The evening world. Newspaper, July 30, 1920, Page 15

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Giants Only Six Games From First Place Now And Playing Like Champs e where and go to horrible deaths on home-made hootch. You can betcher a cantaloupe against a dried prune that the Giants are | looking like champs to the Cards these days. Every Card pitcher that has taken the mound has been carried off suffering a badly fractured sct of feelings. Spitter Doak got his yester- jay—got it good. Fourteen hits had been hooked off him in just a trifle more than six innings, and the Giants beginning to smack Goodwin ly as the game closed. New York for Third Time in Row Bowls Over Card- inal Team. By Charles Somerville. For the third time since their home- Coming the Giants battered the Cards out of their way in their hop, skip and Jump for @ secure place in the first division. And Brooklyn only six games away—don't let that fall to ‘alazie your brain-pan. It pleases me teen smashes in all, The score to speculate on what some of the| Shows it—6 to 8, But that’s because early croakers will do should Nap and| ‘he Giants got too giddy on the chances they took on the bases, And to add to the overpressure of their confidence Nehf was handling the Cards with enough skill and stamina to make a champion of Fred Fulton if it were possible to transfuse */ such qualities into the plastérer with the lime-eaten heart. The Cards touched Artie up for nine hits, but only four of them did any good. These came in the sixth inning and tied the score of three the Giants had accu- mulated—oné in the first, two in the second. A double by Burns, a sacri- fice by Beauty and a single by Pep Young brought in the first. In the second Larry Doyle singled to right and Schulz’s bum handling allowed Larry to keep going to second. Nehf smacked to first and Larry. made a great sprint that carried him across the plate ahead of Fournier's chuck. Beauty doubled, shooting Artie to third, Pep stmmmed it to right and Neht scorag before Schulz's throw nailed Boorroft at second. The Cards broke loose in the sixth when Stock stuck the pellet into left for a single followed by a Hornsby single to right. Schulz croaked on & great stop by Kell taken barehanded. Up next loomed McHenry, And « savage stick swinger the gent* is showing himself in this series. He snaked a low but speed-charged bail into the left bleachers. It was only about a foot to the good inside the foul line. But it was a genuine homer for all that. And that's how then three runs were ered. There was jubilation in the Catfish hut, yells, cheers and handsprings. But they crawled back to the hutch after Nap McGraw’s mawlers had taken them over the fumps in that aame inning. his bunch sail through and snatch the banner! Probably go out and have themselves kicked to death by @ rabbit. Or lock themselves in some. SILVERWARE We do not SPECIALIZE } 9 | ‘steneninbenenane chasigna Spencer walked, Larry NEWS | Doyle singled to rig.it, sending Spence o second, Smith hit to Horisby, woo vuched Lawry as he syed past cur weond, But then Roger uiade « hurtle tu Fuornier that never stopped in that gent's mitt but satled far out over the ¥TAS8 toward the boxes. Spencer tal- lied and Smith moved on to second, Nehf singled, sending Smitty to third, and Bu: cracked it to the right field fence, scoring Smith. Mut Nebf got lost between second and third on this play and was nicked between the bays. Beauty banged out a ieft double and scored George. ‘Thus, as will be seen, with the Cards’ kind assistance but on our own walloping qualities Just the same, the game was tucked away to the credit of the aborigines ot Coogan’s Bluff, . Honorable Mention: Artie Nehf for batting out three singles in a row. Surprise stuff from @ pitcher. I should say 80. Larry Doyle for t slide that carried him safe to plate on the return of Nehf's rap to first. Beauty's dizzily swift throw to first of Janvrin's slow roller in the third. Doc Lavan's superb one-handed running stop of Burns's hit In fourth. Three dazziingly swift running stops and throws to first by Fordham Frankte Frisoh, Nehf's plucky and successful grab cheating Fournter’s hot smash of be- coming a single. ' Weight for Lynch-Ledoux Bout 119 at 8 o'Cloc Charles Ledoux, bantamweight cham- pion of Europe, and Joe Lynch, the crack