The evening world. Newspaper, November 22, 1917, Page 2

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me" » ae | 80 Peter's tree new ground gered are Crmty haldie im, The attaek weed eoncentrated, leentinet assault eavering @ front of @ little mar than half @ mile and wery strong German positions All objactives wore attained to an ih of about @ quarter Briton coveiry, cheat tke med men at @ chance owing away from the eaddie with sanre in hand, out down every gunner 4 took @ complete battery at Rumilly. The infantry hae now reached Cantaing, ese than three miles from Cambrai, and hing the lant fine of German defenses. Never in modern wer has an attach been fo complete « Gumfounded military experts who be- Neved airplanes reconnoiasance would GERMAN OFFICERS AMONG THE FIRST BiG TANKS NA AS Tore Through Great Stretches of Intricate Wire Entangle- ments and Across Trenches. HRITION ARMY HEADQUARTENS DAYS OF prevent a eurprine attack Gen. Byng hero of the hour ENGLAND TAKES GREAT VIC- TORY CALMLY AND QUIETLY ‘Thus fer Lngiand bas taken quietly Field Marshal Haig’s big victory in France, Thin morning, despite the big beadiines and eotiatic articies tn the newspapers and tho foelings of quiet exultation evidenoed in private, the public went about its business as usual, Not an extra flag wae fying and tho bolls have not yet aroused the people to a realization of what thetr armies have done in France. Unlike the Englishmen of the South African war days, when the capture of a town, the release of a marrison or the defeat of a handful of Boerr was made the occasion of street dem- onstrations, those of to-day take the vietories soberly and content them- polves with the anticipation of Digger to come a is generally believed that all has not boon told of the extent of the victory In France, whieh ie being extended hour by hour. The people were thrilled this morning when they were P! mitted to know for the first time that the cavalry had been in tion, not only in clearing the bat- tlefield it had done on several cooasions during the last y but in actually charging artillery and infantry and in widening the breach in the German line, long acclaimed as “impregnable.” How far the cavalry has gone 1s not known but one correspondent at the front eavs that early yesterday morn- ing the cavalry was “still pouring over the furthest hill a good six miles from the cracked line,” while tt 1s aleo stated by correspondents that tho British line swings much further north than Grain- court, behind the broken wing of the Hindenburg Une. FRENCH HOLD GAINS; CAPTURE 400 GERMANS IN NEW OFFENSIVE Heavy Artillery Fire Continued Throughout the Night, Says War Office. Nov, 22.—Following te the to-day’s War Office state- PARIS, text of ment: Wost of the artillery fighting conti out the night. T ered a counter-attack against our new positions south of Juvincourt. It was repulsed by our fire and coat the enensy serious losses, The number of prisoners taken In erday's operas tion has reached 400, of whom nine are off “Bev raids on our small poste, near Bethey, north of Hill 844 and in the region of Eparges, were with- out success, We carried out yoa- terday and last night several expe- ditions into the German Hines routh of St. Quentin, north of Vaux-Allion, north of Ailles and in the region of Tahure and Maisons de Champagne Woe destroyed shelters and brought back prisoners and several maching guns. GHAUFFEURS AND AIDS WANTED IN THOUSANDS Signal Corps Needs Them for Quick Use on Cars and in Aero-- planes Abroad, Miette River heavy wed through~ rmans deliv- ‘ WASHINGTON, Nov. 22.—The Bigna! Corps needs thousands of chauffeurs and mechanicians, uot only to drive ears, but for mechanical work on alr plane engines, It war announced to-day that quickly ag possible squadrons of euca men will be organised and sent over seas. Men of draft aye can enlist in the air service until Dee IN FRANCE, Nov, 21 (By the Aavo ciated Preas).