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Father Time With Deadly Scythe Rushes to Rescue of Beaten Gulls CRFjlT SflFNF
CRACKER CLUB IS VANQUISHED,THOUGH VICTORS
By Fuzzy Woodruff.
TTxANTA won. And defeat wa
A the Cracker*.
Mobile lost, and when the
G«U* departed from the stricken field
of Ponce DeLeon they were tasting
the sweet* of victory.
The statement sounds paradoxical,
but the paradox is true. For to the
losers belonged the spoil*, while the
winner’* share was the headache.
A happier, more radiant, more su
premely contented face has never
been seen in Atlanta than was the
Fenian physiognomy of Finn as he left
that battle-plowed, rain-soaked field.
A more despondent, heartbroken
wlsht than William Andrew* Smith at
that time has never appeared outside
of e hi age snowstorm.
And William was the victor. Miquo
was the vanquished.
J
ET us pause and analyze this con
dition under which oil mixes with
waiei. streams run uphill, theft be
come* honesty, raise* in salary are
given unsolicited, and other rank im
possibilities become stern reality.
When Finn led hi* Gulls Into this
city of Southern progress. William
Andrew* Smith had to lead a forlorn
hope that makes Pickett’s charge at
Gettysburg appear as easy a* pick
ing chsrrles off papa's tree.
With a club that had but recently
recovered from a slump he was com
pelled to face the leaders of the l«agun.
before whose attack other clubs In
the circuit bad fallen as chaff be
fore the wind and riders from the
water wagon on the first bump after
Nlew Tear's Day.
E"OUR games were scheduled be-
1 tween the Crackers and the
Gulls Experts agreed that for the
crankers to have a reasonable chance
for the Southern League gonfalon all
four of these battles must be taken
by Atlanta
Writers got out their trusty book of
adjectives, picked out “Herculanean"
and then began to describe Smith's
task.
Then let the epic poet twang his
lyre and tell tn rounded phrase and
(inkling jingle the gallantry with
which William went about his labors.
Marco Boczarls, the gent who awoke
the Turks, Arnold Von IVlnkelrlsd,
the warrior who made a pin-cushloti
of himself for the Independence of
Switzerland; Nathan Hale, who did a
•aft-shoe dance on atmosphere and
wished for the lives of a oat In order
to take his encores, had nothing on
the sublime courage with which Hilly
and his Crackers tackled the Job.
Wonderful
Blood Remedy
Host
Brings Health to a
of Sufferers
'"THE firm gnme was an Atlanta vie-
4 tory. The ta»k ceased to be Her
culanean. It dwindled to monumental
proportions. A second victory re
duced it to Just plain tremendous.
And then came a drawn battle that
sent Smith back to the Hercuianean
Job of w-inning two battles in a single
day, equaling, if not bettering. the
hatting average of N. Bonaparte, i
major leaguer of the early part of the
late departed century.
Smith didn’t quail. He resumed
the role of Hercules with as stout a
heart as ever tripped inside of hunun
carcass.
He fought de*perately for the first
game of this double affair. He won it.
He fought desperately for the second.
He was not defeated by the Gulls. He
was downed by Father Time, a war
rior who has been able to dispose of
every champion who has ever sported
laurel wreath or The Police Gazette
belt.
To-day he stands a vanquished
conqueror, through no fault of his.
Had the figure in the silhouette robe
with the populite whiskers and the
agricultural impliment. that is pic
tured as being charted by a chubby
Infant every time the Old Year dies,
not cast his shadow over the ball lot.
had not some untoward fate caused
the New York-New* Orleans Limited
to be on time for once on yesterday
afternoon, there is every probability
that Atlanta would be leading the
league standing by one full game to
day, instead of the top of the per
centage table being tied in a knot a*
fast a* master mariner can make.
HTHE Crackers have displayed a won-
* derful nerve during the Gulls se
ries. They may still be working a:,
top speed against the Lookouts. They
may w*in the pennant.
But golden opportunity was lost
when Atlanta took a chance on let-
WIN OPENER
Has Fate Robbed Atlanta of
+•+ +•+ +•-> +•+ +•+
C. Thompson Looked Like Winner
IT was palpable yesterday that the
1 Mobile club had realized it was
beaten, practically before the ath
letes trotted on the field. Weirder
support than was given “Pug” Cavet
in the opening session has rarely been
seen. So securely did the game seem
tucked away that the Crackers eased
In their attack to hurry matters and
make the second game sure.
