| FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. EE — ——————— EE THE MAN WITH And on his back the burden of the world, Who made him dead to rapture and de- A thing that grieves not and that never hopes, Stolid and stunned, a brother to the ox? Who loosened and let down this brutal jaw? Whose was the hand that this brow, Whose breath blew out the light within this brain? slanted back Is this the Thing the Lord God made and gave To have dominion over seca and land; To trace the stars and search the heav- ens for power; To feel the passion of Eternity? Is this the dream He dreamed whn shap- ed the suns And marked their ways upon the ancient deep? Down all the caverns of Hell to their last gulf There is no shape more terrible than this— More tongued with censure of the world's blind greed— More filled with signs and portents for the soul— More packed with danger to the universe. ©O masters, lords and rulers in all lands, Is this the handiwork you give to God, This monstrous thing distorted and soul- quenched ? How will you ever shape? Touch it again with immortality; Give back the upward looking and the light; Rebuild in it the music and the dream; Make right the immemorial infamies Perfidious wrongs, immedicable woes? straighten up this O Masters, lords and rulers in all lands, How will the Future reckon with this man? How answer his brute question in that hour When whirlwinds of rebellion shake all shores? How will it be with kingdoms and with kings— With those who sheped him to the thing he is— When this dumb terror shall rise to, judge the world, After the silence of the centuries? DIAMOND CUT DIAMOND. (Concluded from last week.) All eyes were for Dick and Rao, superb horsemen and wily hog- spearers both. Realizing they meant business, the boar showed . 's well-known belligerency, facing them with furious grunts and only sheer- ing off in time to dodge the spear- heads. Suddenly he broke, and at a lurching gallop headed for the open. Dick was in the act of circling, so that Rao was three lengths ahead of him before he was around. Rao reached the hog, but before he could spear, it “jinked,” that lightning break across a horse's feet which so often saves a wild pig's life. Asit crossed from right to left, Rao tried the Rajput's lance-thrust, stretched by his’ horse's neck, with all his weight behind the rigid spear arm. But the distance was too great. The point struck the mass of hide and gristle at the hump; the boar's weight swept the lance across the horse's legs and it was wrenched from Rao's grip as he went on. In a cloud of dust the hog bucked and shook himself with rage. Bikha said, “A novice's stroke. He should know better. That hog is a bad one!” The boar had abandoned flight and stood with slavered tusks weaving to and fro, sunken red eyes glean- ing. Dick rode at the animal, but a fierce side slash of the massive head turned his spear. He circled and came at it again, when the gray monster went to meet him with clumsy leaps. Before Dick could swerve, it was beneath the dun. There were three lightning upward slashes of the tusks, then Dick was past, with the boar after him like a mad thing. The lifeblood poured from the dun’s ripped flank. They saw it falter, reel; then as Bikha muttered, “Ah, Dick,” the dun was down on its rid- er's leg, with the boar not fifteen yards away. Mona's heart was in her throat. Abruptly her brain seethed with fan- tastic newborn visions of a tran- scendent life for her, affluent and free. Bikha had hurled his horse for- ward, whipping a sword from the scabbard of a sowar of his escort, as he passed, hoofs Rao tore past, spearless. He and the hog reached Dick together, and as the yellow tusks went down to rip the helpless man, Rao dived —— | «Bowed by the weight of centuries he right, leans | Upon his hoe and gazes on the ground, The emptiness of ages in his face, | ‘wide and hard. scorn he hung | cut across and was halfway to Dick with outstretched blade, point low, when with a clean drum of | you old the same, though. Ugh! those tusks!” Bikha said to Rao, “Brother, be- fore you ride pig, better to learn to use the spear All at once they were aware of Mona, pushing between them. She was deathly pale, and her eyes were She did not look at Rao, and before her his head. His hands opened, closed again. Dick said, “Near thing, old girl! We owe Rac my life.” He put his hand on Rao's shoulder. Bikha was gazing at her narrowly, with an appraising look on his olive face. Suddenly she realized there was knowledge, understanding, in his regard. How much did he know? And in what manner had he come to knowledge? «More than life has been saved, my Dick,” he said with emphasis, pointedly turned his back on Mona and went to Rao. Bikha embraced his brother. The sun was no more than a man’s height above the far Ghag- gar hills when she came out on the terrace in