The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 7, 1917, Page 4

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STAR—SATURDAY, JULY 7, 1917. PAGE 4 Wilson, Unjarred by War, Is Fit as Next Novel “Robinson Crusoe” rice vive THE ‘SEATTLE STAR N tiene! : ¢ H 5 ; BY CHARLES DICKENS Lav Sea aie Fe a Fiddle, Mingling Fun Wi or anaes BY DANIEL BOFOE = L fs MEMNER OF SCRIPPS NORTHWKST . ’ x « chen aaa i Vai = 1 | wan 0 ‘ saved out of thin whip, to have con Telegraph News Service of the U bed — KS : (Continued From Our Last 1 ws Hedi bape at ie. ath Gink| waped.to the; that Linge eal Fo a Ei tered At Seattle, Wash. P atorthe oe CHAPTER vi day, and soon perceived that it did | one companion, one w creature 1 month up to ¢ mei A Ship's Gun not move; #0 1 presently concluded | to ha n to ime and to have the carrier, ctty It wan in the middle of May, OM iat it was a ship at anchor; and conversed with hot |the sixteenth day, I think, a well boing eager, you may be sure, to, In all the time of my solitary Pre jan my poor wooden calendar would | 6 gatinfied, | took my gun in my life, I never felt so earnest, so -_ | |reckon, for I marked all upon the |) oan and ran towards the south | strong a desire after the society T ° | | post wtill on the IX side of the island, to the rocks |of m ellow-creatures, or 90 deep W eleome Thrice W eleome! teenth of May that it blew a very | where I had formerly been carried | regret at the was of It. T ’ . great storm of wind all day, away with the current; and get here are som moving a great deal of lightning and thum iin)’ ay there, the weather by this | springs in the y affe ctions, and, dor, and n very foul night ft WAM) tin being perfectly clear, I could| when they are set a-going by some aftor it. I knew not what was the! isiniy wee, to my great sorrow, the | object in view, or, tho not in view, | particular occasion of it; but a* T wreck of a whip, cast away in the| yet rendered present in the ming | was reading the Bible, and taken 1045 upon those concealed rocks by the power of imagination, that {up with very serious thought® Yio 1 found when 1 was out in| motion carries out the soul, by its Welcome to our city, members of the Belgian commis car sion Tomorrow you arrive here, spokesmen of the gamest lot | of people on God's green earth. But long ere this has Seat-| . \ n tle’s heart been with you and yours | |about my present condition, | was boat; and which rocks, as they |impetuosity, to suc h violent, eager Jal! 7 © " , f e object a Out of the ruins of conflagration 28 years ago, this city | | berpeioed wave ee ae Nags & BUD. checked the violence of the stream, | ermbrag paige nt ee ss fore > ’ y and t ld g , efo jas I thought, fired at se and made a kind of counterstream, | absence ¢ {s insupportable, B “hee to build anew and to bui 1 vigor than oan be f re. | | ‘This was, to be sure, a surprise! 0)" .44) were the occasion of my| Such those earnest wish oe Vith pluck and grit and against all manner of obstacles, | of a quite different nature from) overing from the most desper-|ings that but one man had been con Seattle hewed its way out of the forests, until it is today the | any | had met with before; for the | s+, hopeless condition that ever I|faved. I believe I repeated the ie ureatest seaport on the Pacific coast notions = ry padi a ge had been in in all my life ; words “Oh age a vend be and a ps because of this experience the people of Seattle were quite of snotnes . Thus, what is one man’s safety|one!” a thousan Me v a Perhaps .e oa A for ta liteie Get a — ts started up in the greatest haste (M/s. another man's destruction; for it| desires were so moved by it that bat have a peculiar admiration for the little nation across the aginable; and, in a trice, clapped | een ieee ona eenoever they| When I spoke the words my hands ie eas which unselfishly risked its national existence to oppose, my ladder to the middle place Of| Wore peing out of their knowledge,| would clinch together, and my der “ | were, being out of i fa ‘ gainst tremendous odds, the iron heel of Prussianism jthe rock, and pulled it after Me; | ond the rocks being wholly under| fingers would press the palms of fee } We see, as in a vision, a low, flat land whose dreamy old and mounting it the second time. |. had been driven upon them | ands, so that if I had had any for & 4 heen ms t A. wt | got to the top of the hill the