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howto look beautiful
_. t123 fob beautifying the
COMPLEXION.
A popular Poetess and a Loading:
Actraas Discuss the Topic-How
Vv'ell Known Women Treat Their
Faces.
(Copyright.)
Xew York, March:#.—“By what simple
R . ) natural methods may the complexion
.be preserved f
This is a question which I have scattered
I rirht and left for the last four weeks. But
I have not found many ladies willing to
give away the secret if they have it.
“ It is presumed that every woman has
some pet and cherished method for keeping
the flush of the June rose in her cheeks.
Whether is it friction or almond oil which
wards of wrinkles indefinitely !
1 found that I had put my query to one
who had no theory on the subject, an<i
again to someone else who had no com
nlexiou— according to her own account.
Mrs. Lizzie Ohampney, for instance, doesn’t
think naytiing ahout hers; in fact, she is
nor sure] so she says, whether she has any
complexi m. .She is too busv to tiiink about
such things. “Of course, I wash my face
everv day," she added, “but beyond that I
never give my face a thought."
.Mrs. Frank Leslie, who always looks
bright and blooming, thinks the best way
l i preserve the complexion is to take care
~f theh alth, and the best way to take care
( i the health is to take time every after
noon, no matter how busy you are, for a
rap.
A POPULAR ACTRESS HEARD PROM.
( ertaiu things must be borne in mind ,y
per who would, iu homely phrase, “I sen
I'T looks." She must, ou rising, bathe her
whole body in tepid water, following it by
h brisk rubbing with a soft towel. She
must exercise as freely as possible, eat at
regular hours, avoid cosmetics, save those
, : tue simplest order, and in all things bo
g iverued by common sense and the primary
principles, now well understood bv most
people, of hygiene. Regarding exercise,
man chief promoter of beauty, every day
in the year when the weather will permit
every woman who wishes to preserve her
health and beauty should take a brisk walk
,if an hour or two hours’ duration. This is
the very least the sensible woman will do.
\ coup e of hours daily practico with tho
fencing foils is very advantageous. It is only
by the exercise of great care, which in an
i ther woman would be set down to the
credit of overweening vanity, that an actress
preserves her good looks more than any
other person. She is subject to constant,
harassing work and weary travel, and con
sequently if she would preserve any sem
blance of good looks she must take proper
• are of herself. The constant use of grease
paint w ill work havoc with any complexion.
Much can be done, however, to
counteract the bad effects. Imme
diately alter the performance the actress
who is careful will cover her face
with a layer of vasaline, which is well
rubbed in. The face must then be thor
oughly washed with hot (not warm) water
a'.d soap, or if there is objection to the use
•<i soap on the face, a little milk may be
i iisl to the w ater. This washing cannot
i 100 thorough. Most mimn, as a finish
ing touch, pass a powder puff lightly over
tu-j face, but! am inclined to be chary of
li. use even of the simplest cosmetics and
t i trust rather to plenty of water, followed
by a brisk rubbing with a soft towel.
Good living is favorable to good looks, so
tome one has said.
Women who live well remain young much
longer than those who do not. “They have
brighter eyes, fresher skins and firmer mus
cles."
Such being the case, diet as an aid to
b-auty seems to me an important subject.
Tin- depression of the muscles eiiu'es
wrinkles, those dreaded enemies of beauty.
Hence every woman should eat to keep tho
muscles firm and full. A tine, clear coni
i 'i-xion cannot bo obtained without good
digestion, and the first part of tho digestive
process is masticatiou. Therefore eat
si iwlv, and moisten each morsel thoroughly
with saliva before swallowing. Over-eating
a source of facial and bodily disfigure
ment, just as gluttony is, relatively, a
s urce of disease. Rose Coghlan.
A POETESS TELLS HOW TO LOOK PRETTY.
To keep the texture of the skin as soft
rout delicate as possible, there is nothing I
think that equals the u-o of almond meal.
You may ask why almond oil will not
answer tho purposo—the rubbing necessary
with the meal is almost as beneficial as the
meal itself; with an oil you do not use fric
tion, and consequently lose half the benefit.
1 have used almotid meal for fifteen years.
