11 Health Hints -:- Fashions -:- Roman's IorA: -:- Household Topics THK HKK: OMAHA. SATrKlUY. AiUn, i. cm.. AS'ss of Matrimony Meaningless ; Absurd Survival Br nonoriiv nix. In two divorce rnoes now pending the court has boen called upon to rule upon tba matrimonial kiss and to define what In the proper length, temperature and frequency tUereof. tn on of thesn cases the aggrieved wife asked for a divorce because her husband apent hours bestowing .soul kisses on her. In the other case the woman asked for divorce because her huaband re futed to kiss her at all, claiming that he regarded kisses as unaanltarr. When both kissed and unklssed wtvei claim that they have been subjected to cruel and inhuman treatment that en titles them to alimony, what Is a poor husband to do? It adds another and a dangerous complication to the domestic osculation problem, which is always a h explosive In the family circles any way. The why of the kiss of courtship is obvious to all. It is the flower of dealre, the red rose of romance. It Is gar landed with moonbeams, and set to the lilt of music, and its time is the hour that is sacred to love. But the daily kiss of matrimony Is an other affair. Its Inspiration is habit. Ha time, the minute when we are moat rushed and most engrossed with material cares. Its aroma Is that of bacon and gS It Is the profanation of all romance, and why Intelligent people persist in keeping up a cuatnm whose significance has been lost, whose very soul is dead, passes all comprehension. The minute a kiss becomes a daily cus tom, like brushing your teeth, or doing up your hair, it loses it savor. It la no longer a thrill. It Is a bore. It Is a flat, stale and meaningless custom that gets on our nerves, and that we would all gladly cease to observe If we dared. J Women know this, and. yet so wedded are they to ancient superstitions that the average wife would feel herself exceed ingly ill-used If her husband omitted his diurnal duty dry-aa-dust kiss, although every time she receives It she hears In jf rier soul the thud of another nail being mance. Now It is no sign that a man nas ceased to love his wife homnu the vi he bes'.OW. hit of ml on hep . he L rushes to catch the 8:1R car has no mora warmth nor thrill to It than the touch V' a flabby flannel breakfast cake. T: Neither Is it any Indication that his wife no longer cares for him because she receives the peck on her cheek in the spirit in which It was given and with her mind centered more on what she Is go ing to order from the grocer than on the temperature of her husband's parting kiss. Very likely both husband and wife love f each other a thousand times more deeply and more tenderly than they did In the days of courtship, when every kiss was a sacred rite and every touch of the Hps cet their Wood on fire. After marriage comes the business of fe, when the very existence of love de pend upon the husband and wife turn ing their thoughts to the practical affairs of making money and making a com fortable home. In the midst of this hustle and bustle there Is no place for airy ro mance and sentimental kisses, and the pity of it is that married people do not perceive this, and quit trying to turn the pink chiffons of romance Into the scrubbing cloths of dally Ufa. Probably there la nothing else In the world that would do more to conserve teal romance In domesticity than the abolition of the dally duty kiss, and the f -s substitution for It of the occasional kiss of impulse. If we could only kiss those who are near and dear to us when the spirit moves us to do it, instead of having to do It by the clock and because the time has come around for us to take a tit Viro irood morning or a good night pill! What v reiier, on, my renow men ana womeni All of us are prone to loathe the things . that we are forced to do, and if a man I could go to work and return therefrom I without having to bestow that odious twtce-a-day-emack, he would oftener feel like giving his wife a real kiss, warm and vital with love, and straight from the heart Instead of from the ends of his mustache. Also if the wife did not have to receive these diurnal, meaningless, platitudinous, thank-goodness-I've-got-lt-'over-wlth- for todsy kisses, she might oftener turn her Hls instead of the back of her head or her left ear to receive her husband's kins. A kiss without love la without mean ing, and can be as deadly an insult as a blow, and that's what Is the matter with most matrimonial kisses. People wrve them along with the bread and butter. Instead of keeping them like a rare cordial for an occasional treat. The way to improve the domestic kiss Is to diminish the quantity. That will improve the quality. In-Shoots People who ask for criticism generally re praise. Only the very beautiful girl can afford eat onions. Some men are great: others are good fj at bluffing the Interviewer. 