very) s) tne night, the wind blowing hard| thing in my hand, | would ren fea owns have been shot to pieces or burned, whose exquisite | moment that a flash of fire bid me aN Mad hey cee ushed it involuntarily; and badd iyi churches and town halls have been deliberately destroyed |listen for a second gun, which @¢-/ 4). ‘isiand, ax 1 must necessarily teeth in my head would strike whose men have been deported into slavery, and whose women and children have often been starved cordingly, in about half a m I heard; and by the sound, knew they did not, they must ogether, and set against one an thought, have leavored to other so strong, that for some time a , . | that it was from that part of the ome ore by | 1 could not part them again. A e | ; r ism ‘ 4 themsel on shore by 5 7 We see a land where the factories have been dis antled sea where 1 was Griven out with po fom ned oat their fir-| Let the naturalists explain these 3 and every piece of usable machinery has been stolen. We the current In my boat ing off their guns for help, espe-| things, and the reason and manner Bip behold a people who have been drained of the last ounce of | 4 I tmmediately considered that) ciany when they saw, as I imag-|of them. All I can say of them ts their gold and almost the last drop of their blood oT a this must be some ship in distress.) ined, my fire, filled me with many |to describe the fact, which was} D YET, WITH ALL THAT GERMANY HaAs| mu acces cas and that they had some comrade,| thoughts. First, 1 imagined that|even surprising to me, when If ® 4 PETS ¥ 7 * or some other ship in company, | yoon seeing my Hebt, they might found it, tho I knew not trom what’ DONE TO THEM, THE BE LGIAN WOM AND OLD | President Wilson snapshotted while walking and while at his desk. Note the secret service men in the| ang fired these for signals of dis tye put themeelves into thelr |it should proceed; st was, doubt MEN STILL CLING TO THEIR BLACKENED ACRES street scene trons, and to obtain help. Thad the pow and endeavored to make less, the effect of ardent wishes, WAITING FOR THE DAY OF FREEDOM. motor 1d mill in| [He goes to the office section of the Presence of mind, at that minute,!ine shore; but that the sea run- and of strong ideas formed in my! q . BY GILSON GARONER | @o by motor to the old tot to tatete tat tea) cowie cot bak tetas fi | The remnants of the Belgian army stand indomitably in WASHINGTON, July 7.— Rock Creek park, where the [White House only twice a week; |'0 think that tho,I could not help) ning y high, they might have| mind, and realizing the comfort, | the trenches on the extreme fringe of their country, faces and| i| which the convarenten = ae me; 80 I brought together all the inavined that they might have lort|my fellow-Christians would have, sident Wilson has not been horses are waiting, and after Re to attend cabinet meetings, | them, it might be they might held) been cast away. Other tin x . fo ode by the war. in health, an hour or two of exercise, re- Works in Private “ ‘e “ guns tow ard the foe. . : nee aie ian rind turn te the machine and ride At other times he does his work | TY Wood I could get at hand, and, | tyoir poat before, as might be the! been to me. ‘ Welcome, members of the Belgian commission, to Amer-| to gate on hie mall and appears back to the city for a bath and /f the old or residence part. He|™making a good handsome pile, I set many ways; as particularly) (Continued in Our Next Issue) ; ica. Welcome, thtice welcome, to Seattle! less worried than at any time breakfast. By 8:30 he ls ready (haw set a tier of filing cases be|!t fs fire oe ee eee 4 blaze | DY the breaking of the sea upon since he assumed the presi- for his mail. hind his dewk and indexes and files|, The wood was dry, and blazed their ship, which many times CE ee | The president has adopted a everything himself freely; and tho the wind blew very | obiiged men to stave, or take in 4 denc ot - 5 He gete up at 5 every morn- [now system in handling his per pare F dao ya rip Moe gedine pieces, their boat, and sometimes Four Hours on the Water ay e e ea er nows Ing and goes for a horseback (sonal mail-—and much of his bust) this insures the keeping of Im- |‘ was certain, r to throw it overboard with their| ‘Take palatial SS. “Tacoma” or ride with Mrs. Wileon. They ness ix now distinctly personal.