The evening world. Newspaper, October 29, 1904, Page 5

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Repeated Assault Tenant Who Is and Are Repulse ‘ Finally a Truce Is , Crown Forces Br _ the Defenders Are Taken to Court, | Where the Police Club Right and Left, (Bpectal Correspondence (From DUBLIN, Oct: 42. * weeks Not since the stirring days of 4s those-ocourring at Watergrass Hill in the County of Cork. A landlord named Fell with several bai! Jarymen, commanded by a district inspector, marched from Fermoy to evict Murphy, with the ald of sympathising @ tenant named Edmond Murphy. neighbors, barricaded his house and @fabulary and bailiffs charged the house with the ‘ntention of carrying It by orm, but wore beaten back by the d lays Of stones and showers of boiling The constabulary then sent off t forcements. “a number of others in long sido cars, in evicting Murphy from his home; but two miles from the scene of opera- thon they wore delayed for a vonsiderable time by a barricade which the country people had hastily erected, after unsuccessfully attempting to break down a bridge to prevent them joining their comradus, FIERCE FIGHT FOLLO Arrived outside the house, a flerce fight occurred with the country peo- ple who had assembled, the constahularymen attacking the people with their rifle butts and batons and the people ) Stones, In the course of the fray one BATTLE RANGED IN CORK AD FAR-OFF CINOYANG Bailiffs and Constabulary Men Make Uur Kegular Staff Correspondent.) Exciting events have agitated the South during the A number of mounted constabularymen, armed with rifles, and son the Home of a Doomed to Eviction d by the Defenders. Declared, but the eak Their Word and of The Evening World) the Land League have there been su’ liffs and thirty Royal Irish Constabu- bade his enemies deflance, The con- efenders, who received them with vol- water. 0 Cork for a battering-ram and rein- were immediately despatched to help Ws, defending themselves with sticks and constabularyman savagely beat an old man, whereupon the crowd concentrated its attention upon him, and he was rescued by his comrades after he had When the crowd had been driven with orowbars, attempted to break aa Tepulsed by the. defenders, the head been severely beaten, back several constabularymen, armed entrance through the stables, but were constable, who !s named Blessing, re- treating wtth such speed as to evoke the derisive cheers of the spéctators, From the rear he orlered ‘another attack, which was again repulsed, after which the duthorities despatched mes- fages for further reinforcements of constabulury men to all the neighbor- ing towns, In the course of the evening further contingents of the forces of the crown, armed with rifles and revolvers, arrived and a fresh attack in force wi the constabulary men hurling stones At the defenders of the house as they advanced, They suceeoded in forcing in the door, but found thelr pi barred by an iron erected insid The Constabulary no here attacked the defenders with bayonets, and the : Jatto® defended thomecives with bara of tron and drove them from the house, A second and third attack was repulsed in like manner after several of the constabulary men had been knocked ouf, The Tray Wan Eftecttye, One incident of the fight highly de- fighted the spectators—a constabulary man who was crawling along the side of the house suddeniy found an fron bar thrust out from a hole in the wall He jumped forward and grabbed It with both hands, intending to drag It from the owner, but the bar had been heated, and with a yell he dropped tt, Eventually at nightfall the “constab- ulary men sounded a pariey, and offered to permit the defenders to depart to their homes If they gave up posression. This was agreed to, and the house was evacuated. ” Yesterday the defenders were brought up before the Riverstown Magistrates on summonses for assault, notwith- standing the proclamatior, of pcace, During the heuring of the case the consiabulary men, Irritated by the uncompiimentary remarks passed up- en then by the people in the weinity of tho court-house, sudden- IW drev thelr batons and attacked ? all around. Amongst those arsaulted by the constabulury were Capt. Don- FRIGIO TREATMENT FOR ICEMEN'S WINES: Two of Ice Wagon Crew Land in Court Simultaneously on Complaint of Better Halves and Get Cold Deal. “My! but wouldn't I like to be an feeman's wife,” said one