Of course, there is where Smith
or the officers of the Atlanta Baseball
Association or somebody erred. Ther®
should have been no chance of the
second game being called without
five innings being played.
It was known, days and days in
advance, that the Mobile club would
have to leave the ball park at 4:40
o’clock yesterday afternoon to com
plete their schedule at home. It was
known, weeks and weeks ago that
Houthern League games played in less
than two hours are rarities.
But only three hours were given
for the playing of the two games,
when the ten minutes’ rest between
struggles la deducted.
The remarkable
action of 8. S. 8.
in the bknxl is glv- I
en Impetus by m
letter received
from Bari C. |
Cook. 708 Bouth j
Center St.. Bloom- |
lngton. 111. He
say*. “I suffered
several month*
and took treat
ment here, but ob
tained relief only
for a few days at
a time Becoming
doubtful of re
sults. I quit the doctors, and there
wan marked improvement from the
start 1 used thirteen bottles of P. S
8. and was entirely cured My blood
was In a dreadful condition, and 1
can not thank S. S 8 enough for my
wonderful recovery.”
This preparation stands alone
among specific remedies aa a blood
purifier, tince it accomplishes all that
w*s ever claimed for mercury, io
dides arsenic and other destructive
mineral drugs, and yet it la absolute
ly a purely vegetable product These
fart* are brought out in a highly in
teresting book compiled by the medi
eal department of The Swift Specific
f'c.. 192 Swift Bldg.. Atlanta. Ga. It
is mailed free together with a special
letter of advice to all wTio are strug
gling with a blood disease
<»et a bottle of S S s to-day of
ur druggist. it will Kurprine you j
l is t m Lbs
TTHK Atlanta club could have had
1 the first game called at 10 o’clock
yesterday morning as well as 1:30
o’clock yesterday afternoon. Not one
paid admission would have been miss
ing. Still, the club fixed the hour at
1:30. and the club, and the club alone,
i* responsible for the fact that the
(’rackers, instead of being in first
place hv a margin so comfortable
that it would he desperately hard to
overcome, are hut tied for first place,
with the schedule so arranged that
there is only the barest possibility
that Atlanta can finish in front.
To-day Atlanta meets Chattanooga,
an admittedly formidable club. To
day Mobile meet* New* Orleans, ad
mittedly the weakest club in the
league. To-morrow the season of
1913 is a thing of the past for At
lanta. To-morrow Mobile meets Now
Orleans.
It Is decidedly problematical, after
the strain of a series like the one
under which the Crackers labored
while they were flghling the Gulls,
that Atlanta can come right back and
take the dangerous Elberfeldans into
camp.
It la altogether likely that Mobile
(an bent the tail-end Pelicans twice
in tw r o days.
tlrg Father Time enter the lists, for
old Father has won all of his battles,
wave the one that is still being waged
with Lillian Russell, and he may get
her yet.
The Official Score
Mobile.
ab. r.
h.
po. a.
e.
Stobk, ss. . . .
. 3 1
0
.3 5
1
Starr, 2b. . . .
. 3 1
1
o •»
i
O’Dell, .'lb. . . .
. 5 0
1
2 3
0
Paulet, lb. . . .
. 4 0
O
13 1
0
Robertson, of. . .
. 5 0
1
3 0
1
Schmidt, c. . .
. 5 0
0
i 1
Clark, If. . . .
. 4 0
0
2 1
0
Miller, rf. . . .
. 3 2
T
0 0
0
Cavet, p. . . .
. 4 1
2
1 2
Total
:u;
8*
28 15
8
Atlanta.
ab. r.
h.
po. a.
e.
Agler, lb. . . .
. 5 fi
i
14 0
0
Long, If. . . .
. 4 1
i
0 0
1
Welehonee, of. .
. 5 0
3
3 0
0
Smith, lih. . . .
. 5 2
2
2 6
0
Bisland, ns. . . .
. 3 0
l
« 4
«•
Holland, 3b. . . .
. 4 1
l
1 4
0
xMauush . . .
. i n
0
0 0
0
Nixon, rf. . . .
