Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 217, Ed. 1 Friday, August 6, 1909 Page: 9 of 16
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GALVESTON
TRIBUNE: FRIDAY. AUGUST 6,
1909.
9
b
BE WITH THE WISE
FOLLOW THE CROWDS
f
SEASON’S GREATEST REDUCTION
O
o
o
o
o
Green Ticket Sale
Green Ticket Sale
Green Ticket Sale
Green Ticket Sale
Green Ticket Sale
SHOES
I
SHOES
SHOES
a
i
so
I
I
99c
$1.99 Pair
$1.50
Formerly sold up to $3.50.
Values Up to $3.50
Formerly sold above $3.50.
I
O
I *
Men’s 25c
Men’s 50c
Men’s 15c
Athletic
Porosknit
Black. Tan
Elastic Seam
Wash
Cassimere
Undershirts
and Colored
Underwear
Pants
50c
Suits
Drawers
Half Hose
Pants
Suspenders
for
for
Pair
99c
$1.69
25c
I9C
39c
Green Ticket Sale
)
Border
A very comprehensive showing of the most likely
Idr cfvloc On fha ni'H'baf -•>1 ~ .
CASSIMERE
popu-
*•
Lot 2
PANTS
Lot 3
chiefs
UNDERSHIRTS
Per Pair
for
15c
19c
99c
16c
3c
99c
o
o
o
o
o
1
Green Ticket Sale
Green Ticket Sale
Green Ticket Sale
»
Ladies’ one and two-piece
$2.95
8c
49c
$3.95
$4.95
■i
12c
75c
■
5
I
sides horses and vehicles.
?
and
| F-F CO ""A'
■________________•
45C
/
Be Remembered by the
People of Galveston
Ladies’ Rsady-
te-Ww
Men’s $2.00
Blue Serge
Goats
Men’s $2.50
Worsted
Guyot
or President
First National Congress Will
Meet in Seattle August 20
to 28.
CONSERVATION IS
TO BE CHIEF THEME
FARMER FOUND
DEAD IN ROAD
BALBRIGGAN
UND’RWEAR
Children’s 15c black
and tan Hose
Special lot of shoes for Men,
Women and Children, made of
leather, canvas and fancy cloth,
all sizes and styles in both high
and low cuts
' MEN’S
SUITS
FASHION MAKERS
EXPERIMENTING
XJ1LLI1C1 LUlcllO, > UIUC
send name of your drug-gist.
F:r
Witherspoon.
Don’t delay
. There is
.. .99©
Waists,
4c
...49c
19c
10c
10c
10c
19c
9c
... 99c
...49c
....25c
.... 10c
Boy’s Good
55c
$1.95
and
Genuine
Boston
Garters
Boys’ $1.75
CASSIMERE
SUITS
49c per Pair
Extraordinary Value
99c per Pair
Values Up to $2.00
Hosiery
Ladies’ 35c Embroidered
Hose 19c
GREEN TICKET SALE
AT THE STORE THAT SAVES YOU MONEY
for
35C
^F^POPULArW B GOODS POPULAR’p,. g| PRICES s|
W NWN ttaMtotM
IcORHtR B la ZV* Ml MAp 1 1 WtCRMAVC ST.
THE BIG MECHANIC STREET STORE
Buckshot Wound in Forehead.
No Clew to the Slayers of
OttVaskamp.
Keeping Up Effort to Evolve
Something New to Please
Fastidious Ones.
Men’s $4-50 Wash
Suits
Men’s $6.oo Wash
Suits
Men’s $7.50 Wash
Suits
Priestley’s black, blue and
grey Cravenette Suits,
$20.00 values $9.99
8^
A Sale That Will Long |
SEBSKBffiSBDIBnnBStSSHI
\z
Green Ticket Sale
Negligee Shirts 25©
Boys’ 75c Shirts, with
and without collars... .39©
Boys’ 25 c Waists
for
Men’s and Boys’
Shirts
Men’s $1.00 Broadway
Shirts ...............69c
---------- ------j and
lar styles on the market at matcnless prices.
Lot 1
Ladies’ 25c black and
colored Lace Hose. .. .. 15©
Ladies’ 50c, Hermsdorf dye,
black lace Lisle Hose,
3 pairs for 99c
*
Special to The Tribune.
