1916-03-16 — Page 6

Daily Press 孖剌西報 All

holar Jarmer &&

The tire Merchany of the to

NAPIER JOHNSTONE'S

"SQUARE BOTTLE ”

WHISKY.

UNVARIED FOR OVER

150 YEARS. THE SAME TO-DAY AS IN

1745.

BEWARE

OF

IMITATIONS.

BOLE AGENTS IN HONGEONG:

LANE, GRAWFORD & CO.,

and from Axx. Wien MurchantO,

[38

THREE CHILDREN HAD ECZEMA ON SCALPS

Formed Crust. Went From Head to Ears and Neck. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Quite Healed Them,

50. Carilato. Rd., Fomford, Essex, Eng. --- *My three chlidren, agod mine, seven and five and a breaking out of running sores

on their scalpis.

They told us they

ha

D

ertama and

very ·DOLLÈG=

glous kind which

we should have

great frouble to

get them cured

of It was con-

tinually discharg- ing a sticky yol- Tow quid which

dried and then seemed to form a crust which broke out again. Starting on the crown of their bonds It traveled down be hind their ears to their necks and where the children weraiched they had for little sores on their hands. Bat the worst places wewe behind their cars which formed sores ne big na crown plem.

**Wo were given a box of ofnzanent but I cannot say that it did any good at all. Boeing sbo Cuticura Scap and Ointment advertised WO WIDGE for a sample. Upon using some we found that they allayed the irritation also stopped the discharge so we bought the Cuticura Boup and Cintment and in six wocks they quito cured them of the oczomA without losing any disfigurement."(Bigood) Mr. J. Partick, Jan. 23, 1914.

Samples Free by Post

Although Cuticure Soap and Ointment are sold throughout the world, a satuple of each with 32-p.. Skin Bookc will be mat from supon requet, Address post-card: F. New- bery & Sons, 27, Charterorise Sq., London,

42-13

HAVE YOU A BAD LEG

with woods that deskates/m・ utherwise. pachnan Meconded with alemmation and prokling cheek when you presejour ingue, im the indamad part je femeran: the fmsemalna? :IC 20 under the skis you Save polem, which dides all the gomačiön you home:eded. Por kaps your icines are evolien, shu jelas being alberstal, the au vin de ander, round

·asy be magada; the lenses, il pillować 20.000-

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Joluta, Housemaid's Zone"; Pakond Hands,

GRASSHOPPER

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IN CAPEBLES. 18-WIFE-ARD-18-TYER-

[32

VISITORS AT HOTELS.

HONGKONG HOTEL Mr&Mr A. E Ador H&M HL. J.

Althouse

THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 16ta, 1926,

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“OUTRAGE” BY OUR TROOPS. NEW ZEALAND AND JAPAN.

GERMAN CHARGES ANSWERED BY SIR W. ROBERTSON,

A TISSUE OF FALSEHOODS,

A note verbale addressed by the Ger- man Foreign Offico to the United States Ambassador at Berlin containing allega- tions of inhumanity against British and French soldiers, and the reply of Sir

GRACEFUL ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF OUR FAR EASTERN ALIY'S SERVICES.

WAR WORK DRESS FOR WOMEN.

QUAINT. WORKSHOP AND FARM

FASHIONS.

An interesting ceremony took place at Don't you ever lose patience ?" I asked the Japaness Embassy ast month, us brief the Labour Master-a pun of sympathy ly announced by cable, when Sir Thomas all compact; iron grey and smiling and Mackenzie, High Commissioner for Newbenign. A farmer had just gone out, and Zealand, handed the Marquis Inouyé, the office tingled with his sarcasm about Japanese Ambassador, a beautiful model in the girls who went hocing turnips in open-

W. R. Robertson, on behalf of Viscount silver gilt of a Maori war canoe, weighing work stockings, and patent shoes French, denying in strong for the 200 ounces, subscribed for by members of charges against our troops, are issued by the New Zealand Expeditionary Force as

the Press Bureau,

With the note varbafe-dated October 8-

a gift to Captain Kato and officers of the Japanese cruiser Hutt, which assisted to convoy the first New Zealand contingent to Egypt, and as a token of appreciation of their kindness.