. 3 1
1
1 0
0
rhnpman, o.. . .
. \
1
3 2
0
Price, p. . . .
. 1 0
0
0 0
0
Dent, p
. 1 0
0
0 0
0
Total
tl
11
30 16
1
Score by Innings:
Mobile ....
. 000 0110
300 0—6
Atlanta ....
. 220 001
000 1-
-6
•One out when winning run waB
scored.
xBatted for Holland in tenth.
Summary: Three-base hits—Pail-
let, Smith Double play—O'Dell to
Starr to Paulet. Hits—Off Price, 6
In 7 Innings; off Dent, 2 in 3 Innings.
Struck out—By Price, 2; by Cavet, 1.
Bases on balls—Off Price, 4; off
Dent, 2; off Cavet, 3. Sacrifice hits—
Bisland, Chapman, Price (2). Stolen
bases—Long, Smith, Bisland. Starr,
Robertson, lilt by pitched ball—Mil
ler, by Price. Time—2:13. Umpires
—Rudderhum and f*Tenninger.
BASEBALL SUMMARIES.
SOUTHERN LEAGUE.
Games Saturday.
Chattanooga at Atlanta. Game called
at 3:16 o’clock.
New Orleans at Mobile
Memphis at Montgomery.
Birmingham at Nashville.
Standing of the Club*
W. L. Pc. W Ta Pn.
Atlanta. 80 66 .688 Mont ... 68 66 M>7
Mobile 80 66 .688 M phis.. 62 73 ,45t
B'ham. 73 64 .533 N ville . 62 75 449
Chutt. . 70 53^ New O.. 44 87 .331
Friday’s Results.
Atlanta. t>; Aiowiu., o turn innings).
Chattnn>H)ga. 5. New Orleans, 1
Nashville. 4; Montgomery. 3.
Birniingham-Memphis, rain.
By Innis Brown.
A S that mass of humanity rose
and roared yesterday after
noon, as the band of brans
crashed out a martial air whose first
bars even were drowned by cheering,
the clanging of cow bells, the tooting
of horns, the shrieks of automobile
sirensi, as those hundreds of red-blood
ed people, bankers and artisans,
financiers and clerk*, clubmen and
laborers Joined on common ground,
and shoulder to shoulder, marched the
blue-coated, apoplectic musicians to
voice and demonstrate their enthusi
asm, I longed for the present of some
of our critics from across the sea, who
are always prone to ohout that our
sports are too commercialized to per
mit genuine enthusiasm.
That crowd yesterday would have
been a better answer to that critisicm
than 10,000 words written by our
ablest defenders. It was a sight worth
going miles to see.
1 have seen the surging erow'd at
the running of the Futurity in the
days that are gone. I have seen the
hysteria with which the winner was
greeted.
I have heard that awful roar that
comes from the rival stands when toe
meets football and armored athletes
clash in their classic annual strug
gles.
But I have never seen demonstra
tion to equal the one on Ponce De
Leon field yesterday afternoon.
• * *
IT was a climax to a wonderful day.
1 As early ns noon the stands began
to fill. These early comers were the
dyed-in-the-wool bugs, the fellows
who never know what it is to miss a
ball game, men who would sacrifice
Job and health and anything else
rather than miss such a critical com
bat as yesterday.
It was truly a typical American
gathering. The spirit of the Republic
was more evident there than in any
convention of a political party ever
assembled. Every class was repre
sented. As standing space became of
value. I eaw business men of the
highest standing, climbing fences like
10-year-olds. I saw society belles
calmly Reated on the red clay ground,
regardless of future of dainty dresses.
I saw newsboys become supremely
Important personages because they
were possess of a soda water box-
on which to seat themselves.
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
Games Saturday.
Chicago at 8t Louin
Detroit at Cleveland.
New York at Washington.
Boston at Philadelphia.
Standing of the Clubs.
W. L Pc. W. L. Pr.
Boston.. 65 62 .512
Detroit. 67 72 .442
49 84 .369
St. L.
New Y. 44 82 .349
Phila. .. 84 45 .661
Cl’land 78 52 .600
W’gton. 72 56 .562
Chicago 68 64 515
Friday’s Results.
Boston. 6; Philadelphia. .<
Chicago, t; 8t. Louis. 0.
Cleveland, 7; Detroit. 6.
