Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, May 05, 1917, EDITORIAL SECTION, Image 14
THE BEE? OMATTA. SATURDAY, ftfAY g. 1917. Save the Babies Recent figures show that out of 2,600,000 births in the United States in one year, 600,000 babies died before completing their first twelve months. An eminent physician ascribes one-fifth of these deaths to intestinal diseases, largely traced to unclean milk.! KNOW YOUR MILK Is your baby to be listed among the lost one-fifth? You can help to reduce this toll of young life by exercising a little discretion in choosing milk. There is only one kind of milk for the baby safe milk. Alamito Milk Is Safe; It's Pasteurized Practically all milk contains disease-carrying germs. Unless these are killed off, milk is harmful. Pasteurizing is the only effective weapon against dangerous bacteria. It kills them by a process of heating and rapid cooling. Pasteurized milk is not boiled; the lactic elements are not destroyed. MILK IS BEST BODY BUILDER Milk is a perfect food, combining all the elements of nutrition in a form easily digested by growing children. Alamito Milk is a per fectly pasteurized product of healthy, well-pastured cows. Alamito milk is the kind the doctor recommends. Ask your Grocer or Phone Douglas 409. THE ALAMITO DAIRY CO. Strictly Fresh Country Egg$, Beechwood Creamery Butter, per io., at 45e E. C. Corn Flakes, pkg 5c FANCY TABLE POTATOES Fancy Table Potatoes, pk....8Sc 25c can K. C. Baking Powder, per can, at 19o targe can Table Peaches. . .17He Large can Table Pears. .. .17 Me Large can Table Apricots. . .17 Me Sunbright Cleanser, 8 pkgs. . .10c Swift's Pride Washing Powder, 3 pkgs. for 10a Stein Grocery & Meat Market Fruh Fruits and V etabUs At All Times. Free Delivery Mail Orders Filled Promptly at Above Prices. 213 South. 24th Street. Telephone Douflas 2514. PIG PORK LOINS, PER LB 1878c FRESH DRESSED CHICKENS, PER LB 19c Steer Pot Rout, lb 14, Younf Veal Rout, lb llViC Younf VmI Chopi, lb ...1V,c Steer Shoqlder Steele, lb .,.IT'i Porterhouse Steak, StMr, Ib......32Vie Pit Pork Roast, lb I8 Pis Pork Hutu, lb 0 Mutton Chops, lb 17Vio DellverlM made ta all parts of the city PUBLIC 1SI0 HARNEY STREET. -LIVE BETTER EVERY DAY YOU PAY YOURSELF, when trading with us, BY THE SAV. ING YOU MAKE. You. fat reduced prices at The Basket Stereo, ae need to wait for specials, we hare ever 300 PRICES LOWER than other Nebraska grocers every Orangeo Buy a ease, thar keep fine, per case, s.io to aj.au. nr ine aoe., lie, 13c, ISe, 17a, Sic and many other sUes. LEMONS Old roe set a ease el those fine Juier onu yett Case, KU. Dot., from 16c to IBs. raons an sure to be Buck higher Get our prices on Flour before buying, market tends upward. SEEDS S pkgs. for Se Mapelene Makea fine maple flavored syrup, SSe bottle ..... .2Sc Kellots's Drlnkett 21c Dromsdarr Dates, ISe pis, I3e TEA Haybloasom natural leaf on colored Jap, H lb. pks., 23c. Quo Powder English Breakfast, or un colored Japan, SOe grade, per lb 4c Upton's Tea, Ulb., l(c, 1 sound, ere. lb.. Sec, COFFEE I COFFEE I TIF Flnsat Mooa and Java blend Steal out grade, usually sold for SOe, per lb 43a INDEPENDENT It s the kind we sold over I carloads et last year, 4Ke grade 1 lb. can. tee. a lb. can, SSe. CASH HABIT A 1(0 grade, only 24c THRIFTY HABIT Bwnt Drinking Santos blend, 1 lb 20c WASHINGTON INSTANT Small, 2So Large ,. S2e DRIED FRUIT Cnrrants, bulk, per lb.,.-. 20c Clothes Pins, SS for So Ammonia, largo bottle., ee Clothes Basket, medium else. . . .$1.00 Blueing, large bottle 6c Washing Powder Small Pyramid or $5.00 orders Delivered' FREE Smaller orders, ever $1.00, (or OMAHA COUNCIL BLUFFS SOUTH OMAHA BENSON FLORENCE w viimv FORTY Simon Pure" Leaf Lard FOR dtep frying, "Simon Para" excels because it cook quickly, browns thoroughly and stands extreme beat without smoking or burning. For AortemnsT, "fihnoo Pore's flaky, leaJ4at richness is s tree Bold nr ta tigtrtrr-eowed pons ptrrity protactad, YonU know It by the aenecjt bhse aao re Sow Orel UW the eka of the beet is feeds. . wm mmm i I ClugrLliTrvy ) r'W SSSjl ii: per dozen 33c EXTRA I EXTRA 1 EXTRA I Extra large Sweet Navel Oranges, 60c size, per dozen 30c MEAT SPECIALS No. 1 Pot Roast, lb 17 He No. 1 Chuck Steak, lb 20c Fresh Hamburger, lb ...15c Fresh Home Dressed Chickens per lb., at 25c Home Made Pork Sausage, per lb., at 17 He Pork Chops, per lb 23c Spar Ribs, lb 14e Eitra Leea Reeuler Hans, lb...,.24',e Surar Cured Hams, lb ,,.20c Kxtra Lean Baeon, 1b...,,, S3e fiutar Curad Bacon, lb c SPECIALS Pram S to t p. as. Pork Chops, lb., 18c Fran) 9 to 10 o. so. Lamb Chops, lb., 7c Mad orders MM et those prlcM MARKET PHONE DOUGLAS I7S3. FOR LESS! day. Hippo, per Pkg 4e Edna Washing Powder, per pkg 4c, t for loa Pyramid Wash. Powd., too pkg...ISc CEDAR OIL POLISH American Lady, SSe siie. Itc, toe sin, see 11. 