The Daily Express. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 87, Ed. 1 Monday, March 28, 1910 Page: 6 of 12
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6
THE SAN ANTONIO DAILY EXPRESS: MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 28, 1910.
SILK DRESSES REIGN TODAY
At $16.50
We have assembled for today the finest
assortment of the season's newest one-priced
Silk Dresses that we have ever been able to
show. Handsome, original, stylish — no
word is too strong to describe them.
There are fine silk Taffetas in latest
semi-plaited and blouse models with plaited
and tunic skirts—some fancy, handsomely
trimmed, some severely plain; some black,
many in the new solid colorings.
Also a beautiful array in Shepherd's
checks, stripes, changeable silks and even
fine messalines. In fact, the most beautiful
materials in every new style.
A color and style, a size for every
woman; and a number In special
large sizes- not only 42 to 46,
hut even 48 and SO.
The Kaster rush is now over and you
can make your selections carefully, but we
urge you to take advantage of this splendid
offer early today.
FMILRLPMCQ.
'Specialists in Women's, dy-to-We&r.'
SIT E. HOUSTON ST.
Mrj. natti£>/We Itba
Society editor's office hours. 9 to 12
o'clock "a. m.. 3 to 6 o'clock p. m.. ex-
cept Saturday, when the pa#*-'** close at
i> o'clock p. m.
Telephone, old 120.
Items contributed for this column must
be signed. The signature is not intend-
ed for publication.
Events of the Day.
San Antonio German Club entertains at
dancing at 8:30 o'clock p. m. at the St.
Anthony Hotel.
Gerald and Francis Drought give Eas-
ter party I'roiii 4 to •> o'clock at home
of parents. Mr. and Mrs. 11. Drought,
529 Oakland Street.
Self-culture Club meets at 3:30 o'clock
p. m at the home of Mrs. Joe Murray,
ttOiiO West Commerce Street.
Ursuline Alumni meets at 4 o'clock
p. m. at the convent.
St. Luke's Sunday school children have
Easter hunt at 4 o'clock at home of Mrs.
H. S. Sunts, 1920 Huena Vista Street.
♦ ♦ ♦
Easter Dinner. 1
Mr. ami Mrs. W. F. McCaleb enter-
tallied at a pretty Easter dinner Satur-
day evening. The centerpiece of the ta-
ble was formed of Easter lilies and the
jce course was in the form of the same
flower.
Covers were in Id for Mrs. G. Bedell
Moore, Miss Price, Mr. and Mrs. J.
Hamilton Savage. Miss Louise Savage ot'
Summit, N. J.; Mr. and Mrs. Leon Wal-
thall anil Mr. and Mrs. McCaleb.
♦ ♦ ♦
Complimentary Easter Breakfast.
A lovely Easter breakfast was given
yesterday morning by Miss Genevieve
Morlan as a farewell compliment to her
cousin, Lieut. Emery T. Smith, who
leaves with his regiment for the Philip-
pines.
Easter lilies adorned the table and
pretty white satin bonbon boxes held
candies and bonbonnieres.
< 'overs were laid for Lieutenant Smith,
Miss Greble, Miss Claude Coleman, Mrs.
Augustine Mclntyre, Miss Mildred Greble,
Mrs. Frank Hadger, Miss Henrietta Huck-
ner. Lieut. It. I. T. Johnson, Lieut. Simon
H. Huckner, Capt. U. P. Nlcklln, Lieut.
John H. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. James
Morlan and Miss Morlan.
After breakfast the party repaired in a
body to church.
♦ ♦ ♦
Miss Helen Carroll, daughter of Robert
G. Carroll of St. Louis, is here visiting
lier aunt, Mrs. Mamie Bell, 411 Craig
Place.
Easter Lilies. Geo. C. Baker, 206 East
park Avenue. Old phone 1740.
The card party which was to have been
given this afternoon by Mrs. Charles G.
Starr in honor of Mrs. H. F. Yoakum
lias been postponed until next week.
Miss Frances Gillespie, accompanied by
Miss Christine Schott of Galveston, who
Is attending the university, spent Easter
with Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Gillespie. They
Will return to Austin today.
Miss Price, who has been spending the
•winter with Mrs. G. ttedell Moore, will
leave Wednesday for Houston, after
UN FALLS; 1Y DIE
ACCIDENT AT CHURCH IS OF A
SERIOUS NATURE.