west sider, haye been matched by Promoter John Jennings’ of the Armory LA. A. of Jersey City, to appear in the stellar twelve-round attraction at the club's next entertainment on Monday | night. The articles of agreement call for both men to weigh In at 119 at 3 o'clock day of contest, and both men have posted substantial forfeits guaranteeing their making the stipu- lated weight. Considerable interest. In sure to be taken in this international contest by reason of Ledoux's record, unds THE EVENING OF ALL Jeighth, clinched \Yanks at Last Manage to Win | From Browns) ST. LOUIS, July 30--After losing two straight games here by the mar- gin of one run the Yankees braced and won the second halt of the double header, 6 to 4. Light hitting lost the first game of the bargain day session, but Rip Collins's pitching in the last three innings, after relieving Mogridge, and Ward's homer in the the victory in the nighteap game, The Yankee sluggers have been In a slump. For instance, Babe Ruth's triple that natled the winning rally in the eighth of the second game was his first hit in three days, The other Yanks, except Meusel and Ward, were worse, The dases full,; two out, one run needed to tle and Babe Ruth at the bat. That ts a situation New Yorkers have waited months to see, would go miles to witness ‘and would bet untold wealth on the result. It came to-day, in the final frame of the first game, and with 16,000 St. Loul# fans just ready to break into tears and Impreca- tions—nothing happened. Babe flapped @ soaring fly to centre and it was all over. In that ninth inning is told the story of the first game. ‘The Yanks couldn't hit. Jack Quinn gave them a cun in the second when he fumbled an easy tap with a man en third. Then a long two-bagger by Meusel scored Peck an: Ruth inthe third and the Yanks took the lead. They t an evry run in the fifth’ on an error by Willlams and seemed to have the game well in hand, but a home run by Sisler in the sixth and three hits, one a lucky bounder, in the seventh, put the Brown one the and then came the count to ninth, which shows that he has scored knock- outs over the marvellous Jim Driscoll and Johnny Couton. A_ first-class set of ‘bouts will also precede the main event. In the two eight-rounders, Sammy Baker, the Syra- cuse welterweight, will take ‘on Soldier Billy Doscher, while Willle Spencer wi!) try ‘conclusions with Johnny Sullivan of Weehawken. In the opening six-round- er Harlem Jimmy Carroll {s slated to mingle with Mickey Brown. Ruel ped to Austin. Duffy Lewis hit for Quinn and lined a pretty single tp center and Fewster ran for him eck’s swat, got through Gerber and Peck second. Fewster made third an Pipp had filed long and far on his three previous trips to the plate. Any one of these drives would have sent in Fewster and tied the score, but Wally bounced to Gedeon, Fewster was trapped between. third and home, and ‘WORLD, FRIDAY, JULY 30, 1920. nc 0 tate oe ee ae gyn en PA Ba Re Ret THE SPORTS ‘Robins Will Lead by Half Game Even Though Reds Win To-Day Sa nati and had Jost none, Ungue, by Cincinnati Captures Third Bat- an odd coincidence, bad exactly the e eries same revord. Now the Cuban 1s tle i Series Only After bh Ritter S role Brooklyn scored their first run in or Struggle, the first stanza, when Johnson eager pee! | reached first on Kopf's error and rode home on Wheat's three-ba , | ‘ By Richard Freyer. ee the Cincinnati ball team captured the third game of the Brooklyn-Red series at Ebbets Fleld by a 3 to 2 score, there 1s some consolation for the Brooklyn-fans in| the fact that the Reds will not lease the home players’ lot with the Na- tonal League lead, This, immaterial of whether the visiting aggregation Wins this afternoon's game or not. If this P. M.'s contest is taken away by Pat Moran and his gang the home players will still be one-half a gamo in front, which, as the saying goes, will help some. The Reds didn't get away with the third game without a battle. The affair was nip and tuck all the way and was riot decided until the final inning. Cadore and Luque, the latter one of the luckiest twirlers in the National League—lucky because he comes from Cuba and spends his off season there—served up the benders for the Dodgers and Reds respective- ly, Luque flashed a better brand of ball and really deserved to win, but