her riding things. The syce was waiting with the Kathia- wari, and she mounted and at once struck off at a hard canter. It was a week since she had watched the dusi-brown squadrons tripple from the square. At the jast minute she had refused to go to Simla with the other women. She wanted to be alone for a long time, to think, to co-ordinate her jangled feelings, to scheme, to nurse her chagrin and her injured pride, and to decide what to do. She had been so sure of Rao's capitulation. Instead, he risked his life to snatch from her the easy freedom which the Fates had flung her. She cantered down the cypress avenue to the maidan, crossed and rode out to the open desert. The chill of dawn had gone, and the arid heat begun. at Dick but A sense of unreality enveloped her. Could this be she, alone in this fantastic city, forsaken of all men? June! Derby day, she reali- ized. She should be at Epsom. Not reckoning that but for her own petulance she might have been at Simla in the best of company, she achieved a poignant self-pity, which unaccountably swept into fear: fear for herself, for her well-guarded comforts; fear of the veiled vistas of the years to come. She wheeled ‘and rode hard for hume. When she pulled up at the terrace a sowar of the regiment waited bv his horse. He saluted. presenting ‘an envelope. “Rao Sahib Bahadur sends salaam!” Standing there, she read the note. His words leapt out at her: Fool that I was, to let my chance of happiness pass by. But these days here alone have taught me, thinking what life would be had that bear done its work. There is only one thing in the world for me, and that is you. Forgive me. Take me back; say you will come away with me and I will make our plans. The thought of it makes me drunk with joy. She had not failed. She had not failed. Feeling weak at the knees, she went inside and dropped into a chair. Her sensation of relief was abysmal. It was over—this life she loathed. The past for her was blotted out in that one hour; the future glowed as glamorous as it had ever been. She was foot-loose, afloat and free on life's stream again, out of the To an adventur- it was pacid backwater. er born, such as she was, enough. The sowar was leading his horse away. She called, “Subbarkaro!” He halted, stood, while she took her pen and wrote, “I can be ready in three days. I am too happy. Mona." She waited in a fever of impa- tience for his answer. At last it came. It was exhaustive and ex- Pal you s 8 and he had to the Pamirs to shoot sheep. leave had been granted, announced that he was going He would send camels and his trust. ed men, meet her on the desert and the neck of it to take the train at give out that she had changed her mind and gone to Simla. Thus there would be a generous period when neither of them could be miss- ed. Write, then to Dick (he con- cluded). Tell him the truth, that you have done with him, and ask to let you go. But do not say it i§ with me. He would guess what medns I would take to throw him off, and he would intercept us. And if that happened, one of us would die. and thwarted her. ‘ber into the quilted She was to Jnduiating She sat for a long time thinking line in the ghostly dawn ligh ‘of Dick, of the many times he had’ She me?” she asked the fellow. i | 'a villa at Cannes; another in Italy. a turbaned head. a 3 taly. and a camel heaved up, followed by another, till the two were outlined | Her disappoint- for by their dress He adored her elementally, knowing what she desired in return for her favors; he would never plague her with incessant cant of things that must be done for this or that mil- dewed tradition. In her new mood, Ratangarh city changed its aspect. For the first time she was conscious of its gem- like loveliness. It was the night. Dinner was done; the day servants had gone. She had sent the night chokidar with a letter, to get him away. Janki she had of, also. All was . She wore her riding clothes of Johdpur breeches and a coat of Kashmir silk. The lamp- light did not fill the room, making but a yellow pool on the blue tiling. Far off, a woman sang wailingly, and a drum beat. Mona's heart was pounding, and she found herself wondering which was the drum-throb, which her heart. The scent of moughara bloom and jasmine filled the air. It made her think of Dick, whereupon she lashed her mind to memories of her anger to still a tiny qualm. Now that the hour was near, her calm wavered a little. She wished they would come and end her sus- pense. . Suddenly she gave a start. Fram- ed in the doorway was the grim fig- ure of a ‘lonkhi cameleer, armed barbarically with sword, Jezail and dagger. She had not seen him come. As she stood up, he salammed iow. “Rao Sahib Bahadur commanded me. If the presence wills, the camels wait. And there are goods to load?” She was grateful for the need of action. Barefooted men in gaudy silks, at