were enclosed cop as of three records con- taining the sworn testimony of witnesses, "according to which the following in- stances of cruel conduct of French and British troops towards German prisoners of war are to be considered as established." Twenty-four officers, nun-commissioned Three charges are made by the German officers and men of the New Zealand Ex- Government, two against French troops and one against British troops. The Bri-peditionary Force were present. They were received by the Ambassador and the Marchioness Inouyo, and after the presen tation were entertained to tea. In making

tish case is

Between March 12 and 17, 1915, Bri- fish troops, in front of their trenckes at Aubers, tied a wounded German officier. stellvertreter to a tree, opened fire on D. him when he waved his bandkerchief to the German dings, and repulsed by their fire the attempts made by the Germans to free him from his desperate position,"

Statements in support of the charge are farnished by a non-commissioned officer boarer lance-corporal named Engelbert Joseph Bischoff, who were told the story by a wounded Bavarian soldier,

said:

the use of quarreling with human nature

Never ecoed the master. "What's Why, if a man crawled in here on all fours end asked for a job as artillery horse, I'd advise him to wait till he'd grown sixteen hands!" And the exchange shook with the master's mirth, an

LA PLUS GRANDE VICTOIRE

ANGLAISE

Under this heading, M. Joseph Reinach. writing under the pseudonym of Polybe, has published in de Figaro an eloquent comment on the recent law of conscription voted by the British Parliamont. It must be noted that M. Reinach, one of Gam belta's young lieutenants, has shown him- self a masterly writer, and his daily articles in le figaro claim authority in all political circles

LA VIEILLE ANGLETERDE.

*** England, during her long history, has wen great victories, on land and sea, of the two worlds, successively her end "gainst us against almost all the nations unies, her friends, her clients. Her great cst victory-which no other will surpass, not even the oan she will gain with us and our other Allies against Germany, bib which will be only a consequence of it, she has won over herself.

"We've got to recognise that women are

She is the country of old franchises, of women and jelly good workers too, if you individual liberty-reaching, sometimes. ask me. Without them victory will tarry, the borders of anarchy-of the ineralable I don't know-unless because it rhymes Born of the sea, she is sea-proud, as if says Lloyd George. Why he said tarry home-boiter defended than a feudal burg. with marry and he thought his girl muha stamp of aristocracy. A geological eva- tioneers were furnishing homes with the ution, as thousands have occurred during aid of bombs and high-explosive shells, hundreds of centuries, has made of her an island; it is God himself who has sur- rounded her with a silver belt. Forbid- den to touch God's work. England is, with the United States of Aworion, the richest country in the world. She is Carthage with the addition of Shakespeare and Nowton-rich enough to pay for her glory and her army.

“ Why shouldn't they look smart, any way? Why shouldn't the chauffeuse make the most of her oilskins, and the tran-con- ducter glance at the glassy advertisement she knows 11 tell her if her cap's on straight All things in reason,

L'APTEAL AUX VOLONTAIRES,

A moment always happens in the life

Capt & Mrs A. Fresor hir & are. B. Shaw pamed George Weidmann and a stretcher- escort His Imperial Japanese Majesty don't go well with oily smears and honour of all nations when riches, which can do

Maier Franca

Capi. & Man E. M.

French

Mr H. J. Frám

Me Danmam Tuiler Mr 3.Gibb Mr T.. Gelder

Men E, Y. Goggin Mr V. Gouldbourn *Mr & Mew J. Włania. Mr A. G. Gordon B Mr & Mrs R. drum:

mbaw Capt TP. H MFG. F. L. Harrison

hr D. o, Sholliam

Mr sa ma L. W.

Simmons

Mas M. Blads Mrs H. Speos "Me A. B. Sorenson

J. Stalker

Már H. H. Tayler me W. B. Tyler

MrEn.ioser Mra Mia Wallace-

Mr & Mrs W.J. Wells MJ. F. Wright

· King Rowand HOTEL.