00 site .V..72C American Girl, I as. tin Se I for '. 2Se Bon Ami, cake eg bar and Sapollo. Men Sc, S for 2Se Excell Soap Wai)e, fleatinf, per bar . . 4c Olive Cream, a fine toilet soap, par bar, Sc, S for S2c 711 Castile, Fumleo or Tar.bar...4e Shine 'ore vouroelf SHOE POLISH I in one or Shin. ola, lOo bos, ae, I for 22e Bull Frog or Peter', Pasta. ..4e Royal or Jet Oil-Liquid. 10a hot- tie, for Sc Gilt Edse, lis hottl lie Bhlnote Home Sett Dauber and Polisher, usually told for SSe, our price Is ISc MEAT DEPARTMENT We carry the beat mMts all tovernmrnt Inspeeted, everything guaranteed to please. est Creemtrr Butter, lb....4Sc Good Creamery Butter, lb 43e Good Tub Butter, per lb.. ..42c BUTTERINE Best Tip-Tinted, lb. 28c Tip White, lb 27c Cash Habit, lb 2Sc Magnolia, t-lb. nil 41e Crlseo 41c, S2c, $1.64 Loganberry julee, ealled LOJU, It's a splendid drink. 8Rc bottle, 24c wlthli within a reeseneble distance. cents, THE BASKET college view UNIVERSITY PLACE SlllHtS HAVELOCK ASHLAND STORES aimourAconmnv It 3me$conomicsiJBepartmett edited by JrmM.jTrosjP S3 Infant Feeding "Of all that mankind has attempted since the world began there is noth ing which it has practiced so regular ly, so persistently and on the whole so successfully, as eating and drink ing. It is, therefore, somewhat dis quieting to find the great civilized nations suddenly smitten with mis givings as lo whether the rising gen eration is being suitably nourished. The situation is one of national im portance. It calls for a reform of the home dietary beginning in the ear)iest days." Thus begins an article written a few years, ago, chronicling a congress concerning Child Welfare. Within the last years in the United States, a week in the springtime has been set aside as Baby Week, so im portant are the problems of a baby's life conceded to be. During Baby Week last year in Omaha, an exhibit was held and various lectures on the care of infants were given. This year Baby Week has been relegated to the background due to the stress of the world problems which bear down upon all of us. It seems, however, that we ought to turn our thoughts to the baby for a brief while. The importance of proper food for the baby cannot be over-emphasized. On the proper food literally depends the infant's chance for life in many cases, and for future health in most cases. The ideal food for babies is the mother's milk, for that is specially fitted by nature for the purpose. In normal cases it is more sanitary, for there is no chance of contamination; it i more fitted chemically to the baby's needs; and it is more easily di gested. In some cases it is impossi ble for the baby to have his natural food and artificial feeding must be used. But it is always a risk, for the HEALTH FLOUR Try It For Your Health's Sake "TASTES GOOD" MAM MJM FRESH DRESSED CHICKENS, PER LB 19V,c CHOICE FOREQUARTERS LAMB, PER LB. .14c PIG PORK LOINS, PER LB 18c louns- veal Roast, lb. Yont; Veal Chops, lb. . Steer Shoulder. In ..17V,e ..171.., 8teor Pot Roaet, lb 14",. atoer porterhouse Bteak, lb Sl'tc Pl Pork Roaet, lb ISV.e Pie Pork Butts, lb , ao'.e Mutton Chops, lb 17Vie Spare Ribs, lb 14V,c EMPRESS ... e5?',!;irltIT,!!.,'-Vl.Mlrt IU SOUTH lTH STREET. Co-Operation. Readers are cordially invited to ask Miss Gross any questions about household economy upon which she may possibly give help ful advice; they are also invited to give suggestion! from their expe rience that may be helpful to others meeting the same problems. mortality among breast-fed babies is lower always than among babies arti fically fed. In one study of seventy nine families, in which eighty-five of