—Tha present pattie, moro than any other in the weatern theatre, bas taken over the savor of fighting in other wars, when men mrugeied in the open and cavalry made thrilling charges against on- emy guns, Many military critics have long contended that onvairy was a thing of the past, but the mounted men have refuted this claim. Field Marsha) Haig has clung to bis horse troops throughout the weary monthe of trench fighting. He bad hammered at the enemy in Flanders until they were worn out completely. He had driven them buck as far as mud would permit and had compelled them to call on every ounce of strength they had to maintain them- selves, Then he suddenly sprang hin “Urprise attack in an unexpected quarter. The Hindenburg lines on the Cam- bral front wero the strongest the Germans had laid out in the west, The enemy considered them Impreg- nable, Not only were they strongly fortified, but they were protected by & Very deep holt of barbed wire, which jt was thought that only « Protracted bombardment by groa: concentration of guns would out suf- ficiently to allow the infantry to go through. TANKS DO IN FEW HOURS SEV. ERAL DAYS’ WORK OF GUNS, British tanks never huve been cailod Upon for auch extensive work before, but they did In a few hours what tho artillery would have required days © aovcompliah, The Uindenburg line was pierced absolutely on a wide front and to @ greater depth than over befvie, Tho correspondent to-day tnapected the main Hindenburg jine near Hav- rin Court and saw the amasing work done by tho iron monsters, In most places they had no trouble either to tearlag through the wire or in cross. ing trenches. There were gaps in tho Wire entanglements a rod in widto where not ono vestige of wire waa left standing, and by following the tracks of the tanks one could avo where they had trundiod scrosy the trenches aa though they were meraly scratches tn the ground Instead of wide, doep ditebes, The tanks, of course, went t(hrougo No Man’e Land under the full ob- servetion of the German artillery aud while the gunfire was weak, some fire was directed on the tanks ag they advanced. It was interesting to fol- low the tratl of the tants and to ate where shelis had struck ali about ep- parently without doing any damage for in this wholo Jon the corre. spondent did not one tank which had been knocked out. The condition of the German ltrencher showed platily that the ocvue | pants bad abandoned them in a hurry, “Do Your Damnidest,” Order to Tank Men, and They All Did It British history was given another ighting phrase “The Tank Commander expects every tank to do Ite damndestt" the word from the unnamed jeneral commanding land dread- ughts before they went attle that broke the Hindenburg ine. It was Nelson, at Trafalgar, who expects his duty.” agland to-day each Coffee and tea are actually harmful to health and f terves, and lack all food-value, Serve RUNKEL'S nstead! Rich and delicious, b sealthy and more ‘nurishing than most meats and vegetables. THE BVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 99, 1917. — FEW HOURS WROUGHT HAVOC AS GREAT TILLERY FIRE —— Only Eight Days Ago AMSTERDAM, Nov. %—Of in: terest to-day, In view of the ereat Hritiah victory achieved through the tanks against the Hindenburg line ts thin qdotation from the Ber- lin Tawebiatt of Nov. 141 | “The role of the Hriti#h tanks [| has been played out. Our artillery | mows them down. The original terror inapired by their appearance has been vanquished. “The enemy turned, erumpled-up monatora le where they drop crippled. Tt ts niso to be observed that the oceu- |) leave their |) pants of the tanks dangerous armored prisons pre- maturely | “The Engtish have thety troubles || in finding crows for them. Bvi- dently there is no particular pas- sion left for this kind of sport.” | All sorta of equipment and personal bo- longings atrewed the ground. Hince the beginning of the attack, the gunfire had been extremely weak. No Man's Land showed comparatively tow nhell craters to-day and this morn- ing the British guns were doing vir- tually all the firing along most of the front involved. This is @ striking con- trast to the Flanders region, which has been an inferno of artillery fire for weeks, GERMANS WHO FLED CAME BACK TO FIGHT, The Germans, who at the first at- tack yesterday retreated or surren-~ dered In dismay, were fighting desper- ately to-day to regain @ hold on their Tear positions, A particularly bard hand-to-hand engagement occurred this morning at Mesquieres, when the infantry, accompanied by tanks, stormed thia place and drove the Ger- mans from it. The fighting about Mesqutores be- aan last night, but it was not untli about 8 o'clock to-day that the Brittah ;made an organized assautt on the |town. The tanks went ahead and were engaged immodiately by seven heavy German guns, which began to fire at them potnt-blank