Mrs. Josephine Rankin, Aged 72 Years,
Is Painfully Injured as She Is
Leaving Easter Service at
Travis Park Church.
Injuries sustained by Mrs. Josephine A.
Rankin Sunday morning while leaving
Travis Park Methodfst Church may re-
sult fatally.
Mrs. Han kin, who is 72 years old. had
attended the service with her family.
As she was walking down the aisle,
which was crowded, she. did not notice a
step several inches high. This precipi-
tated her violently to the floor and her
right hip was broken near the hip joint.
The Injured woman was placed in an
automobile and rushed to her home, 123
East Myrtle Street, where she was at-
tended by Doctors Young and Russ.
Mrs. Rankin was reported as resting
easily last night, but owing to her ad-
vanced age and the shock and pain fol-
lowing the injury the physicians fear
that she may not survive. The injury
Is of the most painful character and in
case ot recovery Mrs. Rankin will never
be able to walk again.
Mrs. Rankin is a devout church worker
and attended services regularly. She
was particularly happy Easter Sunday
and had looked forward to the sermon by
Rev. E. 1> Mouzon with great interest.
As she rose from her seat to leave the
church she spoke to one of her sons,
telling him of how much she had enjoy.>d
the eloquent discourse and the special
music. it was when possessed of this
kindly, happy spirit that she met with
the accident which may cost her life.
Mrs. Rankin Is the mother of Vinson
Wiggins, Hundley Wiggins and Mrs.
Lillian Warner, who reside with her at
123 East Myrtle Street. The family for-
merly lived at Henderson. Rusk County,
but moved to Del Rio several years ago.
They only recently moved from Del Rij
to San Antonio.
GARB FOR THE GUI SEASON
HUM I FABRICS ARE USED FOR
DINNER AND DANCE GOWNS.
Rumors Are That tlie Present Limp
Models Will Be Followed by
Victorian Fashions in
Women's Attire.
Admiral Evans
Will Visit City
which she will go to Chicago, where she >
will be .dried in May by Mrs. Moore,
ami together they will take a two months'
trip to Europe.
Miss Fanita McMillan, who is attending
school In Philadelphia, will spend the
Easter vacation in Nut ley. X. J., as the
guest of Miss Adele Carmen. Miss Ar-
mlne Riley will also be Miss Carmen's
guest and a number of entertainments
will be given in their honor.
Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Buckingham have as
their guest Mrs. Buckingham's lather,
W. D. Holman of Leavenworth, Kan.
J. M. Stelnfeldt will present the follow- |
Intr pupils In recital Thursday at N:30 I
o'clock p. m. at Casino Hall: Mrs. War- |
ren G. Clarke, Miss Doushka Henderson,
Miss Roberta Wells, Miss Leila Harris,
Miss Ruth Bingaman. Miss Cecele Steln-
feldt, Miss Lucy Hamilton and Fred
King.
Special Telegram to The Express.
NEW YORK, March 27—Embroidered
silk mousselines and nets are so filmy of
texture that they look like the work of
fairy fingers rather than of the looms
owned by far-sighted manufacturers wno
cater to Dame Fortune's demands for
materials of which to make the linner
and dance gowns needed for the brief,
gay season following the dull period of
peniti nee when her soul if not her body
lias been in sackcloth and ashes. Tint
a dress of one of these fascinating fab-
rics is easily crushed, torn or otherwise
put out of commission, does not matter
In th» least, it fulfills its mission -from
the viewpoint of the manufacturer and
modiste if it looks well during the course
of a single entertainment, and if a pretty
girl cannot afford another for her next
party, then she must remain at home
and, like Cinderella, await the arrival of
a fairy godmother with a pumpkin
coach or a modern Prince Charming, in
the shape of a multimillionaire stock-
broker.
Of course, the beauty ot! these inout.-
salines and nets counts for something:,
although it must be admitted that the
average woman would cheerfully dance
or dine in gunnysacking, were that
material fashionable, but the principal
reason for their popularity is due to I lie
fact that they lend themselves so per-
fectly to the present craze for the
straight, limp skirts which have not a
particle of trimming and the bodices
draped with surplice folds and bias
bands of self-fabric. These gowns look
so simple that they are a delusion and
a snare to the second-rate dressmaker
who does not understand the import ance
of preserving unbroken lines over a per-
fectly cut and fitted slip, so that the
woman who cannot patronize an expert
modiste would better wait for the ar-
rival of the more easily rtiade trimmed
skirts and the closely-fitted, pointed
bodices which, it is rumored, are to suc-
ceed the present styles.