woman to an- other in Magistrate, O'Reilly's court room, in the Manhattan Avenue Police Court, Brooklyn, after the cases against Henry Yuttner, of No. 85 Broatway, and John Noon, of No. 6 Stockholm street, had been heard and each de- fendant had been placed under a S00 bond to support his wife, The two men, both In the employ of the’ American Ice Company, were ar- Advertisers, TAKE NOTE! "The World is now PRODUCING MORE RE- SULTS FOR i73 ADVERTISERS than ever before in its history, . To, haye any want in your domes- tie, professional or business life tly filled, get your ad. in early elan, M. P., who has just returned from America, A riot naturally en- sued, In the midst of which the magis- ltrates, fearing for their safety. ad- journed the case for six weeks, One of the magistrates strongly denounced ‘the conduct of the constabulary, which he described as an outrage on civiliza- ton. Ten men © #0 seriously In- |jured by baton blows that they attll |remain under medical care, The Freeman's Journal, in @ leading article, calls on the “Head Conciliator,” las it sarcastically calls the Chief 6 jretury, to state his opinions on the propriety of assaulting prisoners who are on their trlal before a bench of magisteates, . John Redmond ts again in Dublin. He has fot expressed bis views un the scheme put forward by Lord Dunraven. William O'Brien, however, gave a | welcome to the scheme on Sunday tn | Cork, Mr, O'Brien once again advo- | cated a “Union of hearts,” and declared he hoped to see the “union of all Mng- ishmen with Irishmen.” — Michaet Dayitt ia still hostile to the scheme. Blow at Irish Langan: ‘The British Treasury han decided to | withdraw the grants at present allowed for the teaching of the Irish language in the national schools, The (aeilte League at first declined to credit the | statement, but tnformation haa now | reached It, On Sunday last the Secre- tary of the league declared at a public meeting fn Dublin that the British Treasury had doolded to withdraw the grant, and that the Gaelic League was letermined to fight. In consequence there is considerable excitement In the ranks of the age revivalists, The withdi of the grant will mean the exp of the Irish lan- wuage from probably 75 per cent. of the schools in whieh it {s at present taught, and {s undoubtedly the outcome of the jealousy and uneasiness with which the British Government has for a long time pant viewed the growth.of the move ment for the restoration of the national tongue and thelr old national ideais ng the Irish people. a 3 | raigned on the charze of having aban- doned their wives, and it was @ re- markable coincidence that both cases were called practically at the same time, The complainants, strangers to ) ach other, told of their expériences, which were so much allke that the ef- fect was almoat startling. It's the Jee That Did It. “Henry was as good a husband as (You could find In- Brooklyn, Judge, Your Honor, till he began to work for the fee company,” sald Mra, Yuttner. | “Exactly Mke my Jobn,” chimed in Mrs, Noon, “It must have been the Ice he's been handling,” continued Mrs. Yuttner, “that froae up all his feelings for me and made his heart like a chunk of lee.” “That's what's the matter,” engerly assented Mrs, Noon, “It's that fee that made my Joho a regular icicle without feeling for hia own wife and baby.” strate Wonders, * Honor," wound up ‘T've cried everything heurt, but it's nnd may Meare's no m®. LS y nothing but the tee? ba soe ida “Yes, Judge,” confirmed Mra, Noon, “the tee and the whiskey they got to sg to keep from freezing,” Mrs. to melt the ’" murmured rate when he placed the men bd $00 bond cach to support their ves. ieatuiiemeninssentiiaied | HER FALL ENDS IN | Woma Succumbs to Injuries Re- ved Ten Days Ago. | Mra, Ona Gavey, of No, 147 Bast Fitty- | fourth street, who with her friend, Mrs, | Emma ‘La Tass, fell five stories down the stairway well of No, 183 Mast Fifty. fourth wtreet, on Wednesday, Oot. 19,| 4 whit Flower DEATH, | be [to Mra. Ulrich, ety nurse, a No. &@ De | Kal avenue. Dr, Mitchell, of St. Mary's WORLDi eye | aes ‘SATURDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 29, NICARAGUAN MINISTER, WHOM ANONYMOUS LETTERS ACCUSE, AND HiS RICH FIANCEE. THEATRICAL MAN | COMMITS SUICIDE Daniel Shelley, Advertising Agent of Yorkville Theatre, Ends Life by Inhaling Gas in His Room. Rupposed to have become wearted of life through