at short \ Tange. It wan a critical moment, for, jwhile the tanks will withstand heavy | fire, they cannot be expected to atand [4p long under big shells hurled from | etins only @ short distance away, The British Infantry which swarmed | throvah behind the tanks saw the pre- dicament of their tron friends and do- Uberately charged the enemy artillery with rifles and hand grenades All the RUNS wore captured and thelr crews wero dilled. A similar incident occurred at Prem Chappolle, northwest of Marcotn, where three guna wore stormed and their crewa annihilated. Some of the Moat spectacular work of this nature fell to the Cavalry. The mounted troops got into Marcoing and Masni- ores last night, and in the tatter town engaged In nanguinary battle with Ger- man Infantry, An enemy battery there was giving trouble and a squad of horsemen charged tie Position, shooting or sabreing the entire gua crew. Another battery at taken In similar fashion, Graincourt was carried by storm, cavalry, tanks and infantry working tomether, British forces at tho latest reports bave carried their tine in thig section northward to the Bopauwe- Cambrai Road, The Germans ran from Ribscourt with the Britii close « Rumilly was! vi t thelr bee! This town is & mn rulas, Fieri ob account of shell fre atid partie from luck of repairs. Tie Ge Auxouta wore loft intact, © SeFnaan The occupation of Maroy) Masnicros Was & Breat stroke for the ie, ae it gave the inuch needed | crossings for the Escault River and Canal, which formed a natural tu. rler to the advance from (hiy direc. | Cavalry, infantry und tunae were poured Mamediatly across thuse | passages and procesded to work northward, —_—_ FOUR WOMEN MADE CITIZENS Vourteen Others Take Ost Pr i j ton | ie First Four women born tn foreign lande wore adinitted to United stat oltiqen- ebip this afternoon by Ju hatflold in the United States District Court They will be permitted to vow at the next election. are Bri View t Murnhy, @ y Lr © nares at Ellaaboth Walley nue, " t pa their fret ps Bread to Halt Poona a De: ROMB, Nov. 22—The Government haw tneued & NOW AeCree limiting the amount of bread for each person te one-half pound per day, Hoy, eS Ae the COCOA with that’thocolaty taste be searched for hidden (ey food thon at holding exer quantities nq punished seve! loavea the over- |) | under certain conditions, foreign rest- Cambrai, Important Railway Centre, Is Menaced ESTPLE Se ube UK FONTAINE! CROISILE ho Bui LEcouR?? veh 34 Pals, & in Gen Bynes eurprise drive haa brought the British within gunshot of the important railroud centre, Cam- and to the rear of the German lines defending Doual. He has also put in jeopardy the whole German ine running to the south of Laon, and further progress Might well bring great disaster to the Kaly ‘This situation is shown in the larger map. 1ON where the main I depth was reached has been crossed so! r- Pe 5 10 1 SCALE of wee LARGER .MAP_SHOWS DETAIL of BRITISH : ORE DICATES POIN The jarge arrow (A) on th MARQUETTE® ant MPH WuEey ERNE RONT. of FRENCH ATTACIC | smaller map shows ritish drive waa made, Its greatest on the Escaut Canal and this barrier utheast of Cambrai. Further north a Jocal advance was made near the top of the Hindenburg | Mine. At (B) the French have struck another blow. Italy Wants Help Ot U. S. Engineers On Its Railroads ROME, Nov. 22.—American en- Fineering help on the ftallan ratl- roads vehind the front is eagerly desired, as the fame of their work on the French lines has reached Italy. It 1» sumgosted that the hour ia now almost reached. when the Allies should be able to afford sub- stantial backing to the Italian Arny. Italians here resent the pub- Mehed suggestion that the evacu- ation of Venice has been decided upon. They maintain that the ‘tallan Army ts still confident of being able to hold the Pinve line The Germa however, ate throw- ing a greater part of thelr fore into a turning movement from the north and the situation along the Viave must be growing iacreas- ngly precarious, BERLIN WAR OFFICE BELITTLES VICTORY WON BY BRITISh Gained Ground, It Says, bu: Failed to Reach Their Real Objective. BBRLIN, Nov. 22 (via London) —- | Following ts the text of the German War Office statement: “The battle southwest of Cambria continues. By the maasod use of tanks and infantry and by launching his cavairy the enemy sought to effect a break through whioh was denied bim on the first day's attack, Ho did not eucceed In his objective, Al- BRITISH FIVE MILES FROM JERUSALEM though ho waa able to gain a little he ground beyond our front lines, was not able to attain greater sv cennes. “The enemy troops which were cf- fectively caught by tho fire of our Two More Towns Lost by Turks artillery and machine guns and great. . ‘aa —One Carried at Point ly thinned encountered the counter- " thrust of our brave infantry.” of Bayonet. "On the western bank of the Scheldt | TONDON, Nov, 22.