The evening world. Newspaper, October 8, 1917, Page 12

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tN. — ge THE BYENING WORLD, MONDAY, OCTOBER fb, i917. BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK “PM AS CONFIDENT AS EVER.” SAYS GUNS LAER |McGraw and His Charges Be lieve They'll Come Back WORLD'S SERIES White Sox Hope Mle Team THIRD ROUND COMING! New Tore Brening Wer) Coprreht. 10T, Ge the Press Pubttahing pester day, Sean, Total receipts, #72, fubiication yust how | Lit, divided as tole A balp bus fool abeatate can. and Win Series, —— tm the tinal eult, and I ————- ttralght MOMRE Mo take four | nueP ALO, Oot. On Board Mich. Satlonal Commission Thie team te the ¢ \enn Central Limited, en route te Invincible as the Giants Were in Their Own League, They Found Themselves Completely Outelassed by Their American | League Rival, These Gaures are exactly the vametoe prety ao those for Sat. y's game, Oficial pald attendance for two ames, C400, Total receipts, #146204, divided an follows: Players 870,004.16 } Tork. More's bow Manager Me. Grew of the Giants views the World's Bering situation “Naturally we coulda. win with the pitebing we got. It was ted a Wath may be « decided shock to all our admirers that Schupp failed. it wasn't to me My experience har layed the p and made an easy victory tf what started to be @ tough Hi) Piet’ Taber pitched « ewell game, but not nearly £0 good as he le capable of. However, he never felt any fear after the boys tied it up for ‘heon ; «4 RO woe Pach club 26,884.72 bs Mig ~—, od some been that most young fellows wifl ¢al rl American | Natlonal Commission 14,490.40 IT etrias tna tneytt never ater hig || nto @ furry when facing the crow Lasdine ball teams ove i rd game at Polo Grounds tn under such te tes Se S mepun wan | thls ety tomorrow at ¢ o'clock, vel for them to blew up. a ev ! ‘he team hasn't played ite game Searty shown aga a | they're not hitting, but that can’t last World's Series ga piayed at | he the A. A. U fully approves of It'@ pot reasonable to suppose tha! Chicago. Invineibie ae th : “* boil ped oe } our big four, Zim, Kauff, Fletcher and saere in their own league Oey found are going to go through thir then itelassed by | part weries without hitting their stride. tietr American Leagw t) The rived “Chicago had all the luck. We hit usually turns ow t* the | cis tpn |the ball, but always, it seemed, into sy National League pnant w siete’ gainen a ura ietatd ie ree hts will appear in the| their bands, while thetes Ge when the post-reanon ner ti 4 ktob two bits pe two bouts et the Clermont | cnowmh fo scoot thrown a along. They are marvels in their own each, There are some people in thin| Rink of Brooklyn on Thursday night. While the score looks black agains erowd. But they're helplessly out of y who think it rather absurd Matchmaker Silvey Burne to-day tn- things would have appeared ver it when they meet real class bi nie hnl geo lie y distinction duced Hughie Le Klang to sign articles differently had they wot headed off 1 lavage alana org A amateurs and profession to allow Knockout Magers and Joo |two of our hard bit balls. I'm speak at ar ® men going to | my. 1 think that way iy: | Lyneh wo crack West aide boxers,|ing of the one that Holke bit into do with & bunch that can knock |» an Lauite cant the A rent | to appear iy ten-round bouts, B », their bands for « doubie play and the t he wey? argumen eemn to ine our profes i nt , oe . h that Wilhoit 4 1 Weaver Behupp out of the box, anyway |Somot athiaton ts the Panta selit buak: | Se ie Suladcene lo for a double ut first. Had these. two yy tft Sunt a ch by athletic t ] ard fight in adelpinia, at | fe LS ; ¥ HER te a really first clase lieht-' tid competition as our emateur athe | yung Lindo, the aggressive Brooklyn: | Palle got through them It would al weight attraction scheduled |jate soldiers, Seema to mo although to, aud Lyneb will tackle Mickey Dunn nr . for to-morrow evening. Irish |of course 1am a bit funty over there of Hartom Faber had more luck than stuff. ‘Patsy Cline will fight Johany Dun. |thing#—that our professional athlete | I'm as confident as ever.’ 4 ‘* |noldiers will be more useful because | wy Coue and Jobany Duntee, who Linw 'CARTY'S THROWING leo at the Ma: an, of athletic training, In Just the | out ot the Manhattan A. 0.