EARLY VICTORIAN FADS.
Certainly there are evidences of the
early Victorian or 1850 fashions in some
of the gowns of rich brocade, thickly-
corded silks ni- heavy moire which have
skirts gathered into a waist band and
bodices with long darts, rounded necks
and puffed short sleeves. But it is past
belief that a Twentieth Century woman
will ever consent to adopt a costume
which will make her hips look like
shelves, her waist like an hour glass and
her shoulders abnormally narrow. That
Is precisely the appearance presented by
the models who pose in costly gowns
of the Victorian period—dresses which,
being made over paper cambric, roughly
turned in at the waist band, harrow 'he
eyes of every silk-lined tailormade mod-
ern maiden who chances to view one of
them.
In the decollette gowns made with
short skirts, which have lately be.mi
brought out by the leading style-makers
of Paris, there is nothing suggestive of
the Victorian modes, for the hips have i
sheathed appearance—so far as it in pos-
sible to produce it with transparent ma-
terials—and they are absolutely plain
unless the elaborately embroidered bo.'-
derings, ruehed with marabout or maline,
can be termed gai nishings. A unique
feature of some of these costumes is the
sleeves, which are entirely «»f the em-
broidered portion of the material and
closely fitting, sometimes extending half
way tci the elbows, again covering them
ami not infrequently reaching to the
waist, but in e\;ery instance distinctly
outlining the arm and supplemented
with embroidered silk gloves.
A type of evening costume which li.is
gradually worked its way into favor and
was first seen in this country two ye ns
ago when an Anglo-American duche.is
appeared at the opera in a black velvet
skirt topped with a decollette bodice of
draped white Chantilly lace, seems des-
tined to become really popular this
spring. For this period of the year, vel-
vet is, of course, taboo, but satin, moire,
tine English mohair, pernio and corded
silks are excellent materials of which
to fashion the long, clinging skirts, while
the bodices may be contrived fr.au
scarfs of lace or net, which* to b© if-
fective, should be elaborately hand-em-
broidered in colors. Modistes usually • \-
peet their clients to furnish these scarfs
and often are amazed at the wonderfully-
embroidered antique lengths of filmy
fabric which are handed to them by mil-
lionairesses who have no ancestors
worthy of mention.
LACES ARE THE CRAZE.
Sash draperies are another means <>[
utilizing the lace or embroidered net
scarf and usually form the sole trim nun,;
of a satin or soft silk gown, particularly
iL.it is of the sort that is "caught-in
above, at or below the knees. For this
purposf ihe sash must be at least fi.e
yards long, since it should start at the
right side oJ the skirt, run over the hip,
then cross the bust and descend to the
left side of the skirt where the two end <
are joined by a rosette-ended length of
velvet or ribbon extending across the
front.
Antique laces are now sn prominently
to the fore that the flounces, shawls,
tlchus and drapes that for several dec-
ades have been peaceably reposing in
chests along with moth halls ami toba.-
eo leafs, are suddenly drawn forth an I
butchered with scissors, for no longer
Is It possible to adapt the shape of th •
heirloom to the fashion of the niodrrn
sown and no reasonable woman would
dream of hampering her dressmaker -y
forbidding that artist to cut into her
ancient lace. Indeed, so lightly do sotno
%
A I > M I l{ \ I itom,i:\ I). K VAN s
STILWELL COMES APRIL 3
HE HAS TWO NOTED ADMIRALS
IN PARTY.
■ Head of Kansas City, Mexico & Orient
Railroad Is Now on Trip of In-
spection Over Mexico
With Capitalists.
The special train with President A. E.
St 11 well of the Kansas City, Mexico
Orient and a party of fifty or more, who
are on a tour of inspection of the lines
in the United States and Texas, will
reach San Antonio on the afternoon ot
April 3, according to advices received
here Sunday. They will spend several
hours in tlie city, leaving in the evening
over the Katy.
With President Stilwell as his special
guests are Admiral Sir Percy Scott of tHe
British navy and Admiral Robley D.
Evans of the United States Navy,
Charles Glower, a capitalist of Washing-
ton, and a number of capitalists from
England, France and Holland.