whose calves swung velvet scabbards, bore off her trunks. On the terrace it was very dark. The fountain tinkled among the roses. She made out two kneeling camels, with baggage beasts loom- ing behind them. One of those kneeling bore the fantastic tented howdah Rajputs use when their pur- dah-women travel. Her guide raised wne embroidered silken curtains and helped her clam- cradle around the hump. The screen fell before her, and at once the camel lurched to his feet. Within, it was dark as pitch and’ reeked of stale, heavy perfume. The loose drapes swayed about her like . the wings of evil things. Frantical- ly she flung the curtain back on the carved ivory support. The night was dark, but starry. They rocked in silence through Shan Singh's exquisite garden, through the winding streets, where voices murmured from behind pierc- ed screens. Presently they were passing through the date palms at the city's rim. The tasseled tops hung black and still against the myriad stars. They thinned and dwindled, ceased, as, straight ahead, Mona saw the rim of an enormeus yellow _moon slide up from behind a smc ve of the desert sky line. They left the last ragged palm, climbed a soft rise, topped it, descended—and were alone among the sands, Ratangarh city left behind. For all the hushed eerie atmos.. phere about her, at the thought her spirits rose. That was the last or the life that had galled her so. She was going hack te what she loved; Europe, where women ruled men, not men women. Yet at once her spirits sank again. She wished desperately that Rao would come soon. How long would he be? slid up, a gigantic yellow disk. In its e light she saw her escort clearly, a grim, hawkish figure, perched on his camel's hump. He Mona spoke to him. “When shall ‘we meet your master?” He did not answer, did not turn his head. impassive, and she shrank back, crouc! in the saddle. She was afraid, desperately afraid, all at once. She gripped the pommel, swaying to the camel's racking lurch ‘while hours dragged by. The moon- light was brilliant now, the gently swelling sky line silver against the somber sky, pricked with stars. Shadows of tall dunes lay on the sand, impenetrably black. More hours, more miles—on, and on, till she lost all count of ‘time, till her limbs were numb with cramp. Aeons after, she was snatched ‘from oblivion by the deep voice at her ear. “If the presence wills?" She had actually been asleep. The into its hot, soft dryness. |" The moon had set, and was aware that it unbroken sweep of “When will your master meet | clearly on the | Dick loved you, He had not said. The moon 8° She called again, but he remained on She was so stiff | The shoulders sky. ment was acute, they were Tonkhis, like her escort. As they neared, she saw that the leader's garments and the accou- trements of his came: were magnifi- cent. Then he unwound the blue silk puggree that was drawn across his face against the dust, and flung it behind him. Her heart leaped for joy. It was. Rao. The set of his head and the lean contour of his cheek were un- mistakable. She ran to meet him, as his camel knelt. ground, dropping on his feet to face her as she stopped before him. Her heart turned over and her eyes stared with consternation. It was Bikha, the king, dressed as a Tonkhi chief. He stood faintly smiling, regarding her, it seemed, with a sort of benev- olent toleration. Her overtaxed nerves failed her at last. She shook all over. She was so shocked that she forgot her guilt, forgot the need of concealment, forgot everything but her loneliness. «“Wh-where is Rao?” she faltered. «past Landi Kotal, by this time. He has a year's leave and has fled from you, who would have him mur- der his best friend.” She swallowed, and her lips twitch- ed. As from a great distance she heard her own voice say, “But he wrote me to meet him here.” Bikha's white teeth flashed as he smiled his negative. “No. I wrote those letters. It seemed to me that you had been long enough in Isul- meer, and when my brother fled, knowing your heart I presumed to arrange for you the freedom that you have so desired.” “What do you mean?” was hoarse. “You know well Her voice what I mean. brought you here. You were received as one of us, sharing our confidence, free of every- thing we prize. But you have foul- ed the place that made you welcome. You were done with Dick, once you found he held his duty higher than your whims. You planned to dis- card him like a sucked orange. You did your best to drive Rao, who loves you, to betray his friend, and you hated him when he stopped that boar and spoiled an easy freedom for you. “There never were such friends as Rao and Dick and I, since we were children. For generations our fath- ers have been great men together in this land. Yet, to serve your ends, you would have destroyed all that, put bitterness in place of loy- alty.” “I didn’t! Oh, I