| portant information until euch |#9Y such thing as # ship. they! own hands. Other times, I imag-|“tndianapolix” at Colman Dock o@ * aie —_——— time as it should be communl- must nesd see ft, and no doubt they ined they had some other ship OF |the odd hour after 7 a m. Cook 1 4 peers eally or velesisage: 43 leave => the judgment of] cated. He has his typewriter | id: for as soon as ever my fire « in company, who, upon the! pleasant trip to Tacoma, “The City wil t ie ree er—we don't know e don’t know is our answer FS In front of him on hie desk ang | blazed up, I ears ovens gpa signals of distress they made, had|o¢ Beautiful Homes.” ; to Regular Reader,” who sends in the following: Letters to the Editor pecks away at it like a pro- efter that aevera ot as, 8 ‘Son taken them up and carried them | 6c Returp—Single 40¢. 3 “Editor The Star: Why haven't the Germans themselves | fessor writing a history. His * be suarver. Li my fire off Other timer, [ fancied they) prGrT soUND NAVIGATION Co, 1 iven us final solution of the U-boat proposition? Flag day epeech was written on | #!! night long, till daybreak: and) were all gone to sea in their boat, | the ae eines that week the| thie machine and the original |“ben It was broad day and the air | and being carried away by the cur- Py iat German merchant submarine, the Deutschland, made | rscepedleticrtablailg la A Mauer “ested ¥ Mo 38 Seid ad 1 to} copy treasured by Secretary | Cleared up. I saw something at ® rent that 1 had been formerly in, | op S nga russ i two trips to this country. Its incoming cargo was said to be| Editor The Star: I cannot, for ieee sttontive there pte . Tumulty in leather binding |freat distance at sea, full east Of! were carried out_into the great Fr worth a million dollars, and on each homeward trip it carried] lite of me, seo how you, in your) "OT St might be sent out as an adver- | {he Island, whether a sail or @ hull ocean, where there was nothing |T#U8* WEAREMS, Here's Great, Geof 7) $2,000,000 worth of war supplies, according to reports answer to Mra. W. N. Vanderpool, | SE ae BOvENGDON teoment by 2 typewriting firm 1 could not distinguish—no, not| hut misery and perishing; and| ‘rireso Ex ‘ re the prohibition law with} mt ente Z sch | With my glass; the distance was| t h t by this | thrown “Four times this vessel went safely thru the British navy, aeuseription ‘ec. ax son may, Bak 415 Mefison 1 Pie act pages Rout rag ape ze ot | 8 great and the weather still| ae oe oe wiaine! STUARTS PLAPAO-PADS including submarines, the nets, mines and the chasers of the) a vote on prohibition. The majority | FOOD FOR THOUGHT the persons! business cocurs is the | something hazy also—at least, it! in 4 condition to eat one another. | f-athestve. puERea allies. ; ‘ ruled. But we had not a vote oD) 1400 phe Star: In these atir-|efterncon, | ed As all these were but conjec- as sat vo ont “For obvious reasons, submarines cannot successfully com-| conscription. Was it that congress) oon fe fae Ot Keeps Guards on Jump tures at best, so, in the condition | -ag~4 a ee ee 1 was in, I could do no more than look in upon the misery of the poor | men, and pity them; which tae | sull this good effect upon +4 side, | ae that it gave me more more fon is in the fiery, crucial test for, Interviews at the White House ¢, the blatant/are followed by frequent trips to 4 not “4 r it al bat submarines. But German submarines are practically all| Wes sfrald of thet manny i id not get a chance to vo that American merchant submarines would have to look out Sone L pag hogp eyen yh foe for. lof going across the pond to fight “The best brains in America and Europe have thus far|Prussianism and at the same time | Oecween Moense and liberty should| War department or failed to get up anything, offensive or defensive, to meet the evtablish | t Fey bl gdony dl be serenity aathd Lad rematbor »e Ay i ic y ' ou e to 1 ee ee ere ees OY motran gard to your comparison of prohi-|for exactly gg ay nF straighten out at once, H sits | provided for me in my desolate con- American fleet of big merchant submarines? the vaporings of un-American, un & n ie visit pa 4 . “REGULAR RE » | dition, a law by choice of the peo} 1 or except the gain of cheap|to the capitol have become so fre-|_ Some good women of New York | dition; and that of two ships’ com- ee OG pegs york aes ‘notoriety, and invariably filthy|qvent they no longer create sur-|SF? sending jigsaw pussies to the | panies, who were now cast away which we have had no —— shekels. The thirty pieces of sil-| Prise men in — Mi ee camp for!upon this part of the world, not CENSURE IS a tax a man pays to the public for being eminent.