'i The optimist Is the fellow who knows ' u-Vwn thlni4l are romtn tnm wav Judge not the divorce until you have een the old man who used to pay the rent The man who harbors a grudga and forjret favors is the most undesirable r of all citlsens. . When a fellows gets in love he is usually the last one on earth to discover the fact. When a man dotes on home cooking It Is a sign that his wife Is saving the ex pense of a hired girl. Kvangellcal enterprise without the press agent and contribution box never seems to get anywhere in this age. When the wife Is able to keep her former Job and take care of the house '2'enlngs marriage ought to be a suc- Olrls matrimonially inclined should re- niemlier that the fellow who writes poe irv hss no love for the lawn mower or rden rake. We cannot always tell what our neigh ; - are thinking about; but in most , we know that they should be ,,, ining their sins. 9 The Heavens in April By WILLIAM F. niOGF.. On the 23d of this month we will cele brate the feast of Kaster, the greatest of the year, from which all the other mov able frast get their positions,. The date of ITastrr depends upon for conditions, all of which are summed up In the law that it must fall on the Sunday following the first full tnoon of ei-rlng. The beginning of spring is fixed upon March 21. and the leap years In our calendar ate so dlswsed that this date shall never vary. As the moon was full on March 19. two days be fore the 21st, we have to wait until April 1? for the first full moon of spring. The Sunday after this ia the 33d. Thla is a late. date, the latest of all being April 25 and the earliest March 21. It may be of Interest to note that Easter has fallen on tills date, April 23, In 160R. l2S. 181S and 1M. The future years will be 20i. 207, 2l2. 2220. and then not again until JfiTI. H is peculiar that this date occurs only thirty-six tlmea from the year 1 A. I), to while the preceding date, April 22, occurs exactly twice as often; the following one. April 24. forty four times, and April 23. the last, only twenty-six times. The least frequent of all ia the first. March 22. which occurs only twenty-one times In these 3,(X years. The days are Increasing one hour and a quarter In letiKth during the month, from twelve hours thirty-four minutes on the 1st to thirteen hours fourteen minutes on he 15th and thirteen hours forty-nine minutes on the m h. Cm the 2Uh the sun enters Taurus, the Bull. In the following table are given the standard times of the rising, meridian passage and setting of the sun and moon at Omaha during the month. Three days of the preceding and following months have been added to facilitate the con nection. The sun is slow on local time from the 1st to the 15th and fsst the rest of the month, the exact amount In mlnutea being found by taking the differ ence between 12:24 and the tlmca given In the noon column: SfN. MOON. 11 I RIM. (South' Ht I.l i 12. 4. 4-5 In 12 2Vli.4.t Wed Thu. Frl. Sat. 4 04! 15 2.;4 :.2 3.47 .30 4.5x1.31 6.CW .1 7 If.' 2 s.2?.a .:mi.4 4 S2I in 04 6 13 12 2S !.44l 4 5 5 21 5 44! 11' 10 : 11 12.2S i;.4.i 1 1 VM2.2i.fi.4fil (fc 12 . 27 .41 ' I2.27!6.4it 6 04 12 .27 ! 5l 02112. 2iR.; Ml 5 i 12.26:6.6.'i' U 38; 12.24' 1 11' Sun. Mon Tis. Wed Thu. Frl. Sal. 8 4. S. ft 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 37 7 11 7 471 Sil 1.69 2.4X1 1(1,34 .5 S.JS! 11.34' 4.30!Midni.7 5.211 12 2i. S It 23 I 10 JsVi 11 1ft 12.12! 1.2AI 2.201 3.2.V C 57 12.25 S.M' Hun. 5 fkfi12.3n fi.Mi Mon. R 53H2. 2r-'.M" Tue. 6 52112 25 .. j Wed. 6 50,12.25 6 5ft Thu. 5 4!)'l2. 24 7.001 Fli. 5 47 12.24 7.01! Sat. ! I l 5 4S, 12. 24 7.021 Sun. 5 45 12.24 '7.03 Mon. 5 4.H12.23, 7. 04! Tue. 6 41 1.23,7.06 Wed. 6 40112.23 7.0il Thu. S tN;12.2.T7.(7l Frl. 6.11! .f.! I 7.4.M S.20 9.13 9.671 1 18 .9 1 551.10 2 30M1 2 to, .12 3 23 .13 3 4 .14 4 09 .15 I 4 32 . H 4 57 .17 6 25 .18 01'. 18 44v.20 7 40 .21 8 48;,22 12.: 13. 14. li. 1. 17. 1. 1. 