Mra Russel Almond

Mr G. Bannerman Mr & Mas T. 8. Unang Mr. & Mas A. Ciparso

Man Corbett

Mr O. Dinger

MT. N. Gregory Mr B. Grieve

| My T. Gunn

Med Mrs Hammmand:

okildran

Ales W. G. Passmore Mr W. J. Pringle am H. A. Hamasy MƒJF. Beid

0. B. Richardson Mr Robson Dr & Mrs 8. Same Mr.F.. Bliger *me F. J. Howert Min 15. Sylvester Min Square: Mr G. LL. Soper Mr E. M. Baigh Mr J. Jonnaton and Me a Man E.

ildren

Tawney and son ala 7,couplejako Min J, Tawney Me & km C. A.

Mr H. Thornton Kofold

Tibosert

Me * Mm Wu,

Jackson

Mr A. Lambdan

Min E G. Lambden Mr. W. D. Les Mixi Massy Mr D. Moors Mr H. Marshy Mr & Mr M

Mr. E. C. Norris

Man Newman

A

NOK-EXISTENT TREE,

contemp- covered itself with

Make up your mind that our substi- tutes cling to dress. 'Course, some of 'em overdo it! I'm sorry to see fine ladies. with dangly earnings at the lathe Jewels able dirt. But that's a transition stage, a lot, are not sufficient. The and I've got a hand in the transit What tible little army

I'm asked shall I wear on war service 1 each day by keen girls who want to look the part in the tragedy, Will a sports coat do? How shall I drest my hair?

And are skirts likely to catch in the

machines!

much glory. All the game, it was too small. England makes an appeal for volunteers. Nearly three millions answer the call. Magnificent effort, still insuffi

attached this name of Derby, already dient. New appeal, to which will remain

B0 written on "Sensible enough, you see. I tell 'em to

many beautiful pages. go and seo Miss Strachey's acetylene Nearly three millions of men enter their welders Fusory of acroplate parte, in names this time again, but only elevor dark-blue pinafores, tidy cape, and fear-hundred thousand bachelors, the majority some goggles, Regular witches, patting comprise married men, fathers of families. molten metal in a cloud of sparks, yet well Important lesson of social morale: the man on to their job, unconcerned as dairy ladies who has a home has twice the sentiment at the butter-tab. Or there are appealing of what he owes to his country. nodes in the Birmingham hives. 2.000 of the sprucest in drak overalls and linky khaki caplets lined with green, Engaged to our Allies, I fancy, for in the glare and clatter French or Belgian flags

I saw

Two millions of married men, under

presentation Sir Thomas Mackenzie Your Excelency,-When the first con- tingent or the New Zealand Expoaionary Furces teft the Dominion upon their long voyage to the seat of war, they had the the accompanying honour of having in skip baki, The New Zealand officers and men highly appreciated this evidence of the value of the Aliance between our two great nations, and Captain Kato and his smp's company, by their many acts of kind. The mattor was referred to the British ness, endeared themselves to all the New Headquarters in France, and Lieutenant Zealanders who took part in that great General Sir W. R. Robertson, after in-voyage. It was resolved by Major General quity, replied on behalf of Viscount Sir Alexander Gudley, his officers, non- French. The positions where the alleged commissioned officers and men, to ask Cap incident took place were portions of the tain Kato and the officers of the Ibuki to Third Corps and the Indian Corps, but accept a small souvenir of this agreeable the commanding officers of both corps ro and historic voyage, and it is a pleasing ported that nothing was known of the mast fact that the suggestion of a presentation ter, the commander of the Third Corps add originated from the rank and file.All ing that there were in that part of the were proud to subscribe, and we in London line no trees to which anyone could have were entrusted to give affect to their wishes been tied, and the distance between the by having something made, which could be lines was so great that it would have been of interest to the sailors of Old Japan. It impossible for anyone from the German line, to approach close enough to the Bri- would be an impossible task to equal the perfect workmanship and the exquisite tish lines to see any occurrence in detail."

taste of the Japanese designer and grafta man, but we hope this model of a Maori war canoe may prove of interest. The ably. An overlong skirt cost a girl attend-pulsory conscription of bachelors. Maorus are the original inhabitants of New at her life on the Tube not long ago. And British Army of to-morrow will reach over Zealand, brave and honourable warriors and fearless seamen, The model is a mini-as no metals may be carried where explo six millions of men.