~-1éritish forces our troopa drove back the enemy to [i Haleating have advanced ive mes 4 Fontaine, and on the,20rthwest of Jerusalem, the War Ot- Anpeux an tage jtive angounces, ‘The officlal statement eastern bank to hia positions of do- |7') 1s parture south of Kumiily. “Phere t# no change in the situation “Botore and behind our tine, 48- | ct of Jama. tributed over the whole battlefeld, | 6, Monday Kuryet-el-Enad, ein Hes the wreckage of tanks which have | io. wost of Jerusalem, was curried been shot to pieces. Our aviators and | Jing point of the bayonet by torrie motor guns took a prominent part ID} vias infantry, and Bolt Likia, some thelr destruciton. five miles to the northwest, was «c- “At nightfall fighting activity on 4 cad Aer cupled by Scottish troops. the battlefield diminished, South of [os d Vendhullie the enemy did not 1 Yesterday our mounted troops In contact with the enemy four) ttack: were our | plas extos _ miles west of Bireh on the Jerusalem. AMERICAN IS FORCED ee INTO. GERMAN ARMY Dr, Fisher, a Dentist, Who Has Lived in Germany Ten Years, Is Conseripted. COPENHAGEN, Nov, 32.—Dr. Fisher, an American dentist, who has been practising In Cologne, has been luken into the German army, accord- ing to advices received here from Germany. The conscription was made under the rule requiring that, —_ | AZORES ROW INCLUDED = IN NEW U BOAT ZONE Islands in Atlantic Centre of Sey-' eral Cable Lines—Greek Waters Are Also Named. | AMSTERDAM, Noy, 22.-—Extension of the German “barred gone” for ehinping to include the Azores and Greek waters wos announced tn @ Berlin despatch re- ceived here to-day. | The statement deseribed the Azores as “containing important hostile bases | for Atlantic navigation.” | Eelgian relief ships and neutrals wore | allowed one week In which to withdraw | from the new barred sone, | dents in Germany serve in the army, Dr, Fisher ts from Chicago, He has resided In Gorimany for more than ten years and had decided to continue hia practice there during tho war, (or teens Thy TROOPS IN AMERICAN SECTOR AGAIN RELIEVED | Change Made Without Knowledge of Enemy—Old Men Back in Billets, United Press despatches received last | reported re- | 3 = 2 3 z 5 z z United States Aaores. The Navy Department, tn deny- | ing the report, sald there was only the! usual activity in connection with naval | operations there, | ‘The Azores are Portuguese, cable Unes centro there. The extension of the Gorman Marj- time barred gone is announced from WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN| Merlin in an official memorandum FRANCE, Nov. 22.—(By the Associated | which #ays:— | Press).—Another relief hae taken placo| "The hostile governments are n-| jon the American sector, It was accom: 'deavoring by the intensification of the! plished successfully and without the hunger blockade against neutral coun. | knowledge of the enemy. Artiliery ac- | tries to force out to sea neutral carg, | tivity continues normal with the usual space, Which Is keeping In port, and | patrolling, \to press it Into thelr wervice, As ios. The troops to de relieved lett their |tile slipping Dipping sailing in peaitions in smelt groupe over a certain Hostile utero! are below ou period. After all were out they were Uovernment its struge! taken on trucks to their billets, which Great Britain's domination were reached at night time during a lence, Which tramples under The relieved units were those of rain. wood health and in good aspirtty. | ‘T uly COMplAIN! heard wes that they had Bot had enougn ection, marines'® ENTIRE KERENSKY ARMY REPORTED 10 HAVE SURRENDERED (Continued from First Page.) | shevik! Cabinet, has proclaimed an nwapaper advertisements to be the, f the state and allows them nly in the publications} istonal Workmen's and vernment or of the Local! Es | Lenine proclaimed that all power In| Russia wan vested in the various] Soviet bodies of the Workmen and! Soldiers and directed peaxants’ coun- cils throughout Russia to seize power in thetr respective districts, Orders for the arrest of the ruards of counter:revolutionary generals, is- | sued to-day, were algned by Oullanoif, Lenine and Krylenko. The wife of Premior Kerensky ts reported to bave been arrested by members of the Red Guard while tearing down Bolshevik posters in which Kerensky was referred to tn uncomplimentary terma, The revolutionary committess t ware forming spectal guards for the protection of foreign subject, and have organized @ bureau of reg. istration, WASHINGTON, Nov, 23.