—| might state that I'm not a German var dae even ta nuken, The president ne ae riven up |them to ork on jeisure mo-| one life should be spared but mine. or pro-German. is, dor hird ds nent I learned here again to observe, Cashmere, Wash. when this same nation wae fight.|Plays 11 holes. By reducing the|!26 mood. dence of God casts us into any con- W t l t R 1] ee ing for the same prinetples, and number, he cuts out a couple of dition of life so low, or any misery 4 e ngra U a e usse EDITOR'S NOTE.—We re [also its own very existence, the miles of the course and saves an So great, but Wwe may see something! No sTRAPsS, oor OR SPRINGS. sans : , > peat that democracy does not [country wae infested with the sa . . ft The socialist party of New York has ousted Charles Ed-| Frean anarchy. In thie state we |ciass of disloyalists. Men, ward Russell, the immediate reason being that he did not| have the Initiative and referen. | wo too, who, by word of mo | ya: Nour oF so of time. Dr. Grayson | ANSWERED or other to be thankful for, and ATTACHED, can a | ts still his riding and golfing “bud may see others in worse circum: | sr f° . h, cle,” and the long-suffering seoret | B stances than our own ™ stinate cases resign from the mission to Russia when asked to do so by| dum. writings and every avaflable means|“rvice men have had to add the| Such certainly was the case of cured—no 4 F ¢ part: fficials. In the United States at large | possible, just as they have done in equestrian art to that of riding mo- | |these men, of whom I coula not pres 3 spree oa 5 A ive and refer [tp hree yei forded the torcycles, driving automobiles and | so much as see room to suppose $i, \ruses Awarded Gold Medal Inter- e , we have no initiative and refer. [the past thre ars, afforded tt y We congratulate Russell on his good judgment—and in fi 1 federal ‘e me ist their|long distance hiking and runnin, any of them were saved; nothing | mational Exposition, Kome; Grand Prix at = . a r P jum. Therefore, al edera enemy every sistance in elr iT g andr «. la wouka tt gate ' an |fooe today ey egg > view of the circumstances, we congratulate him for being out| jaw is made thru representa. ypower, and handicapped and crip-| Likes Frivolous Shows cou ¢ it rational so much a ay to prove Wt ty aa i Piapae 08, Se .. EB. D. K’s.". COLYUM freedom and exis utterances of thousands of dema-|the capitol, and it gogues who refuse to discriminate for Mr. Wilson to r federal sade commission's offices to nec some man on business he wishes to cause to give thanks to ‘Ged, who . i had so happily and comfortably of the company of persons whose.judgment has been so un-| tives, and not by direct vote. pled the country of their birth or| About three evenings in the week | to wish or expect that they did not | i | prexid all perish there, except the possi-| American. Congress and the president are adoption to the fullest af thelr ab{l-|the president goes out. One of | I bility of their being taken te by i i i our chosen representatives for ity. Time changes, but the venom) these is sure to find him at the lo- y he Ss an ip by It is to be noted that this action against Russell comes! Qt, purpose. They eccupy the is ever the same |cal vaudeville theatre, and another! When @ man takes @ vacation | other ship in company: and this ‘a cay wcaisics at a time when he is in Russia on a government mission to| game position in the nation that The rattlesnake of 1776, 1861 and|ct #ome other theatre where there | should he leave his money at home?| 4% but mere possibility indeed, In the of Seattle's Wholesale and Shipping a sister republic. our Initiative or legislature does 1917 i* not changed fs & non-serious attraction. The|—J. M. M. jtor I sew sot the least Signal or District” Whether the conscious purpose of this action at this time| In the sta In 1776 they were called tories, |e6rious in dramatics does not ap-| No, indeed. He should take it with | appearance of tp ake aoktiae Hike is to embarrass Russell and the American government, peal Page Ne As get sad Sig ee copperheads, in 1917 pact pennies Pint yee Pa ye his/ him. The change will do bim good.