20. 11. 22. 23. 10.41! I 1 6.49! 11.28, 7 .00 Mldn! 8.18 12 17' 9.34! 1 13; 10.47 2 12! I 11.521 IMidn! 3 11 4 17i I 5 37HJ.i2i.0KI Sat. I 12 471 1 30 2 0T) 2 351 8 01 8 :' 3 47! 4 All m!.23 11 Hi. 24 It. 25.25 1.38I.2) 2.471.17 8.541.28 6.021.29 7.15M 8.1X1.1 9.23 .3 6 JW 12. 22 (.091 5 .14112.22 7.1! 6 8.TI2. 2117. Ill 6 82112.2217.121 6 81 12.2217. 13l 6 80112.21 17.141 6 S8il2.21i7.15l I I I 6 27112.2117. 11 6 iiVl2.21l7.17l Sun. Min. Tue. Wed. Thu. Frl. Sat. Pun. Mon. 6 19 17 7 11 8 02 24. 25. 25. 27. . 8 49i 9 34 10 19 1 11 2.-.I II 521 4 89, 6 24 12. 2117. 1H) Tue. 8 OH I 12.88 6 45! 1.311 I.I S 22112. 2117. 19! Wed. The bright star in the west in the early evening In the planet Venua. It Is a little smaller than the earth, and owes Its brilliancy mainly to the fact of Its being no near to us. On the sixth It will make a fine picture with the crescent moon. On the twenty-fourth It wll appear to be farthest from the sun. setting that night at 11:12 o'clock. Its brilliancy Is thirty-six times that of a standard star of the first magnitude. Saturn Is much larger than Venus, but as It is now about ten times as far away, it appears much fainter, and Is about twice as bright as a standard first magnitude stare. It sets on the sixteenth st 1:06 p. m. Mars is also an evening star- like Venus snd Saturn. It Comes to the sixth meridian at 8 o'clock on the fifteenth. Jupiter is invisible. The moon is new on the second at 10:21 a. m., in first quarter on the tenth at 8:36 a. m.. full on the seventeenth at 11:07 p. m., and In last quarter on the twenty-fourth at 4:88 p. m. It Is In conjunction with Venus on the sixth, Saturn on the ninth and Mara on the twelfth. Advice to Lovelorn By Beatrice Fairfax He Mast f'boose. Pear Miss Fairfax: I have been going with a young man for the last eight months. I have imullclt faith in him and yet his actions of lute are causing me much uneasinesa of mind. He receive lettera from a woman of questionable character and keeps engage ments with her which alio mukes. and ex plains his actions to me by saying ha doesn't know how to refuse her. Because lie is a college boy, well edu cated and mannerly. I hate to see him deceived into thinking this womsn csres ror him. We two are the same age, while she is considerably older. She Is not particular about whom she associates with, and I conclude he only wants this hoy in her power to us hi position and means tn elevate herself Into his class of societv. Although the bov tella me he car nothing for ber and is troubled by her unwelcome, persistent attentions, yet I know from his own conversation that he kisses this womaa and Is altogether free In his actions toward her. Ue takes her to theuters and Is seen In public with her. V. It is most distinctly unfair of tnls boy to keep up his friendship with, a woman of questionable character and to be seen publicly with her. as well aa with you. Why not Insist that lie make a choloe either sacrific bis friendship with you for her, or see no more of yon If he con tinue to associate with her. Don't sacri fice yourself in an effort to save him, for If ho has not the strength of char acter to break with evil associations even you will do him no good ard he might do you harm. "Unstable as water thou shalt not excel." - says the Bible. Olrls ought to remember this in dealing with weak men. Don't vacillate in your course or permit him 'to continue to do so. Why Not Ask Hlssf I ear Miss Fairfax: I am correspond ing witii a young man who Is now In prison I know be la a respectable man, but through bad Influence was led to do wrong. 1 am trying to help him so that when ha gets back It will be easier for him to keep straight. With each letter I enclose a stamp as I know he 1 in need of monvy. Am I insulting him 7 A. U U. If thu man were Insulted at your little pieie fit thoughtbulness he would prob ably tell you so. But I think the very best thing for yoj to du is to auk him quite frankly If he inludu this course on I be iait of a sincere friend. Grace Darling's Talks to Girls By onttn ntmnt.. Who Has Won National Recognition n a Moving Picture Star. We girls need more words. No. Unit Isn't a Joke, nnr is It funny. It's a sad fact. We talk a-plenty, but we use the swim words over and over again until the )nni things are all worn out. and frayed around the edses, and back broken, and generally played out. . And half the time the word we h ri nsing was no more Intended to express what we are trying to say than a crochet neodle was designed to dig the Pananut eanal with. That's the real reason in take refuge In slang. The only words we know are so pitifully Inadequate to ex press what we are trying to convey that we selie upon the first handy crutch that we can lay our tonguo to. You never realise how povert . v -stricken we are in the matter of a vocabulary un til you listen to the chatter of a lot girls and observe how they overwork some one or two words. For Instance, 1 know a girl who would bo stricken aosolutely dumb If she were suddenly depr ived of the word "cute.