Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, October 04, 1897, Image 4

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    Royal makes the loud pure,
wholesome and delicious.
POWDER
Absolutel/ Pure
FREELAND TRIBUNE.
Established 1838.
PUBLISHED EVERY
MONDAY AND THURSDAY
HY THE
TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited.
OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE, I
Make all tinmen orders, checks, etc., payable to !
the Tribune Printing Companu, Limited.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
One Year $1.50
Six Months 75
Four Months ft'
Two Months 25
The (lute which the subscription is paid to is
on the address label of each paper, the change
of which to a subsequent date beeomes u
receipt for remittance. Keep the ligures in
advance of the present date. Report prompt
ly to this olliee whenever paper is not received.
Arrearages must be paid when subscription
is discontinued.
FREELAND, PA., OCTOBER 4, 18U7.
Congressman Williams' Views.
Congressman Williams is sojourning
at Colorado Springs, Colorado. The
other day lie was waited upon by a
reporter of the Denver lit publican and
the following interview took place:
"M. B. Williams, member of congress
from the center of the Wyoming valley
coal fields, Pennsylvania, was in the
city yesterday at the Brown Palace
hotel. Mr. Williams is a practical miner
himself, having risen from the ranks,
and now owns and operates one of the
largest collieries in the Wyoming fields.
'1 have been greatly distressed by the
condition of affairs in the coal mining
districts,' said he. 'I have been in busi
ness for myself since 1878, and am now
employing 700 men, and in all that time
I have never had a strike and have
never had any trouble of any kind with
my men. I have always found that it
was best for all parties concerned to
treat the men right, and that when they
were treated right 1 was pretty certain
of fair treatment myself.' Continuing,
lie said:
"1 have had no news from home since
the unfortunate affair at llazleton, and
am therefore not prepared to express a
decided opinion regarding it. I know
all the parties concerned, and must
admit that I was very much surprised
at the action of the sheriff, whom I have
always regarded as a remarkably cool
and level-headed man. At the same
time 1 feared some trouble when the
sheriff's force was called in, and on my
way West called at the company's oflice
in New York and advised them to settle
with their men on the best terms possi
ble.
"From what I have seen in the daily
papers. I am inclined to believe that the
sheriff was hasty. The right of the men
to march peaceably has not yet been
definitely settled; it will undoubtedly
be carried into tho supreme court, and
pending a final decision the utmost care
and judgment should have boon exercised
in carrying out the decision of the court.
Of course, I cannot speak positively on
the subject, as there may have been
circumstances that have not appeared
in the published report.
"My men are nearly all Poles and
Hungarians. I have got along with
them pretty well, but they are so ignor
ant tiiat it is difficult to handle them.
They do not understand and are extreme
ly tenacious. I do not think the em
ployment of this class of miners lias
been an entire success.
"The strikes, when they occur, are
very difficult to settle and are a very
grave menace to the interests of all
parties concerned. The stories that
have been published about the low earn
ings of the operatives refer in the main
to the soft coal regions. In the anthra
cite section of the state the men have
not been required to work for starvation
wages. In the Lehigh valley the wages
paid are much lower than in the Wyom
ing valley, and 1 believe the men work
longer hours then they do with us.
"There is no doubt that very serious
results are likely to follow this last un
fortunate affair at Ha/.leton. and I am
afraid it will load to an indefinite pro
longation of the strike. 1 think very
much of the trouble might have been
avoided had there been an earnest effort
to come to an understanding with the
men, such as I have a ways advised."
To < ure Conatipatlon Forever.
Take Cascan ts Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c.
If C. CC. failj re, drugg ste refund money.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The fac- /p
55T &
Your Only Body.
The Medical and Surgic-al Reporter
gives the following practical advice:
"Think deliberately of the house you I
live in—your body. Make up your !
mind firmly not to abuse it. Eat noth
ing that will hurt it. Wear notihing
that distorts or pains it. Do not over
load it with victuals or drink or work.
Give yourself regular and abundant
sleep. Keep your body warmly clad.
Do not take cold; guard yourself
against it. If you feel the firs* symp
toms, give yourself heroic treatment.
