteased agnostics, were Jjst as convinced
in their secret hearts that d,ath was
merely an Incident In evolution as ever
were Cheops, or Cephrenee. or any build
ers of the royal and priestly tombs.
In the United States, where I can recall
more than one memorable Christmas day,
there la more-of the old world feeling, and
people and country alike make one less
sensible of abeonca from bygone placa and
habits. The ouUoat Christinas day I can
remember was In Wisconsin, whore I saw
to my surprise, on an afternoon not espe
cially chilly, the thermometer marking 30
degree below sero. On that Christmas
lime It was that I tasted the swift Joy of
sailing on an Icelxmt, the most enchanting
kind of locomotion which has ever been
invented.
PACKAGES FOR DISTANT ONES
Sangeatlona Itcerardlna; the Wrapping,
the Addreaa and Mode of
shipment.
As a usual thing the gifts for the
members of one's own household are the
last to be bought. Those which must be
sent to a distance should be attended to
first. Ail packages to be sent abroad should
have gone before this, and In sending to
places In the United States at least one
extra day should be allowed over the usual
amount of time. Remember also that al
though It takes a little longer, valuable
gifts should go by registered mall or ex
press and that small Ikxcb containing
Jewelry are not delivered by ordinary mall.
Just a word about packing when the
gifts are bought they should be ticketed
and placed In a spare closet, so that they
will not be forgotten nor left where they
will become soiled through handling.
When sending to a distance some regard
for size and danger of breukago must be
considered, although In sending cut 'glass
or china the shops wilt pack for express
age If asked to do so.
The value of the gifts Is enhanced If It
Is properly tied up and sealed In true
Christmas fashion. A Christmas greeting
should be written on the card sent with a
gift, and these may be bought already
written and decorated with holly. If so
desired, If the ordinary visiting card Is
Inclosed the message should be written
above the name and the Miss, Mrs. or Mr.
have a pen line run through It if the
donor knows the recipient well enough to
send a Christmas gift.
Burntwood, when packed to be shipped,
should first be wrapped In tissue paper
and then In heavy felt paper before the
final outside wrapper Is put on.
It Is better to write the address right
on the package if It Is to be sent by mall,
because a tag may get torn oft or a pasted
card loosened, and so the package can
never be delivered. A pacage sent by
mall should have no writing within, ex
cept a card, according to postal rules.
The address of the outside should be
written legibly on the outside of every
package, so It can be traced. A photo
graph should be packed with a piece of
heavy cardboard Just a IUtle larger than
itself. In tying with string, cross the
string, which should be strong, twice each
way and pass It around the transverse
string each time they pass In the middle.
When the recipients live In the city It
Is an excellent plan to dispatch gifts by
a trustworthy messenger. In this case
they should bo done up In tissue paper
and fancy ribbon and then Inclosed In a
stouter wrapping to prevent their getting
soiled.
Christmas candy should be ordered early
because It will be sure to be carefully
selected; those who wait until Christmas
eve for purchasing bonbons generally have
to take what they can get, rather than
Just what they want. Christmas ribbons
and calendars too will be getting scarce,
and, Indeed, all the Christmas bundles
ought to be wrapped up and ready for de
livery within a day or two, whether they
are to be sent or delivered by hand.
AMENDS FOR LOST CHRISTMAS
, "
How One) Seared Sonl Filled Every
Day in the Year With
Christmas Joy.
From a little southern Tillage cornea to
us the story of a woman who once lost
Christmas out ot her year. Just before
the day, misery and disgrace, and, at
last, crime came Into her family. She
carried the load for a while, and then fell
under It, sick unto death. The blessed
day dawned and passed, but she was lying
unconscious and knew nothing of It. When
she came to herself the people of the
town had forgotten that there ever had
been a Christmas. But the day had always
counted for much to Jane. It seemed to
her like a word of cheer from Qod Himself
on her weary climb upward, giving her
hope and strength and endouragement for
the whole year to come.
Jane kept the village postofflce. She was
apt to be sharp and cross, because she
was old, and had a secret ailment which at
times tortured her. But when she took
up her work on the very first day that
she was able to do so, it suddenly occurred
to her:
'Why not pretend that this is Christmas
day, and keep it, though nobody but Qod
and me will knowT"
She opened the window, and as she gave
out the letters had a cordial word for every
one of the neighbors outside children and
hard-worked women and feeble old men.
They went away laughing and surprised,
but strangely heartened. When the office
was closed, she bethought herself of gifts,
and baked some of her famous crullers
and carried them to folk so poor that they
never had any crullers, and to the old
paupers In the almshouse.