the children were breast-fed and 109 bottle-fed, all the breast-fed children were alive at the end of eleven years, while 57 per cent of the bottle-fed babies were dead. The problem of artificial feeding is to come as close to the ideal or mother's milk as possible. Every case is a special problem, and is best handled according to the directions of the doctor, who understands the baby. A few general principles may help in understanding the particular rules and formulas laid down. Since cow's milk is richer in protein, or Doay-ouiiaing material, the myk must b diluted. This dilution lowers the sugar and fat content of the milk, which is made up by adding milk sugar and cream, or using top milk which is richer in cream. The diluting substance is cooled boiled water, or in some cases barley water. When barley water is used, other ingredi ents are not always added. The milk is sometimes made more digestible by ine aoaition ot lime water, or by pep tonizing, which is partially digesting the protein of the milk. Generally a sufficient quantity of the food for the day is modified at one time and put into separate nursing bottles. For the invalid as well as those in perfect health Bakerk Cocoa is an ideal food bev erage, pure, delicious anawholesome., Walter Baker Q Co. Ltd E3TABII3HC0 1760 DORCHESTER, MASS. WAR BREAD Answer to Dr. Wiley's whole wheat flour problem: Sterilized Whole Wheat (Nothing but wheat) (Starch la changed to dextrine by our proceaa) Only Whole Wheat Flour in thi Locality. At your grocer or phone So. 4141 We Deliver and Pay for Phone Calls. Youth Era Industry 6108 Se, 21st St. OMAHA r.xtra Lean Baeon, lb SS'ic Suaar Cured Beeon, lb 27,e Extra Lean Regular Ham, lb 24.c eunar vureq name, id.. SPECIALS from to . m. Country Saueate, per Ik., at loc From t to 10 p. m. Pork Cbope, per '. 17 Vic MARKET sltjr Mall erd.re filled at these prices PHONE DOUGLAS 130T. Be Want Ads Bring Best Results. We have received a large shipment of young pigs. which we are going to place on sale SATURDAY at the following low prices : MEAT DEPARTMENT Pit Ham, from I ta 7 Ibi. ftvcrai. per lb., at , aoy4 Pile Pork Shoulderi, average from 4 to 7 Jbt.. Bar lb 19V.c Ptc Pork .total, from S to 7 Jbt., per lb., at 20 ic Extra Fancy Genuine Lamb Hindquarters, er lb., at 223c Extra Fancy Lamb Chopi, lb 25c GROCERY Beat Granulated Sugar, lOe Ibi, , .$1.00 Diamond "C" Soap, 9 ban 25c All Brandt Creamery Butter, lb.... 40c S earn of Peas .5r S cane of Fancy Sifted Peas 65c FRUITS AND Large Head Lettuce, head , .loc Spanish Onions, lb ......10c Extra Fancy Cauliflower, 2 lbs 25c Extra Fancy Sweet Peas, 8 qts 25c Fresh String or Wax Beans, lb 25c SPECIAL IN OUR ICE CREAM PARLOR AND LUNCH ROOM Delicia Ice Cream in Brick r Bulk, 15a a pint and 30c par Quart, lea Cream Sodas or Sundaes, 5c. You can enjoy a sandwich in our lunch room of our own roasted meats such as: Rib Roast Beef Roast Fresh Ham Roast Chicken Roast Young Vcat and anything else you may wish In the cold meat line. We strve all kinds of hot and cold drinks. ' WASinKG'TONWC rlARKEiT 1407 DOUG!. AS STj .MC MOJT t T and Moer wtKir n The kind of milk is important, for unless milk is of the best possible quality, it is unhealthful for a baby with a delicate digestion. Certified milk is probably the best; next to that pasteurized. Authorities are somewhat divided as to the use of boiled milk for infant feeding. A few years ago boiled milk was absolutely forbidden; but recent work in London hospitals has modified that view, and some Omaha specialists recommend boiled milk. Whatever the kind, the mine snouirt be absolutely clean and fresh, and the feedings kept cold after preparation till used, when the food should be warmed, in the bottle, to lukewarm, The choice and care of the appa ratus is ot great importance, what ever formula is used. The bottle should be of the straight-sided va rieiy, wnicn permits cleaning. A nar row-necked bottle is much less desira. ble. There should be as manv bot ties as there are feedings during the day. After the bottle is used, it should be rinsed in cold water, then washed in hot soda solution. Before refilling the bottle should again be wasneo with hot soda solution, then boiled for twenty minutes in