Seattle, Wash., Aug. 6.—The First
National Conservation congress of the
United States, which will be held in
the Auditorium of the Alaska-Yukon-
Pacific exposition, Aug. 26-28, 1909,
promises to be the largest convention
of eminent men ever called on the Pa-
cific coast. The executive board of the
Washington Conservation association,
Instant Relief for Itching Piles.
The very first application of Dr
Hebra’s Ungoid will surprise you initl
instant effect on your piles and stoj
the terrible pile-itch. It is without,
doubt the best remedy for these af-
flictions known. For all irritating skin
diseases, such as eczema, tetter, rash,
barber’s itch, ringworm and all cuts,
sores and bruises it positively has no
equal in quick healing effects.
“Ungoid is the best ointment on earth
for piles,” says G. M. Hoover of Bucy-
rus, Ohio.
Dr. Hebra’s Ungoid is sold at al!
drug stores at 50c a package, or sent
prepaid on receipt of price, by the G. C,
Bittner Co., Toledo, / Ohio. Alwayt
send name of your druggist.
_ For sale in Galveston by Chas. El
Choice of Any HAT
in the House
Shirts
Men’s 75c Negligee
Shirts
Men’s and Boys’ 50c
Ladies’, Misses’ and Children’s
Canvas Shoes in many types,
all seasonable and in present
great demand at the almost in-
incredible price of
A grand line of Shoes for
Men, Women and Children, em-
bracing the widest latitude of
styles, leathers and finishes;
every Shoe is first class
Choice of Any HAT
in the House
tsjfcL. ...
Splitting Headaches
The best medical authorities'
agree that about 75 per cent of
all headaches are caused by eye
strains and can be relieved or
cured by glasses giving the
proper correction to the defect.
People who are subject to
these awful tortures are obliged
to lose much time from their
work, or, if they do work, it’s
done through suffering and
they can neither do justice to
themselves or others.
If you want relief from all
this we invite you to come and
consult us.
. We can tell -you just what
■
7
12c
Unmistakably the
Greatest Event of Its
Kind Ever Held in
This City.
I 4
Wash Suits, values
to $6.00, at-.
Ladies’ $2.00 white
colored Wash Skirts
for
Ladies’ white
values up to $2.50,
at >
|j
-
■
-
,■
|
■
Az
" -
-■
r
■
.!
I
Special to The Tribun®.
New York, Aug. 7.—It has been ob-
vious for some little time that the fash-
ions of the Moyen Age were growing
in favor and now, it may safely be said
that this style has been accepted by the
most fastidious women of fashion in
^Paris as well as in New York. But, in
spite of this fact, Mme. Paquin has cast
her eyes around for something new,
and it is said she will attempt to force
upon the tastes of the Parisian women
not only the fashions of Louis XVI,
but another fashion which she herself
seems to have designed and to have
stamped with her individuality. It pos-
sesses the pointed corsage, not in the
front but in the center back, the front
is rounded off, and even sloped upward.
The skirt to be worn with this bodice
is very full; in fact, it is made in
gathers around the hips.
One of the most recent Paquin gowns
of this style is of soft chiffon over a
smoky blue satin. The corsage is
trimmed with folds of chiffon in the
fichu style of Marie Antoinette. This
fastens into a buckle slightly to the
left of. the front, and the waistline of
the bodice rises in.front to this point,
then it slopes off to a deep point in the
back. The overskirt is gathered, al-
though the underskirt fits tightly and
the raised waist gives an effect that
suggests the empire when the costume
is viewed from the front. On all gowns
of this type the sleeves are but elbow
length, and a scarf is made to carry
with each one. These, of course, har-
monize with the gown, the one be-
longing to the gown just described be-
ing of taupe embroidered at each end
with smoky blue.
Ever since the beginning of the sum-
mer season a great deal of experimenjt-
•s
under the auspices of which the'con-
gress has been called, announces that
more than 600 representative citizens of
the United States, Canada and Hawaii
have accepted the Invitation to attend
the congress and participate in the de-
liberations.
It is expected that a permanent na-
tional organization will be effected at
the congress, and that delegates to the
, International Conservation conference
to be held at The Hague, Holland, dur-
ing the coming autumn (when sys-
tematic plans for the conservation of
the natural resources of the entire civ-
ilized world will be considered) will
be appointed.