financial and domestic dif- floulties, Daniel Shelley, forty-six years old, @ well-known theatrical advertising agont, committed suteide to-day by In- Naling gas in his room at No, 138 Rast) One Hundred ayd Twenty-seventh street, a furnished-room house run by Mra. Caroline Smith When, in order to wake Shelley, Mrs. Smith went to his room, she detected a atroug odor of gas coming from it. Not receiving an arswer to her calla, she sent for the police, and Detective Cc way broke open the door of Shelley's ruom, which was filled with gas to such | an exient that the officer was nearly | overcome. He managed to rush to the window and throw it open. Then he shot off the gas, which was streaming from a burner high up on the wall. Shelley was found in bed, and Dr. Burns, from the Harlem Hospital, said | the man had been dead several hours. | Mrs, Smith, who was much affected, aid sho had known Shelley for @ num: | ber of years, | “When dir. Shelley came home last | night,” she said, “he seemed dejected and somewhat undr the faftuence of Uquor, I know he had been worrying 4 kood deal Iately, about money trouble, I believe, and also some ey affairs He had a wife and two culidren, but where they are I don’t know.” “L tried to comfort Mr, Shelley, and after a while he brightened up, and we talked over the arrangements for «a Wttle reception which Mr, Shelley Was to give next ‘een 8 hia birth- day, Then he sald good-night, and that's the last I saw of him.” Shelley had been connected in an ad- yertising capacity with ber of theatrical companies, was advertiaing agent of the ville Theatre. He was & member the Royal Areautm, ot FINDS BABY DRESS-SUIT CASE ——.— Guarded by Dog, Foundling Coos| with Delight When Brooklyn) Broker Takes Her Out of Her! Close Quarters. NA Leis | NA Protesting in faint cries against the closeness of her quarters, 9 blue-eyed | baby girl about three weeks old was! found by James H. Babcock, a broker, lying in « dress-suit case In the we bule of his home, In Elm strect, near Union place, Brooklyn. “Jack,” Mr. Babcock’s dog, was| guaiing the baby. When his master | arrived the dog barked loudly and then | ran ahead to the vestibule. Here Jack’ growled as though to call him master’s attention to the sult case. Mr, Babcock by the light of a match sifw the baby, Who ecoed with delight/ when lifted out of the sult-case, With her was a bottle of milk, and she was warmly dressed. She was sent to the Richmond Hilt) police station. and Jater was turned over t Hfospitel, who examined the child, said sho was in splendid condition, She wore 1c flannel dress, & Itee Gap, woo!- ler ‘stockings and haa light hair and rufftan who had attacked me full in the face. Ho staggeral back, more from | surprise at my’ realest I believe, | |than from the force of blow. | “Then another man fumped out from behind a tree and rushed toward me. 1| turned on him and struck him on the WOW BAT WT FOUTPA Miss Stebbins Uses Heavy Handbag as Weapon and Beats off Two Highwaymen Who Attack Her, | Miss Mary Stebbins, a middle-aged | woman, whose hair is prematurely gray, | but whose courage is fresh and vigor- ous, is in A serious nervous and hys- terical condition at the home of Mrs. A. N, Towell, in Foft Washington avo- nue, near One Hundred and Ninety- second street, where she is employed as & governess, as the result of an en- counter with two highwaymen last night. ‘There ts ‘still much of nature's nesa in that section of Manhat and, and there has been an alarming number of hold-ups along the wooded lanes and by-paths leading to the fine homes on the heights of late. Miss Stebbins did some late shopping in Harlem, and in her hurry to get home before the family retired left the | | Fort Washington road and climbed the! steep hill leading to the Towell house. | A narrow pathway, thickly wooded on each side, leads up bhe bill, and the gray-haired woman had only the ligh’, of the stars to guide her, Her aFiha | were filled with bundles and she car- ried a amall handbag, heavily silver mounted and hung by a thick chain, “LT had hantly made half the dis- tance up the hill.’ sakt the governess to an Evening World reporter to-day, “when I felt my arms pinnioned to my | shle and @ man's hand throst over my mouth, Then a gruff vaive assailed my ear with: ‘Give up your money or I will cut your bhroat.’ “What prompted me to resist I don’t | know. I must have found courage in & frenzy of fear, for with all the strength I could summon I shook off the anne that held me and then swung my hand- tag with all my strength, striking the| face with my handbag. sessed with hy rushed, at the y atr ing trdnsieally The fury of my attack must have stunned them, for they made but little resistance, and suddeniy as the sound of voices came down from the top of the hill they took to thelr heels. “L hurried as fast as I could to the house, and as Mrs. Towell opened the door for me I fell ina dead faint across | the threshold | am afrald it will je some time before I recover from the hack, T cannot ascribe my cournge and | strength to anything more than hve- | t 18 1am NOt aAwvoune Woman any lpnwer and as a rule have none too inuoch streneth to spare,” TRUST CLOSES A BRANCH, Locomotive Works in Schenectady ‘ Have shat Down, SCHENECTADY, N. Y., Oct, 2%—The} entire plant of the American Locomo: tive Company in this city closed to-day | Several employees who have been the firm many years have bee ferred to other plants of the company It in said that the plant will not be re. | I d pos rength nm trang. | opened until the first of the year, foarte \ Rath TO CONSEGRATR CHURCH. MOUNT VERNON, N. ¥., Oct. | Archbishoo Farley, accompanied by Wishop Colton, of Buffalo; Monsignor | Tavelle and WO other priests, will go to Port Chester to-morrow to take par in the © the Church of Our La of Mer Tt will be th y tenth anniversary of the church, which ia {roe from debt <a eee ATHLETE SUSPENDED, F..D, Bauman, @ Metropolitan Arso-| ciation athlete, has been suspended by} the Metropolitan *Asociation Reg'stra-| Commie for haying played fout.| the Srofessigna ~ | faculty WOMAN BADLY HUBT BY AUNAWAY HORSE Knocked Down on Broadway, Sustaining Fractured Arm and Internal injuries—Driver of Another Vehicle Thrown Out. ‘There was plenty of excitement and lots of narrow escapes on Broadway to- day, caused by two horses attached to different vebicles, both running away at about the same time, John McCall, of No, 043 East Thirtisth street, was dri- ving down Broadway, when at Fortieth street his horse began w on the asphalt, The animal became frightened, and McCall lost control of him. At Thirty-elghth street Kate McGlynn, Of No, 10% Columbus avenue, started to cross directly in front of the runaway. McQall made a herole effort to pull the horae up, but failed. woman wa knocked down and run over, She was taken to the New York Hospital suffer- ing from a badly bruised face, a frac- tured arm and internal injuries. The horse wus stopped by a policeman be- fore he had gone half a biock further, At about the same time this accident ocourred Henry 8, Smith, a pou? dealer, of No, 168° West | Forty-sixt stree:, — W: driving past Thirtleth street, on Broadway, when his horse became frightened and ran away. He dashed up to Thirty-fourth street, & crowded transfer point, and there was tome ively. scattering of shoppers. Smith was thrown out on his head, but was only slightly injured. At Thirty-ffth street the horse got tengled in his harness and fell, Before he could fc up @ policeman had him by the orkdle. ———_—_—- THIEVES MAKE:A BROOKLYN RAID Carry Off $4,000 Worth of Plun- der from Three Houses in the Same Police Precinct—Work Boldly Done in Broad Daylight. Brooklyn thieves, who have a happy of robbing houses and flats when they ke, and never getting lcaught, made a pertodica! raid in that | |jnateum. borough vesterday, getting away with Jabout $4.00 worth of siverware and|in One Jewelry, At noon a young man called at the home of Mrs, Egbert Maxon, at No, 7 Jefferson avenue, and introduced him- self as the agent of a rubbish-removing concern, He tailked rubbish removal with Mre. Maxon for twenty minutes at the basement door, while a partner picked the front door lock and went upstairs, where he got $1,50 worth of plunder, including @ diamond pin val- wed at $800%and a sapphire and ruby bracelet. Within half an hour aftes this rob- bery thieves, probably the same ones, | forced an entrance to the flat of Mra, With | enrique K. Muller, at No, 12 Putnam | | avenue, Neht around the corner trom the Maxon house, They took ehirty-five pleces of silver, a gold watch and some money amounting In all to adout $60, er in the day the house of Mrs. Farrington Hanford, at No, % Cam bridge place, was broken Into by thieves and $1,000 worth of allver and jewelry aken, All of these robberies