The Daily Express. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 2, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 2, 1910 Page: 3 of 63
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THE SAN ANTONIO DAILY EXPRESS: SUNDAY MORNING, JANUARY 2, 1910.
I!
r*
iiii
4.
SINGER HAS STRUGfiLE
TO LAUNCH CAREER
HE WILL SIT IN COURT
OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
HOW MME. SCH U M AN N-H EIN K BE-
GAN WONDERFUL CAREER.
Box on the Ears Her Reward for
Poor Singing—Appeared in "Car-
men" Once Without Having
Studied the Role.
On the eve of her promised return to
New York with the Boston Symphony
Orchestra Ernestine Schumanh-Heink at
her New Jersey home told of the strug-
gles of her early career as a public
singer.
"My lather was an Austrian, my
mother was an Italian; I have spent
most of my life on Ciermnn soil, hut t<.
day I am an American citizen, .ml all
my eight «I ildren shall become American
citizens," she said. It appeals that two
of lier boys ai" appearing on the Ameri-
can stage in 1:111 musical cornel. and
liie younger children also show aptitude
in instrumentm1 as well as vocal Music. !
Bom at Lichen, mar Prague, m Bo-
hemia. when her ,;i her was stationed 1
with the Austria army there in 1861, j
Ernestine Koesslor was one of a ♦"amily i
of four, including t brother and three i
sisters. When 10 years obi she wis sent
to school in the convent of the Ursuline !
Nuns at Prague and sang in their choir.
"When 1 sang well I received as a re- :
ward a 'kipt'el' < r sweet cooky with j
raisins on the top. ]f I made a slip I !
had my ears boxed. Thus my musical
education consisted of kipfels and .slaps." i
MANY I) f SCO I.' RAGING INTERVIEWS.
The poor army officer was transferred i
to Graz. where Marietta von Le Clair
offered to e his little girl lessons with-
out pay. Diip day the young vol e was
rolling out Schubert's "Dor 'Tod ur.d das
Maedchen." "A c alf among jour pupils?"
exclaimed a visitor. Ti e wise teacher
kept her on exercises for two vears be-
fore she gave her songs by Mendelssohn
and Schubert.
The Vienna opera director asked the
36-year-old ^irl to present herself lor
trial on recommendation of Marin Wilt,
who had been ii Graz tor a performance
of the Ninth Symphony. Field Marshal
Bedeck gave her sixty florins and she
went to Vienna. As she said, "I was a
thin scrawny looking girl. and my
clothes were of the poorest material and
baaly fitting. The director heard me
sing. Then, after looking me over he
said, 'You had better go ho a- a--<« ye-
fed up, and then go to a finishing school.'
It was a hitter journey home. '
As a relief to wounded sensibilities
came a modest engagement at the Dres-
den Royal Opera. The famous Ma tenia
persuaded the management to pay the
joung contralto's traveling" expenses.
Ernestine presented the "Fides' aria
from "Lee Prophete." The result mav
be seen in the name of Mmo. Schumann-
s •N,ew Jersey home Fides Villa.
' You are engaged for iiiloij marks,' said
tne pompous Director von Platen. She
threw her arms around the man's neck
and hugged him. "Rut," he protested.
aren t you a. mere slip of a girl to eo
on the stage-/"
"As for that." Fraulein Jleink replied,
f ** »» Prom,s© t0 e&t butter and grow
JUDGE FELIX J. Mct'ORD.
ep ELIX J. McCORD of Tyler is now a
^ presiding Judge of the Court of Crim-
inal Appeals, he having qualified yester-
day nt Austin, the%oatli of office having
been administered by Associate Judge W.
II. Ramsey.
STREET 01 BUDAPEST
IS FULL OF INTEREST
PEASANTS' ANNUAL TRIP TO THE
CAPITAL FOR WINTER'S SUPPLY.
Wide Pavements, Lined-With Trees,
Makes One Think of the Paris
Boulevards and Vet Have
a Savor of Boston.
fatter.
Her Dresden engagement lasted four
years. Resides minor roles like tie.* Shep-
herd in 1 aniihause:." j( was Azueena in
j rovatore" in which she made her
debut. She w.«s obliged to do solo work
In church under Hcrr Krebs. husband of
Again we arc in the season when over
In Budapest they are experiencing a
peasant invasion.