- In one breath she will tell you that a doll, or a baby la cute. In the next she nlll ssy that Xlgara Falls are cute Last summer I wss riding with her In the park, and she asked me If 1 dnln t think that the Obelisk was cute, and that it was cute of the EgypJan government to have presented It to us. and the cutest thing that ever was for the park com missioners to have placed It Juat where they did. Another girl I know plus her conisa tional faith to the word "'lerce." She will tell yon that the fighting In tlie trenches In France is fierce, and that the ice cream at dinner was fierce, and the price of chocolate creams has become something fierce, or that her new pink evening dress is the fiercest thing ah ever saw. Still another g-rl I know finds the word swell" a life Mne to which she clings desperately in every emergency. She will tell you that they had the swellcst pie for dinner, that her favorite actor Is perfectly swell, or that she has Just been to the awellest play, or that the paiers have an account of the awellest case of starvation sho ever heard of, or that she Is reading the swellest book. Now these girls are not s4 lipid. They are not ignorant. They are not lacking In discernment. They arc merely lacking In words. They have not enough vocabu lary with which to express the things they feel and perceive. It Is this same lack of vocabulary that makes people so often say the wrong thing to us. and offend us when they mean to please. For exsmple, did you ever watch the scowl on an artist's face when some well meaning but wordleax person told him that his picture. In which he had tried to paint the agony of a soul in torment, was "so pretty?" And a woman novelist, who ha written a story that Is a great traglo epic, told me that she feels like cummlttlng murder every time anybody tells her that her book Is "sweet." The real secret of flattery Is to find out the particular adjective that people like to have applied to them, and then use It where it will do the most good. But we can't do this unless we have a large and fexlhle vocabulary, and so I urge you girls to make a resolution now to add a new word each day to your Homely Virtues By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. Are the old-fashioned virtues of dig nity and self-respect going out of style? Occasionally one is tempted to think sq. But as long as the world lasts the woman who values herself lightly will be lightly valued Jn turn. Never forget this when-some man urges you to have a drink to prove yourself a good sport, or some "popular"' girl explains to you that: the persons wouldn't like her so well If she didn't let them make love to her occasionally. A certain cheap success may be ob tained by an undignified catering to the baser side of worldly natures. Hut it its cheap success remember that. H leads nowhere and It does not abide long. While you are young and pretty and able to carry off boldness and flashtness and lax moral standards with a little air of youthful bravado and "cuteness" you may be the center- of a gsy circle. But their admiration Is not worth hav ing, and It can t be kept. No worth-while man wants his wife to be a woman of questionable reputa tion... or even one of whom gay com rades speak lightly, nor yet one whose Intimates are people of too giddy a suit. v Popularity which ran be bought .by relaxing the standdards of self-respecting womanhood la not worth having. Tod many girls are writing me agitated letters about the boys who . suddenly slopped being nice to them when re fused a good night kiss. The boy who sets a price on his attentions and de mands that a glry repay him for his society aa escort to a dance ia either weakly selfish or scoundrelly. In any case his terms are