1 spend live minutes at night and as'much
time iti the morning, and wash my
face with warm water once a day.
Most women wash their faces too
frequently. There is no fabric that would
net become dingy, discolored and rouga
ened if soaked in water half a dozen times
daring the day and then exposed to the cold
■ i winter or the heat of summer. Just so
it is with the human skin. I consider an
occasional Turkish bath a great beautifier
of the complexion. When I was a vouug
Kiri my face was plentifully decorated with
freckles; these seldom appear now, even if
1 have been exposed to the hot sun. It is
partly the use of almond meal, I think,
vliieh has kept them at bay, and partly <t
preparation of rosewater and benzoin, a
preparation vised since the time of
Cleopatra. An ounce of the latter to a
inart of the former. This should be dab
bled on the face with a soft cloth. This
mixture is also a good tonic for the skin.
As to wrinkles, borrowing trouble is a
fruitful cause of these hated reminders of
time's advance. While a man may be un
duly nervous and worried about tiis busi
ness nud other affairs of import, his wife
will fret over trivial affairs. She worries
fib ut the dust on the bric-a-brac,
the chip on the new china cup, the fctvle of
! t bonnet and the fit of her gown;
and these things make hor oid as surely
as do leal troubles. A placid temper will
'°ng keep wrinklas iu alieyance, and years
' j eood humor will leave a sweet mouth to
eld age. Shakespeare makes Cajsar say
that c wards die many times liefore their
deaths. So they do, and so do thousands
upon thousands of people who grunt their
lives away. They make themselves old
with imagined aches and pains. It is not
good to give away to megrims. Anticipa
tion brings the misery teat it looks for.
it we look for old age it will run to meet us.,
r.very one can be in some way pleasing,
fV ,cl ™ould be. for, as Dr. Holmes says, in
' 1 Qilosopher at tho Breakfast Table,”
tne woman who does not please is a false
note in tho harmo lies of nature.” To
simulate those who havo boon “cheated of
enure by dissembling nature,” and who
remain ugiy in spite of soienco and art, but
>vn° have the commendable ambition to
a ract and please, let rue assure them that
uiey can bo lovely and attractive if they
•mu cultivate their minds and thoir
arts, (-.very ouo has noticed that they
not all beauties who havo becomo brides,
cl one is often at it loss to understand how
11 ) lead their husbands captive. There is
• mystery about, it, they did it by being
ngreeaole, kind and bright. Milton’s le
' Hption of Kvo is worth noting m this
connection.
t„ ~ ,j race in her step, Jlonv’n Id her eye,
'ivery gesture, dignity and love.
.> it thla is not practical enough, possibly.
-me givo you a few simple and very
practical rules.
W plunge your f aC9 ; nto very cold
- r when it feels ho; and dry from x
-ma to tho wind; such an imprudous act
• lost always permanently yellows the
* -'P u v ‘ E nt a taco that looks like leather,
mi become a confirmed tea and coffee
. " !*? r ‘ J ; 3' ou hko blotches and piuioles,
h ..' y,* a a ’nil of fure which includes hot
sur?o . fat food, candies and late
• Last.y, don’t worry about freckles. Be
fond of them, because mankind alwavs
claims that the girl who freckles is lovable.
Ella Whkelkr Wilcox.
IV ash the face in warm water at night
and with cold water in the morning. Al
ways dry the face thoroughly after wash
ing. Rub up and never down, the lines of
the face ail tend downward, and rubbing
down accentuates the lines. Get the body
into a good perspiration once every day.
Do not contort the face in conversation, or
when iu a strong light, wrinkling the fore
head does not protect the eyes and it does
produce lines. Do not apply lotions and
cosmetics to any extent. Lying down for
half an hour each day with the muscles
of the face thoroughly relaxed and
with a soft linen handkerchief
wet ia rose-water laid over the
face, is an excellent way to lieautify the
skin. The complexion depends largely
upon the health. Occasionally one sees a
woman in good health with a bad complex
ion—local skin troubles do sometimes exist,
but rarely. There are many parsons who
are the victims of skin troubles which are
the result of deranged nervous systems.