Get into a fine glow of heat by exer
cise. This is the only body you will
have in this world. Study deeply and
diligently the structure of it, the laws
that govern it, the pains and penalty
that will surely follow n violation of
every law of life and' health."
A gentleman who was fishing in a
secluded: lake, in New York, became
tired andi sleepy. So he anchored his
boat near the shore in a shady spot, and
lay down for a nap. After awhile he
was awakened by something blowing
in his face, and* when he opened!his eyes
he saw a big stag standing in the water
beside the boat, with his nose close to
the fisherman's face. The gentleman
I lay quite still, rather enjoying the situ
! ation. The stag investigated him in
this manner for several minutes, until
i another boat came around the corner
| into the little cove, ajid then the animal,
i with a bound, disappeared in the woods.
The gentleman had firearms with him.
but, to his credit as a sportsman, be it
said, he did not atempt to shoot.
A Georgia stor}' from real life: A
negro rented a farm from a man who
! had a store, but for everything he need
; cd during the year the renter paid cash.
' At the close of the season he had a fine
crop on hand and plenty of money in
sight. The rent was paid in full, and lie
solicited another year's lease from his
( landlord. "You can't rent from me no
more," said the landlord. "I'm done
, with you for good." "Didn't 1 pay you
for all I got?" asked the negro, "and
ain't I ready to paj- 3 011 in advance for
another year?'" "That's just where the
trouble comes iu," replied the landlord.
"You're too fond of pnyin' cash. What
I want in my business is a nigger that
farms on a credit!"
Though the recent Mississippi flood
broke the record in Louisiana by three
and a half feet, the levee S3"stem pro
tected 85 per cent, of the land of the
state subject to overflow. The state
engineer of Louisiana reports that the
total length of the levee lines is 81C
miles on. the main river and2so miles on
interior streams, and the total width of
j the crevasses only one and three-fourth
miles. In view of the severity of the
j test the engineer claims a high degree
of success for the levee system.
J All old man died in West Virginia re
-1 cently who was wealthy and had made
his money in an extraordinary way.
He smelled out oil wells. When oper
ators were about to begin work 011 an
oil tract, this man would walk over
the ground, sometimes crawling 011 his
hands and knees, sniffing like a dog.
According to the stories told about him.
he had made dozens of locations for
wells, and was invariably successful.
It may have been only a lucky guess,
: but it is queer that it never failed.
! We are told that the supreme court
of California the other da 3' upheld a
decision of u lower court which involved
a declaration from the bench that the
I law dOes not recognize hypnotism. One
i of the judges, McFarland, while not dis
pensing from the opiniou as it applic-d to
that particular case, expressed liis dis
agreement with the theor3" involved.
Hypnotism, he seemed to think, might
in some cases compel recognition by 1 he
law.
A Maine man who recentl3* sued his
neighbor for occupying three inches of
his land was not a little discomfited
when, a survey proved that lie himself
. was the trespasser to the extend of two
feet andi eleven inches. Ills overt hrow
was complete when his neighbor shook
hands with him and told him that the
; fence needn't be moved*.
I While the rain was pouring" down in
I torrents, a young couple of Caro, Mich.,
who atteuded a church social, were mar
ried in the open. On the lawn Frank
Lawrence, the bridegroom, and Miss
Sadie, the bride, took their positions,
with an umbrella hoisted over their
heads, and the clergyman pronounce d
them man and" wife.
| A Georgia mob recentl3* gave a ncgi o
culprit the privilege of choosing the
, manner of his death. The victim de
sired to kill himself eating water
melons, but his captors were unanimous
in the belief that such a death would
involve no punishment, and that it was
not their purpose to reward but to
avenge.
! "Nervous prosperity" is a diseu' , ac
cording to a Philadelphia physician,
| who declares that, it is caused by a
man's head being turned b3* success.
In. spite of this warning men. will go
011 risking their nerves to catch pros-
I perity. Very few are dying of this new
I disease at the present time.
• The noted man in Auburn, Me., is a
I man who is publicly known to have
I worn the same straw hat 2G summers
! and the same cloth cap for 12 winters
without a break for repairs or renova
' tion.
UPPER LEHIGH NOTES.