usurious and no dig nified girl should pay them. Familiarity does breed contempt. That la an axiom of fact based on human nature. A' boy who Is permitted to take liberties with a girl is Justified In sup posing that other boys are allowed the same freedom. He does suppose It. 11 thinks the girl a cheap little coquette or worse. What girl would sanely sacrifice her chanoes of future hsppineaa to pay some young Lothario for a chocolate Ire cream soda or a trip to Coney Island, It sounds absurd or sensational when put that wsy. doesn't It, girls? But thst is Just about how It stands. I-et people call you pilm. prudish, old-fashioned, alow, not a good sport, a quitter, anything they like, and re flect that people who reproach your dignity in these terms are morally lax young wasters who are ready to inort gagn their ideals, their education and their chani-ea of future happinck In successful marriage for the sake of s little cheap emotion of the soit that li gjsrHiiteed to leave a bitter after taste 111 He mind and the heart. No. 7 The Art of Conversation mimmimmmmmmmmm''mKm ". " "wnw ' '-wsssBsssaw MananmSKiaiMisms .vtKN wtsssss n mmm mm wmm n 1 mm hi '" "n ammmmmm H " ' "' a a a ." ' eV. " i k 1 H " 1 1 i t - ! 1-; rf" "v--.,5-.s..--;s. i . 'v v .. f . v r , "- r l : . I - jViwiaain-iWiisisiMSMiiM ""4 "" " iSGI "ffTM"! 7 Another Striking Hioto store of words, and the best way to do thla la to follow the advice thnt the poet Longfellow gavo to Mary Anderson when she asked him bow to acquire a largo vocabulary of exquisite words. He told her to Uarn a verse of ioetry every day. Isn't It silly to go through life hampered for a lack of words when there's a whole dictionary full of them free to us all, and to bo had for tho taking? The Kiss in Self-Defense A new line of defense has been opened to us women, which, although primarily adopted by a modern Adam for our undoing, we can easily adapt, us we did the old Adam's rib, and use for his. , I am alluding to the self-defense kiss. "Did you kiss her?" asked Justice aternly of some fickle awaln the other day. "I did. but only In self-defense," an swered the swain. Utile knowing tint by doing so ho had Invented a fresh weapon of defense for women almost as deadly as a Maxim gun. Men from time to time have done many strange things in self-defense, but never before have 1 heard of a man who, caught in a flirtations net, tried to nibble hi way out with the mouse of a timid kiss. Olio presumes naturally that the kiss In question wouldn't be of the roaring, lion devouring kind, because the damsel might well have retorted in kind, and then the net would have been closed round him tighter than ever. My Idea of the imtitir Is lhat the alarmed Ixtharlo In question, frightened by'the lady's dlspos'tion. In desperation showed her just how badly be could kiss In order thai she might be Induced to let him no for fenr that the rest of him might be up to sample, too. No self-respecting ilrl would like to be kissed as If she were some kind of a ripening fruit and tin- man a wood pecker. Where do we come in on the self defense business? lx-t me telll you. The feminine self-defense kiss should he designed to stimulate, desire instead of allaying It, to encourage a man tn fur ther effort In case he might think he bad used up his ticket, and to tempt him al together to a fuller knowledge. There are all sorts of ways of kissing, but the self-defense kiss will have to thoroughly well atudled. Now that man has given us this weapon. It will be folly not to sharpen It for use I'ur myself, I see great ixissibllil lea in It For long, a censorious world has been apt to blame the girl who, living made the discovery, that lipa were not intended by a bountiful nature to tie wasted, aeon to It that nature Is obeyed. Hut now all we have to do la smile sweetly at cen7 sure and say, "Well I only did It In self defense!" Nobody can grumble about that. Self defense Is a good sane Instinct, and tin most conscientious objector to love should find no flaw In that. If a man sort of hesitates on the down ward path that leads to matrimony, what easier for a practised self defense kisser than to du her work ao well lhat he soon discovers that the ltfhts of love are to be seen only through her eyes? I predict a great future for the self defense klsa as soon as the Klrla havo had lime to practise it. It awnjld be rather. a Joke come to think of it for the verv man who propagated tbat kiss lij be roped In by it after all It wuiild onl e pocll - J 'sli'i- if by wci. j graph of Miss Darling. "You Can Save Time and Money By Trading At The Rexall Stores" Fresh Goods Bought Direct From Manufacturers are the Reasons Why You Can "Save Time and Money" by Trading at Our Drug Stores RUBBER GLOVES ranted kind. . 