She astonished each of them, too, with
the gift of a dollar.
"I can do with my old cloak another
year," she thought, "and they will feel
rich for days!" "In His name." she Bald
to herself as she gave each of her poor
ore sent a. '
The llttlo gifts held out for a long time
as she carried them from house to house,
her face growing kinder as she went and
her voice softer. It seemed to her that
never before had there oeen so many sick,
unhappy folk in the town. Surely H was
right to make them glad that He had
come among us even if tt were not Christ
mas dayT
But she could not Bleep for thinking of
other poor neighbors to whom she might
have given some little comfort or pleasure.
"Why not make them happier that He
has come, tomorrow, as well as today?"
she thought, with a shock of delight In her
discovery.
So it came to pass that this little post
mistress made a Christinas out of every
day In that year for her poor neighbors.
When she had no more gifts for them she
threw herself Into their lives; she nursed
them when they were sick, dragged them
up when they fell, cried with them when
they suffered, and laughed with them when
they were happy.
And thus It was that she taught them of
her Master and led them to be glad every
day of the year that He had been born
into the world to be Its helper. Rebecca
Harding Davis In St. Nicholas.
IS MOUNTAIN CLIMBING NECESSARY
TO REDUCE FAT?
A few years ago the average physician
would have said "Yes." but today less tx
penalve, lens strenuous, and less danger
ous methods are employed. So Weil un
derstood haa this dlstrttsnlng condition be
come that one can literally sit In an ea-,y
chair at home or at a well supplied dlnn.r
table and reduce excesblve fat at the late
of half to one pound a day without pre
viously going to any greater exertion tuun
a visit to Uij drug store entails. A.,y
druggist can supply a perfect fa.1 reducer
at a moment's notice at a coat of only a
few cents. His best receipt Is one ounce
Marmola, one-half ounce Fluid Extract
Caacara Aromatic, and three and one-half
ounces Hyrup simplex. A te&apoonful
taken after meals and at bedtime will do
mure for a fat man or woman In a shorter
spare of time and far more safely than
all the exercUe and dieting one could
crowd Into a summer's vacation.
f f f t
ts
0
at 1
'Y
-'0
si
as
7P
is-
(36
(GeG M Hon0 Mlinni
At Browning. King's
B
y
Hero are some hints that ought to bo helpful to
Mothers Shopping for Their Sens. Wives Shopping for Their Husbands,
Sisters Shopping for Their Brothers. Aunts Shopping for Their Nephews.
And You Shopping for Him. .
Smoking Jackets
Lounging and Bath
Bags and Suit Cases
Umbrellas and Canes
Pajamas
Night Robes
Gloves
Shirts
Scarf Pins
Link Buttons
Silk Hats
Opera Hats
Fur Lined Overcoat3
Our showing for the Little Fellows is the most complete we have ever made SUITS, OVER
COATS, GLOVES, CAPS, BLOUSES, ROBES, PAJAMAS, NIGHT ROBES, MUFFLERS, NECKWEAR, Etc.
.Wir -
an aa an SB Sk Si
i
AN OLD ARMY CHRISTMAS
Recollections of a Primitive Festival
at a Montana Post.
SHADOWED BY AN INDIAN WAR
Inarennltr "t an Army Wife Over
eomra Obataelea and Prepares a
Feant Worthy of
Mars' Men.
It was the beautiful army custom In
those days for officers already at the sta
tion to call the first evening upon the new
arrivals. AccordlnKly our officers visited
the tents that were put up In military pre
ciHlon close as convenient to our little
Fmncks. Afterward all the new officers,
mout of whom I had already met, called to
pay their respects to the two ladies in this
little beleaguered post they hud endured so
much to relieve.
It was not much like a holiday gathering
that Christmas Eve. They came dressed
In the best that their limited kits afforded.
(Winter campaigns In Montana were fur
from belr.g pleasure trips.) Several of them
were sunVrlns from frozen noses, ears,
cheeks or fingers, from the terrible ex
posure of the last week's ride. The pain
ful peeling process was exceedingly annoy
ing; but not a word of complaint vaa
heard.
Realizing how hard It was for them to
be away from their wives and families
under such trying circumstances, and espe
cially at this time of the year that stands
for family reunions, I invited ton of them
for Christmas dinnt r the next day. It wa.i
my pleasure to take all imishIIjIh pains to
make my dinner ultractive, und the sub
sequent delight of the hoine-hunt'ry men
fully repaid me.
Ileal Koiupliia.