A new Hungarian was hurt while ,
jumping on No 5 loeie on Friday* morn- >
ing. 11 is foot slipped and one of the car
wheels passed over his leg between his
knee and ankle. The cut required
eleven stiches. He was taken to the
hospital next day.
Yesterday's Philadelphia Press con
tained a very good portrait of Paul
Dasch, who is making fame and friends
as the Democratic candidate for pro
thonotary.
Mrs. John 11. O'Donnell, of Chicago,
is the guest of her mother, Mrs. Rose
Burns.
Miss Ella Campbell is enjoying her
vacation at Atlantic City.
Dr. 11. M. Neal is visiting friends in
I Connecticut.
! Calvin Boyer spent Saturday in White
; Haven.
Bigotry IN BIICUH Township.
Miss Mary Mcllale, a school teacher,
! was on Thursday granted an alternative
• writ against Jeremiah Wood and others,
school directors of Bucks township, this
• county, and had an alternative writ
awarded to compel them to permit her
to teach the school or show cause why.
I The plaintiff in her petition alleges she
1 was employed at a salarv of $22 a month
j to teach, the school for the ensuing year:
i that she taught ail day on Tuesday, Sep
! tember 14. 18U7, but on the next day she
found the school barricaded and she was
I refused admittance by two of the school
directors. She alleges that she as el
for a reason and was told that after her
appointment the school directors learned
| that she was Irish and a Catholic and
would rather see the schoolhouso burn
down than have her teach.
Editor Joyce Found Guilty.
Thomas J. Joyce, editor of the Black
Diamond, of Mahanoy City, was on trial :
last week in the Dauphin county court j
j en a charge of libel, preferred by Joseph
: Wyatt, of Shenandoah, who was scr- j
| goant-at-arms of the house at the last |
session of the legislature. He alleges i
I that Joyce printed an article in his j
; paper relative to Wyatt | remising half j
of his salary to Senator Coyle for the !
appointment. The prosecutor was rep- (
| resented by Senator MeCarrell, and the ;
defendant by John E. Fox. Wyatt took
the stand and denied the charge. The!
jury returned a verdict of guilty.
Heavy Sentence for Burglary.
A man named Edward Barnes, or |
Warren, who is thought to be a profes-,
sional burglar, who was trim! on the !
charge of burglary and breaking into the
| cottage of Walter Pettebone. at Harvey's
j Lake, was found guilty 011 Friday, lie
j was sentenced by Judge Lynch to pay a
i line of S2OO, costs of prosecution and he :
imprisoned in the penitentiary for four
Kcniion.
"Your father," he cried, passionately,
j "has no reason to object to 1113' suit."
"Oh, yes, he has," she sighed, with a
deepening of tlie habitual sadness of
her eyes. "You are smaller than papa,
you know."
Woman, it will perhaps be recalled,
is endowed with a powerful and pe
culiar intuition to aid her in tracing
the intricate relations of causes to ef
| fects.—Detroit Journal.
Xo Procrastination.
"Mary!" came the voice from the
top of the stairs.
I "Yes, mamma," came the answering
| voice from the parlor.
"I want to speak to you a minute."
"Jut as soon as I say 'Good-night' to
Ilarold."
"Very well. But, remember, I shall
not allow you a minute over an hour
and a half for it."—Chicago Post.
I, CRM Trouble MONTE.
"My wife has been studying geology,
and the house is so full of rocks I can't
1 find a place to sit down."
"What will you do about it?"
"I've induced her to take up astron
omy."
"Is that any better?"
"Of course. Sim can't collect speci
mens."—Cripple Creek Times.
"What sort of impression did Clara's
young man make on you?"
"When I first met him?"
"Yes."
"Well, he was scorching, with his head
j down, and the impression he made upon
, me was a bruise I didn't get over for
i a week."—Chicago Tribune.
JIIMI IIN n Test.
; "Sometimes I think," said a dejected
man, "that ther orter to be tax 011 hus- !
bands."
! "What for?" asked his friend.
"I'd just like to see," said the man of
1 the first part, "whether she would pay
, it as willingly us she does on the pug
dog."—Cincinnati Enquirer.
01:1 EttonKli for Any tit In nr.
1 "I've brought you some lace for your
stall at the bazar, Lizzie- I'm afraid
it's not quite old enough to be really
valuable. I had it when I was a little
girl."