Just as to New York, at stated seasons,
buyers from every part of the country
come to purchase wares, so to the capital
of Hungary thousands, tens of thousands
of buyers, make their way in the winter
to purchase. Only, in budapest, it is the
consumer who does tfie buying, lor store-
keepers in the back country are rote.
Interesting, indeed, are these char-
acters.
To begin with, a Hungarian village is,
as a rule, agricultural. H»re and 11 • re
an entire settlement may la■ devoted to
mining", but this is rare. There are no
stores nearer than the district capital,
not is there need of them. Everything a
the famous contralto. ~~Aloyisia^ Krebs- man or 'li-s f , nily requite with the few
Michalese. She ang by ear, and at a es* exceptions, produced by tlie farm,
big Corpus Oiinsti service the siclif of Meat is considered a luxury, and sel-
th© crowds below confused the girl and i do:n eaten, but when so, the eater's flock
she stuttered ami then stopped in a solo. or *'''s Hei'd yield it. His friends give
"Du elende pans!" exclaimed Krebs lift- ',IP °ther items of food, his flocks afford
ing his heavy baton, "you have spoiled tlK' wherewithal for garments, the local
the whole mass." And he brought her a i *orest, from which each householder may
blow over the arm that left a black and ?raw each year In proportion to the
blue spot for days. German methods are i ''^acls in his care, gives the material for
not delicate. Sehumann-Heink took the I P'2.w aTU' ,10c and harrow.
lesson to heart and redoubled her techni
cal studies under Franz Wullner.
SANG WITHOUT A REHEARSAL.
The contralto's triumphs came at las*
at the Stadt Theater in Hamburg;. She
had gone to Berlin to assist the tenor I
Brotael at his benefit in Kroll's Theater,
when agaii she sang Azueena. Her di-
rector at Hamburg invited her p. siUg
bides, it was her long desired chance
and she took if without a rehearsal An-
other of Schumann-Heink's feats wapiti
4 C armen. To obtain some petty revenge
a prima donna of the Hamburg compauv
told the management at noon that she
was Indisposed. The then "Mine. Heink"
had not only never sung the ron\ but
ehe had never even studied it. From
her observation of the acting of others
and her musical memory, which bad ab-
sorbed every note, she went on the
boards and scored a success,
Rut there are some things one cannot
make, and for these he goes to the county
seat. Sunday niorn;n« is usually market
day there, and then the peasant] in addi-
tion to vending his wares, buys what he
needs until next Sunday.
That is the event of the week in his
life. The event of the year, however, is
the annual trip to the capital.
Nowhere in all the world is railway |
travel so cheap and so good as in Hun-
gary. 'I he famous zone-tariff system has
divided the country into three zones, and
one can travel from border to border of
each for a given far* . The low rate is
counterbalanced by the increase in trove.,
and, since railways are a government
institution there, by the diffusion of edu-
I cation, which must result by travel.
ANNUAL MIGRATION TO BUDAPEST.
It is this which makes tlu-se annual mi-
| grations to Budapest possible. How they
The fame of her season at. Bayreuth in ■ (i° • then, those peasants irotn the
1896 led to engagements in Eond
Far East! hi Siebenburgen they
mi-
Ameriea. A short time after visitine ' garments of heavy brown: from
America, the contralto astonished the I north in the t 'arpat iiians, men and
musical public by becoming an American vvnmrl1 attired in pink or in a ri"h rose;
citizen. Here .she married her third bus- fn m t,1M. p»8tward. around Sissek, the
band, William Rapp of Chicago dusky gipsies; then from Croatia the
_ -tapp of Chicago.
r,f r.0?? publln to Warsaw, ari l from
' J'hrfstiania to Naples, her captivating
humor as well more serious dramatic
interpretations are known abroad
In Richard Strauss' "Elektra.' a cv-
clonic production, described as a "orodi-
glous orchestral orgy." SHiumann-Melnk
l««t winter i renlpfi ihe roln of Klvtern-
nostra In a "guesting engagement ' on
her old Dresden stage.—New Yc.k Sun.
Ice Gorge Causes .$30,000 Damage.
8r. LOl IS. Mo., .fan. I, Damage o.sti-
muted at $.10,000 was done on the levee
here late today n lim w gorges whh h had
formed in Ihe Mississippi Klver liroke. The
floating ice swept a>v.iy everything in its
path.
PILES
Quickly
Cured
Instant Relief. Permanent Cure—Trial
Package Mailed Free to All
in Plain Wrapper.