Cadore was right there in the pitching end as well. The Cuban allowed but six hits to the Brooklyn batsmen and struck out five, while Leon's slants were slammed for eight hits and he fanned but one. The game was a ‘pitcher's battle to decide who was the better twirler, In the games played this season, before yesterday's contest, Cadore had won two contests from Cincin- counted for in the sixth, when John- ston reached first again on his safe One-banger.. He was forced at_sec- | ond by Griffith, Wheat hit a Texas] Leaguer and Tommy went to third,| from which base he scored on Mey- er’s sacrifice fly to centre. Cincinnati accounted for thelr run in the following manner: Roush opened the second inning with a hard hit @ingle to centre and went to second when Wheat let the ball get away from him, He rode| home on Neale's one-bagger to deep left. The second tall ywas chalked up in the stretoh inning when Dau- bert singled, went to @econd on Roush's eingle, to third on Duncan's; single and scored on Neale’s fleld- er's choice, Cadore was in a pretty | tight predicament in the inning, as the bases were loaded, with none out. Glever and errorloss flelding by his team mates, however, gut him out with only one run being soored againat him, ‘The final tally was sent over in the ninth. After one man had been retired, Roush hit to deep left. Myers, Dodger centre gardener, made a@ hard run and try for the ball and just missed the pellet roiling to the fence from the bases. Kopf then sent a long sacrifice fly to Myers and came home. Cincinnati again to-day tn the final game of the series. Sherry Smith fe about due to work for the home tal- ent, while Hod Biller may be as- signed to the mound for the visitors. Wills-Fulton Fight in Newark Drew $97,212 in Gate Receipts Tex O'Rourke Shifts Blame Bitton, at Newark on Monday night, ‘The ar ticles will show that Deschamps, manager of though he got back In safety, Peck. who had moved ‘up, was cal out, making two "down. Pratt. walked. Davis plainly being nervous, and up came Pith. * Georges Carpentier, signed for Thomas, fe the manager of ‘Thomas, and when he went for Confusion in Explaining Sale of Seats, age the affairs of Thomas, Sere, Ray Smyth, the Camden, N. J., heary- By John Pollock. Their second and final talley Was AC The nau! away he left Carpenticr’s trainer, Wilson, to mas }@ound, but this time more distinctly, TH SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS eit the opaet’ of vi beautiful French {n search of het son, who was supposed to hai teen Witt hie fetoer in a abvipwrec Team beforw, His futher waa Vorski, at one time an Internationa: fwure in Rurvve and kvown ae CHAPTER VI. (Continued. ) ICK at heart, she dared not cross the thresholds. There were fgeraniume on the window ledges. Tall clocks with brass pendulums were ticking off the time in the empty rooms. She moved away. In « shed near the quay, however, she eaw the sacks and boxes which Honoring Had brought with her tn the motorboat, “Well,” she thought, “I shan’t starve, There's enough to last me for weeks; and by that Ume"-— She filled'a basket with chocolate, biscuits, a few tins of preserved meat, rice and matches; and she was on the point of returning to the Priory, when it occurred to her that ehe would con- tinue her walk to the end of the mil- ard, She would fetch her basket on ‘tne way back. A shady road climbed upward on the right. The landscape seemed to be the same: the same flat stretches of moorland, without ploughed fields or pastures; the same clumps of an- cient oaks, The island also became narrower, with no obstacle to block the view of the sea on either side of the Penmarch esa 3 im the dis- tance. “There was also a ‘hedge which ran from one cliff te the other and which served to inclose a property, a shabby property, with a straggling, dilapidated, tumibledown house upon it, some outhouses with patohed roofs and a dirty, badly kept ot scrap iron and sticks of firewood. Veronique was already retracing her steps, when she stopped in alarm and surprise. It seemed to her that she heard some one moan. She lis- tened, striving to plumb the vast silence, and once again the same reached her ears; and there were others; cries af pain, cries for help, women’s, cries. They fad not all the E SECRET OF SAREK RICE LEBLANC (Copyright, 1080, by the Macauley Company.) e. j with her eyes fixed on Veronique, said: “Thats it... . that'@ "t . 