didn't! I never meant—" Mona stopped, for convic- tion had descended on her. She remembered the tall figure of Bikha in the doorway, the night she first had laid seige to Rao; she remem- bered what Bikha had said to Dick that night, and the grim understand- ing. in his lgok after the boar had died. She knew she was beaten by a more subtle player. He nodded, perceiving that she un- derstood. “You have been clever, madonna, but not clever enough. You have forgoten that this is not England. There is a proverb of the desert people, ‘No pestilence like an evil woman! They tie them up and burv them in sand if they are ugly. Ii they are beautiful, they cut their tongues. “You are more fortunate than they, for you have, instead, the free- dom from your husband that you have so desired. Where will you ? South are the sands. the chiefs of Tonk. North, three hundred miles to the railway and Europe” —and she was penniless! “Or will you go back to Dick and say that you lied, that you do not hate him as you told him in your letter?” “You saw that?” “Ten minutes after you wrote it. Dick had it two days ago. The world is yours, madonna. I wish you bet- ter luck than these last months have brought you!” His teeth gleamed and his eyes searched hers, Then his head went up with arrogance. “And know that I, no less than other men, have desired you greatly. And if it should chance that the des- ert is too hot, or you fear the arms of Tonkhi lovers, or your pride will not bend to beg your husband's mercy, then it may be you will hon- or me with your favors! “ill sunset this man waits with you, and if you would so delight my heart, command him, and he will bring you to a certain gate in the south wing of Ratangarh Palace. soft music, beauty such as few eyes long as you are lovely. You shall be chief of all my women, save only uncie gave me. “I go there now, to bid them pre- for the honor that I dare to pe may come to me. At sun- down, the Tonkhi follows, with you or without you. Yet remember, that is a door from which there is no | out!” He turned without bowing, mount- ed his camel and set off, followed by the Tonkhi who had come with him. Mona stood slim and straight, MANY apply conservatism He slid to the BF ‘ed blouse or ‘a man’s social-climbing So gia im Wi her reckless dis- . satisfaction th his There are jewels and eunichs and make money rapidly; she can slay 3 wi be have seen, that shall be yours 8 fo th her insatiable demands. ‘long and black, when the awoke and glanced at the sun. He | looked at her, tightened his beasts FAMILIES LIVING BEYOND THEIR MEANS. thrifty.” mode of in ogy of ment is a upon the mat- ter of false pride about liviug standards i has capitalized this as- hol Over pect of human psychology. and out the mode to there it is out proclaim your poverty. It is quite the thing, when visiting homes of andeur there, to have your hostess preside at to behold a nursemaid cutting down little Anne's frock to suit sister Sue. It is quite the thing to be “too poor” to do this, or go there, or purchase that. America seems not quite sufficient- ly sure of herself to abandon pros- perity pretense, however. Keeping up with the Joneses is still responsible for the harassed lines of strain that are written into all too many faces of the men and women you see in business and in homes. The difficult and nerve-twisting game of spending more than is earn- ed is still being played in the high- tensioned atmosphere of the Ameri- can home. That national high-tension is sure- ly as much responsible for our na- {ional affliction of nervous heebee- jecbies as the alleged topspeed of our daily lives. In fact, it is fair to assume that this top-speed is large- ly created by the general frenzy to keep up with one or another family of Joneses. The large cosmic joke of pretense and pretentiousness is hourly being played to the tune of speed, tension and strain. The ill-wind of the present eco- nomic depression will have accom- plished a national boon if it blows to the American people the good sense to despise the futile game of keeping up with the Joneses. The average American home is like a runner in a race, straining for place. Straining to pass every mem- ber of his team; straining to reach an arbitrary goal. Only in this case the goal is not a specific one; it is a teasing mirage of a goal which lies eternally beyond the one achiev- ed by a next door neighbor, a busi- ness or a social rival. In this desperate race families are confronted with the nerve.rack- ing frenzy of speeding up pretense by living just a bit beyond the in- come; the harassed knots begin to show in the faces of those who must provide not only the where-withal but usually the nervous energy to achieve that mathematical paradox of spending more than is in hand. The financial worries that must hang over and oppress the men at the head of such