We want every mnn and woman suf-
fering from the excruciating torture of
piles to just send their name and address
to us and get by return mall a free trial
package of the m ist effective ami positive
cure ever known for this disease, Pyramid
I'lle Cure.
The way to prove wh.it this jrre.it rem-
edy will do iu your owi; case, is to just
fill out free coupon and send to us and
you will get by return ninllir free sample
of Pyramid Pile Cure.
Then after you have proven to your-
self what it can do. you will go to the
diuggist and get n ijO-eent box.
Don't undergo mi operation. Operations
are rarely a success and often lead to ter-
rible consequences. Pyramid Pile Cure re-
duces all inflammation, makes congestion,
irritation, itching, sores and ulcers disap-
pear—and the piles simply quit,
For sale at all drug stores n
a box.
.it ia the
white robed men and women- and wo on,
Willi the rest.
From the environs of Budapest County
tliey drive for miles on wagons pulled by
the sluggish cape buffalo, the beast of
burden of the locality, or som« will even
trek afoot iri order to reach town the
more cheaply.
Budapest is ready and waiting
Shops keep open late; in fact like a
Saturday night in East Canada th'ev keep
open virtually till it's early next 'morn-
ing. Interesting shops lh"v are. too.
You follow the peasants! first of all,
up the famous Andrassy Stras.-<\ Just as
everyone ii: New York gravitates first to
Broadway, so here people seek, first anil
foremost, the long boulevard. You,
stranger, find your way bv Beadeker's
map of the city, penciling over the streets
you liavo covered. At the center of ilic
street Is a long park, lined with splendid
four and five-story stone buildings. These
are the fashionable flats of the . - j t >. The
lower floor Is devoted to the city's' !lne«t
i stores.
Before the shops, wide pavements, lined
with trees, make one think of the Paris
boulevards, and .vet <\ith a savor of
•Massachusetts Avenue at Boston. Many
little peddlers of fruit hover on these
sidewalks. As you pass by, you remark
how many men aspire to gray felt hats
Kvery one is chattering in Magyar, what-
soever he their local dialect. ' Folk are
lively, life is busy, it is a strange con-
trast to South Europe below,
You remark the innumerable students
In the street, also, The.v drop in at shops
of post cards to write these to hotels.
Inr off as Trieste, to forward their letters
here. Students are traveling, too, on
their 'wander-jalire," and ihe\ help
boost up trade.
roung girls going, to schools are nutner-
our this hour Iri the highway. They
SO happy in the splendid,streets out In
the gorgeous sunshine. A horse car
without track, goes by in the street at
other places there is a largo electric car
also.
^ - s -V
P.J1IV i M '
I his great s«ale starts again tomorrow with greater inducements than ever. Not only a
clearance of four of our greatest linesof suits and overcoats, but high-grade furnishingsas
well. Shirts, hosiery, neckwear, jewelry,suspenders, leather goods. Come early for bargains.
These are the most remark- /
a b 1 e v a 1 u es ever offe re d a n y-
where on superior quality
clothes, irrespective of the
fact that woolens have advanced 2^ to 40 per
cent. Anticipating the increase, we contracted
for large quantities long before the new tariff
law became effective, thus protecting our
customers as well as ourselves. Hence these
rare inducements.
Men's Suits and
Overcoats Worth
SI 8.50 and $20 for
The increase in the volume of
our business this year has
been phenomenal. Naturally,
this greater business necessi-
tated more stock and a larger variety than
heretofore. Your opportunity for selection
this sepson is practically unbounded. We
doubt if as many shades, beautiful weaves and
patterns have ever been displayed at onetime
under one roof before.
Men's Suits and
Overcoats Worth
$30 and $32.50 for
Men's High-grade Furnishings Reduced
Eclipse==ExceIIo
Savoy
Entire Stock of Fancy Patterns
Soft bosom shirts; garments you
can wear the entire year. In plain
and pleated bosoms with or with-
out cuffs attached. All sizes from
14 to 20, sleeve length to 36.
All $3.00 Values for S2. 15
All $2.50 I alucs for $1.85
All $2.00 Values for $1.45
All $1.50 Values for $1.20
Men's Colored
Neckwear
The Season's Most Beautiful
Designs
Hundreds of styles and patterns
for your selection—four-in-hands,
batwings and bows.