The trip to Mexico was made through
El Paso after leaving here. Some time
will be spent in Texas inspecting the lines
of the road, of which there are about five
hundred miles In the State.
Arrangements probably will be made
for a reception of the party by local bus-
iness men. Just what hour they will
reach the city is not known. They will
leave Laredo on the morning of April 3
and come direct here. Several hours will
be spent in the city.
Admiral Evans is a guest of President
A. E. StilweH of the Kansas City, Mexico
& Orient Railroad, ami will be in San
Antonio with him on April Arrange-
ments will be made to properly receive the
distinguished guest.
women value such possessions that one
lady of London, herself an antique of
eighty winters and summers, has re-
cently sold her wedding veil of Carrie k-
ma-Cross in order to obtain money for
gaming. She'll never get married again,
bflt bridge goes on forever.
Gauze coats with satin slips are the
derniere cri in evening gowns, the upper
garment in this instance being, of course,
decollette amf* practically sleeveless,
while whatever arm coverings exist are
cut-in-one with the body of the garment,
which does not meet In front and slopes
away from the sides toward the back,
where it merges with the train. For these
coats not only chiffon and net are used,
but all manner of thin laces as well as
fancy grenadines and sh er silk voiles
in white, black or pale gray, the better
to tone down the effect of the lath r
vividly-colored satin slips which they
partially veil.
Too Much for an Architect.
H. B. Warner, in "Alias Jimmy Valen-
tine" likes to tell a tall one. "Once," he
said, "when I was still bumping the
bumps of the 'For One Night Only,' 1
attended a meeting of a country school
board.
" 'I move,' said one delegate impres-
sively, 'that we build a new schooiiiouse
on the site of the old one; that we use
the materials In the old one for the
new one, and that wo don't tear down the
old one until the new one is built.'
"Well, what did they do about it?"
smilingly queried a man, later on.
"They were a little bit slow coming
around," was the reply, "but just as
soon as they g«>t their heads to working
again they sent for an architect to ligue
out how the thing could be done."
"Did ho find the answer?"
"No." was the chuckling rejoinder. "He
worlod on It until the demijohn was
empty, and then told the school board
that what they wanted was a sleight-of-
hand professor, not an architect." April
Young's Magazine.
AMUSEMENTS.
At the (Jrand.
"Uncle Josh Perkins," one of those
melodramas that are melodramatic to the
point where every scene is a fist fight
between the hero and the villain, was
presented at the Grand Opera House last
night. There was a pleasant little gath-
ering of twenty-five or thirty persons on
the lower floor, but quite a few more
above. The gallery furnished appladse
now and then.
It was hard to tell what it was all
about. There was a lawyer in the play
called Caleb Slick and on all occasions
he was running around trying to get a
poor, hungry woman of middle age called
Edith Marston to marry him or sign a
document or both. Uncle Josh Perkins
was a good-natured farmer from Stell-
town, Vt., and he handed Edith money
on various occasions and paid her rent
and gave her and her friend jobs. She
had a iittle girl friend, the part being
taken by a woman of mature years.
Without much in the way of develop-
ment Slick and Uncle Josh made a rough
house of the stage on occasions too nu-
merous to mention, and sluggers and
gamblers and various other horrid per-
sons with ugly whiskers came in and
said mean things in stomach tones.
D. B. Kennedy, who played the part of
Uncle John, was as good as the lines
would permit him to be. His makeup and
impersonation of the rural character is
good, but the rest of the players might
have been stage hands drafted for the
occasion. They opened doors and waited
for their cues and made various other
blunders.
After a while the stage manager seemed
to know the play was over and dropped
the curtain. The brightest part of tlM
evening was some excellent selections
by the house orchestra from musical
comedies that have been here this sea-
son.
The house will he dark tonight and
"The Prince of Tonight," an excellent
musical comedy, will play Tuesday even-
ing. C, T. C.
At the Empire.
"Brought to Justice," a melodrama
with lots of bright spots, was presented
at the Empire Theater yesterday by the
Isabelle Lowe Stock Company. The story
is well worked out and numerous clashes
between the hero and his friends and the
villain and his supporters brought storms
of applause from large crowds.
This is a story about a little mountain
girl called Chick, who has no education,
but is blessed with beauty, a bright mind
and a sunny disposition. She starts out
to find the murderer of her father. The
villain, Gerald Stone, wishes to marry
This Suede Oxford
Appealed to Us
Look at the charm in the
extremely high arch--the grace
in its every line? A trim foot
would look ravishing in it.