| ARM: “Semo ono bas wished the Cline has been fighting very well | proportion that our amateur athlete | — ~ up thelr training (0-487.! Spanish blight on me. It's pretty for several months. He is coming | soldiers will be more useful, Seems = — a Lae and neither will have as! hard to get all bunged up again aftor fest and may be able to give even | me that our professionals are just a — — —— es . defeat, a tack of prevara-| sitting out a broken leg for eo many Benny Leonard an interesting eve. (#2, Much entitled ax our amateurs to e ‘ 2 Wily Kocae Laas deem selected to referee. | weeks. I don’t know whether I wiil en onard an interestin: *- | the ethletic work that will give them | be able to play to-morrow or not, aing-—if Dundes jets him, The /akiN in defense and offense with the| HLANTS Are a unare er Cent. ine cient iT} ” | Te ee elaluay, waee ak “It there fs anything torn in my Gooteh-Wop has been fighting very | bayonet, and physics! endurance to ° spot Fe on eis ey tities Moulder it will be useless to try. 7 fi elt. ep ig Wee chooace CHO handenite at the Ro I d SI d J h 60P C He ds h ke “ i rea ,| cam hardly lift the arm now, as you Sethe Jumping that rendered tn hie: | tFenchen |fvowlan ipped Jonn a - CU. Manashake sthtt See font wns | cut aoe. Teil have to be pretty wore, th: ineffective and has improved a|_,S¢ems to me, in short, that the last poser however, to keep me out to-morrow.” fot in boxing place in the world for “the amateur a _ : WHAT FERDIE SCHUPP BAID: Johnny haw tt in hin head that nea |!deu" te the army. | The American Tha. Mika O'Dowd has earned erat peoaarty) “What can I say? | Didn't you a like to Agbt Bei L 1. Welsh |Atmy can't have two mas nd , opnag * Fh | ss sire Sereatouia wan ovienced by the crome | CnOURH ? had a bad inning, that’s hever cave him a chance at the tite, [as yet the United States Government BY ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER. ; | a . at bens ne leaner Sil, this that i? ne had ates Jounny wants his opportunity be. |hasn't shown any devire to abdicate |Copyright, 1917, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York bivening World.) boarded the train en route to join the National there I would have pulled myself out fory he is xo old that long white | . CHICAGO, Oct. 8 Anay. ‘Mike waa ‘a big eend-off. There oe the bole. 3 adaitt 1 wasn't ging bf cee ll gdalada his chief personal | OW they say Benny Leonard i IRECTLY south of skies that were as blue as the New York deloga- | ovat Pe cer i memeree che Oreste re eee eet felt {hat X was fooling dhe Manes » OF Clitie, one of there two, | a hypnotiet. tion of rooters present, the Chicago Sox dedicated another beating ¥ he ; int reine a palit ae oh nalineas . shee > and more us T went along. It isn't aya e Tanh to coeed Beane “le had Vic Moran nypno- to the Glants with elaborate ceremonies and appropriate gestures. ‘ou have got to concede that Rowland has knitted a set of sox that) jimmy Durty. tie mest side ilghtweigat, bes over. Oh, don't think that, We'll get are mighty hard to unravel. Chicago's Mayor didn’t hand the English Commi: in @ more cor- rugated reception than Chicago's team slipped the New York Baseball Commission. There has been some inclination among the experts to grill McGraw for his selection of pitchers during the series, but that stuff is just as foolish as expecting the Twentieth Century Limited to stop at a pum: \t is @ tough job to pronounce Cicotte’s name correctly, but it i tougher job to pronounce his pitching, He throws in hieroglyphios. The vocal calisthenics im to have purloined the Giants’ goat The rooting sounds like a million cats with walnut shells on their feet rattling over a tin