49c Pi n 35c site, Sat urday, for. . . , Genuine Castorla, 35c kind 50c Doan'a Kid ney Pills 50c Genuine Syrup of Klgs. . . II. 00 IMnkhaiu's, Compound r.Oe I'ape's Dl i- ppis,ln Hal Mepatka, llr and riUWIT KltVlCK i ki i; iku i;kv SHERMAN & McCONNELL DRUG CO. Corner 16th and Dodge Streets OWL DRUG CO., 16th and Harney HARVARD. 24th and Farnam New Store Soon at 19th and Farnam lam i img.m m &m Malt A BRANNEW BEVERAGE Making an entirely new and novel beverage from the choicest American cereals, WITHOUT MAlT, without fermentation, without fugar, not fill hi i i Get into New York Servant Girl Problem When more than two women get to gether the servant girl proh'em always has an airing That was the topic be tween three women durlns intermission at a Broadway theater. Ton should have seen me." said one of the women. "There was all my loxely dnhcs and my rut glass punch howl broken, broken In a thousand puces She had dropped the whole trav. Hi. It was nwful! 1 could j ha-d'.y get mv breath 1 was so mad snd so rv Ited. 1 Jn-t looked st her, and what do you think 1 suld'" Mlrst do you think 1 said to her"'' oh, ob, oh! 1 cans Imagine," chorused the two others. "W hat did nil sa ?" "Not one word,' answered the speaker. "Not one single word. She thought 1 was going to scold her; but I never opened mv mouth And 1 never do. no matter what she break" or what she does. Why, she has broken more tniin l-i worth of chins, cut glass ami furnltuic. K.very wash dny she let some of mv fine things blow off the ronf or forgets 10 bilng thcin down, and they are stolen, but I never ssy one wonl to her. That Is the way I keep her. All my friends have trouble with their mauls and are changing all the time, nut mine stays with us. If I let her see I was mild and scolded tier sll the time, 1 would be Hlttlm: on a chalt In an eniplovimn' nitrm y living to get maids. No. mn'sm. Imp your mouth suit Is my pi m. an. I you can keep jour servant." And the two other women said: "Ain't It the truth?'' When a Man Phone Tyler 1000 "BfBSSi Our Windows ttS?- i , ' Horllck'g Malted Q Milk, 39 and. . OiC Mfterlne, 1SA CQr ID. SO nd OVC Scott'a Emulsion, 43 and 25c Carter's Liver PUla LIMESTONE PHOSPHATE 25c Mennen'a Talcum Powder, 4 kinds per can 24c Plver'a French Kxtrart, per ounce Witch Hazel, large bottle. . . . Wood Alcohol, large bottle 50c Yale's Hair Tonic for 21c 34c 34c 64c 29c 69c 2 dozen Aspirin or Capnules, for KAHTKH Kii lYKS. Holler !uy now 1st-fore atork ia ex f" hauNtJri OC ATTEND oril SAT I KDAY 'AM)V KA 1,1 less brewed, containing sti AlCjorHHj, being tax-free; not a beer, near beer" or "temperance beer," with a flavor and taste of Its own and being In a class of Its own. For aaJa at all drug stores, hotels, restaurants, soda fountains and soft drink establishments. Omaha Beverage Company rasollf Trate sjnpPu4 by i MtMKi lo AO I (I Houlh KOth KtnevC WX1aof i"' Isomi WUK STATION OMAHA, NEn. Pboaa IHjuaias 'S31. I I'hone Houth 1307. business via the "Business Good Ice Cream is so much better for the growing child than many other forms of dessert. ICC CREAM The Fairmont Creamary Co, Omaha, Nab Pays 85.00 For His Shoes lis has right to expert quality anprrior workmanship pom f'trt nnd materials tbat are toond to th ror. We show todar the "New Yorker" model at 8 0l the shoe for a gentle-rim In black, tan or patent. Mutton or laoe. 'SHO&CQ 1GT3 A. DOUGLAS And yon will reoelva the imm oour tsona sarvloe as though you wera de. liverlng your Want-Ad to TBI BIX Office in psirson. QQ OVC Hinkle Tablets, 100 for 19c 100 niaud'B Iron 29c 12c Toulc Pills. . , 100 2-graln Pure Q Qulnlne Pills. . . iC Crude Carbolic Acid, for disinfectant, OCw large bottle asuC 1 C U 111 12c Azurea 69c 15c 15c 29c Luther Durbank Flower and Vegetable Seeds 5 and 10 I'aoWaKes. We have the Omaha afcency for these wonder ful seeds. They cost no more than th doubtful "no-nanie" kinds. Tablets HATl ltlAY OIGAK SPKCIAli Tom Moore, 10c alee, 5 (only .1 lo a customer) 10 .Mitnllii (iRftj-s 82.50 35c Alcoholfree Chances'