families! What must be the wretchedness when they awaken at that low-ebb hours of 2 o'clock in the morning, to lie sleepless with the worries that confront these harassed heads of families that are hell-bent on keep- ing up with the Joneses. Install. ments to be met on the new sedan. New living room furniture to keep up with the neighborhood modes in living room furniture. Private schools for the girls. Motorboats for the boys. Furs for a wife who would go her dearest enemy one bet- ter. Facade. More front. More and more of the ridiculous pretense of pretentiousness. No man who awakens day byday to the demands of a family living East, beyond its needs can be immune to this physical and mental jeopardy. Death to contentment, wisdom and ideals lies in living beyond one's means. There is something not only un- dignified but highly ridiculous in the spectacle of a group of these neck- and-neckers. Wisdom seems a long way re-| moved from the millions who even in these Upon the most casual analysis the 8 le so obviously becomes not wo the candle. Not a pretty picture, but one all too apparent in the patterns of con- temporary American life. Women play a cruel role in this picture. We still have with us—may her tribe decrease—the type of parasitic non-productive woman whose alle. giance to her husband is in propor- tion to his earning capacity. She is an almost infallible incentive to instinct. She inability to If the present economic | makes ridiculous this revolting spec- ‘ tacle, the by the chill | the red-haired girl of Cutch mY mighty Ring will ive blown 9 . ——If you want high-class job ‘work come to the Watchman office. | We aim to satisfy. ETE The sun was low, the shadows _Tonkhi girths, crossed t® hers, kicked it up the advertise- ... home “Don't have to wear my luncheon in a finely mend- times of depression are doubtless living beyond their means 1 DAILY TruoUGHT Two lines taken out of my Ameri- “Of course, everybody'll From the time & F wife has to prod him to get him into evening clothes, he seems to have a natural prejudice against any kind of fixing up. | "At the opening of the Metropolitan that thermometer of winter fashions, practically 99.44 per cent of the men wore tail coats. And it ‘also means, Mr. Man, that you're going to be asked to wear youl tuxedo a great deal more than usual for dances, theatre parties and most every occasion that isn't extremely high-hat. The seated man in the illustration who has stopped a pal for a worc about the Thanksgiving footbal scores, shows you what's in fashior for semi-formal affairs. He's turn ed out in a tuxedo with peak lapel: faced in dull grosgrain. Notice the flat-lying, hardboilec shirt of white linen—it's his specia pride. And he did a pretty job or his tie—a smart, pointed-end affair It's of black silk, trimly pullec around a collar with fair-to-mid dling-bold wings. Black oxfords, either of paten leather or dull calf—black silk o lisle socks—and a white handker chief finish his outfit to the queen’. taste. The man standing up has a ver; formal date. His coat has moder ately wide, grosgrain—faced lapels and tails reaching to the bend of hi knees. The trousers come well uf with silk braid over the side seam: Vest, shirt and pique tie are white ‘So are the pearl studs. And h | carries a collapsible top opera ha (how the men have gone for 'em!) WITH YOUR TUXEDO WEAR: 1. Black silk or white pique waist oat. 2. Hard-boiled white linen shirt. 3. Black or smoked studs an links. 4. Black silk tie with pointed end: 5. Black patent or dull calf ox fords. —Jt is almost as important t have a thorough understanding c cooking terms as it is to use goo recipes. Too offen the success C failure in cooking and baking can L traced to the method of preparatios ‘and if the cook fails to discriminat between beating and stirring an ‘folding and mixing she may expel indifferent results. Cooking term have very definite and distinct meal which must be followed if suc cess is assured. To stir is to mix ingredients. W stir for the purpose of blending ir gredients and a circular motion c To beat is to turn the ingredien! over and over for the purpose « introducing a large amount of a into the mixture. A rotary motien used, constantly turning the mu terial over, bringing what is at ti ‘bottom to the top. Beat with ‘long swing. To whip is to beat rapidly mu: terials that expand and undergo phy ‘ical change by the inclusion of air To parboil is to boil until the m: terial is partially done. One-thi to one-half the full time of cookir is usually implied. To boil is to cook in actively boi ing or bubbling water. There is 1 advantage in hard boiling exce where material is to be kept apa by the rapidly moving water. To simmer is to cook slowly ju below the boiling point of wate 212 degrees Fahrenheit and the sir mering point 185 degrees Fahre heit, so any temperature betwe: permits simmering. i to thread lean me | with narrow strips of fat. A lar ing needle is necessary to draw t fat through the meat, but the te: is often used to mean the addition (fat by means of gashes cut in t meat. —Fairly tart, juicy, quick-cooki varieties of apples make the Ix pies. The first apples to ripen a ‘fall are sometimes a little unders ‘ed, and often tarter than one lik 'to eat unbooked, so it is a good id to make apple pies of them. | For the filling you will need 4 t | apples, depending on their si three-fourths cupful sugar, t i cinnamon, if spices |liked. After paring, quartering a slicing the apples very thin, ps | them carefully into the undercr | so the cover will fit evenly. Sprin |the apples with the sugar, salt a | spice, mixed together, and dot w ' butter. Place on the upper cr after moistening the lower rim, a A voice she did not recognize ; “ WZ€ | press the edges together to hold croaked, What-—are you doing? | the juice. Cut a slit to allow ° The fellow pointed to the sun, mound, Spunk hia beast anMeRE: Lich or nl the crus go ed east. Then her nerve went at! prown and the apples are tender last. Anything, anything, but not — ‘to be left alone in that awful plain!| __A fresh fruit salad served w Evening found them still there, “Wait, wait for me!” she called. lettuce and a rich cream may the Tonkhi squatting where he had He stopped, and she stumbled af- | naise is a delightful dish to se: from the saddle, squarely onto the fanned her injured conceit into rage, He looked up. “My lord com- ankle deep in the sand, staring be- and led it to his own. brute's gray back. till she took up hes pen and wrote | manded me to meet him in this | fore her with eyes that did not see. Mona’s mouth was acrid, and her ne, farewell message. | place at sunrise.” | By and by, one of the camels tried head sang. She saw a mad whirl| yt was a letter such as many] Her spirits rose at this informa- to bite the cameleer. He quirted it of gray boar and khaki clothes and wives have penned, since wives be- tion. Sunrise! Already the saffron &Cross the nose, and as it recoiled long brown boots in a gloud of fst | Ear The burden of it was the old in the east was tinged with | snarling, squatted in the shadow of before the butchered dun. Then | cheap thrust, “Gone with a hand- She leaned her camel's side, its body and composed himself to Bikha was afoot beside them, with gomer man than you. But her pen watching the dawn wax tranquilly wait. poised blade. Three times he made | was dipped in vitrol that day. All | through rose to gold and flaming | to thrust, but stayed his hand. Then her repressions found vent in it; her scarlet, till the first fierce ray stab- | he lunged home and sprang back as hurt conceit, her disappointed sel- bed at her from the sun's rim, dozed the long day through. ‘ter him as the camels knelt. | afternoon guests. You need the hilt was wrenched away. fishness, the hatred that his defeat| The sun was up. It had turned Mona crouched close to her camel, He motioned to the howdah, and package dates, % pound pecans For a moment the fantastic wrest- | of her had borne. It was finality, the dawn coolness into mali t | Where she had been forced for shel- | trembling violently, she mounted. | oranges, 2 bananas, 1 small « ling match went on, but the hog’s | limned in vindictive, |ter from the sun. Her lips were The curtain was snatched shut be- pineapple, & pound grapes, 1 sm struggles weakened, stopped, and he her face like ivory, and her fore her, leaving her in inky dark. |can cherries, lettuce, a cup of wk lay weltering in the darkened dust, | preparations. her adventure, for the sight of Rao, | eyes seemed to have receded into the When the camel rose and marched ped cream and a cup of mayonna with Rao embracing him, one arm (ly her loveliest clothes. Her thoughts | his rare smile and the ardent sound | caverns of their sockets. Hour af- she tried to part the drapes for xia. Mix the diced dates, banar about his neck, ome hand pping | ran on excitedly. Life, with all men |of his voice. The cameleer was ter grim hour, the same thoughts She could not. They were ; oranges and pineapple with gra his snout and long legs wrapped at her feet. squatting by his camel's flank. through her brain in a tight. The heavy rfume from t*| and pecans. Fold whipped cre about his quarters. | Rao was rich, far richer than| Presently the fellow to his mad, macabre dance: four cholces— | previous occupants filled her prison. into mayonnaise. Combine; se When the spectators rushed up, | Dick. He never could return to|feet and pointed silently. Against and each led pitilessly to death, or —Hearst's International Cosmopol- ' on lettuce, surround with may the twins were releasing Dick's leg | India after this. They would buy the blue above a dune crest nodded to abysmal shame. itan. |naise and top with cherries.