roof. yern kuseked out, but Joe Welling delams/them yet. I'll come perform this feat tomorrow night at the| whip therm. % Welling anzious to| them. “Allowing they have a lot of nat- ural abilityy I want to say that they're the luckiest crowd I ever looked at.” —_— jartfeld Trounces Carbone. Soldier Bartfield trounced Frankie Carbone in thelr ten-round bout at the Broadway Sporting Club of Brooklyn. on again and I'l) Honestly I can't eee 8 attention in the near fu- he only trouble that may pre- Yen. such a match ts that either or oth of these boys may soon be busy a in the training camps, teaching the soldiers how to put up thelr mitts and dive gracefully when hit on the chin, ae tised,” declared Moran's manager d after the fight Friday night. ‘There'r| '#¥Ving absorbed @ twin beating, Manager McGraw {fe sorer then a bear something about Benny tbat buffaloes with a flat wheel. The Glants ambled to thls neck o' woods figuring that them all. I never saw Moran whon| the serics was @ pushover, If our skull Isn't Mmping on the fe‘, von! be couldn't fight, until to-night. He] Kluck also figured that the trip to Paris was also a push-over. When the was all right until he faced Benny,| Giants lost Saturday MoGraw doped that it was an accident, but yester- but after that he wos il ied ouid ger | day's Dummelling makes {t authentle, You never lamped an accident that | atarted—bing! Benny nailed him that, stuttered. ono in the body, and I knew it was) all over. Leonard's a greater fighter) than they know. Down in New Or-) leans we all thought Leo Johnson) HE Amatour Athletic Union tn about to confer a great favor on the United States. The A. A. U. has decided that 1t will allow soldiers in the United states Armies be dattliog for the championship of New Jersey, whieh Tuohey claims tut which Drummie toe bia right to, but they You The Giant roofers are wearing their jaws at half m figure that the boys will tour a trifle faster on the home terrace. Phil Wagner, Joe Wagner's promising bantam: ¥ " * a fr . In the third, fifth and eighth round, to compete against cach other in ath-| would surely beat bim, The news of have got to concede that Rowland has knitted a set of sox that are Zim is just as popular here as @ waiter’s thumb in the consomme. |] "eh. will bos Franke Daly of Staten Island) fh at a naa yy ba Leo's knockout in one round was a ; } at Oe eae lesa, Jun | Bartfleld had his opponent in bad ebere. gi letis eporta without being forced to | surprise. Nobody could understand| ("iGhty hard ke unravel. @tll where there lee basse ie Heinie would finish second in a popularity contest with an alarm clock. they, anctier Wasser oeetege, to tralsing for | (othe, such geasion the bell came to Gar; pay the A. A. U. a 25-cent “registra~| it, But I'll tell ‘em when I get back MoGraw might h t in a few d inch hitters during th h Frankie Burs at Albany | Bar ont * “| a! ave pu’ in a few dozen pinci jitters during ith Frankie Burns at 7 | Bartfleld sent his opponent to his knees “4 fee.” manners has been quite @|that I'vo seen the greatest light-| ue the last customer out and plays “Home, Sweet Home, aaples The other birds were missing the ball by yards, and the ight, Sharkey iu his last two| from a right to the jaw. Beciee aitclon Ad Get dee comatons | done wehdee Leonard Gin motes . pinch hitters might have missed a little closer. id Willansa and Sol Moore, : * body didn’t know whether or not to| He he claas-—yep, clus. In the first game Kauff and Holke were caught dumb footers off e! ¢ Jackson of thie city and Rocky Kansas Allow ‘the. United. Miates to, 100 tte | he puts thet ose oh ‘enecgond aight Chicago's Mayor didn't hand the English Commission a more corrugated | ting,” We've heard: of quye walking in their sleep but these birds ae ie oe ee ae oe RACING SELECTIONS. troops have athletic competition, wi Seda Ait reception than Chicago's team slipped the New York baseball commission. i fa tha! 1k 4 am less said troops “kicked in” with a Yea, bo. The fourth inning was the stanza that extracted all the romance |{ SeeP 'n their walks. 