Invitations have been extended to
approximately 10,000 prominent people
to attend the First National Conserva-
tion congress. Many letters of accept-
ance are on file, and others are reach-
ing the office of the association daily.
Among the hundreds of letters re-
With the
vogue of pointed bodices, Watteau
pleats and bouffant petticoats estab-
lished, a change in figure is inevitable
and the plump woman who has had to
make herself uncomfortable to main-
tain a hipless silhouette may take heart
of grace once more, for the Louis cos-
tumes will be particularly becoming to
her style.
Not that there is any diminution in
the effort to look slender. Never was
embonpoint in such disfavor. But there
will, undoubtedly be- a marked relaxa-
tion from the extreme of slenderness
demanded by the styles of the past
spring and of the present season.
Nearly every new costume, of what-
ever material, has a coat of some de-
scription as a third piece. This gar-
ment' is rapidly changing shape, and
the most conspicuous change is in the
■slope of the lines at the natural waist,
shortening of the skirt part, widening
of the shoulders and the lapping of the
coat front at or below the waist line,
instead of the one, two or three-rbut-
ton front, closing over the bust and cut
away below, with back longer than
front. Another peculiarity is in the
arrangement of the trimming, which is
somewhat like that used a few seasons
ago, to outline the very wide arm-
holes, and all ornamentations or motifs
are placed at the sides, over the hips,
instead of in the natural location, over
the shoulders, on the fronts and backs
or in the noints of the skirt nart The
the matter is and prescribe the,
glasses that will do the work
which nature comes short of
doing'.
Come now. P
important a matter,
always loss in delay.
M.O.NOBBE&CO
Jewelers and Opticians.
Cifford Pinchot, chairman of the joint
committee on conservation between
states and nation; Senators Reed Smoot
of Utah, Joseph M. Dixon and Paris
Gibson of Montana; E-Governor George
C. Pardee of California; Booker T.
Washington of the Tuskegee Institute;
Howard Elliott of the Northern Pacific,
and James J. Hill of the Great North-
ern railway systems, and many others
of national prominence.
Germany’s first electric ferry-boat
rently was launched at Duisburg. It
has a capacity for 645 passengers, be-
mer season a great deal of experiment
ing has been done by Paris designer!
of fashions, chiefly in the line of drap-
eries, and the handsome frocks worn by
Parisian elegantes have in many cases
sacrificed beauty of line to eccentricity.
^Many of the linen and muslin frocks
worn by Parisian fashion leaders this
season, and, to some extent, by fash-
ionable women in New York, have been
so cut up so fantastically teased with
trimming in blocks and points and
angles and puffs and frills, that they
lost all real charm, and, while chic
from the fashion-maker’s point of
view, could not be called beautiful from
an artistic point of view. ’
There is every indication that the
very first fall styles will follow the
lines of the Moyen Age mode, which
developed last winter. The chief fea-
ture of this mode is the elongated waist
line, the belt or sash often falling over
tile hips. The fall models, however,
will cling to the figure more trimly
and not be as loose and bag-like from
armhole to hip, as some of this sum-
mer’s models have been; and this be-
ing the case, waists are bound to grow
smaller.
NO 13-INtH WAIST LINE.
It is not likely that women will try
at this day the absurd 13-inch waist-
line of Catherine de Medici, but it is a
fact that some dressmakers are al-
ready advising their patrons to loosen
their corset a trifle over the hip and
draw it in at the. waist.
of pointed bodices,
Lot 4
10c 25c 49c 99c
Men’s Genuine Panama Hats, $1.95
V-V-ZZV
Men’s 50c
WVWZ
Boys’ 75c
ZVTVT\
Boys’
25c
/“vzy-x
Men’s Men’s Colored Men*&$1.50 j
Bo rdes r
25c
8c
' - I.
By Associated Press.
Weimar, Tex., Aug. 6.—Riddled with
buckshot and with a deep' hole in the
center of his forehead made by a rifle
ball, the body of Ott Voskamp, a pros-
perous farmer and stockman, was
fqund last night in the road near his
home. There is no clew to the slayers.