took place in the precinct covered by the De Kalo venue station. Capt. Maude and D: otives Congrove and Carroll are look for the thieves, = ¢ ee Kaew His Man, (From the Hardeman Pree Prem) We was up to the head of Scanty Branch with Cy Lyle week come Mon- day, and Nantes out the spirits he rubbed th ol h ith a bacon ineke CSS ti ape eae ACCUSING LETTERS LAY WEDDING: aa ;Anonymous Missives Charge | Contemplated Bigamy and | raguan Minister to U. S. | | ENGAGED TO MARRY RICH AMERICAN WIDOW. ‘Latter Has Confidence in trance! | but Ceremony Is Postponed for Investigation, lah Dunlap Jordan, a rich widow, of | sald to be a series of anonymous ietters | sent to Mrs, Jordan, Mayor Smith, of Macon, and others, These letters alles: that Minister Corea already has a wite and several children, and charge him with being an adventurer, that he does not pay his debts, that he is of negro lineage, and that he is only to marry | Mrs. Jordan for her fortune. ‘The first letter was written to Mayor Smith several weeks ago, on paper of the Hotel Manhattan, New York, and was mailed in this city, Mayor Smith turned the letter over to Mrs, Jordan's brother-in-law, who forwarded it to |New York, where rt was received by Mrs, Jordan, and read by her ber, Mr. Dunlap, her brother, and Minister Corea when they returned from Paris two weeks ago. Demands Investigation, Senor Corea was astounded at the contents of the communication, and im- mediately demanded a fuil investigation of his record by Mrs, Jordan's family He proposed a postponement of the wedding, which was originally set for Nov. 1, until the Investigation could be completed. Within the past few days Senor Corea has received another letter, written on Waldorf-Astoria paper and mailed in this city. The writer says in it that be knows of the charges that have been made against Senor Corea in the letter to Mayor Smith, and offers to remain quiet for $5,000. Senor Corea was di- feoted to send a jetter w "A, B. C., General Delivery, Baltimore,” it he wished to enter into negotiations. Mra. Jordan ts sald to have perteot confidence in her fiance, and refuses to believe the charges made against him by the anonymous writers, She con- sented to the postponement of the mar- nage only at Senor Corea’s request, and characterises the letter wholly slanderous, Well Kaown tn New York. Senor Corea is well known in this He has been in Washington eight ye and his standing In the Diplomatic Corps is of the highest, Members of the corps who have heard of the at- tacks upon him offered him every assistance in proving his standing. Sec- retary Hay, who holds thé Minister in high esteem, has requested the latier to send any inquirers to him, President Zolaya, of Nicaragua, cabled 4 request to Senor Calyo, Minister from Costa Rica, to represent him at Senor Corea’s wedding. In the opinion of dip- lomats this effectually disposes of the charge that Senor Corea t® married and establishes beyond question his standing In Nicaragua. CREE IRI | MUSHROOM Pecullar Combination of Condi- tipns Causes Edible Fungus to Sprout Beneath Covering of Floors in Harlem Institution. ity. Andrew Carnegie ts the only known man up to date for whom mushrooms | grow out of a wood floor covered with In the handsome brary which Me, Carnegie bullt for the city | Hundred and Twenty-ffth street, near Third avenue, at a cost of £100,000, three beds of mushrooms have been discovered, When the library was opened the coment under the wood flooring had not dried, this, and as It is waterproot it re- talned the moisture oosing’ from the cement. A thick growth started, eating its Way into the wood, Persons walking over the linoleum noticed that it sank be- neath their feet | The linoleum had rotted away at the bottom and in some places in the three rooms where the strange phenomena wae observed a dark gray growth woe found. Much of the flooring was ruined. Carnegie ts -ertial to mushrooms. V6 THE COST OF MEAT RICH CREAM WITH Negro Lineage Against Nica-| | at His Request to Give Time) Reports from Washington and Macon, | Ga, announce that tho marriage of Benoe Lule F. Corea, the Nicaraguan Minister to this country, and Mrs. | Macon, has been indefinitely postponed, | The cause for the postponement i) Linoleum waa placed over | SODETY GALT 6 UNOER A Operation for Appendicitls Will Be Performed on Miss Helen White Stevens at*St. Luke’s Hospital To-Day. MRS. BERKELEY MOSTYN, HER