clear water or very dilute soda solution. The bottle should be removed from tne water in which it was steri lzed. inverted for a moment, then filled im mediately with the food. One should no more think of wiping a nursing bottle than to wipe a jar in which fruit is put for canning. The filled bottles are either nut directlv intn the refrigerator-till used, or are nas. luenzea nrst. in either case the bottles should be plugged with sterile cotton. for pasteurization, special racks and kettles mav be nurchaaerl Th nip ples after use are scrubbed with a soda solution, then kept in a weak SAVE EGGS NOW FOR NEXT WINTER Coat With Egg-O-Latum Keep Per fectly Use When Worth Double or Treble. 1 winter 40 cents to 60 cents a dozen? They'll be higher next win ter, because hens are fewer and the demand greater. Preserve spring eees now. Means a saving of 20 to 40 cents a dozen next December and January, or a profit of 100 per cent to 200 per cent on your money. i-gg-O-Latum can be applied at the rate of one dozen eggs per minute and at a cost of 1 cent per dozen. There is no evaporation, no air-cell, no contracted odors, no deteriora tion; the yolk remains whole and in the center of the eggs; poaching, boiling, frying and beating as if un der a week. It is guaranteed to keep fresh eggs nine months to a year so that they cannot be told from eggs laid within a week. Couldn't Tell from Freeh "I tried out a jar ot Erg-O-Latum lest summer and it worked, fine; used the eggs in winter and you couldn't tell them from fresh effss Offdon Feed Co.. Ogden. Utah." "Please send me two jars of Egg.O Latum. I have used five jars and find preservative very satisfactory. Have also distributed some among various Cath olic institutions, namely : St Louis, Mo. : Weterloo, la. ; Kirkwood, Ho. They all think very highly of the preparation. Rev. A. V. Nicolas." Don't pay exorbitant prices for eggs next winter. Begin preserving now, before the moulting season and hot weather. Little trouble: no risk. Beat the food speculators. Sell your surplus at the fancy prices. bgr-U'Latum Is prepared in fid-cent jars, enough for SO dosen eggs. At dealers or mailed postpaid. Full information free. Cieo. H. Lee Co.. 60S Lee Building, Omaha, Men. Advertisement. Extra Fancy Lamb Shoulders, lb... .18c Extra Fancy Beef Tenderloin. Jb. ,37 Vic Choice Pteer Sirloin Steak. ll '. . . .22V,c Choice Sirloin Roait, lb 20c Choiee Steer Shoulder, lb. . . . 17Vic, 20c Younar Milk Calf Roast, lb ZOc Choice Steer Boilina Beef, lb. . . . f12'ac Sugar Cured Breakfast Bacon, lb 30c Sugar Cured Regular Hams, lb. . . .Z53tC DEPARTMENT I cans of Pork and Beans 25c I cans of Wax Beans..., 25c S bottles of Catsup 25c Extra Fancy New Potatoes, peck.. $1.15 Extra Fancy Old Potatoes, peck.... 85c VEGETABLES Extra Fancy Strawberries. .. .12'Zsc, 15e Extra Sweet Oranges, dosen 18c Thin Skin Lemons, doxen 20c Good Cooking or Eating Apples, peek, 40c Good Eating Pears, doxen 15c ) TEL . TYLRR 470 ' ah a .Amei v csarocMy ! H iiiiiiiiViiiiiintiT The All DOLE WtST . Rains Make Radishes and Lettuce Crisp and Fine Potatoes have not grown any dearer in the last week. In fact in some stores they are quoted a shade cheaper. One store that sold them at 85 cents a peck last week is selling them at 80 cents now. The new crop appearing on the market from the southern gardens is showing up bigger than it lias been heretofore. The new potatoes up to this time have been abaut the size of marbles, but now they are nearly as big as hen's eggs. The price has alos been lowered somewhat as the new supply begins to be bigger. One store quoted the latest arrivals of new spuds at 10 cents a pound, which is less than twice the price of the old ones. There is a big supply of fresh rad ishes and lettuce. The wet weather of the last week lias made these especially crisp and fine. So also with the new turnips, carrots' and red beets. And asparagus, that is also of a borax solution; before use the nipple is rinsed with clear boiling water. The borax solution should be changed at least once a day. A special word should be given against the use of a thermos bottle to keep the feedings warm. Nothing is more dangerous than to keeD milk at a lukewarm temperature, unless both