All 50c and 75c values for 35c
(Or Three for $1.00)
Our entire line of men's stocks,
comprising many beautiful pat-
terns, at one-third less reg. price.
Men's Fancy
Hosiery
All the most stylish patterns are
here—neat stripes, dots and fig-
ured effects—in tan, blue, helio,
green, purple and brown. All sizes.
All 75c Values for 55c
All 50c Values for 35c
(Or Three for $1.00)
All 25c Values for 1 Vc
Jewelry, Leather Goods
and Suspenders
The entire stock in these linesare
reduced one-third the regular
prices. Jewelry, cuff buttons,
scarf pins, tie clasps, full dress
sets, watch fobs and leather
goods, purses, bill folds, toilet
sets, collar boxes, card sets and
cases. Fancy suspenders, some
with silver and gold buckles,
others with plain leather fast-
enings.
Send Us Your Mail Orders
We will fill them promptly and guar-
antee the same satisfaction as if you
bought them right here in the store.
Full Dress and Tuxedo Suits
You'll need one this week, and on short
notice we'll lit you perfectly in gar-
ments that can not be excelled,$25to $30
have bepu sf-t along: tlio thoroughfare, I
too, under the young walnut or locust,
trees. One r< sts and lets the eye seek
the splendid store windows. The stores
themselvf-a, though, are dingy.
Already they ai^ cleaning the street,
squirting ni'Ht hoses for this purpose.
<'afes are crowding up. and buildings
four or five stories, all splendid buildings,
throw shadows on thes» . Switched in be-
tween are the little shops, and these
liawK American fly cages. "No flies on
the Americans" evidently. What's more,
our American "ragtime" is in the win-
dows, the words translated into both
Magyar and Oermttn. Folk sine "Mein
Baby Du" and "His Koko-Nus Palm!"—
JvOS Angeles Times.
BRITISH Tl'RN TO ARGENTINA.
Panama Canal May Turn Americans
to Some Market.
nt ail drtiK Htores at 50 cents
Free Package Coupon
Fill out. the blank lines below with
your name and address, cut out coupon
and mail to the I'VRAMIh DftUG
/COMPANY, 154 Pyramid Hldg., Mar-
shall, Mich. A sample of the great
Pyramid Pile <'ure will then be Hent
you at once by inn 11, l-'HKR, in plain
wrapper.
Name
EVERY STREET IS TEMPT [NO.
Budapest Is such a beautiful city you
don't wonder the peasants come. Every
ulica, alias street, as the signs at each
corner indicate, tempts you, as you follow
the map. By and by, you, too, turn down
tne Isabell ulica.
Here, as over all South Central Europe
before the top of rhe barbers' doors hang
two iron bars, from each of which dangles
a round brass plate, with niche cut for
the chain.
As they emerge, men, meeting some
lady they may know, stop to kiss her
hanu. Men take off their hats to each
other as well. When In mourning, your
Magyar wears a black band around the
arm.
We have come then to the office of the
Politisehe Volksblati. A large number
of papers are published in one great
building here. One of the leaders is the
Peat her TJoyd.
m one of the cafes where the strangers
are flocking, American billiard tables are
In use.
By and by we return to Andrnssv
ctrasse to see mont of its boulevards and
its stores. Innumerable carriages take
shoppers about, adding life to the scene.
Down near the opera ilouse many bag-
gage bearers Mre on the avenue; tliev
recall "Arabian Night" days. Benches
Street
City njirl State..
According to a statement published in
the London Times, Great I Iri t a In obtained
the larger proportion of both its imported
wheat and Indian corn supply during the
}enr 1008. not from the United States, hut
from Argentina, and twice the quantity
of refrigerated fresh meats were' procured
from the South America area that were
obtained from the United States. The
significance of these ratios is heightened
by the farther statement that the ship-
ments of meat from Argentina to British
markets have been heavier during the
first nine months of the current year than
they were last year.
The tremendous advance which has
taken place in the retail price of all fresh
meats in this country within the past few-
years would seem to lead to the conclu-
sion that the time is near, if. indeed, it
has not already arrived, when the home
supply of meat foods is Insufficient for
the home demand. It is ensy enough to
understand why this country has been
exporting lef--s foodstuffs in recent years.
The simple reason Is that the home mar-
ket is the highest priced market to be
found.