7, I've got the total... . you know how many there were in boats, without my sisters and me’ Do you know? Twenty i... W reckon it up; twenty . . . Maguenngo, who was the first to die . M. Ai who died afterwards . . . and little Francois .jand M. Stephane, who vanished, but who are dead too . . ‘8 correct, isn't iow take twenty-sig , doesn’t 7" She could no longer speak; tongue faltered. Nevertheless terrible syllables came from mouth; and Veronique heard batt “Eb? Do you understand? . . . That leaves four . +. ts four —you know, the ‘four women oruet. fled’—the number's there . . . our four selves caer the island . « one besides us on Veronique had listened in four women . except ourselves on the what are you afraid of?” “Them, of course! Them!" Veronique lost her patience. “But if everybody has gone?” ghe who?” “They, the people of old. “The people of old?” “Yea, those who used to make + the people w' 83 from thirty . . . . You undere stand, don’t you? The thirty coffins® they have to be filled . . . . So. twenty-six from thirty . . . leaves wolght, whe had the misfortune to set knocked! inhabitants taken to fight? She had The grows receipts of the big box-| ut br Hob Martin, the hearrwulsht champion ofa fecling of joy mingled with some ing show staged by the International | wena Uist ne eng.” stun se ba Hersey im yh Sporting Club of New York at the| cent. of the gros reoelpts. Martin drew down per. t ite would - First Regiment Armory at Newark, | 2 ver cant. of te rerlits which made his end] pho thowent thar evente, would pas. N. J., Monday night, at which Harry | $180. Tae gate amounted to $4,880 and hun-! fatal cycle of death and horror. With acknowledgments to K. C. B. are upon wood, Be ree pguere Garden on Macoh |” Tint ib vowel on a ul tem Spa) The cries ta) the onithonee at sees | AEA Rae ed , 1916, These figures were given| cuartey waite, the veterin Calcage light ered he decks bene Vereanans reflected. hardly weight, It wee THE POET says a rose, to the writer by ‘Tex O'Rourke, the] who gave Benny Leonard « reat faat at Deaton | ore had no doubt heard Veronique | | Verenique cee matchmaker of the International | Harbor. recat age pally Widen Bile ET a Wha cade Bice) outbutldines should have had time to be at halt- Sporting Club, “Our club A brandi sed ow crieens | was gone in laces, the walls were | past ten in thie end an hour By, ANY other name. 9,000 tlokets printed for Lp er Hades cok Le a ees eek Thick ‘and solid, with old arched doors | {ater to be end the roa Som WOULD SMELL as eweet, faeces Can AUC ah MciineNtts fas a -knocking against one of these | two boats, Waa it to be presumed eee sued there was supposed to be t while the cries | that one or more of their accomplices AND THAT'S all right, chair. Treallzed early that there was |, Tb lshtwldt chimoloamip of sudan val-|Gocrme more urgenes” were left on the island? Pee ars @ bigger turnout of fans than we had |'*7 Will be deoided Monday night at the Star A} inten! Help!” “In any case,” she said, “you tnust BUT CALLING. accommodations for and for that rea- | of Troy. when Johuny Martin, (he former New! nut there was @ dispute; and an-|come to a decision, You can’t remain a ae son I airat Off the ticket sales. ‘There | York lntwoiast, jodi in omer ariprpegg ered other, less strident voice grated: in this state. You must rest your- wi ji “ y q seo SOMETHING ELSE 8 rote, ; have wold, But we did not want edo | sash im & ten-ound svat. "The rr wil"b | gE, eet cant your )serfne, second. sister ied risen. to her . ° ” presented with gold belt. The other twe ten- | ™& A 9 0 WON'T CHANGE its smell, SCL oue pry ain Fone ta: fad soninte il bring are ‘Hare ote, | ,NO,DO: Gertrude, t's not. T don't test. she anid in the same bellow and Champion Johnny Kilba the Brooklyn heavywelght, and Kid Jackson of |M@@r them! . . . n » | viele sue 6 7 nee 11,754.80 will you. The key ought to “First of all, we must hide ,.