BRITAIN HAS DONE THE DEED." ature and exact reproduction of the frail Ves are, hairpins are taboo in a place like Kynoeh's, all cordite and T.N.T. No

This is the great victory of England over boats in which they made their wonderful as your booth in the danger-house, her traditions, her prejudices, her habits

no steel buttons on voyage, and on which they fought many

blouse. But the big of mind, over self. Those who know: Eng memorable battles, The fact that his

armament firing are ever considerates land can estimate the price of it. The their new hands more than mindful of what Germans know England very well-just to Majesty King George inspected it at Buckingham Palace will no doubt add a the new duties entail her faithful and irreducible adhovence to special interest to the canes Your Excel They re making grand unney, those the right, to her pledged word which made leney, many of these who subscribed for

can afford to wear munition dress-for neutrality of Belginn was violated-just this little souvenir have since made their pretty creatures in the ugly crafts. They her declare war the very day when the last voyage, dying honourably for their evening dress follows it when the tale of to her implacable resolution to go the end, King and country, and for the cause we fuse and cartridge is over for the day. to the total victory which made the vote all have at heart, Others are still in the You'll see female troops in uniform at the of yesterday. fighting line, but a few--just recovered

Sheffield works: enger, deft-handed maidens The decision from their wounds are with mo to-day, who' machine a thousand copper shell On behalf of the subscribers as the official bonds in the ten-hour shift. representative of New Zealand in Great Britain I have the honour to ask you to bo

good as to receive and transmit this token of friendship and respect to Captain Kato and the officers of the Ibuki.

Sir William says this evidence appears to him conclusively to show that no such occurrence could have happened, but he draws attention to the following facts, which appear to show that the evidence produced by the Germans is far from being of a reliable nature.

In the first place, Weidmann and Bischoff stated that the wounded Bavarian lay out in the open for five days and five nights. "It is almost inconceivable that a man why had been unable to move during that time, and had been without food, should have had strength enough to crawl back to the German trenches from within five yards of the British lines" is Big William'e.com ment. Even admitting the physical pos- Hibility of such an extraordinary feat, the mental state of a man who had lain out badly wounded for five days and nights, without food or drink, would almost cer tainly be such as to render any of his statements totally unreliable."

Mr & Mm J. B

Underwood Mr Van Villot

Mr & Mrs G.

Watere

Mr & Mrs J.W. White › Me D; H÷Wiobol

PEAK HOTEL

Man Bowdiar

Mr W. E. Omborn Mr & Mrs Carmichael. Me V. L. Porkina Me F. W. Chry ***M= 0, skott Med Man O. D.Casulli Mek Has Grant Mr E. C. Gale

Smith Mr & Mrs Adam Mr & Mrs A. Findlay

Gibson

Mr & Mrs B. &. Hale Mr T. A. Hadeland Mrs T. J. R. Johan Mr Los JonOE Mr N. Linder Mr & Mrs H. Moines

and child

Smith Mr & Mrs A. §.

Sorenson

Mr G. E. Stewart Mr H. J. Vermey Mr & Mrs Vivian Findley Smith Mr&Mrs David Wood

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-POLYREED DAILY

La the oldest and sh11 Imaamirsanbly the bor Advertising madban, among the Native Community,

CONTRADICTORY STORIES,

waved from each machine.

"Our women workers must, dress suit-

forty years; one million of bachelors, in the heyday of life, had not answered the call. Out of this million of men, 400,000 services concerned in the national defence, belong to war factories, to industries and It is the others that the law is going to find and take from their homes on the com

The

vient des entrailles du coeur profond du pays.

The country is not, has never been, the electoral committees. The House of Com- mons has followed the country. It has fel- lowed the Government relieved of one or two rowers in soft water, disturbed by the trumpest. Hardly one hundred of Irish Nationalists, Radicals, and Socialists have been found, on the day of the vote, who looked only at their circonscription

That's why the nimble parlourmaid doffs cap and apron. She's earning £4 a week and dresses Course after hours) better than her late mistress ever did. What's more, she talks knowingly of Ex chequer Bonds Still, the soberest is apt to braid her hair with ribbons in the whiz zing shop. Why shouldn't the piecework lady look nice, though there's no one to

A great pity that the whole of Ireland see her bat the forewounaan amazos în kas Bot protested against the exception butcher-blue with her heart sot on gauges which does not associate her in the efforts and grenades!