When the Panama Canal opens to com-
merce, Baltimore will be ir.oo miles nearer
the commercial rente to the cattle mid
sheep producing areas of South America
than at present. Nothing but an obstruc-
tive tariff rate will then prevent the bring-
ing of Argentina fresh meats t<> this mar-
let at n less cost than tlie homegrown
supply can he obtained. <\msiderli u the
present retail prices, which »re prohibi-
tive to many people, tlie Importation >>f
South American meats seeun to affor.l
the one possible source of relief. Balti-
more Anicrlcnu.
GETTING AROIM) POLL TAX.
Mark Twain's Cousin Circumvents
Ill-advised Statute.
In the years gon«
had turbulent times
■y Topeka regularly
vcr the payment of
a S.I poll tax annually by every man of
voting age. I < r .1 long time the matter
was the subject of a great deal of con-
troversy. c, Clemens, the well known
'I opeka law yer and a cousin of Mark
Twain, r en 11 > put the law out of busi-
ness. He mud" it look foolish one year,
and the next he knocked It out through
the eiurts.
The law held thit when a mail failed
to put up hN $.'5 la- had to appear on the
streets and work two days at Sl.."»o a
Ch mens did not pay his tax and re
reived a notice that it was due, and that
he would have to work on the streets to
make up for his negligence.
"Bring with you a pick and shovel,"
read the notice.
"Clern" appeared on the appointed day
and reported ready for work.
"Where is your pick and shovel?" de-
manded the street commissioner.
"Mere they are," lie replied, and diving
down into his vest pocket he produced a
pick ami shovel, the kind that are about
two inches long, and that you buy at a
toy store for < hi Id ren.
"What arc you giving me?" snorted the
commissioner. "You can't do anything
wtih those tools."
"You didn't sav a word." replied Mr
Clemens, "about the size of the tools w hi- h
J wa« to bring. So 1 brought what J
1 wanted to. Come on, now, asslgne me
j to work. I want to cret to work, and don't
I care to lose any time."
The sheet commissioner walked away
iu disgust. Clemens waited for about half
nu hour, and still no assignment. So he
went to ills office and put Iu the dnv at
work on his law cases. The next morn-
ing he turned up for work again. The
street commissioner again didn't give him
an assignment, so he went back to his
office, and declared he had fulfilled the
letu; of the law. Ho said it was not his
fault that be bad not been directed to
work.
The next year he sent the law skv high
through the courts. Kansas City Journal.
Judge Speer'g Mother Dies.
ATHENS. On,, .Inn. J. Mrs. Anne Specr,
mother of Judge Emery Spoor and niece
of ^ I Ilium l». King, former Vice President
of the I nited States, of Alabama, died to-
dav. She was 83 years old. Mrs. speer
was the widow of Eustace W. Sneer and
the mother of Miss Laura Speer.
THE BALLINGER IMBROGLIO.
Situation Calls for Full Inquiry to
Restore Public Confidence.
The fundamental trouble about the
MEXICO PREPARES FOR PAt.EANT
Indians Will Dress in Feathers as of
Old.
Moctczun:n. Xocoyotzin. Cacama, Cul'-
Presidents endeavors to dispose of the j inhuaczin, Cunubtemoczin, Xieotoncul
Pal linger imbroglio is that, in affairs of j and their Ilk. when the, man b in
gcant, the
lions to
abioad.
The eonimltt
such complexity as those here involved,
the public is unable to form any judg-
ment by independent inquiry. It is at the
same time unwilling to accept as con-
clusive the verdict of any one, however
high in its esteem, whose position is such
as to make a smoothing over of the dift'i-
eulty desirable to hlni President Taft
is naturally disposer] to civ«- all possible
weight to any presentation of facts that
en me to him from his own Secretary of
the Interior. No one doubts that lie is
" nvinced ii his own mind that Mr. Hal-
linger has fully met the charges to which
he has replied, and as to whh h the Pres-
ident h'mseif. as a result of his own study,
has given the Secretary a clean bill of
health. Now conies a new batch of
charges, presented by Collier's Iu an arti-
cle which Is in part a rebuttal of the an-
swer made to the old charges. To these
the Secretary makes vigorous reply, but
there will doubtless be. In regard to all
this, a drawn battle again, no far as the
public is concerned. What is evidently
called for by the situation is something
broader and deeper than this sort of con-
troversy a full inquiry Into the whole
state of facts involved in the dealings be-
tween the Government and the various
parties interested in land grants and wa-
ter sources and such an inquiry will com-
ma: <i confideuct onl\ If ii is keeping the
whorls of the administration uia« hlnery
running smoothly. New York Evening
Post.