—Supplies ure now moving to Russia and will not bo halted, the War Trade Board oMolally announced to-day, With the War Board's statement of the Government's changed aititude toward Russian supplies came a sig- nificant change of sentiment at the Russian Embassy here to-day, Le nine and Trotaky, leaders of the re- Volt, were pictured by embassy off clala not as Germun-inspired tlonaries, but as sincere, patriot and well-meaning vislonarles, ‘We have no evidence that Lenine Is a German epy," sald a high em- bassy official. ‘He has always been A leader of radical soclalism In Rus- Sia. He was deelafed a fugitive b: the Kerensky Governmont not be cause of any pro-German activittes, but because he was charged with in- iting insurrection to Kere y.” ‘Trotsky was regarded by this off- cial aa Lenine’s “brilliant and mag- rene- 8, By British, and French Are Driving to an | were gnomen who suddenly sprang to ef Soldiers’ and Workmen | *! 000 PRISONERS — § URPRISE ATTACK OF BRITISH CAUSED PANIC ALL ALONG THE HINDENBURG DEFENSES a Many Had to Leave Breakfast | in Dugouts and the British | Pershing Watched Swept Over Them. || Cavalry Charge With Greatest Interest WITH THE BRITISH ARMY IN FRANCE, Nov. 22 (By the Ae- lated Press).—Milltary neces- sity precluded the mention of cav- alry in the firet despatches regarding the present offensive, but It may now be said that the mounted men went into action at 11,80 o'clock yesterday morning after the tanks had opened the. way through the barbed wire. This was one of tho features of tho battle in which Gen, Pershing appeared to take deep interest while ho was at the front yeaters day. It has been a wonderful twe days for the horsemen, who have By William Philip Simms WITH THR BRITISH ATtMIPS BEYOND THE HINDENTRURG LINE, Nov. 22 (United Pross).—Vic- | torlous Britain “carried on" to-day | with her triumphant smashing of the Hindenburg lines, Tanks, cavalry, infantry—all wero closing steadily around Cambrai—the &reat war machine rumbling ovér the | enemy just as tho tanks first crushed | the way through the German lines With thelr storios and the tales wrung from German prisoners still | daznd with the surprins of the British blow, It was possible to-day to plece | been relegated to rear aroas of together some idea of conditions in|] the western front, with few ox- the luxurious and—supposediy—im- |f ceptions, since carly in the war, pregnable German positions of the | Thousands ofthem operated over line when G Byng || ° ' beyond the Hindon- urpriss party. Urs: ns. Not a German had any knowles b cana eaemeed of the attack until the over their hoads. tanks loomed Then they literally that moment for the greatest of the u blew up" in panic, French civitlaas W¢j,‘ranias then al Pei. in towns just nd the lines de- the “kick-off lig bute eho scribed the officers and men as run- tense momcat when tho ball is put ine e chickens with tacir '@ Play 80 aptly expressed that mo- ning around heads cut o ered and sh f the thing: . ment whole army aniv- 1 the suddenness! it groat ghost-like the Germans in a gre many places on their lines did not awaken with the first snorting of the tanks as they Kreat swaths through the tres, But there were count- wices Where It was not until ths themselves their tongucs finming ahead, their steel bel- ll broke loose, osterous that the | Steel jaonsters that battered through coment and earth and watils were fearsome giants; the swearing, yelling fiends who followed toem human Ifo out of the ground. . lies flattening the earth, actually It must have been} ors * came over the German trenches—that palsy of surprise, of fear and of ‘hut the Bocho came to lite. Your Gere Aberoet achounted (6 wiparab(tiouN p man tsa creature of habit, He knew mn : : It was customary for artillery to pre- that something supernatural had | cody’an attack. There was no artile curred, passed away among tho Ger-| ery, Hence thera could be no attack. na nnn British “moppers up" told of how! Great Wrecking Steamer Takes men from whose heads the letharsy of | Over by United Staten, p hod hardly passed blinaing CLEVELAND, O., Nov. 2.