of Greater Britain. A great error, too, "I've seen pretty brooches for the work which will hear upon the future. **To shop warrior, with On Shell-Work done be deprived of the honour of serving in the in red enamel. And I believe the stores French Army"! way a penalty of our an- are showing one-piece frocks from Paris cient law. There are privileges you must

Gowns for the claim pra with monstrous pockets. Ilift-girl, too; smocks for the gardener; and The part of Mr. Asquith, in this great for the window cleaner & mannish outfit act, is considerable; he has manoeuvred that passed in failure and a flood of tears with a skill more than a strategist, more "We'll soon straighten | than a diplomatist could envy him. Lord

"It will not have escaped notice that he is said to have stated that he escaped being The Japanese Ambassador replied:-- killed by feigning death, whereas the Sir Thomas Mackenzie and gentlemen witness adds that he had a rope tied to of the New Zealand Expeditionary Forces, hit leg by the English to prevent his re- —In the first place I abould like to say it turn to his own lines, the two statements is a great pleasure for me to receive you being, shaolutely contradictory. Further here to-day, especially as you have come to more, the German account states that be the bearer of such a pleasant mission. according to the wounded man's evidence Sir Thomas Mackenzie has been kind German officer sud some men attempted enough to allude in very cordial terma to to release the offizierstellvertreter when the assistance which our Navy has render he was tied to the tree, but did not sued in acting as convoys in the transport of ceed on account of the British fire. They the forces of the Overseas Dominions. approached, however, to within speaking need hardly say that the part which Japan distance, and learnt that he came from has played and is still playing in this great Wurzburg. If this statement be true, how is it that the German authorities have struggle in due not only to her desire to not obtained the evidence of the above fulfil the obligations of the Anglo-Japanese mentioned officer and men, since it is in- Allianco, but also to join hands with you conceivable that if a Germen officer had to uphold the cause of humanity and civil ever seen such an occurrence as the one sation This testimonial I shall have much described, he would not have reported it pleasure in transmitting to the favoured in order that official notice might be taken recipients, and on their behalf allow me to of it? Lastly, even if the evidence of the thank you, gentlemen, moet singerfly for officer and men cannot be obtained, how the splendid gift I am sure it will be is it that the German Government have highly treasured by them, not only as a not interrogated the wounded. man him perfect work of art, the more so as it has self, rather than rely on the hearsay of been inspected by his Majesty the King, Corporals Weidmann and Bischoff Doubt but also as a souvenir of the cordial sym- less the German Government ere anxious pathy and friendship which existed, nud to bring any accusation that they possibly which I hope will always exist, between can against our troops; but the mere fact the officers of our Imperial Navy and the that the only charge they have been able officers and men of the Now Zealand Forces, to produce rests on so flimsy a basis as the above appears to me to be an eloquent testimony to the humanity of our troops and their scrupulous observanes of the laws and customs of war.

PIPES TO COST MOBE.

A bria; pipe of any quality,” a briar root pipe manufacturer stated recently in

an interview with a representative of The

I am sure that the friendly spirit which prompted you to make this presentation to day will be highly appreciated by our whole Navy, and will be regarded in Japan as a fresh mark of goodwill between Gar respective countries,

SIKH INFANTRY IN FLANDERS.

Never mind.

out these modes and rebes-all the way Northeliffe has been the journaliste from the lady barber's she'll affect a red d'aimis." (brass), as Wellington, the Iron- and white stripe to the debt collector, Duke. whom we'll clothe in armour; the dentist, veiled against laughing-gas, and the girl grocer with ultra-Louis heels that reach the big cheese and side of bacon on the highest shelf.

I'd have the lady traveller in the latest mode and the gardener in the soonest bred girl will never know how to dress, She's no great success, and I'm not sorry for it. Neither is the man farmer bard, hard man fighting Nature's devis 611 the time, and now up against the angels!

mended. As a farmer I fear the town.

It's weird work for a woman to turn out at four on a winter's morning, call the cowe (which is nice as a song), aml go round with the bottle to the delicate calves. Twould puzzle Proteus to be dressy on jobs like these,

You'll see dairymaidg in dainty prints and aprons for the first week. The shepherdess in breaches and leggings would make Watteau and Lancret tura in their BILVER.