Largest line of pocketbooks
ladles’ handbags at R. H. JOHN.
fronts are then made with the deep
op'enjng and a narrow shawl collar, or
one with blunt notches placed high, but
no trimming, other than the facings of
silk, satin or velvet. The backs of all
of the latest imported coats are show-
ing more fullness below the long waist,
and this is in the flare of the part or
in plaits ^lat the seams. There^must be
no more of the straight and drawn look
in a fashionable outer garment. In
speaking of the increased width of the
shoulders it should be remembered that
length of this part does not signify that
the seam or width at this point is to
be carried over the round of the
shoulder, placing the top of the sleeve
on the arm instead of over it, but that
there is slightly more fullness in the
sleeves and that all trimmings are set
out farther, usually to cover the seams,
TO EXPLOIT BASQUE.
The one-piece dress has seen its best
days, and while some form of Princess
will undoubtedly be worn for some time
to come, it seems that the basque is
to be exploited, and, we shall at no
distant date have a waist which will
evidence a dressmaker’s skill instead
of a blousing, unboned affair that is
nearly as much a success w’hen pur-
chased ready made as when made by
the average seamstress.
One of the prettiest materials for a
handsome house or evening gown for
the dignified elderly lady is a gray
crepe shot with steel beads. This fab-
ric may be had in double wlt|i, and,
being of uneven texture, is softer in
effect and more becoming than chiffon.
The gray, is particularly becoming to
the woman whose hair is approaching'
white, and the glistening beads pro-
duce the necessary contrast to save
the whole from monotony. Little trim-
ming is demanded for this material, but
the transparent yoke and undersleevea
of silver sheen or ametallic lace made
largely of silver will prove its most
effective decoration. If the dress be a
low-cut dinner gown net may be intro-
duced to give the necessary laciness.
The long and very tight sleeve has
taken on a common look, and women
are ready to accept something less try-
ing and showing a little more thought
in its conception.
The fashion of using two materials
in a gown is now well established and
no longer creates any special atten-
tion. /
I
Buttons are still popular, but ara
somewhat more modest in size than a
few months ago.
Parasol handles are growing mors
and more elaborate, and some of them
are quite friigh in price.
Lightweight pique and Galatea cloth
make ideal summer suits \for the small
boy and girl.
All greens are popular in the present
fashions, jade green being a particular
favorite just now.
FLORENCE FAIRBANKS.
Men’s and Boys’
Straw Hats
Green Ticket Sale
New Merchandise
Ladies' 10c Lawn
Handkerchiefs
Ladies’ 75c French
^Corsets
35c yard Allover Em-
broidery and Lace....
Ladies’ 19c Wash
Belts
Ladies’ 25c
Neckwear...............
25c Lithograph Pillow
Tops..., .......
35c Scarfs and
Squares...............
Assorted lot of 15c
Ribbons
52.50 human hair
Switches
$1.00 human hair
Puffs
50c black Moire Ribbon,
6 inches wide
25c Rose Hat
Pins
J
o
ceived are announcements from 64
leading universities and other insti-
tutions of learning, to the effect that
the president or other members of the
faculty will attend the congress. Many
governors of states, and representa-
tives of 40 state conservation commis-
sions will be among the delegations.
More than 150 commercial and civic
organizations have appointed special
delegates. The church be represented
by 22 bishops and other prominent
churchmen of various denominations.
The official program will call for
nine sessions of the congress and close
with a religious conservation service
on Sunday, Aug. 29, in which various
church societies are expected to par-
ticipate. Speakers of national repu-
tation have been chosen for the occa-
sion.
Among those expected to deliver ad-
dresses at the congress are Hon. R. A.
Ballinger, secretary of the interior;
'Twas a Glorious Victory.
There’s rejoicing in Fedora, Tenn. A
man s life has been saved, and now Dr
King’s New Discovery is the talk of
the town for curing C. V. Pepper of
deadly lung hemorrhage. “I could not
worn: nor get about,” He writes, “and
the doctor did me no good, but after
using Dr. King’s New Discovery three
week I feel like a new man, and can
do good work again.” For weak, sore
or diseased lungs, Coughs and Colds
Hemorrhages, Hay Fever, LaGrippe
Asthma or any Bronchial affection it
stands unrivaled. Price 50c and $1 00
Trial bottle free. Sold and guaranteed
by J, J. Schott,
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 217, Ed. 1 Friday, August 6, 1909, newspaper, August 6, 1909; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1362867/m1/9/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.