"Oh, that's old enough for anything,
dearest. How lovely 1 Thanks so very
much.*'—Tit-Bits.
The Nntlonul Falling.
Jackson —I'm going to start a new
paper, and I think I'll call it the Um
brella.
Merrill —Why?
i Jackson—Because everybody wh*> I
sees it will take it.
Merrill—Yes, they'll take it, but they ;
won't pay for it.—Up-to-Date.
For Itrnln Food.
! Dorus (somewhat in the literal line)
—Naggus, I'm trying to collect material !
for another novel. Have 3*oll anything !
to suggest?
Naggus (somewhat In tlie book re
, viewing line) —Yes. Eat victuals that* J
j are rich in phosphorus.—Chicago Trib- |
Why lit* Wait Excused.
"You wish to be relieved from jury
duty, but you haven't a good reason/'
said the judge,
"It's public spirit," said the un
willing talesman, "on the score of econ
omy. I have dyspepsia, judge, and 1
never agree with anybody. If 1 goon
this jury there will be a disagreement,
and the county will have to go to the
expense of a new trial."
"Excused," said the judge.—Green
Bag.
Tliose Millinery It II In.
She—l think one tiling is very un
fair. A woman is forced to reveal by
her name whether she is married or
not. All men are called "Mr.," and
there is no way to distinguish the mar
ried from the single by their names.
He—Oh, yes. there is. it's very easy.
She^—How, I like to know?
He—Just examine the checks he
signs.—Detroit Free Press.
A Trntli fnl Snw,
When church Is out. and Jack and Jill
In linked seclusion stray.
It takes them two long, lonely hours
To pick their homeward way:
And as It's scarcely half a mile.
No reason can I find
Why It should take so very long.
Except that "love Is blind."
Puck, j
TO JIDUR IIV Al* PEAR A ACES.
Guest —Is this steak broiled?
Waiter—Yes, sah. What did you
t.hink had been done to it, sah?
Guest—l did not know but it had
been embalmed.—N. Y. Journal.
Utility.
There must be some who labor hard
This old world to exalt,
To furnish occupation for
The people who find fault.
—Washington Star.
Sizing; Him lip.
First Tramp—Yer say dcr woman
dat gave yer der grub didn't b'lieve ye
war a gentleman in reduced circum
stances?
Second Tramp—Dat's what 1 said.
First Tramp—Did she t 11 ye so?
Second Tramp—No; she brought me
a knife ter eat den pie wid.—N. Y. I
Truth.
Ihnv It Happened.
"1 can't understand how such a hid- '
cous thing as the doctrine of total de
pravity ever came to be promulgated.
"Well, man was bound to reach some
curious conclusions in the ell'ort to ac
count for his neighbors." Chicago
Journal.
A .Model Yautli.
Rev. Goodman—Y'ou are a very noble |
little fellow. Tommy. Now tell me what
deep, underlying principle prompted
you to forgive those wicked boys who
called you ugly names?
Tommy—They was bigger than me.
—Brooklyn Life.
A r*owcrfi|l Argument.
Iler Fatiher —So you wish to marry I
my daughter?
The Diplomat—l'es—but a dearer
wish of mine is to comfort your owe.
declining years.
Iler Father—Say no more. You'll do.
—N. Y. Journal.
Providing: Tlicm Practice,
i Keedick—How wonderful are the
ways of nature.
Fosdick—ln what respect?
Keedick—lt brings along the greeu
apple season just when the young doc
tors are being graduated.—Judge.
Struck by the Old Mun.
Van Clove—Was Teddie Though!less
much impressed with Miss Vander
whack when lie called on her last night?
De Caverly—l don't know about thcit,
but I understand he was much struck
j by her old man.—Town Topics.
Fresh Allowance Needed.
! "I suppose you keep track of your
| running expenses, my sou?"
"Oil, yes, father. The wrong horse
I won every race this week."—Detroit
j Free Tress.
Tliey Ought To lie.
"They seem to be interested in each
j other."
"They are. lie is waiting for her
i husband to die and she is waiting for
; him to get a divorce."—Harlem Life.
Breaking It Grudnally.
llowso —Slobs is a kind-hearted man.