7 ata aes be: LAUR EL Tegistration fee und were duly placed from the tournament for the Giants. In that eplsode MoGraw chang = — Gre, Pitteburgh, « bard @n the books among the registerod everything but the bat bag. But the Chi-sox swung from their hip pockets Firet Race—Sir Oracle, Séeal, tiachew with’ Joe Bond, Lindsey * gq athletes of the athletig clubs. Reced- and glued the cavalcade for New. York. Mao changed his pitchers faster ever, the Giants get the 40 per cent., which is quite a few spoonfuls. Tone ONC ey Second Race—Einden, Perpetual, ing from this position proves that at than a debutante changes her complexion, But the Chicago birds swatted ° 3 us Cp toil if be | Blue Fox. Th Race—Kashmir, ‘Tippity Witchet, Compudre. Fourth Race—Fenmouse, Dorcas, Venetia. Fifth Ed Roche, Holiday. Sixth Race—Hampton Dame, Im- ‘em all. They banged blond twirlers, they swatted brunette pitchers, They | busted right-handers and they low-bridged fork-handers, They gave as copious an exhibition of two-legged running ag has ever been ogled in this bailiwick. OFFICIAL SCORE OF SECOND GAM The John Anderson of the series pulled by Faber In the fifth. He singled and tried to steal third, with Weaver already bivouacking on that bag. After he recovered, Faber admitted that he was still suffering from the single, RESULTS. The Browns won POST SEASON ST, LOUIS, Oct. 8 Race-—Runes, bs There has deen some inclination among the erperts to grill The umpires are distributed differently 7 h ression, Tranby, a d “ ently in this series. Instead of fester-| the first game of a double header with pres Ny a CHICAGO, ABR HO A Fj NEW YORK, ABRHOAE McGraw for his selection of pitchers during the series, but that stuf’ | ing ouet the suburbs, the foul line umpires are draped loosely around the| the Cardinals by the score of 2 to Oand J, Sevgnth Hace Sir Wiliam John- J. Collins, rf-.... 1 0 0 O 1 0) Burns, If........8 0 10 0 0 iu fust a9 footlen ay expecting the Twentleth Century Limited to stop |infleld., One unnpire rides the left field foul line at third base, while the|1ve second kame fas & tie tn nine In- 5 . . Lelbold, rf 3 1 1 0 O 0| Herzog, 2b .400800 ake A th a rig! eld umpire chokes the rig! eld. foul Mne close upon the handle. . LOUISVILLE. seeeeee . pump. manager picks his pitchera out by the eeney, meeney, Now they h . o Bt 4 | a y are near the works and can tell when the series is over. ae a — Sine = McMullen, 8b....5 1 1 0 8 0) Kanff, ef. 400200 miney, mo method. He counts eeney, meeney, miney, mo, and if he a oy! AND, ©.. Oct. 8.—Cin nats palitat Race na, Chick. Blarkley, E. Collins, 2b. 4 1 2 4 2 0) Zimmerman, $b..4 0 0 4 2 0 happens to stop at meency, then meeney pitches; if meeney wins, the The Glants haven't done anything radical on the bases, They have| leacue ames, de eating Cleveland of Second “Race—H. Prospector 8 1 30 1 O|Fletcher, 400221 manager is a hero, If meeny loses, the manager guy is dogmeat. observed the trafMfo rules very carefully, In the first game Kauff and Holke|{®, 4merican ’ean ym score Cee) Ataline fa, Crestwood Gy 41.1 2 1 O|Robertaon, rf.....8 12200 Fou coil ut were caught dumb-footed off first, We've heard of guys walking in thetr - —_ - 46 122 1 0] Hok 1b * sleep, but these birds sleep in their walks, Manager McGraw suggested py Smith W Eastly. jolke, . 115600 - , tenderly that the boys wear thetr pajamas when they get on base. Happy Smith, the fast Yorkville ban. 41.8 7 6 0| McCarty, ¢..... o1500 MoGraw changed his pitchers so quick that on several‘occastons thera, _ — = tem, gave the Ravenwood Kid « beat- ee cre Ws -4 11 8 2 1) Rariden, o.. 0 1:1 3 Off were two of ‘em trying to throw the same ball. He changed Schupp for ing Saturday night at the Queensboro Race—Manager Waite, 3 0 1 1 4 OlSchupp, p 0 0 0 1 Of{Anderson and Anderson for Perritt, Mac would have dono better if he ’ ° A.C. in ten rounds. Ravenwood's left | Cudgel, Beaverkill. A changed two outfielders for