Washington, 3-1; New York, 2-0.
A rLANTA can win the pennant
^*under these .ondltions:
(D Defeat Chattanooga, while Mo.
bile loses one game to New Orleans '
(2) Lose to Chattanooga, while j
Mobile los^s twice to New Orleans.
t3> Win from Chattanooga, while
both Gulls games are being rained
out.
(4) Have rain in Atlanta while Mo
bile is losing one or more games.
The conditions seem numerous. Jusg !
try to figure out the number of ways
in which Atlanta can lose and then
*-md a hurry call for an adding ina-
chinjk
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
Game* Saturday.
Philadelphia at Boston.
Brooklyn at New York.
St Louis at Pittsburg.
Cincinnati at Chicago.
Standing of the Clubs
W. L.
W. L Pc
New Y . 87 4t .680 B’klyn.. 54 72 .429
Phila. 74 47 .612
Chicag
P’burg
Boston. 54 69 439
71 57 .556 ( C’nati... 56 78 .414
69 59 539 St. L... 46 87 346
Friday’s Results.
Cincinnati. 9. Chicago. 4
New York. *5. Brooklyn, 0
Pittsburg 8-11; St Louis. 3-2
Philadelphia. 1-0; Boston, 0-u ^second
gam« tea Innings, darknem).
That crowd was never silent for a
1 second. Every noise that could
be made that crowd made. Every
move that favored Atlanta was greet
ed with a demonstration louder than
the one Just preceding. until it
seemod that the limit had been
reached.
But w’hen the winning run wns
scored the noise that had resounded
before sounded like a pin drop in a
boiler factory. The shov.ts must have
been heard in East Point. Certainly
the spirit of enthusiasm pervaded
Fulton and DeKalb Counties.
\nd then come?' the sad part. That
crowd, the crowd that did all and
would have done more for :he Crack
ers was the direct cause of the Crack
ers not scoring a double victory. The
three-base bit of Paulet that scored
Mobile’s tying runs that forced the
gam * into extra Innings and con
sumed valuable time wouid have been
easily captured had not the presence
of the crowd interfered with Out
fielder Nixon.
.Again in the tenth inning. Wallie
Smith’s drive to left would have been
an easy home run. but the fact that
it went into the crowd made it a
three-base hit. and more of those
priceless mtnutes were lost bringing
him from third home.
By Lou Castro.
H AS fate beaten the Crackers out of the Southern League pennant for
1918? After trimming the’ (lulls 6 to 5 In the first game, the locals
looked like sure winners In the second combat. The calling of the
second game, however, forces the Crackers to beat Chattanooga this after
noon, while Finn’s men must drop one of their two remaining contests to
the Pels.
At the present time both teams have about ah even change for the
flag. But, had the locals been able to finish the second game they would
have surely copped. Carl Thompson was going strong, and it is doubtful
if the overworked Hogg could have stood the strain much longer. A vic
tory for Smith's crew in the final game meant the pennant. The Crackers
knew it. The Gulls knew it, and every fan in that ball park knew it.
Pretty Tough to See Crackers Pi
GRAND BATTLING GAINS.
still
By 0. B. Keeler.
B OYS, we’re still THERE—
And not so BLAMED
ahout It, either.
Our bread-winners tremble as these
lines are indited. The typewriter
trembles with conflicting emotions
and type-bars. The desk trembles.
The old work-shop trembles.
We recall something Scriptural
about the little hills skipping or danc
ing together, or something.
Must have been at the shank of a
bitter pennant fight—what?
"THIS small writing 1s going to stut-
1 ter. Pnssihlv the magic of the
S TILL you can not beat fate. The second game started at 4 o’clock. The
rival managers had agreed to stop play at 4:40, no matter how the
count stood. To complete four and one-half innings in 40 minutes was
impossible. The teams started to play, but after going three innings, the
contest was called, as the time was up.
True, the Mobile players stalled, but where is there a ball club that
wouldn't have done the same thing? They were fighting with their backs
against the wall and were out to take advantage of every opening. If they
dropped that second game to the boys from Atlanta it meant the pennant,
and they were out to save themselves. Fate did it for them.
ter.
linotype
straight.
Possibly
will keep
the alphabet
Don't know—
FIRST
GAME.