With some persons coffee excites the nerve
centers to such an extent that pimples are
produced. Any person suffering from an
affection of the skin should go to a reputa
ble dermatologist and receive careful and
intelligent treatment. I think that wearing
a thin veil helps to preserve the skin.
Mabel Jen.nf.ss.
In my opiuion all the lotions, balms and
complexion beautiflers in the catalogue will
do no good to enhance beauty if women per
sist in keeping the late hours they do in this
country, eating the late suppers, etc. First,
keep the system in good order, take plenty
of rest, cultivate a sweet disposition, and
tho result will be a fine specimen of Ameri
can beauty. Eliza Proctor Otis.
An Open Letter to Rev. Dr. Gregg.
From the Boston Globe.
My Dear Sir—l have been very much
interested in your sermon ou the negro
question, which was delivered last Sunday.
You treated it with much more breadth
and strength than tho average preacher,
politician or newspaper is accustomed to
give that interesting and important topic.
You delivered it in the city of Boston,
where the colored man is supposed to have
found his best friends before the war, during
that struggle, and presumably since it was
closed. You assert w ith honesty and enthu
siasm that you are entirely upon tho side of
the negro, or, to use your own language:
To the defence of his rights I consecrate my
head, and my heart, and my hand, and my hu
manitarian instincts and my time, anil my
patriotism and my purse, and if need be, as a
final resort, my rifle.
You further claim with eloquence and
force that tho northern men who are send
ing their capital south have a grand oppor
tunity and tiie power to “right the wrongs
of tho south.” Now as the southern people
simply ask their northern neighbors to let
them work out their own problem, how will
it do to take them at their word for awhile
aud let the north turn its attention to the
way the negro is treated here! Instead of
following your suggestion of having a solid
north tell the south what it should do, sup
pose the solid north looks at home. Xu
other words, before we call further atten
tion to the mote in the southern brother’s
eye, lot us see what can bo done with the
largo black beam in the eye of tho northern
brother.
I assert that tho negro is not so well
treated in Boston or Massachusetts, or in
trie north generally, as he is in the south.
You must know that in this city of Boston,
which professes to be the original and still
the chief headquarters of tho friends of the
colored man, he is ostracised in a more
effective manner than he is in the south.
Fewer occupations are open to him here,
and lie is not treated ns well in many re
spects as he is in the south.
Do you not know that in the city of
Boston, as in every other city and town iu
the north, there are only three or four oc
cupations open to the colored man? He
must be either a barber, a waiter, a janitor,
or a porter. In what other calling can he
succeed? There are exceptional cases where
he has succeeded in other lines, but they
simply prove the general rule, which ex
cludes tho colored man from otner occupa
tions by the force of general sentiment.
The white man in Boston does not admit
the negro to social equality. Tako
the young colored man who is class orator
of Harvard this year, a graduate of tho
Boston Latin school, a young man of fine
attainments, and mentally well fitted for
the position to which he has been elected.
Unless he oecumes a teacher or a pre icher
among his own race, what occupation is
open to him in the city where he has been
raised? Cau he become a merchant, a phys
ician, a lawyer, a banker, or even a me
chanic? No. Will Harvard college make
him one of its professors? No, certainly
not. Here he can only enter one of the oc
cupations which I have named, and in which
college education is not worth two cents a
ton.
Just think for a moment how completely
the colored men is shut out of the ordinary
vocations of life. How many colored sex
tons are there iu tho white churches? How
would tho members of your church like an
assistant pastor, a coloe rd man, to help you
in your parish work and visit among them?
How many business men, lawyers, physi
cians, or bankers, who sit in your congre
gations, and are delighted to hear you
pound the south for its treatment of the
negro, will take a colored man into business
partnership with themselves iu this year of
our Lord 1890? How many storekeepers
who attend our churches, whose hearts are
warmed with the arguments in favor of the
colored man in the south, will take him in
as a clerk in any one of their 3tores?
Mr. Grady made an address to about 400
representative men in Boston last Decem
ber. What was the colored man doing on
that occasion ? Was ho among the guests—
the merchants, the bankers, the lawyers or
the physicians who listened to Mr. Grady
and applauded him? No, he was waiting
on the table. And not a colored man could
have secured a ticket to that banquet.