milk and container are perfectly ster ile, a condition hard, almost impossi ble to obtain in a household. Milk which is not sterile contains bacteria, most of them harmless, but some may oe narmlul, and any kind of bacterid flourish in warm milk. A thermos bottle may be used to keep a feeding cold for a journey, then the milk must be warmed before it is given to the baby. i A short cut to the modifying of milk is found in the" prepared baby foods found on the market, the so- called "proprietary" foods. As might be expected, the short cut is not sat isfactory. For the very reason that every baby is a special problem, best understood by the doctor in charge, so no one prepared tood can suit every babys needs. No proprietary food should ever be used excent at the order of a doctor. They are useful in special cases, and in communities where fresh pure milk is difficult to obtain. In general the prepared foods are too high in carbohydrates, a food stuff which tends to be stored in the body as fat if eaten in excess. Hence a baby fed on prepared food may look healthy, because it is fat, but it may lack the power to resist disease that a baby fed on ordinary milk will have. CarelessnessMn the preparation and care of a baby's food is such a selfish thing it means that one is risking the life of a little helpless child. At best, a bottle-fed babv has onlv Dart of the chance for life and health that a breast-fed babv has: it is reallv sin ful to lessen that chance in any way. . Working Women in Trousers. With the United States actively in the world war some of the working fashions prevalent abroad, especially trousers, may become necessary as well as popular. Margar t lia.is, writing from Paris to the Philadelphia Ledger, thus describes the working trouserettes in vogue in England and France: This war will change all things for European women. Military service, of a sort, has come for them in both France and Englandwhere they are replacing men employed in clerical and other noncombatant departments, including motor driving. The moment this was decided upon in England it was found that 30,000 men would be released for actual fighting, with pros pects of the release of more than 200, 000 more. A good many of the old conven tions have been put quite aside, among them the ancient superstition that women's legs must be held sacred and mysterious, not to be seen in public. The women workers on the English farms (of whom there are thousands in these days) dress frankly in knick erbockers or trousers, and no one looks twice at them for i. In the cities women window cleaners go about with pails and ladders and find an obvious advantage in their definite, quite masculine pantaloons. At Self ridge's great store the largest and most progressive in London, operated on Chicago lines skinless maidens are not rare enough to attract undue attention. The first to be seen there, indeed, is not in the store at all, but HADE ROM THC HIGHEST GRADE DURUM WHEAT COOKS III 12 NINUTES. COOK BOOK FREE SKIHHM MFG.C0. OMAHA. US A. lrOTMM5irooHfarjor Get the Round Package Vtd ft Vl Century. (Z Caution ?. Ivejdjubslltirtfjtj SWAiTrDMiv- eW''i$U raw r eoi. quality never surpassed. Artichokes, water cress and French endive are on the market in force. New toma.oes are here, but not in very. fine qual ity as yet. There are plenty of young onions. Strawberries are on the market in great quantities and of very fine qual ity. The price also is very moderate. A good-sized pint box sells for about IS cents. ' . Grapes don't seem like a very sea sonable fruit, but they are on (he market. They are the white im ported grapes and are very good. Oranges are still plentiful and hold to the old moderate prices. Grape fruit is still obtainable, but is not up to its mid-season standard. Apples are also still on the mar ket. Some in bulk are selling as low as 65 cents a peck. Those from the Pacific coast in box lots still hold to their former prices though they are getting scarce. on the sidewalk outside of it,-engaged in the gentle art of directing custom ers to and from their cars and cabs and incidentally keeping the chauf. feurs in order. An extremely pretty girl she is, too, with her frockcoat coming to her knees, her