Don’t rare;
a
Innings—
Price Dent Cave
Thing is
Fust
23
We’re still there!
Second
Third
... 16
.. . 8
• •
13
8
The typewriter
did that. Just
Fourth
. . . 0
16
sitewed out of It,
like the orecious
Fifth
.., 15
..
9
attar of roses out of the otter. Ought
Sixth
Seventh
... 8
.. 23
•*
7
H
to put quotes around that. Old Mark
Eighth
7
13
Twain’* stuff. Let’s
be honest, though
Ninth
16
13
the bottom drops out. That's Lycur-
Tenth
13
13
gus, now.
• •
•
Totals
. . .86
V 3G
123
\1F H’RE still there, because we won.
vv We would be more there, but
N OW that the great series is over, there is one player who is scampering
around the shortfield for the Crackers who deserves much credit.
Rivington Bisland is the gentleman, and he is certainly a wonder. Never
have I seen a boy deliver the goods in the pinches better than Bisland.
His work at short was simply wonderful, and it will be some time before
local fans will see it duplicated. I have watched such stars as Wagner,
Barry, Wallace, Elberfeld and Bush in action, but Bisland’s work in this
series has never been equaled by any of them.
He covered the territory between second and third in great style, and
more than once raced in hack of Holland for seemingly impossible
grounders. Once he got his hands on the pill his throw to first was like
an arrow. His two one-handed stops yesterday were surely remarkable.
If some major league club doesn’t grab this boy next season I miss my
guess. And it’s a 100-to-l bet that he will make good, too. He has the
class, and class tells.
game
be-
we lost, too—lost the second
because wc didn’t win li.
We won one and we lost, too,
cause we didn’t win two.
Try that over on your typewriter.
It looks sort of suspicious to us.
D OYS, that was one ball
LJ Everybody thought so.
NT EXT to Bislaud Joe Agler was the shining star, for the Crackers. Joe
’ played great ball, both at bat and In the field. It is my opinion that
Agler and Bisland are two of the greatest players in the Southern League.
Going back to the game, I want to say a few words about WdlUe
Smith. Many of the fans had thought Wallie was about through after he
made four errors the other day. Wallie certainly redeemed himself In the
eyes of the fans yesterday when he lined out a triple In the tenth inning
of the first game. The crowd was all that robbed Smith of a home run. The
ball cleared Clark’s head by twenty feet and would have been a home run
on any field. Ground rules, however, kept him from circling the bases.
He was forced to go back to third, but later scored when Robertson dropped
Manush’s fly.
game!
Every
body aaw it. It was a grand afternoon
for second-story men. Most of the
houses in thle town were depopulated.
Also, moat of the dinner conversa
tion last night was in husky whis
pers.
Also, it was ahout the hall game
that was, and the ball game t£at
wasn’t, but ought to have been.
And about the pennant that may be
—AND OUGHT TO BE. if right really
does prevail and a mighty uphill bat
tle is to be rewarded.
leaving an odd ten minutes for the ,
necessary interval between the con- s
tests.
A game played In an hour and »
half is a fast game. There must be I
SIDELIGHTS 0
GAME AT
By TV. S. Farnsworth.
H
day:
ERE are two tables of figure
showing just how many halls|
each hurler uncorked yester-
SECOND GAME
Innings— T'mptfn Hoggl
First n 11
Second 17 15
Third 12 14 (
Total* 46 ilOj 1
• • • -
FIRST GAME GOSSIP. \.T
Price's first ball was a fast one ar.if
Starr fouled it off.
Cavet’s opening offering was also
a fast ball. Agler banged it on the
ground to Stock, who relayed to
Paulet.
.Welchonofe’s first hit was a lucky
one. The ball took a bound past
Stock.
Long made a nice play after being
caught asleep off third in the first
Inning by tearing straight for the
plate instead of running back and
forth.
AND the demonstration Itself. The
crowd surge on the field. It ran
wildly for awhile then It formed ani
marched, and more time was tRken
Eighteen minutes were consumed In
clearing the field. The allotted time
between games is ten minutes.
Those moments that the crowd
wasted might have been enough to
enable the Crackers to have taken
both games.
TTAD Robertson caught that ball the game might have gone on lndefl-
nltely. The ball was close in and chances are that Smith would have
held third. Billy Smith made a good move when he yanked Holland and
sent Manush to bat In his place.