There are other Oxfords, of
course, but we picked this one
from the market as the most
pleasing.
Practically every size and last to pick
from this morning.
15he Guea"0Lr\tee
Losoya Street
Alamo Plaza
FROCK OF SATIN-STRIPED
SILK VOILE IS NICE
THANK YOU!
was most satisfactory — kept
us busy right up to midnight
Saturday, making deliveries.
We knew we had styles that
would go—most cleaned us out—
but we expected this, prepared for
it and today will find us out-
fitted with an almost entirely new
stock—shipped in time to meet
the after-Easter demand. Won't
you come and see the new ones?
Imperial Millinery Shop
MRS. POWELL, Prop.
10 2 East Commerce Street, At the Bridge
li
Florence Sinclair for her money, and
also wishes to get her brother, Robert,
out of the way. lie murders Stubb West,
father of Mabel West, with whom Rob-
ert Sinclair is in love, and also father
of Chick. He places the hunting Knife
and game bag of Robert near the mur-
dered man shortly after the father and
Robert had quarreled about Robert's at-
tentions to the girl. Robert is arrested.
O'Neil, a sailor who is held in bondage
by Stone under threat of prosecution
for something which O'Neil did not do,
but seems guilty of, turns hero, after
falling In love with Florence Sinclair,
and saves her brother. With the assist-
ance of Jerry, the servant, and the little
mountain girl, Robert is saved and all
ends well.
In this play Miss I.owe. as Chick, was
described by enthusiastic admirers as
"just a little dear." She plays the sou-
brette role excellently and wins the sym-
pathy of tier audience from the time she
enters chewing her gum and smiling.
11. Guy Woodward is the life of the show
in his humorous sallies In the role of the
servant. He can get as much out of a
few good lines as any comedian who has
ever appeared in stock in San Ant« :ii >.
His wholesome and bright wit is a big
part of ine play.
Repeated hisses attested Ijce Harvey's
success In the role of Gerald Stone, and
Ted Woodruff makes an excellent Robert
Sinclair. While not In a leading role.
Joseph Remington discharges a hea\y
role as O'Neil with marked success. Miss
Grace Raymond, as Florence Sinclair,
has one of the best roles she has j -
peared in durin*? the engagement of this
company in San Antonio and her pres-
entation of the part Is very pleasing.
Harry Bewley has some new songs and
a bright monologue as a specialty. Both
song and monologue are filled with local
hits that brought much applause. Miss
Lowe also appears In a song specialty
which is up to her excellent standard.
C. T. C.
At the Royal.
The famous Mizuna troupe of Japanese
acrobats carry off first honors In a bright
bill at the Royal which was presented
before several large audiences yesterday.
In addition to some of the well-known
Japanese acrobatic feats, this troupe
has a number of new stunts. One is the
handling of a Japanese parasol with new
features. The parasol is thrown to the
top of the stage and far to one side, in
such a manner that It performs various
evolutions and returns to the clever Jap
who is on his back in the center of the
stage. Two boys of midget siae go
through some twists which seem to prove
conclusively the absence of backbones.
Earl Wright, a daring barrel jumper,
adds a stunt to the usual performances
of barrel jumping that is a real sensa-
tion. Sitting in a chair on the top of
barrels and tables which reach to the
top of tlie stage, he turns over back-
wards, and after a "flip" alights grace-
fully, still sitting In his chair. His dar-
ing and cleverness, however, are nearly
spoiled by lack of grace. He slams bar-
rels and chairs around as though he were
angry with them and makes a deal of
unnecessary noise, beside wasting lime.
Do Vau 11 and Mile. Uotta have a bright
act. De Vaull wanders into an artist's
studio and smokes the artist's pipe. It
has a. happy effect. The picture in a
certain frame changes every time he
looks at it, and finally the girl walks
forth and has a little chat with him, clos-
ing with some songs. In the finale six
pigeons are liberated in the gallery and
flv over the heads of the audience to
Mile. Lotta. the girl in the picture, and
alight on her heads and arms while she
is in the picture frame singing. The
gowns worn are beautiful.
Stanley and Rice put on one of the
cleverest "Old Southland" acts seen here
this season. Stanley comes in with an
excellent makeup for a rheumatic old
darky of the cotton fields, and sings
some old-time negro songs that have the
charm and melody of the better known
airs, but these songs are not common.