a pulmotor. ‘The Chi-sox wrecking crew wus or S erl eye was completely closed and he wast . Geventh Race—/Turco, Olge tar, say p 9-0 0 1 OF) visting that ball at the outheldors so hard that Benny Kauff borrowed the es Fido ree EIES SPE MHS SEBH FA ERE BRE HE Col ORteL as: 1 | Soe 0 1 0 0 OF} Catcher's shin guards. If Schupp had been throwing a sugar coated curve = Wilhoit, x 6 0 6 O |] it wouldn't have tasted wo badly when the Chi-sox batted it down the in- sigsiien dak & brake virpeniee Gandit, ana & ‘ di CHICAGO, Oct. | breezed to third. Came Gandil, and his | Teareas, Di. 0 0 0 O || feld’s throats. As It stands, 1t was a bitter deating to digest. ben dike HG Ce previous | Bust tesred Voceo wok i ae ae ade ie eae || - -——- H day, learned about stealing from| Robertson drew a Ri fg Brother: Totals «........85 71697 21 1) Totals B12 BM OL The Giants seaed off to @ two-run lead, but soon fumbled a good ‘dio Colling and tay Schade 1n| toll we af Weavers mmarated | 66 es oO sew UI ie ind after x crochet a » | to wet ie ttl r Ne rough that x Batted for Perritt in eighth inning. . neni} Whe New Verner? chances wore Jost eo Strong as Samson |°% “Our the big blonde tried to Dilfer) whentneld that surrounds, the Box . New York Giants.......0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-2]| Gfter Delllah had staked him to that free haircut rie take erga ae ante Zacks | SAUNT ee teens -2 - bi re and Kobby earned another hit. Robert- . Chicago White Sox... 0 2 0 56 0 0 0 0 x2 Ani gue: oe alana, rons clndar uth stuf pop the Sox to | : ‘h Pri Are | O ” : ; 5 rowing the ball around the lot in the W Stelon Bases—E. Collins, 2; Jackson. Double Plays—Herzog (an- ‘The Giants have now lost two games out of two, which tles Bill Bryan's ttle “Belupps Ghante” ued to ane second, and this, combined with Sehalk's (G ces assisted); Faber to Weaver to Gandils Felsch to E. Collins to Weavers || Presidential election record. They are a hundred per cent, inefficient. yanked “wa early, tn the morn Bitter | Unaveidanle error, gave us the bis Bin Weaver to Gandil. Left o “er 7 ¥ Clootte had ‘em in his pocket tn tho first contest, and Faber knocked ‘em| lll, ye godg-—that tragedy wasn't a —— S i i i ked eaver I. Left om Bases—-Chicago, 7; New York, 8 First || { yenterddy. It is a tough job to pronounce Cicotte’s name correctly, but {DL at all, The thing we gulped was 4| They've taken to riding Herzog So said an Arnheim customer to a friend who as! Base on Errors—Chicago, 1.—First Base on Balls—Off Schupp, 15 off I! \¢ in a tougher Job to pronounce hiv pitching. Ho throws hieroglyphies, | {ummecouted polo ball, Ae Soares pce tears fe about the cost of clothes at Arnheim's, oof Perritt, 1: off Faber, 1: off Tesreau, 1-—Hits and Farned Runs—Off [| And the Giants swung at Faber's aquatic hops as if they had studied bat.|. Gandil gave the few Friars who were | ind the crowd gave him fits Then he continued: “Remarkably low when the selec- Faber got under a hero halo in the ting in a Chinese night school, there an awful shock in the third in- ning when he swung a healthy one into| third when he fielded Kauff's mean | Schupp, 4 hits, 2 runs In one and one-third Innings; off Faber, § hits, 2 tion, style, service and satisfaction one gets are considered.” runs in nine innings: off Anderson, 5 hits, 4 runs in two Innings; off . q we the extr end of the left field boxes,| rounder and then tobogganed along There are several thousand patterns in all weaves and Perritt, 6 hits, 1 run in three and two-thirds {noingss off Tesreau, no While the Giants have skidded badly, there is still a chance to put the | Liev sputtered real prayers when it} tie ground on his tummy and right colors in our new Fall line. landed Any man who is not now satis- foul. ‘© # million cata with walnut shells on their fect rattling over @ tin roof, New York fans might grab all dope from Chicago fan 1f a Chisox by hu ‘t hii t 1 simply yalle for the exercionn” ear) anyening t yell about, then he Joe Jackson had his