I was at a public meeting when the President of the Board of Agriculture in- troduced the shy and sceptical farmer who belts like a frightened rabbit at the swish

Marshal Roberts will sleep more peace- fully in his grave.

But however careful, obstinate, and regardless of the honourable unpopularity come have been on this occasion, they keep in the background. The Nation must claim the glory, Britain has done the deed !??

"TIMES" AND BULGAR PEACE OFFER,

are in

leader The Times, in

while admitting that the Bulgarian troops unenviable plight de procates. crediting the rumours to the effect that Bulgaria is ready to make terms, King Ferdinand, having once misled. the Entente, is ready to repeat the exploit; but our debt of honour to the Serbians pre- cludes any dealings with King Ferdinand. Even the Kaiser, with all his crimes is a more reputable sovereign.

At a recent lecture to the Calcutts Light Darly News "will cost of least 20 por Hores, Captain O. E Smith, commanding of amateur skirts The Minister hoped maize to the finer strains of poulity and cout more than the usual price and prob the Governor's Bodyguard, referred to a that Mr. Bradners would advise the ravish new-laid eggs from the straw, Work ably more. The cost of the raw material. in fact, is already up by 20 per cent. This number of his experiences while at the novice about her clothing! Another of this sort led in the all occasion coat advance, therefore, does not make any front in Flanders with the 8th (Hodson's) speaker had seen, the reckless apper plod and a quite smart skirt of uavy serge. No. allowance for the increased ooet of labour Horse. He had much to say of the gallant ding the winter-ploughs in dainty cloth thing fancy-just open sirish and sane.

Make no mistake. Women do think of and of freight. Vulcanite, too, has gone behaviour of the ladien divisions and one topped boots! up in price, Amber practically non- of his instances related to a company of And then arose Miss La Motte, Inspec. their books when they drive a lorry or go the existent. Any fresh supplies that reach Sikh infantry when he relieved. These tor of Women's Labour under the Board. postman's round. Dress crops out in all the market come from Germany, through men, he said, had lost all their officers but Her ideal was a short skirt, stout boots employers problems. It's louder than dis- America Meerschaum, which comes from one; they were in a trench up to the waist and gators, and a knitted cap. No room cipline, peor pay, weak spelling and Turkey, the industry being confined to in icy water; it was December and they for coquetry, you see, in a city; Then arithmetic, or the strong language which Vienna, to which city it in imported, is had been there three days and three nights women who had to deal with animals these entail. Convey to the woman worker so unobtainable. As a substitute for almost without food. As he waded up the should never wear a hatpin Hatpies are that she looks nice and her last ounce of

crowded omnibus, bat in overtime is yours. amber, this authority added, we are trench he spoke to some of the men, every-well enough in

* Opinions about her vary. The Post Jirenlaten largely throughout Benihern Chius considering the question of working in a one of whom was grey with cold and prao the byre they'll goad some two-horned

Office is all praise, the Stock Exchange little tortoise-shell. But this is also antically frozen from the waist downwards. to murder.

"So that, all told, farm fashions are aloof and cautious But all are agreed expensive article, and will not in any way They all said the same thing: Sahib. reduce the cost of the pipe. The tendency, we cannot move but we can still shoot anary, scary things, Hodge himself must that dress is the ruling passion of wongD'S indeed, will be for pipes steadily to ad Take your men away, we will stay here stay on the land, for his job won't admit life, not to be slain by a world in area. vance in price. There is nothing that can till we die." They had to be carried out of pretty raiment and a place in the public Why, death itself is expressed in terms of take the place of a good briar pipe bodily and in thirty-six hours they were eye and papers. It's a pity. No reason, cloth and crape. If you knew what our Smokers, therefore, who know ita value, back again ready to take their gruel though, why Maud shouldn't come into the women workers spend in mourning ! must be prepared to pay more

kitchen garden. And fine kugerg car pitch IP in Darly Mail,

Establisbad for over TIPIX XRAZE

|Indo-Chins®ete,

Farms for Advertising "krapolation freo) ana fin ohtakand st the Olloe, 101; Des Vœux Hond. Central, Hongkong, 131, Fleet Street, Londen or from the diferent Apoate

Jiosamente faunelated from se luta Cirneisi

again.

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