Before I finish this story I want to say a few words about Billy Smith,
manager of the Atlanta baseball club. I have been on his club for two
seasons and can truthfnlly say that there Isn't another manager In base
ball to-day who labors under the strain this man does.
True, he doesn't play, but if he was an active member of the team it
would be better for him. I watched him during several stages of yester
day’s game and it Is really surprising to me that he didn’t collapse. He Is
without a doubt one of the hardest losers in the country to-day, but a good
fellow with it
W the blff aartoe 18 1,ut still have a chance to cop the rag.
» 1 Remember, to-day's game Is just as Important as any of the bat
tles just finished. The Crackers must win to-day if they hop© to cop the
pennant. 1 will be out there for one. and 1 hope that another record-
breaking crowd will he out to cheer the gamest ball club Atlanta has ever
had to another victory. <
The fans that are out at Poncy to-day will also have an opportunity of
getting the scores of the Mobile-Aew Orleans game. They will he posted
on the eeore-board.
"THE Craekor© won the final game
Jt „ of * ,rle * by whipping the
Guile. This time they outplaved ae
well as outfought the enemy, and only
the weakening of Gil Price's over
worked arm in the seventh inning
saved the doomed Gulls from a dis
tinguished licking within the nine
rounds prescribed for an ordinary bail
game.
It was on the heels of the mjventh
Inning disaster that the oourage of
the Crockers flashed more brightly
athwart tho gray horlxon than ever
before 1n all their desperate, grueling
grind of eighteen victories out of
twenty games.
Price yielded under the savage at
tack of the Gulls, bat Elliott Dent's
great heart and arm and Chapman's
deadly whip mastered the oneiaught
and fought back the Invaders until
the flail crack of victory in the tenth.
Blsland'e single In the first spasmj
was a wicked grounder to left thdg
would have gone a mile had it been
a ballooner.
Blzzy then made a beauty steal «
second, pulling a dandy hook slide, r
Elnn had Berger warming up 1
in the
Cavet wae being pounded
inning.
Robertson would have been out a
mile on his pilfer trip in the second
had not Chapman's throw been low.
Miller, the young man who tied up
Thursday's game with a single, looked
like an awful boob the first time up.
He fanned on throe ourve balls.
Robertson made a peachy try for
Axon's single to center in the eeoond.
pill
N!
He almost
ehoet ops
speared the
at his
tl
A WD it wa« an honest victory, well
CG earned, for Pug Covet blinders
Chapman
ieely In
the Gull lnfeid
fixed o»
and all, woe pitching a grand game
of ball after a bad start—a gritty,
calculating, heady gome that rated
him for all ’ ...
I time with 15,000 Atlanta
fans as a pitcher of oourage and ster
ling ability.
Had it not been for the yielding of
Price, we would have been helped to
a ball game by the cracking of the
Gulls in the first two rounds.
As it turned out. we smashed out
a victory that was earned to the core.
. crossed
nicely In the second. With Nl:
first Chapman tried to sacrifice ton
the flret ball. But on the next bull
he banged the ball hard to Stock and
beat it out for a hit,
A ND there is small doubt In 15,009
minus that the Oraokern would
have taken the second rams and the
lead In the pennant chaee—would
eventually have won that terriflealiy-
foqght-for flag—but for the grave
mismanagement of the club director*
in arranging tits play-off of the drawn
battle of the day before.
DY some quaint method of reason-
*-* Ing. it apparently was figured
the two games could be played
Just three huuxs ot (tUyius time,
Price wag robbed of a hit when ha
wae declared out in the second on u
bunt that Cavet threw so wide to
flret that Starr left the bag, Starr
was covering the bag as Paulet had
run in to get a bunt.
• * •
Bisland was lightning f^si cover
ing Cavet’s demon grasser in thr
third. And he made a pippin chuck
while ont of position, too.
• • s
A bunch of fair fans crowded into
the Gulls’ benoh In the third inninif
There wasn't a pook inside the para n
that wae n't oo^phsd.
Bisland robbed Psulet of a sure bll h
when he made a one-hand stab of A .
hard-hit grounder back of second-*'*
the third. r> Jl
» » * A
Agisrs n*juu pi JtihwWA# AwistiUF *
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