Mind, X am not blaming the managers of
the feast; they simply represented public
sentiment, and their acts showed how thor
oughly they respected it.
Has the negro made any advance in Bos
ton among the various vocations or iu social
life since he has been emancipated? If so,
in what directions? Is not the reason because
the sentiment of Boston, like that of other
cities and town3 of the north, is against
him? The colored people make only about
2 per cent, of the population of tho city. If
it was SO, 40 or 50 per cent., as it in some
southern cities and towns, would these men
in tho north, who now practically ostracise
*the colored man, be any more liberal in
treating him politically, think you, than the
men do iu the south!
I submit these point*, my dear doctor, for
your consideration; because a man who is
ready to deveto his life to tho cause of tho
black man has an abundant field right hero
ir. the city of Boston, and when he has made
tho colored man tho political, social and
business equal of the whi o man in this city,
it seems to me that bo may mere appro
priat dy and effectively take tho stand and
tell tho peoclo of the south how they should
act in tho solution of this problem." Yours
moat respectfully.
The Editor ok the Globe.
'Tho Northern Boundary Bine.
film the St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
Tho boundary line between the United
States and Canada is not “imaginary,” as
most peoplo suppose. Tho lino is distinctly
marked from Bake Michigan to Alaska by
cairns, iron pillars, earth mounds and tim
ber clearings. There are 385 of those marks
between tho Lake of the Woods and the
base of the Rocky mountains. The British
placed one post every two miles and the
United States one between each B.itish
i>ost Those posts are of cast iron, and cast
t.n their faces are tho words. “Convention
of London, Oct. 30,1818.” Where the lino
crosses lakes, mountains of stones have been
built, projec.-fng eight feet above high
water mark. In forests the line is defined
by fulling trues for a .-.pace a rod wide.
THE MORNING NEWS: THURSDAY, APRIL :i. 1890.
MEDICAL.
;.I \ * I
do confident are the manufacturers of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy
in their ability to cure Chronic Catarrh iu the Head, no matter how
bad or of how long standing, that they otter, in good faith, the
above reward, for a case which they cannot cure.
SYMPTOMS OF CATARRH,
Headache, obstruction of nose, dis
charges falling into throat, sometimes
profuse, watery, and acrid, at others,
thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent,
bloody and putrid ; eves weak, ringing'
in ears, deafness, difficulty of clearing
throat,expectoration of offensive matter;
breath offensive; smell aud taste im
paired, and general debility. Only a few
of these symptoms likely to be pre
sent at once. Thousands of eases result
in consumption, aud end in the grave.
By its mild, soothing, antiseptic,
cleansing and healing properties, Dr.
Sago's Remedy cures the worst eases.
This infallible remedy does not, like the
poisonous irritating’snuffs, “creams”
aud strong caustic solutions with which
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets regulate and cleanse tin* liver,
stomach and bowels. One a (lose. Sold by druggists.
CLOTHING.
WHAT A RUSH
r-TO
Dryfus Bros.
-KOU
EAS T E R
Suits, Trousers,
STRAW AND DERBY HATS.
Handsomest Neckwear in tlie City.
WILLIM VNTK THREAD.
SIX-CORD
SPOOL i|||flpS*\ COTTOH.
For Sale by an j Leading Dealers.
34 Union Square, New York City, /tug. 31st, 1889.
After a scries of tests at our Eltzabethport factors, extending over
a period of several months, we have decided to use the
WILLIM ANTIC SIX-CORD SPOOL COTTON,\
believing it to be the best thread now in the market, and strongly
recommend it to all agents, purchasers and users of the Singer Machines.
THE SINGER MANUFACTURING COMPANY.
HOTELS.
UNDER ONE MANAGEMENT!
DUB’S SCREVEN HOUSE
OPEN ALL THE YEAR ROUND.
First-Class in All its Appointments. Large Sam
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JB- IDTJZB 3P:ro-p:rd.etiOX.
Ul PiGi TOPS.