\ end OF COURSE not, richer today than be was on Wednesday night, | Boch sad Georse Reach of Nerth Adams 09-| 11 093 be able ‘ourselves penis Johnny recelred thie amount foe oatpolntiog Artie | osins Kid Black ef Trey, Veronique, who was seeking for'| them, xy Cleveland at an open air show ae 4 + rn AND I’M not knocking. Tommy Ginty at the ball mn Guontiona . Harold Farees, the Newark feather, won nia| 80M Means of Hecinglir age! be ub “What do you mean?” asked Vero~ end ogee aCe that evening, “The vam Feelpia amounted to | anseer, Jack Tiulaer, claims Chasir Hivcher is [DHE Key tn the lock: | She turned It; | nique, BUT JUST telling you, $82,340, which ta the largcet um ever taken In | raid 10 meet, will box Dick Losdman at Port-| “Md the door opened. 1 1] she, tm spite of herself, tet e168 at @ boxing show in that city, Kilbane got 35 land, Me., Aug. 11, and Johnny Murray im Jersey| , SHO at Gas Poe pele unt, evil-| this need of @ refuge against @. pos- IT OUT. per cent. of Uke gross receipts lees the Btate tax of | City probably & week later. Archignat, half-dressed, gat oven |aible enemy. RIGH) . Soe aac ae looking, witoh-like. | ‘They | were)” “what do I mean? I'll tell you, ‘The 98.18 ‘Tae Bayonne A. A. presenta « pair of peppery |i a wash-house filled with 4m |ening has been talked about a lot in © THAT THERE are only, ‘The most important boring show yet held by | little vuslists in its main attraction next Tureday | Plements; and Veronique saw at the | tring int Dele tne” niu ee Tang eee the Ocean Park A, A, of Long Branch, N, J,, | evening, when Joe Leon, Sammy Golden's new find, | Ack, lying on some straw, @ third} iil tooo. Gecided that at the. first THREE GRADES. ' will be etaged by the clud officials to-night, Im | clashes with Abe Attell Goldstein. In» tea. |WoInaN, who was bewalling her fate] Viti’ yea cay take shelter ic OF TURKISH tobacco. FIRST, GOOD Turkish. , WHICH 18 mnighty good, ’ AND ALSO expensive. at a boxing show in the East since the Jess WiNard-Frank Moran fight Witla, the colored heavyweight, | “a % {a8 were turned away for lsat of room, knocked out Fred Fulton in three rounds figured up $97,212.60. This Tepresente the biggest gate roceipts| 2 stuy city prabably on Monday erealse, “Ave, 9, Matchmaker Jennings has been trying to bring these lade together and now that thelr managers the main bout Willie yan of New Brunewick will meet Vincent Coffey of Kingston, N, ¥., for ten rounds, while in the other two contests Yo Chick boxes Silent Regan and Danny Lee takes op Frankio Bell, round event Dave leenbers, former A. AU, rd-hitting Bully Hinners of takes on is bome city snd Philadelphis, where be is the proud possessor of of knockouts, Danny Morgan is all worked up over the re port that ia being ciroulated that he was manager of Marcel Thomas, the French fighter, in the lat- 4 impion Jack house, but from the buildings on the So far as Veronique was able to Judge, the noise came not from the right of the yard. This yara was closed with a simple gate which she had only to push and which opened with the creaking sound of wood in an almost inaudible voice and who was obviously the third sist At that moment one of the first two collapsed from exhaustion, and the other, whose eyes were, bright with fever, seized Veronique by the arm and began to gasp. “Did you see them, tell me?.., Are they there? . . . How is it they didn't “Why in the Priory?” “Because we could defend ourselves there. The cliffs are pei You're on every side,” “What about the bridge?” =! of everything. teen yards to the left of the a ter’a bout with, bie own. fightct STANDING OF kill you? . . . They are the masters ‘ f Sarek since the others went off,..| That's the place they hit on to > pase 8 ‘And It’s our turn next... We've been | thelr stock of petrol in. Empty three POOR TURKISH tobacco. eee WHICH [8 less expensive, ee AND NOT s0 good, THE CLUBS NATIONAL LEAGUE, locked in here now for six day: Listen, it was on the day when every: body jeft. We three came here, to the wash-house, to fetch our linen, which was drying .., One never does or four cans over the bridge, strike a match ... and the thing’s done, You're just as In your own home, You can’t fevrot at and you cant be attacked.” “Then why didn’t they come to the Priory instead of taking to flight in Clube, = WW. L. PC.) Clubs: hear them + ai And then, suddenly, Rroty tee, heey Brook: 41 673 | Chicage the door was onus... , | the : AND THIRD, tobacco, Cinslone ‘s62 | st. Lou a turn of the key... and the thing| “It was safer to escape In the boate. eee was done... We had bread, apples a er = oer Pare Sie Seat 4 best of all, brandy... We didn't