When we entered our quartets, I had
personally superintended the lluia of bot'a
rooms with heavy brown paper such as i
jised between partitions and Hours to keep
houses warm. )
In one room sipod the bed hidden by u
large screen. It had proved my good for
tune to have ordered my piano to lie
shipped to Fort Custer tco late in the sea
son for It to arrive before we left for
Poplar river. It had come up to Fort
Huford on the last bout before navigation
closed for the winter; and from there it
had been forwarded to Poplur river, sixty
miles up the Missouri. So, delightfully In
congruous as it was, we had t lie piano in
the combination led and fitting room,
flanked by my guitar and banjo. Near it.
suspended from the celling, was a haniting
lamp. At each window hung lure curtains
and wine-colored red lambrequin ; and
with the floor made warm with buffalo
robes the little room waa voted delightfully
coiy by all who entered.
In the dining room stood our dresser
which waa utilised us a sideboard; my bit;
"Saratoga trunk; and t he smaller traveling
trunks, all covered and curtained and mude
Into seats. A door in the rear of the room
communicated with our cooking tent, whlell
was put up like a lean-to on a frame, with
loose boards for flooring. Two great stoves
which burnt green cotton wood kept the
little two-roomed house warm. For the
Christmas dinner, several tables were put
together Id the small dining room, almost
filling it.
Appeasing; Home Hanger.
Despite their unpleasant and decidedly
uncomfortable situation, all the guests ap
peared with the bright holiday faces that
their beautiful optimism and gentle cour
tesy prompted.
Covers were laid for twelve, and as we
entered the dining room the guests stood
still with appreciation at the sight of the
table. I had procured from the trader,
who had cared for them until we had en
tered our shacks, several geranium plants:
sod by Christmas their buds bad opened
f m f f f
Way of
$5.00 to $20.00
Robes $2.50 to $50.00
$5.00 to $32.50
$1.00 to $10.00
$1.25 to $10.00
50c to $7.5o
50c to $25.00
$1.00 to $3.50
50c to $3.50
50c to $3.50
$6.00
.J57.50
$125 to $250
rowning,
R. S. WILCOX, IVIor- Open Evenings This Week
ft a
-
'i 'i -i 'i
Into warm red "Sowers. They were at that
bleak season a delight.
When the officers saw that the dinner
preparations were more elaborate than
could have been hoped for In that out-of-the-way
place, their faces brightened still
more, and as the evening progressed my
heart warmed to see that the spirit of
Christmas was assisting my anxious hos
pitality In causing them to forget them
selves and enjoy the present as much as
possible.
Our first course was raw oysters, which
were canned and frozen before shipment.
For it I hud made careful preparation.
My man had cut for me a large square
block of Ice and twelve small ones. With
hammer and chisel and the aid of a dish
pan and a baking powder can tilled with
boiling water, these were transformed Into
receptacles for the sea food. A hot flatiron
made for them ull beveled edges, and the
large block was further decorated with our
monogram. The whole gave a beautiful
crystal effect. The novelty delighted the
guests and immediately dispelled the traces
of sadness that threatened. In fact, the
Ice dlBhes most effectually broke the social
Ice, and started a warmth of approbation
and comfort In the little dinner.
Pleasant Itecolleetlone.
The diary I have kept all tny life brings
back to me even the menu of that night.
After the oysters came soup, home made,
and not the canned variety with which we
had become so familiar as diners on th"
frontier. Then showed salmon croquettes
with egg satire and potatoes. The butcher
had provided me with sweet breads, and
these were served In patties with peas
fresh from the can.
Too Isolated for the Christmas turkey,
we had a big roast of beef, and I really do
not believe the guests gave one passing
thought to the holiday bird. Potatoes and
eubhune u la cauliflower completed that
coin e. Tralrle chickens and currant J llv
tarts melted from view before the canned
asparagus salad mnilo its appearance; and
no hostess ever hnd more reason to be
pratifted by the enthusiasm with which
each dish as received, than I had upon
that occasion. Cheese and crackers pre
ceded the sherbet, home made cuke, and
the randies I had made with hurried z. al.
Refore the cofTee had entirely disap
peared, the room was comfortably per
fumed with cigar smoke; and the party
was launched upon after dinner stories.
We had been' three hours and a half at
table, and were now quite In the humor for
music and lively conversation.
One of the officers was an accom
plished musician, and of course delighted
with the presence of the piano. Solo, duet,
chorus, story and Instrumental duet fol
lowed each other in happy succession for
a couple of hours after.
But the time fur goodnlghts abruptly re
minded us that this was the last social
gathering before the Impending fU'ht with
the Indians, which their insolent and
threatening dispositions made Inevitable.