City Top MfgGo,
—*M*NUMOTU*i OP
BU6GY TOPS
\ IYY CUSHIONS', BACHS, RAILS
\IAAV / iM Sf ATS AND TRIMMINGS.
Pfnm St., Cincinnati, O
the public, b tve long been lramTiugged,
simply palliate for a short time, or
ilrive the disease, to the lungs, as there
is a danger of doing in the use of such
nostrums, But it produces perfei't
mill [imiiiiiieid cure* offlie
worst cases of < lironit* <’a
tari’li. as thousands cau testili.
“i’olci ill tßi<* S leant ’’ is cured
with a few applications, t 'iitarrtiu!
■leatdtieiie is relieved and cured u
il' by magic. It removes offensive
breath, lessor impairment of the sense
of taste, smell or hearing, watering or
weak eyes, and impaired memory, when
caused by Hie violence of Catarrh, as
they nil frequently are. Sold by drug
gists, at 50 cents. Manufactured l>\-
World’s Dispensary Medical Asso
ciation, (169 Alain Street, Buffalo,N.Y.
ILOTE L T Y 13 E E,
WILL OPEN ON OH BEFORE MAY Ist.
One of the Handsome*!, Summer Resorts in
the Union.
WHSTE-KOUSESSSI
mSMIOK-BOOK
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SPRING OPENING.
KNOX “to-morrow
mThe Critics Will Begin.” dullu
. THAT FIT.
LEVY- f 11 '* *> article in Our APtrMWtl
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LEVY A_djectives fail ns in attempting yjetliiTjlD
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LEVY your verdict will be our reward. Color,
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LEVY -| I 1 1. LK VY & KUO. | T Britlancy
HOTELS.
THE MARSHALL,
savannah, ga.
Under new management.
Most Popular Hotel. Spacious Piazza.
Finest Location.
With broad piazzas commanding a grand view
of tho laxiiiouablv promenade, tho hroadtvay of
Savannah. ('uisine and service equal to the best
Northern hotels.
M. L. HAKNETT.
■THE
De Soto
savannah, ga.
'TMIIS New and Magnificent. Hotel was opened
for business JANUARY I, 1890. For par
ticulars, terms, etc., address the proprietors,
JOHN A. BAKER A CO.
PULASKI HOUSE,
Savannah, Ga.
ENLARGED AND REMODELED WITH
PASSENGER ELEVATOR. BATHS,
ELECTRIC APPLIANt KS. AND
ALL MODERN CONVEN
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Making one of the best and most complete
hotels of its size in the South.
Cuisine and service of a high standar 1.
Tlie Seminole
WINTER PARK, ORANGE CO., FLA.
r l Mils new and elegant hotel, accommodating
l fourhundred guests, will be opened Jan.
Ist, 1 moo, under the able management of Mr, W.
F. Paige, so well known as the successful mail
aeer or the groat "KaatersUll" in tho Oat skill
Mountains, it is superbly located upon high
laud between two beautiful lakes, the ground
gently sloping to the shores or both, and I rum
the promenade on top eloven lakes can be seen.
Everything that human ingenuity can devise
has been provided to make this beautiful house
attractive and homelike for old and young.
Sleepers from New York without change. All
trains stop at Winter Park. Send for guide.
AddressW. F. PAIGE, Winter Park, Orange
Cos.. Fla.
Huntsville, Alabama,
Charming Spiing Resort in the
Alabama Highlands.
UUiYi’SYIIIE HOTEL,
NEW,SUBSTANTIAL AND ELEGANT. 7
THROUGH PULLMAN.SERVICE,NEW YORK,
Washington and cihcago. for
RATES AND best ROUTES, ADDRESS
HARVEYS DENISON, Manager.
LOTT K It 1 .
IiOOTERY
OF THE PUBLIC CHARITY.
ESTABLISHED IN 1877, BY TUE
MISX I O A. re
NATIONAL GOVERNMENT.
Operated Under a Twenty Years' Contract
by the Mexican International Im
provement Company.
Grand Monthly Drawings held in the Moresque
Pavilion in the Alameda Park. City of Mexico,
aud publicly conducted by Government Offi
cial* apooiuted for ihe purpose by uj Secre
tary of the Interior and the Treasury.