—The wreek- diy crowded out of thelr dugours, !K steamer kavorite, the mout modern dazedly crowded out of th was Wrecker on the Great Lakes, has been or how, uncomprehending th reality and not dreains, they dully ist great tanks crush then flat or fur taken over by the United States Navy. ‘The ate owned by the Great i j any and ia the moat ' y gleaming British bayoners find thei | complete aalvage ship afloat, accordin, jly gleaming |to experts It ts understood ‘the Favors | mark, In tren ite will be on wrecked ve —_—_—— ent abroad at once ven and dugouts blankets once to work and cots were still warm from #leep- ers’ bodies or breakfret tables for} | offtcers, daintily set, still smoked ap- | petizingly. A tangie of personal be- | longings In line after Ine of dugouts | | showed sleepers ja the bunks and o | the cota had leaped to their fect ‘VERY shop on the Avenue, these days, « | | the first terror of the moment—and fled to the ghostly dawn above with- te mnie iS : ‘out hats, without blouses, without ig its own par. | guns, almost without with their ticular suggestion to help ‘ nenaes. | Vust stores of cho!co wines were you with your Christmas | 4 | found In the offic rtera, Clyars | and cigarettes packed there shopping. Every show rotusely. . . | "Many sections of the Hindenburg, © Window is an illustrated A) Mne came into British hands abso- advertisement in full lutely intact. The tanks bad smashed col- @reat geps, Through these the tn- ors—and every single wine |fantry poured and spread out, fan- | | wine, behind, taking yard after yard dow on the Avenue is of the “impregnable” positions from by th the rear, passed y ie | ‘The correspondents were sum- | moneda to the lne during the night. They stood that memoratle morning| le In the very light just before dawn, | |in the midst of great droves of tanks | —all camouflaged and bedizened—a| veritable multitude of the Things, ‘They were a great herd of gontlo| looking stolld creatures, that seemed to browse on the grass covered bat- | tle jeld, sheltered somewhat by trees whose branches showed no nipping by shells, scene Uke some farm in the Kentucky blvegrass r gion, One could Imagine the takes Uo venue Bus was elthor as bovine herds or as cluttered | ' | up dingy-looking neglected farm ma- DIED, “ | ohinery seatte bout “ERNEST MATTORS, netic” mouthplece jchinery scat a r ; i atilteRe halls aha Services at CAMPBELL FUN} a Only o few d act ca s exploded! cHuncH, Broadwey, 66th at. Len! Rolahevik! Leader, Declared | 10 the distance—tho regular, monoton- | r -j German. boy. | ous, y-morning interchange, Col- = —— PARIS, Noy, 22—Absolute proof | umn after column, miss after mass of | ogy FOUND AND REWAR that Nicholai Len the Bolshevtki | men and machines and horses and par | eq > Meet dictator at Petrograd, was sent to ltussian by the German spy system and in a creature of the Prussian propa- | nda. service 1 rench Govern ont. ~~_—- BOWIE RESULTS. ACK — Selling; two-year + anda half, (slonuta.—Arnack (Walla), etraight $4.10, place w $2.90 won: African Arrow 108 $7.00, show $4.00 seoond: Moone! MM (Troise), show $3.00 third, Tiny, 1307 a5. Corydon Bun th uanita . Gree ara gs, Ce sdewort Ruthie At, June Bug aleo ran SECOND RACE—Claiming; four-vear- olds and upward: mile and a furlong Buse Around, (Troise), straight 30. place $2.90, show 0, won; - nhion, ose), place $2.00," show Pe ity oliver, Wit "tan fier), pow $7.30. third, Time, 1.59 3-6 Mathats March Court, Maxsin's Chol Siar Guao and Lady A also ran THIRD RACE-FI b anes; aig and onechalt fur F atraaht fivet; Star ow ) how $2.0 Fenmouse, Bab- the hands of the | ~~ aphernalla Yad slid throy night shadows and were li the olly | up at Ry a "ark : 1 remind for retum on Uarrison, 2 ASSORTED Goodies oF 6 collection, C0: Buttorenps, drt + Satinetten Twists, Midget Sticky and many more fuyorites. in lor POUND BOX tn Offerings for To-Morrow, Friday, Nov, 23d CHOCOLATE. ¢ NOUGATIN rt KOUR BALLS; a coltece of those Rood alm loned the kitties. Uke ” outh anil fe soreme: iy five container,

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