| (rey ot words, what a strange jtion law itn s e . h 4 0 | = " . not be proved—but that its effect is such is without question ftlative, we had to get the initia-| WASHINGTON had his Renedict} Whenever Washington has had| What ts it that stands on its|J0mging I felt in my soul upon this It is a matter for satisfaction on Russell’s part that these /tive {taelf. Before we can get a Arnolds |@ stock company putting on the old|head and still is not upside down? men no longer wish to call him one of them, but such action |referendum on war, we must get the} LINCOLN had his Valandigham,| favorites, as it has for a number|—H, C. R taken just now is of a piece with all of the other hand-jreferendum Itself in this nation Mrs. Surratt and J. Wilkes \of years, the president was sure to| Cabbage. We stated before that many peo-| Booth be there. He knows all the stock i maiden work for the kaiser that has been done in America. | 10°) ‘tnis country who clamor for) WILSON has his traducers favorites and has had them as} Why can’t a weman ever win a a referendum on war fought bitterly| “No resistance to the FIEND {n-| guests at the White House. walking match? | against the referendum itself, or carnate” {s their slogan Growing Young Daily | Because the only way she ever| |were indifferent to the fight for a) Is it not time for our really lib-| Other evenings when not drag- joen make a lap is by sitting down. | AMERICAN LAKE direct vote of the people. Dig deep|erty-loving citizens to awake? Is it/Ked out to some official function, _ Tomorrow by Steamer into your conscience, and see if you, not time such as they were shown, he works in his st lever gave a whoop as to whether we|to the public in their true colors?|department should have the right to initiate J. H. VERNON, ports on the.progress of the army | Many of them grow up to be wall constitutional amendments in this} 1118% Stewart St organization, the doings of the | flowers. state. What have you contributed - ~ -|navy, confidentially communicated| . ont * y ot Money makes the war go. Haynes e ary . r >. to that fight? Yet it | neas by the secretary, and writes state | e " ‘o that figh ot it is @ measure) | ies the watches oo, Haat Lit. hi What makes hives?—Lon M. orty theatre —Advertisement Commercial Savings Trusts GUARDIAN Trust & Savings BANK Cor. First Ave. at Columbia St. sight, breaking out sometimes | thus “Oh, that there had been but one or two, nay, or but one soul, COSSACKS STOP revolt In Russia, we are informed. A few of them ought to be imported to civilize East St. Loul: . writing stato| What becomes of all our scouts Fast service from Colman Dock. BR two. hours after munteations, | buds ?—Helen. Sate leave ¢ 7 m, on the 4 hour, connecting | with electric car in Tacome. | Round trip direct te Army UND NAVE ATL that the people are denied today, jand without which many other measures may be denied them Likewise, the people did not want or were indifferent to the power of initiative and referendum for the country at large. Therefore, under our representative system, the vote of congress OUR vote We said before, and repeat it, that while the prohibition law carried in this state, there was a vast number of people who were against it It would not be right for her nur forcibly to resist th tho it was enacted against their will To do a so would be anarchy, not ¢ or ay. In the cane manner the What asi ghtn voice of congreas being theoretical archy to resist kin was Sanat papers to be signed by Secretary| Carpenters. Lansing. “ee Any reports that Mr. Wilson | QUESTIONS MR. E. D. K. CANNOT is showing strain ér wear un ANSWER der this life are misieading. He How many wheels has a football appears to be growing younger | coach?—F. E.R every day and never was in When a man is all in, how much better physical form. ta ee betta. —the home drink Besides its popularity at drug stores, fountains and réstaurants, Bevo has found a welcome place in the home. A family beverage—e guest offering—a table drink that goes perfectly with all food. Asa eadeotion for Sunday supper—Sweet red or @reen peppers stuffed with cream cheese and chopped nuts or olives, served on lettuce ‘sire THE LESSON OF THE LINCOLN PENNY Have you taught your children the lesson of SAVING that is found on the Lincoln Penny? They will think of it every time they get one. | IT can make a ham tender by boiling it, but how can I make a bridgetender’?—8S. T. B. I read the other day that Arctic explorers use a sleeping bag. Is that, anything like a knapsack?