Cuniso—Why?
i llowso—When his wife's pet poodle
died he got a friend who stuttered to
break the news to her.—N. Y. World.
An Indignity.
"What's the colonel so tearing inad
! übcut, doctor?"
"1 gave him some medicine to be
j taken three times a day in half a glass
' of water."—Detroit Free Tress.
A Choice of Routed.
She—Yes. Mr. Detrop has dropped
1 - lit of my life forever.
lie—Elevator or coal hole.?— Chicago
I Record.
In the Conservatory.
"You are my ideal; wou't you be my
wife?"
"1 prefer to remain your ideal."—
' Brooklyn Life.
The Height of Cruelty.
"Cruel, heartless woman!" cried Lord
, ' ashibroke. "You told ine you loved
ne. and vet I discowr that you* father
1 - a bttukrupt!"—Tit-Hits.
CHOICE SELECTIONS OF VERSE.
The Day We Gathered Golden-Hod.
A day of glancing arrow poirAs,
Yef swathed in shadows, olive deep,
When curling leaves were shaken down
And drifted in a pungent heap;
When scarlet liowers fell asltep.
Each In a filmy pillow-pod,
And all the world was half adream —
The day we gathered golden-rod.
So still the air, in passing by
A rick of gathered corn- we heard
A harvest spider's startled flight
Wherein a yellow blade was stirred.
Some late and lingering autumn bird
Sang low. his lazy headanod:
No haste nor harshness seemed to mar
The day we gathered golden-rod.
Wild bramble's trailed a thorny web;
The sumac's lighthouse towered high:
And damson plum.s made purple spots
In orchards that we wandered by.
A llgirt was In the autumn sky;
A warmth was in the autumn sod:
Deep autumn turquols tipped the heights,
The day we gathered golden-rod.
Our ways have somehow slipped apart
Since then, and you would think it
strange
The trifles of one idle day
Arise through every bitter change
And follow me In life's wide range;
To me, perhaps, it seems as odd
That Time will never let me lose
The day we gathered golden-rod.
—Ha-ttie Whitney, In Woman's Home Com
panion.
Why f
Across the waters drear, with force un
spent,
I Cometh the ol<d unanswered question:
Why?
The universal air is filled and rent
i With v.'oful voicea that forever cry
Against the Judgments of the law of Fate-
Forgive the doubt—but Is It love or hate?
With us always the question and the
doubt—
i The darkness deepening as life grows old! ,
We wonder Why, and longing look about—
Yet still the dead their sacred silence
hold:
We cry to thern—they answer not again— ■
And love is twice tried In the throes of i
pain.
All prayer seems useless as all quest Is !
vain,
Save that at last we shall be satisfied—
Somewhere and sometime there Is end of J
pain,
Where love will live forever and abide— '
Somewhere and sometimes there is perfect i
rest;
The answer to the dou-bt Is: God knows
best.
1 —Charles L. Ilolsteln, in Indianapodls Jour
nal.
IlecnnHp.
I love you not because your eyes
Blue as the blue skies are,
Nor yet because your cheek outvies
The summer roses far.
The locks of gold that cling and curl
Around your forehead fair.
Your ruby lips, and teeth of pearl
Did ne'er my heart ensnare.
'Tis true the blackbirds in. the trees,
The larks In ether clear,
Will often cease their melodies
And list your voice to hear.
To match your hands no lilies grow
In wood nor garden plot:
But for white hands and accents low.
Sweetheart, I love you not.
But 'tis because that voice so soft '
Has kindly words for all;
Because 'the tears of pity oft
From your bright eyes down fall:
Because your hands are strong to do
Good for -the poor and tone;
Because your heart Is brave and true
My heart Is all your own.
—Chambers' Journal.
One to Love Hlin.
There was never a star In the dark o' the
night—
In the skies that were bendln' above me,
And never a lily that loaned to the light
Till the Lord sent a woman to love me.
| For all the beauty of stars and of skies
I found in the light of a woman's dear eyes
Then springtime kissed ail o* the winter
away,
And the bloom and the bright were above
A star for tlie night and a sun for the day
When the Lord sent a woman to leve rac.
And earth seemed as fair as the heaven
above
For Just the sweet sake of a woman's dear
love!
| —Frank L. Stanton. In Chicago Times-
Herald.