eagle eye pecled, When he first showed he let the first three go by, and A count of one, one to right for th was Just wid pitch for was the next—a beauty, too— 4 To Measure Only $25 to $50 Arnhetnr and #0, Burns just did nip the next one enough to make it @ foul, The next one was closs to Burns and he dropped his but as it he had been hit, The next was away wide, and then Burns led off us| yesterday, with a clean hit. — =| Writers PT aes rane! Sz, tector 1 Paseod Ma Motarty, Umptree— Il pions And that heipe fut os mush ae’ a pink card helve a Giue Mush. | EB Wit fe Tie eatin ant See | em, sele Rarh deere Og. gus whee] well repeld if he vista Arabeim’s end acquises the Arnhatan ' : o , % 9 e , i eng plate; Rigter at first; Klem at second; O'Loughiin at || i#"'s 8° __ He Apally whacked it to left and Felach gut rs the ‘mound. Of course. we'uns abit, y the THe voce! callethent fs seem to have purloined the Giants’ goats, |!” Brat SDE ee here ne a strikes Suits and Overcoats | they were all bad. nd then Joe banked first Sox hit. Felsch eyed, He slammed & singte, Joe WEAK KIDNEYS MEAN A WEAK BODY the next “Bugs’’ Baer and Other Heinte Zim inhert Zim clowning. While ¢ ‘ 5 Gleason & Co, wert i When you're fifty, your boay bem! the bunch, most of the bleachers’ chirping and the racket has tte und Faber were fooling the Giants’ eyes, Kid fooling their ears, Zim was the moet badly gyped of to e pleas: ’ = Eo ae” eae eae ; ° F373 2 : | “Werenk « little at the hin Motton 1#| ®t ttlen, cacanas e { 4, Be litre tow ane tetinarate, (ot oe youse| «PA Mi thes iiea|| 7xenl Sh Just a’ popalae hare: an ec matters: rum Of Baseball Will Teti You - | i sa T used to be” te & frequent and un-| woul, quae tine Fes iy n C pe pia b in the consomme, ’ } | ge tecorne’ hove _dreauent a Pall ould watiow et] Heints would finish second in « popularity contest with an ularm clock. All About the World’s Series BROADWAY @ NINTH STREET“AND { fUone upon which good health and goo } — 7 ware { gpirte'do'much depend are impatret. "Tie | Sou "oid, ime, th MoGraw might have put in a fow dozen pinch hitters during these two ; 40 €. 420 8T., BET. FIFTH & MADISON AVES. { suk spot is generally the bladder, Vn-| quickly relieve thoes stiffencd Join gaines, The other # were missing the ball by yards, the ping “Bugs” Baer will cover the World's Series in Chicago and New York : Pleasant symptoms show — themselves. | barkache, rheume hed Jc hitters might hi ‘1 ne ’ and the pinch : 0 : j aa) , Feria, eT naan, | DARKER, rheumation, lamba bitters silent have eolaeed it Uitte ‘cloner. After the fourth inning of |] fer The Evening World. He will describe everything that happens and & If the man who has marched away is to return ‘Thie is particularly iy They are an effective remedy eases of the biadder, kidne: ach and allied organs liver, atom an wea And {n the first embroglio they didn't have any more chene in an orphan asylum. 5S fun in Siberia: hance than one apple lo some player himself and knows a lot of things that don't in his inimitable and humorous etyle. “Bugs” he must be armed a 9 Leaguer from @ “Busher” at Go to your Grugwist to-day and get © nt first sight. In addition to Baer, The Evening World will have ite regular |) * ng the in-| box of GOLD MEDAT. ; le eee wee Bond. cing | evles. etunder Pie, Soe It Wnoked ominous for New York from the jump. When McGraw trained oorpe of baseball specialists on hand at each game to keep its home | yor GOLD MEDAL are the intreduction, Ae ROW Dut UD in ederiens, (antelens pul ules. original imported Meariem O11 Cap- Ascent no substitutes —Adrt and Rowland mitted each other for the movies, some Anancal expert noted that Rowland had slipped John a 60 per o “ae ent handshake, How series. veaders informed on everything of importance connected with the big nd fed and clothed and cared Sor if wounded. Money is needed. Buy a Liberty Appointed by Liberty Loan Committee to accept po sonspimee e ad subsertptions

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