Me has a delightful voice and dialect.
"De Missus" also sings a few songs.
The Royalscope and orchestra round
out a bill of more than the average clev-
erness. C. T. C.
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
"The Prince of Tonight."
The Minneapolis Dally News has the
following to say of "The Prince of To-
night" company, which comes to the
Grand tomorrow night and Wednesday
matinee and night:
If you liked Mort Singer s other shows.
SILVER
for Wedding Presents
Exclusive designs In solid silver and
finest quadruple plate.
Chests, Bowls,
Sandwiches
In fact, anything you may desire and at
prices consistent with good quality.
HERTZ BERG'S
111'!* West Commerce Street.
"At the Sign of the Clock."
VACUUM
Carpet Cleaning
Your carpets, mattings, upholstered fur-
niture, etc.. cleaned without removal.
We also sew and relay carpets and ren-
ovate mattresses.
Hansen Bros.
Established 1890.
631 Austin Street. Both Phones,
"The Time, the Place and the Girl," "The
Girl Question," "Stubborn Cinderella"
ano the rest, you'll like "The Prince of
Tonight," the Singer musical comedy
which is filling out the week-end at the
Metropolitan. It has the clever, catchy
lines Hough and Adams always furnish,
the lilting music Joseph Howard Is fa-
mous for. the pretty girls Singer always
provides, and Henry Woodruff.
Oh, girls, you mustn't miss Prince Hen-
ry! He's quite the handsomest of the
season. He has curly hair, just like
Dick Ferris; big blue eyes, and such a
figure! No wonder the haughty beauty
In the show, who has flouted every other
limn in Palm Beach, is an instant cap-
tive to his charms.
"The Prince of Tonight" has all kinds
of plot, but anyone who can follow It Is
entitled to a niche in the hall of fame
with Sherlock Holmes.
It appears that at Palm Beach, Fla.,
there is a famous century plant, which,
of course, blooms only once in 100 years.
On this great occasion anything is likely
to happen. For instance, a prince might
drop In to furnish entertainment for the
social butterflies at the famous winter
resort. And this Is what happens.
This prince can only live one night un-
less he is kissed by the right girl and
4creps smoking cigarettes given him by a
j sort of fairy godfather.
In this ease "coffin nails" are life-
| savers.
The prince has ten cigarettes, which he
j must smoke incessantly or die. He'll die
anyway when they're gone, unless he Is
kissed by the right girl. His life is
saved.
"The Prince of Tonight" has the pret-
tiest bunch of broilers in a long time;
they haven't a corner on the beauty mar-
ket. either. The chorus men, usually a
bunch of misfits kept behind the scenery,
are supplanted in this show by flne»
clean-looking young fellows who can sing.
A Fable.
Once upon a time a fond mother disap-
proved of her daughter marrying. This
young lady had plcKed the young man
out. Also, he had wealth. And the
mother, who was widowed, had not the
wherewithal to furnish her daughter with
the variety of frocks and things which
her youthful heart craved.
"I might not object to the man so
much," said the mother, one evening, "if
you would only let me see him. But
here Is a man whom I have never set
eyes on, nnd yet one whom you insist
on taking for a husband. I don't under-
stand such secrecy!"
Replied the daughter: "If 1 ever Intro-
duced him you'd insist on marrying him
yourself."—April Young's Magazine.
The scant skirt of this frock of satin striped blue and white silk voile Is gath-
ered Into the walstbaud and is bordered around the bottom with a broad band
of blue rutin which begins Just below the knees. A seamless-shouldered blouse has
sinull bishop sleeves gathered Into band cuffs uud a low«cut neck exposing a
gulmpe and collar of muslin embroidery. The Gage hat of Louis shape Is of natu-
ral colored Leghorn, faced with black velvet and trimmed with a garlaud of pink
rose#, * T • r * * > 1" «1
A Combination Food
By knowledge of the properties of WHEAT, OATS, RICE and
BARLEY, Dr. Price has been enabled to combine these important
grains into
DR. PRICES
G KAIJV
FOOD
A food much stronger in nourishing qualities than any single cereal;
containing all the elements necessary for bodily needs, as the whole grain
of each and all of these cereals is used in the food. Ask your Giocei.
132
i,
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The Daily Express. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 87, Ed. 1 Monday, March 28, 1910, newspaper, March 28, 1910; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth434515/m1/6/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.