Grand Semi-Annual Drawing May 5, IS9O ;
CAPITAL PRIZE,
#120,000.;
*ji**o,ooo Tickets at !§iM, gift 10,0011.
\t holes, gjS; Halves, $I; quarters, #2; I
Eighths, #l. i
Club Rates: $55 Worth of Tickets for
SSO U. S. Currency.
1. 91 OK PKIZKS.
1 CAPITAL PRIZE OF 5120,090 is . .8100.000
1 CAPITAL PRIZE OF 40,000 is 40 000
K APITU. PRIZE OF 20,000 is 20 000
1 GRIND PRIZE OF.. 5.000 is ... s.ooi
2 PRIZES Ob 2,0 K) are.. . 4,000
5 I RIZKS OF 1,000 are.. . 5.000
20 PRIZES OK 509 are. 10.00)
10) PHIZES OF.. 200 are 20.000
:-J¥> PHIZES OF 100 are.. ss.tnO
529 PRIZES OF 40 are... 21,1(iJ
APPROXIMATION PRIZES.
!f0 Prizes of 1120 app. to $120,00) Prlz-.$ 18,000
15 i Prizes of 100 app. to 40,000 Prizo. 15,090
1 :0 Prizes of GO app. to 20,000 Prize 0,000
799 Terminals of S4O decided by 8120,00)
Prize 31.060
2.280 Prize. ... s)Pni)n*l))~ to *'*57,190
All Prizes sold in the United States full pall
In U. S. Curr -ncv.
SPECIAL FEATURE)!
Hy terms of contract the Company must de
posit the sum of all prizes included in the
scheme before selling a single ticket, and re
ceive the following official permit:
CKHTIFICA TK.—l hereby certify that the
Xante of London and Mexico ha* on fecial
depo ti the neceteary fund, to guarantee Pie j
payment of all prize, drawn by the Ixjteria
de la Beneficencia Ihtblica.
A. CASTILLO. Interventor.
Further, the Company is required to ilistrib- j
ute 56 percent, of the value of all the tickets in j
prizes- a larger proportion than ia given by any I
other lottery.
Finally, the number of tickets is limited to !
80,000 20,000 less than are sold by other lot
teries using the same scheme.
For full particulars address U. Mss—a,
Apartado 730. City of Mexico, Mexico.
MOUSSES,
CUBA MOLASSES
CARGO SCHOONER BONLFORM JUST
RECEIVED BY
C.M. GILBERT & CO.
1 M P O If. X E lit! ,
FURNITURE. ETI .
WF. ARE THE LEADERS
V^'|'
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CREDIT RIVEN IF DESIRED.
EMIL A. SCHWARZ,
125 AND 127 BROUGHTON ST.
IIAROWAKE, ETC.
GEO. P. DREW HDW. CO.
40 and I‘2 E;ist Bay St., - Jacksonville, Fla.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
HARDWARE SASH, DOORS AND BLINDS STOVES AND TINWARE
STATE AGENTS for Revere Rubber Company’s Giant Stitched Rubber Belting, Henry Dtostoa
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HEADQUARTERS for lowa 4-Point Barb Wire. Kilhourne & Jacobs’ Wheelbarrow, Atlantic
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CLAYTON R. WOODS. JOHN K. OAJtNETT. CHARLES B. MALONE.
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SUCCESSORS to WOODS A CO.. w *
Cotton Factors and. Commission Merchants,
-Ha y Street, - - Savannah, Ga*
Liberal advanced made on consignments of cotton. Prompt attention given to all business*
CLOTHING.
NECKWEAR.
Y\ T khave opened nur latest importation of
> ▼ fine kijjditih Neckwear, comprisinp all
the popular s' apes, together with some new
mil exclusive designs, and we will take sfreat
pleasure in showing all interested tho most
s!iai*?a” for tho present season.
We have also an unusually attractive line of
£sc. and oOe. domestic goods.
A. Falk & Sons,
One-Price Reliable Outfitters.
Our spring styles in Men’s, Boys’, ami Chil
dren’s Clothing are now being much admired
and sold at popular prices,
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