MOTHER, WITH HER. Daughter of the Late Alexan- der H, Stevens, Engaged to Wed Gilliat Schroeder, Helen White Stevens, the elder) daughter of Mrs. Berkeley Mostyn, will| Under#o an operation for appendicitis at St, Lulee's Hoeplital to-day, Dr, Robert Abbe aken to the hospital from Se: | her moth y place at Far Rock- way, Mrs. Mostyn has taken a private room In the | w tecovered from the effects of the opara- | Miss even about twenty-two | years old and yular in soc Aur. NK made her debut at a large reception or hi vy her grand rth late Mrs, W Ay the White residence, Madison ave nd Soventy-eigatn street, The le Alexander If, Stophe: was her father, beauty and wit, She ts noted for her Subject to Freq t Attacks, | For over a year Miss Stevens has | been subject to frequent attack# of sppendicitis, but an operation was p thought necessary until last Wed: day, when a consultation of physicians was held. Her general health ts excel- | lent. and it is thought she wilt safely | pase the operation, When taken to the | hospital she was accompanied by her mother, her aunt. Mra. Ledyard Stey- ene, dnd Dr, Rutherford Morris, the family phys clan. Bngaced to De Married, Miss Stevens's encagement to Gilllat | Schroeder. the younger son of Mr. and | Mrs, Gilliat Schroeder, was announced | three years ago, Schroeder's brother, | to marry Miss Nathalie Mrs, Mostyn was married to Mr, Mos- tyn about two years ago, Before her marriage to Mr. Stevens she was Helen Chanler White, a daughter of the Inte Dr, and Mrs. Octavius A, White, Mrs, Mostyn has made arrangements to take ter daughter to Rurove.for the winter as goon as she has sufficiently recovered from the operation to stand the voyage. They will be accompanied by Mrs, Ledyard Stevens, BRONX PAR PYTHON A A CLRUS STIR Snake House Employees Heave Sighs of Relief when 20-Foot Reptile Is Landed in Box! Ready for Trip to Florida. A sigh of reliet cate trom every lip when the last nail had been driven home tn the box in which the largest python in the collection ef the Bronx Vark menagerie will travel In solitary confinement to Piorida, to spend the winter with a cireus. The snake, which is twenty feet long, was brought here | from Singapore, by Carl Hagenbeck. This particular python has always been a great source of trouble to the attendants in the snake house at the Park, and has endangered the lives of some of the meo more than once, When the time came to box up the reptile for shipment, the attendants were not par- tioularly eager to undertake the job. It took the combined efforts of five men and several hours’ work to convey the snake from th othet building, coll (t properly in the box and fasten down the lid. {Buy BORDEN’S Bran All brands bearing the ** BORDEN’? name teed absolutely pure and unadulterated, BORDEN’S Bagle Brand Condensed Milk and Peerless Brand Evaporated Cream pipes HAVE NO EQUAL for the Nursery and Household, | | Avoid purchashig unknown brands | |] been skimmed before condensing. BORDEN’S CONDENSED Young Woman, Who Is the War Vessels of Admiral Ber | See that the label bears the name of Avo SstusTireres, SHOT AT WHILE IN AND HAD TO HURRY AM ford’s Fleet Not Scene and Speedy Aid Assured. TANGIER, Morocco, Oct. British steamer Hercules 4 ache Tanaieny jeret i¢ operation will he performed hy pa & the river ead fae Miss Stevens was .argo, bringin) Change, | Brith of (forty-f that Larache The Hi ni 4 ritish interests, z % Admiral Heresford's s! a nies, are a ae from here and ¢ or it is pipers that each kept in free action, and BEECHAM PILLS are foremost of the few thi that will do it. 3 For Active Brains r liver must be right, IevLcnny conantea aire roperly their p functions, or your body wo the strain and your brain active. If you would have head and keen of DEECHANS PILES use ! | see how much more alive you For Perfect Hea | there is no; | famous Pil over the ~ it womanhood ami childhood ane BEECHAM’ PILLS Oc. and @ J 2 In Boxes, | Cowar The Coward Combination Shoo, The average shoe, ifqom= fortable at the toe is to loose at the instep, 1 Coward Combination Si fills a long felt want by Sete ting close up under the arch - and wrapping the in smooth and trim, = Single and double sole, ¥ JAMES S. COW. Pe | 268-274 Greenwich St., N. omare) (wean WaneeD ’ tye . mM n te " es ad > if \ Grean i often made from milk wileh til MILK CO., New York,

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