VIRGINIA TOWN IS ON FIRE.
Holland, Near Suffolk, Is Threatened
With Destruction.
NORFOLK, Va.. Jan. 2. The town of
Holland, on the Southern Hallway, five
miles southwest of Suffolk. Is threatened
with complete destruction by fire at an
early hour this morning, six or eight
buildings in the business section have been
destroyed and the fire is still raging with
only a bucket brigade >>f volunteers to fight
tie flames. The loss so far Is estimated
at $:«UMX).
The fire originated in Ihiugherty's pea-
nut warehouse and was discovered'at »:3U
o'clock last night.
/
ie (* 11 y <<f Mex « i
wear home-mad-:
historieai pageant in
ii' \t. September, will
clothes
This decision has been reached 1>> :l
centennial celebration committee, . : ••
studying the proposals of one • :■ ! .n
large costume manufacturing < on j m.
in the United States who h;i\• :<■ k< 1 i
bo allowed to bid on the sartorial • i:
of the celebration.
It was found that tl.cir priors w» ■
b'-1 three <»r four timr^ as- high ,.
same work could be. d«-t> • i-u ,n t • v
of Mexico, and that patriotism m.i;
• ombined with economy by par n-i. :/.r.
home Indu try.
As the feathers of Mexican birds w:
enter largel/ into the clothing «»t ')i
Indians who w ill take part in I he :m
of
aftern", i
tors. T1
of funds
gaaized.
begin tie
One la i
.ng the
1 lidaigo
'TIS blow
I ' ■ ''atnir'" io»w ) - photographer
in th field ' • .e. ,»rd the details of th»i
itinerary of Hidalgo, but has not yet da«
«'i'l > a t«> i v a nd upon how great .»
• t1:1 r« < <>, r ruction will be car**;eU
out.
New and novel ideas are crowding foil
lit ":' tin committee in isuggestions fro.1t
i'i . a 1 'union <>w afternoon will
i I. ih- ... ,| 111 • ■ pi. ; „ i .] re la y ru j
f ■ Ven Cruz bo ih© City of Mexico to
i«eoi;stru<i 11 ie fiat of ine carriers ul'
,\ 1 <• e11■ z11n;,t in ^IJ.plying fresh milk ?<j
' > rbarh monarch's table each moru*
in-; Mexico Daily ftecord.
v ie found further objeo-
vii'g thes. • manufacturj^,
will ' eet at t!ie hoin<»
I.H.da \ i union tomorrow
to |e< i'ie other important mar-
• ommittees /,,, the collet Mi )
• e a, ( \,.f i»p,.u entirely or-
1 -i is rlr.vit e.i to have th'.\s«i
work as qua kly as possible,
hoi.so in 11 1 nited Stat' i
' •led. jn addition to undertait-
•ik in' ina uifa< turing the all-*
"> * arij< t tho march >C
• ii g the ijieipietaw of Mex»«
■1 frt« th»m ag.ihist the Span«
-r-
A Poor Weak Woman
As she is termed, wil! endure bravely and patiently
agonies which a strong man would £ive way under.
Hie fact is women are more patient than they ought
to be under such troubles.
Every woman ought to know that she may obtain
the most experienced medicai advice free of charge
and in absolute confidence and privacy by writing to
the World's Dispensary Medical Association, K. V.
Pierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Hierca
has been chief consulting physician of the Invalids'
Hotel and Surgical Institute, of Buffalo, N. Y., for
many years and has had a wider practical experience
in the treotment of women s diseases than any other physician in tliis country.
Hi* medicines are world-famous for their astonishing efficacy.
1 he most perfect remedy ever devised for weak and deli-
cate women is Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription.
IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG.
SICK WOMEN WELL.
The monv and varied symptoms of woman's peculiar ailments are fully se»
forth in Plain English in the Pcopb's \iodical Adviser (1008 pages), a newly
revised and up-to-date Edition of which, cloth-bound, will be mailed free or,
receipt of 31 one-cent stamps to pav cost of mailing only. Address as abovo^
>
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The Daily Express. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 2, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 2, 1910, newspaper, January 2, 1910; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth433671/m1/3/?q=%22Business%2C+Economics+and+Finance+-+Advertising%22: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.