topboots coming to the coat, and now and then, when the wind blows, a glimpse of loose knick ers. She tells me thai she's never had a man stare at her since she appeared in the new livery, although women have been curious about it and even critical of it. Women have done all the staring to which she has been sub jeeted. Within the store many girls en gaged in various especial employ ments are dressed conveniently for their work in perfectly frank trousers. Among these are the girls who oper ate the elevators. There is no com promise about it. These girls wear absolutely trousers every working hour of every working day in a great public store in a great crowded city, rubbing elbows (even touching trous ered knees inevitably) with hundreds of men daily. And they like it. They work better in the new uniforms than they used to in skirts and are less weary at each day's end. And nobody worries them at all. There has not been the faint est suspicion of an insult or an ad vance from any one of the thousands of men and boys of all classes whom they have ridden with upon their, "lifts," sometimes in dense crowds, sometimes in an involuntary tete-a-tete. The women omnibus conductors keep their vehicles nearly as close to schedule as their male predecessors did. They are far better tempered with the traveling public (although they often look pitifully tired), and are said to be very exact and able in the management of their complicated work of collecting fares differing with the distance traveled a very much more complicated matter than the average American conductor's job of merely collecting a nickel from each traveler. They are called "conduc tresses." All French trams and busei have "conductresses." The coming of women cabmen in London is inevitable indeed, it al ready has begun. In Paris they have been established sparsely for some time and have done well, but they have not been used on taxis, only on the horse cabs. I have spent most of my time in Paris for some months now, and have ridden behind women drivers fre quently. They drive carefully and well and are much kinder to their horses than the old, red-faced, brutal French coaohers are. I like them. They have a wonderful command of language, not always entirely or even partially polite, but they are accom modating and less greedy for tips than male drivers. The coming summer will see an immense amount of England's farm ing done by women and, I think, well done. Organizations already are un der way whereby women propose to help decrease the food shortage by intelligent increase of the chicken and egg supply, and this is being so well planned that undoubtedly it will suc ceed. I have met three ex-stenographers who now are at hard work, two of them in munition factories (making military engines of death) and one of them on a farm. I asked them how they liked the change, Without exception' they declared that they were pleased by it. One of them was a little gloomy, predicting a lonely future owing to the shortage of men which will follow the war. Belgian Relief Ship is Confiscated by Germans London, May 4. Confiscation by the Germans of the Belgian relief steamer Carmetta is reported in a Central News dispatch from Copen hagen. A Danish sailor who is a member of ths crew is authority for the report. He says the Germans ordered the crew to leave the ship and placed a prize crew on board to take it to a German port. The men from the Carmettarin two small boats, asked for provisions, but the Germans re fused. After six days of terrible suffering the men in one of the boats reached the Norwegian coast AkForandCET f , j ORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL ALTED MILK Made from clean, rich milk with the ex tract of select malted grain, malted in oui own Malt Houses under sanitary conditions. Infanti mi children thiiv on it. Agnm with Ih wtaktit itomach ot tht invalid or tht Ofti. Ntedt no eoohingjmr addition o4 milk. Nourishes and sua tain, mar than tea, coffee, etc. Should be kept at home or when traveling. A nu tritious food-drink may be prepared in moment. A glassful hot before retiring induce refreshing sleep. Also in lunch tablet form for business bud. Substitutes Cost YOU Sam Pries Take a Package Homo