She'* touting Home.
' [ The summer girl is coming heme,
All browned and plump and rosy,
| Prepared to make the winter seem
Extremely nice and cozy.
She's bathed, and danced, and walked, and
smiled,
And read a book and flirted,
Till to the young man she has left
The whole wet-Id seems deserted.
The flush of health is in her cheeks,
With fun her eyes ure dancing;
The flush of conquest in her h< art
Makes life seem more entrancing.
Ah! soon she'll be the winter girl,
And we shall bow before her,
For she was made to be adored,
( And, therefore—we adore her.
—St. Paul Globe.
Happy Women.
Impatient women, as you wait
In cheerful homes to-night to hear
The sounds of steps that, soon or late,
Shall come as music to your ear.
Forget yourselves a little while,
■ I And think in pky of the pain
Of women* Who will never smile.
To hear a coming step again.
With babes that in their cradles sleep,
Or cling to you in perfect trust
Think cf the mothers left to weep,
Their intents lying in the dust.
And when the step you wait for comes.
And all your world is full of light,
Oil, wonn n, safe in happy hemes,
Pray for all lonesome souls to-night.
—N. Y. Tribune.
A Xote of Life.
Take it as you find it—
Black or beaming sky:
Smile, and never mind it-
Little time to sigh.
i i Fast the-clouds are creeping
Over heavens of blue:
Little time for weeping—
(Skles'll weep for you!)
Keep the pathway steady—
Ileaven is not so high:
When God calls, say "Ready"—
Smile, and kiss good-by!
Atlanta Constitution.
••I Care for Nobody—No. Not I!"
(A little word-catch.)
| Who cares for nobody cares for none:
j And nobody need suppose,
I If nobody cares f.rr nobody, one
1 | Need care—if nobody knows.
i If nobody knows that nobody cares—
And nobody cares to know
That nobody cares for nobody—whesc's
The good of minding it so!
—St. Nicholas
Come Apart anil nest Awhile.
Come apart and Test awhile:
There are many coming, going,
i Whose dry lips forget to smile,
Who forget to rea.p. for sowing:
1 From the hot street's surging tide
. I Rest Is but one step aside,
j —Arthur Willis Colton, In- Indies' Hpm r
Journal.
AN OPEN LETTER
To MOTHERS.
WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE
EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD "CASTORIA," AND
" PITCHER'S CASTORIA," AS OUR TRADE MARK.
J, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Hyannis, Massachusetts,
was the originator of "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," the same
that has heme and does now on every
bear the facsimile signature of wrapper.
This is the original " PITCHER'S CASTORIA," which has been
used in the homes of the Mothers of America for over thirty
years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is
the hind you have always bought ? —r—r**' on e
and has the signature of wrap
; per. No one has authority from me to use my name ex
| cept The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is
| President /> *
March 8, 1897. A ,jo.
Do Wot Be Deceived.
Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting
a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer you
| (because he makes a few more pennies on it), the in
! gredients of which even he does not know.
"The Kind Yon Have Always Bought"
J URE OF
Insist on Having
The Kind That Never Failed You.
GREAT BARGAINS IN
Dry Goods, Groceries
and Provisions.
| Notions, Carpet, Boots and Shoes,
! Flour and Feed,
Tobacco, Cigars,
Tin and Queensware,
Wood aial Willowwa re,
Table and Floor Oil Cloth, Etc.
A celebrated brand of XX Hour
always in stock.
Roll Butter Rnd Eggs a Specialty.
| My motto is small profits and quick sales.
I always have fresh poods and am
turning my stock every month.
Every article is guaranteed.
| AMAITDUS OSWALD,
| N. W. Cor. Centre and Front Sis., Freeland.
P. F. McNULTY,
Funeral Director
and Embaiiner.
j ■<s
Prepared to Attend Cails
Day or Night.
South Centre street, Freeland.
V!ENNA:BAKERY.
J. B. LAUBACH, Prop.
Centre Street, Freeland.
| CHOICE BREAD OH ALL KINDS
j CAKES, AND PASTIiY, DAILY.
i FANCY AND NOVELTY CAKES
j BAKED TO ORDER.
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