do} “. hall t bere vk os alana #0 badly... Only, were they going to| “At once. It's daylight still; and 8 come back and kill us? Was it our than the dark. oe NEVEB SAW Turkey. ee e “But your sister, the one on her turn next?... Oh, my dear good eer, beck?" A F how we strained our ears! And how : BUT GREW thousands, rane ah, t. thlans, 2 | We trembied with fear! ... My eldest] “We have a barrow. We've got to ° * * | wster's gone crazy . . .Hark, youcan|wheel her. There's a direct road to OF MILI away, hear her raving... The other, Clem-|the Priory, without passing through eee ence, has borne all she can... And I|the village.” AND DOCSN'T even, Philadelphia, Gertrude... ." Veronique could not help looking see TASTE LIKE Turkish. AMERICAN LEAGUE, plenty of strength left, wisting Veronique’s arm with repugnance upon the prospect of living in close intimacy with the si “and Correjou? He came back|ters Archignat, She yielded, however, eee We, PC.) Clube, W.L. PC./ didnt ‘he, and went away again? | swayed by a fear which she was un- AND IT’S the good Turkish. +63 92 663) St. Louls,....44 47 464 Why didnt any one come to look for |able to overcome. ident b in Turkey are Fy us? It would have been easy Vv well,” she said. “Let's go THATS REALLY from Turkey. UR resident buyers bade § bi OTH sides of the enough: everybody knew where we |r take you to the Priory and ‘gome None experts, They know we want the foot-lights. the were, and we called out at the least |back to the village to fetch some pro- THAT YOU get. best~and we getit, And the same with in ne B35, GAMES YESTERDAY. sound. So what doeq it all mean?” | visions” apae Domestic leaf. Blend them together— stars” in the great Play , Lele 4i Mew Yorks 3 ititet game. ecveroniaue hesitated what to repiy.|"' "on, you mustn't be away lon j ii | @ull, why sho nM di of the sisters, “A: INTHE cigarettes. by that ean't-be-copied methed—and of Life are earning the crutht™ ts the bridge fx cut, We'll ght «bone ou get @ smo! iad | 0 he replied: Ps fire on Fairies’ Dolmen Hill an | THAT SATISFY. rie. ‘ encores in well-Atting, nis two boate went down. fire fo Fae Sees, Dela eee right-feeling What? mainland, To-day the fog is coming The two boats dank in view of|u5; put to-morrow. . har board were drowned. ean ee Pao | “Veronique raised no objection, she Teen tae the Devila’ Passage? ‘}now accepted the Idea of leaving Veronique said no more, 60 as to |Sarek, even at the cost of an inquiry which would reveal her name. They started, after the two sisters had swallowed a glass of brandy. The Low Boston at Cleveland, Washington at Detroit, }avoid mention ng the names of Fran- cols and his tutor or speaking of the part which these two had played, For the formal function, or the informal fun, whatever Philadelphia at Chicage. amano But Clemence now sat up, with dis- torted features, She had been lean- ing against the door and ralsed ner- madwoman sat huddled tn the wheel- barrow, laughing softly and utteri Mttle sentences which she add: the occasion, whatever the wif to her knees. to Veronique as though she wanted NEW INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE - | rtrude murmured: her to laugh too: rb cr the getup: the Standing of the Clubs, i nd Honorin “We shan't meet them yet, .. . secret of absolute body Ce WE PCC Ww | “Honortne te dead." ‘They're getting ready, : ‘ | peinere $F he Nene "Dead!" “Shut up, you old fool!” said Ger eens and mind comfort is Foran i i be The two sisters both cried out at|trude. “You'll bring ns bad luck.” found in SUPERIORS. a Then they were atlent and! “Yes, yes, we shall see some sport, 9 looked at each other. ‘The same|. . . It'll be great fun. . I have | long-life Syremme, 135 lthought struck them oth. They|a@ cross of gold hung round my neck | A sa ° |seomed to be reflecting. Gertrude and another cut into the skin 1. was moving her fngers as though !of my head. . . Look! . . . y 7 UVards Games counting, ‘nd the fener on thelr | Crosses everywhere . . . One ought |” z Nepermendured fer tellertit, | ets ay, enw City two facea Increased, |to be comfortable on the cross, « 4 +. if SOR BTEC Speaking In @ very low voice, as bevy < Noe tym ai’ Baitinors, though choking with fear, Gertrude (Read To-Morrow’s Exeiting Chapter, ye . tinabiie on ere So enn eet

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