The Idea entered my mind that the coining
week might find us beyond earthly pleas
ures, and, aa we separated from all those
we held dear in this world, Ht was impos
sible to escape a little depression. Since
there are no sorrowful Incidents to re
member In connection with the tight, how
ever, the recollection of our momentary de
pression does nut dim that of the Christ
mas cheer. Army and Navy Ufe.
Kauilly .Newspaper War.
This Is a tittle domestic story with two
characters father and son.
The Kiay-haircd lather us he has been
reading the newspapers day after day has
been ImpiesseJ with the tact that an un
usually larife number of sons of good
families have been fcoliiK wrung. A bright
Idea came into his head the other day.
H nee that time until within four or live
daya ago he has been clipping- accounts of
these misdoings out and placing them each
morning beside the plate of bis sun at the
breakfast table.
Then a bright Idea came Into the head
of tiie young man. He found good mate
rial in the daily papers for the misdoings
of elderly men. fathers of families, and yes
terday at break last put tlie bunch be.sidH
the plate ot his father. Thus far honors
are t&sy. Indianapolis News.
m tet f f
Suggestion-
Handkerchiefs
Fancy Suspenders
Fancy Vests
Collar Bags
Toilet Sets
Hosiery
Neckwear
Sweaters
Mufflers
Full Dress Protectors
Underwear
Full Dress Suits
Tuxedo Suits
Suits and Overcoats
sn Si St al St si at Sh
r?T7 a .
-V.-V4V--V. i4.a.9.a9.
t 'i
"THE ONLY REAL
c andy . Cathartic
HEASTTlflfRS"" are really the only laxative remedy we have had any de
gree of success with. They seem to possess, in just the right proportion,
those properties which soothe and strengthen th'j tissues of the digestive
organs and restore the muscles to a normal condition so that they can pre
form their functions in a natural manner. Our customers say that the
action of "EASYTfHCiS" is mild and pleasant they do not gripe and cause
pain as is invariably the case with strong purgatives. In our opinion and
judging from the enormous sale we are having nn them it won't be long
before . CAST TWltM will be the only remedy sold
for constipation and stomach trouble."
BEATON DRUG COMPANY
I 3 til and Farnam Streets. Omaha. Neb.
Thit reliable firm it in dote touch with itt
cuttomert and the above ttrong wordt of endortt
ment should be tufficient to warrant a trial of
thit great remedy.
Guaranteed under the Pure Pood and Drug act. Serial No. 56.
TIIE Om MEDICAL CO., Mffjs. and Dists.
COUNCIL BLUFFS. IOWA
msasai . -
3fl
13th Street. Between
This ia th
play in the
SARATOGA DRUG CO.
24th and Ames Ave.
Pressing Dyeing Repairing
VACUUM PROCESS
Clothes Three 81 Per
Cleaned Suits rVIonth
Restores the nap; preserves the cloth; absolutely removes ull dust.
Carpets. Rugs. Feather Renovating.
Sanitary Cleaning Company
1810 Farnam fairest Red
I I'M
f. 1 f f
m0
99
25c to $1.50
50c to $2.50
$2.50 to $7.50
$1.00 to $3.50
$3.50 to $32.50
25c to $3.50
50c to $4.50
$3.00 to $6.00
$1.00 to $5.00
$1.00 to $4.00
$1.00 to $12.00
$40.00
...$38.00
$15.00 to $50.00
an ak aa . aa .
r
99
Tlic safe, pleasant,
hviinleha laxative
"EASY TIMERS1'
are absolutely pure.
Will cure the wort
cases of chronic cons
tipation and wive Im
mediate reltef from
sudden attacks of Indi
gestion. All driiKKlsts
sell and rpcominend
them. In metal boxes,
luo, tto and 60o.
8Ae Omaha
National Bank
Capital $1,000,000
OFFMCKKS:
Jrcsilcnt J. . Millard
Vlce-rresldeut Win. Wullace
Vice-President V. l Mctirew
Cashier W. H. Hucholi
AsKlhtant Cashier Frank Lloyd
DIKIiCTOUS
J. II. Millard. Guy C. Ilartou
V. M. ilurg.es A. J. Simpson
3. K. Ha u in '. K. .McUrew
Wm. Wallace I. W. Carpenter
W. II. Kucholz C. II. Hi own.
Farn am and Douglas.
Mia.ua.il j-iiti'.r i iwi mi iftmmif 1
Lowney's Woodward's, Bal
duff's. We have very reason
able priced packages in pretty
decorated boxes.
finest dis
JOfES "ndy.
city of
The Candy Corner for Xmas.
Tel. Web. 116