—-L. D, C Where can I buy a bushel of wild! oats?—A, E. B. . ee MR. E. D, K.'S HOUSEHOLD) HINTS Order the laundress to save all} the old soapsuds after she finishes the washing. Put benzoate of soda in them to preserve them and use them the following week | Spaghetti makes a fine substitute for noodles. After the spaghettt 5 has been softened by boiling, beat ness are severe and have resisted ordi- it until it is flat, ke a noodle. » nary treatment, a little use of Resinol Never place onions and milk in Jintment and Resino! Soap will usually the same com oring out the skin's rea/ beauty {ifrigerator. Thi Resinol Ointment and Resinol the odor of th the purest ing oats tnand gentlest medication, which # prescribe widely in the et of the akin, other soft drink. Pure, wholesome and nutritious. Bevo—the all-year-'round soft drink, Sold in botties only and bottied exclusively by ANHEUSER-BUSCH—ST. Louis ber The face of Abraham Lincoln should remind them of his life, which ly our own, it is a forcibly the law passed by our rep- cleared it with 3 Pesaro Democracy gives you the govern the initiative and the referendum for the nation as well as the state, Evenifthe pimples, redness or rough- the war has giv some advanced thought least he made a success through his frug ity and thriftiness. They can gain a successful career by following his example. “LIBERTY”—no one can have real freedom from worry without a bank account to rely upon, The earlier the youngsters learn to save, the sooner they can realize the iull mean- ing of Liberty When making a berry pie, place OF course you should choose a safe a piece of oficloth in the bottom so Bank for your boys and girls to place that the juice will not touch the “tome of their money in, and there is no stror crust and make it soggy. rhe Scandinavian ger Savings Institution in the Pacific A an Bank. Every Sunday “We Point With Pride” to This Show Wea artment in the re. onions will absorb milk Toasted lettuce makes a fine breakfast dish JOHNSON NEXT PRESIDENT? Editor The Star: 1 want to con \gratulate The Star on two recent G aa 8 Sees Comeny, Gueten editorlals—“Shall Those Who Kept Us As a Nation Now Perish?” and “HANDKERCHIEF NO, 15” the one on “Hiram Johnson, the They strike the right chord, and Johnson should be our next presi. S€¢ Or. Edwin J. Brown Rodway & Edwards dent. The forward-looking people D. D. Ss, Dan: of his own state are for him, re oe intent sag | HIMSELF Dentist 713 Vivst ay Miss Fremont Benton & Co. ASSISTED HY RICHARD CARROLL Sold by Northwest than the Scandinavian American Bank Of its $12,000,000 deposits, $7,000,000 is made up of Time and Savings Deposits AROUND SEATTLE HARBOR See the Great Shipyards, Dry Docks, Flouring Mills, Grutt, Kramer & Gruet “A Clreus Day in Georgia” Son, & Clare in | Let The Star do its bit to bring orT J 1 pe | DO BLE CRON the whole Coast into line. | - I have just returned to Seattle! for tao Amold & Page ia (LIL) Star, ee lafter a five-year residence in Calt-| fora! CHARLES AND MADELINE DUNBAR 0) 102! an¢ 1x0 much interested pein to see that The Star has not lout | Its editorial punch. {St Paul Stove Repair & Plumbing Co Free Balloons for Children at Wednesday and I was reminded of what The Ss day Matinees. Star used to do, when IT went intel the public brary last evening at! A Brooklyn lawyer has been sent Port Commission Termin- to Sing Sing. If he is the average als, Immense Ocean Docks, lawyer no doubt he will not be Bathing Beaches, etc. | lonely He'll meet some of his cilents, Capital and Surplus $1,08,000.00 Resources Over $13,500,000,00 Great Panoramic View of the City. On SOMETHING LIKE THAT Tt Is sid that the driver of the Fireback linings a all | The Scandinavian American Bank Alaska Building, Seattle, Second and Cherry. Use Our Ballard Branch if More Convenient. 9:35, IPP DRO OME i eeiey ..10¢ i sun are In the old days the public I- VAUDENIL as ; bie LEAVES COLMAN Dock 4:10 P.M. Returns 5:15 P. M. of @ Mink Steffy who accompanied Tucker-—Geneva (O.) Free Press.’ jbrary was a useless piece of fur- ‘niture after 9 o'clock, A few edl- |torlal remarks in The Star so tl luminated the minds of the elty it TER red Lobedie & Co. AAULLER nar 5a vour OF Veterans As 08 PIKE ST. Main 876 -- me wielnee || READ STAR WANT ADS* tanta bascainctseidinchanesnannatiad 5

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