Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 October 1938 — Page 8
AS THE CHICAGO CUBS SEE IT
SAY SEPT. 4 GAME SET EM OFF
Indianapolis Times Sports
Pirates 1s
PAGE 8
N the cool of the evening of Sunday, Sept. 4, the Chicago Cubs believe they set off the spark which set ‘em off on their successful pennant drive. It was in Cincinnati, at Crosley Field, and old Charlie Root was chucking for the Bruins against the secondplace Reds. . . . The Cubs were fourth, seven games back of the leading Pirates. Root was in front, 1 to 0, when Ival Goodman belted a home run in the ninth to tie the score. . .. The veteran Root kept fighting and stayed in there. . . . Came the 11th. ... Augie Galan put one out the park for the Cubs, who won, 2 to 1. The hard earned victory came just after the Cubs dropped a pair to the Reds and Gabby Hartnett’s pastimers felt the breaks had turned their way at last. . . . On Monday, Labor Day, the Cubs tore into the Pirates in Pittsburgh and snatched a double-header, behind Bill Lee and Clay Bryant. The Cubs went on from there, taking a setback now and then but always with. their heads up. 2
= INCE 1900 the Cubs have won nine pennants and two World Series titles. . . . The winning managers: Frank Chance. 1906, ’07, 08 and 10; Fred Mitchell, 1918; Joe McCarthy, 1929; Charlie Grimm, 1932 and 1935; Gabby Hartnett, 1938. . . . The Bruins won the World Series in 1907 and 190K. Hoosiers included in the Cub family are Billy Herman, second baseman, New Albany; Johnny Corriden, Indianapolis, coach, and Andy Lotshaw, Indianapolis, trainer. Vance Page, a native of North Carolina, was purchased from the Indianapolis club at midseason this year and won six games. . .. Steve Mesner, shortstop, and Al Epperly, pitcher, who spent the summer with the Indianapolis Indians, saw action with the Cubs yesterday in the final game after the flag was in, = n ® = 5 J HEN Leo Miller, ger 1 manager, and Ray Schalk, field chief, took over the Indianapolis club last December, they said they i it would be another step toward landing in the major leagues. it in a successful season here as baseball rates business and both ig Time before another season rolls around. aid to have been made an offer by the St. Louis Browns sv the Chicago Cubs. . . . Miller denied the Chicago offer said he had not talked to Schalk who in the Windy City his bowling establishment. . . . The managerial turnover in has been “terrific.” with five changes. ut with the Cubs, Frisch with Cards, Cochrane with
. Street with the Browns and Wilson with the Phillies. robably Burleigh Grimes at Brooklyn tossing in the sponge aft what happened to his
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® = = ROAR won over a bark as the Columbia Lion upset the Yale Bulldog . The Big Ten football champion met the Big Six \Pior 1 reversed last year’s outcome, 16 to 7, Minnesota, this , last fall going to invade Atlanta to play Georgia Tech avden will leave one of his Irish gridders r in “Gone With the Wind.” . . . They were urday and turned the fracas with Kansas
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it tops in comebacks . son of the Brown coach, helped make his dad’s hing 90 yards to a touchdown.
McLaug by das =
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=» = = OWLEY., Fordham coach, prefers juniors over sophomores on his team. . Says sophs don't know enough and too much sense. lara. the Sugar Bowl King, probably will be back there Day. . . . Ask Stanford. . . . Statistics show that In“left on bases” title Saturday in its tussle with Ohio Hoosiers did everything except score. line like a mirage at times. . . . The closer t retreats. . . . Anyway, Bo McMillin’s “pore little boys no mo’ if you ask Ohio State. . .. They once the wraps were off.
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YANKEES OPEN AT 2% TO 1 OVE
Cub Rooters Hope Flaming Spirit of Hartnett’s Team
Nationals Reach World Series Worn to Frazzle After Tough Race While Americans Arrive in Easy Fashion; Upsets of Past Recalled.
By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent
Cubs. day afternoon. Five games should be enough for the Yanks, the soothsayers say. In the last 11 vears the Yankees have engaged in five World Series,
That's why everybody considers it suicide to challenge the su-
Newark Evens
ships. premacy of the Yankees. The gamblers are betting 21% to! 1 that the Yanks become the first/ baseball team in history to win three world’s championships in succession. The best odds you can get from Jack Doyle, Broadway pricemaker, that the Yanks won't win four straight are 5-1.
FOUR MEN IN BLUE
CHICAGO, Oct. 3 (U. P).— Baseball Commissioner Kenesaw M. Landis today announced umpires for the Cubs-Yankees World Series would be Lou Kolls and Cal
Over Kansas City.
NEWARK, N. J, Oct. 3 (U. P).— The Newark Bears today called upon
Will Overcome N. Y. Power,
CHICAGO, Oct. 3.—Everybody's building a coffin for the Chicago | Their demise is set for approximately Oct. 10. They are playing | the New York Yankees in the World Series, beginning in Chicago Wednes- |
played 23 games and won 20 of them in capturing five world’s champion- |
Little Series y
Bears Score 12-4 Triumph
MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1938
effect.
R
Stock Market Note
Hartnett’'s homer that beat the
supposed to have boosted
the Cub’s stock $300,000. That's the first time a bear raid ever had that
BRUINS
Batsmen
Hubbard of the American League
and Charles Moran and Ziggie Jack Haley, leading pitcher of the
Fall Before Rapid Robert
Sears of the National League.
Yet ever so often a hated underdog, a team without a conceivable chance on the cold dope, comes along to prove the adage that nothing can be taken for granted in baseball. Remember the White Sox
upset Frank Chance’s great Chicago Cubs. considered invincible after they had won 116 games to set &n all-time record? Remember the Boston Braves of 1914, 1-3 shortenders. who humbled the mighty Philadelphia Athletics in four straight? What Records Show
From almost every standpoint the Yankees have the Cubs out-| manned and outclassed. The more vou look at the records the more it
| International League, to put them ahead of their farm cousins, the Kansas City Blues of the American Association, in the “Little World| | Series.” | The Bears evened the best of! seven series yesterday when they
of 1906. those hitless wonders, who won the second game 12-4 before a
crowd of 13386 in Ruppert Sta-| dium. They play their last game) : {here tonight, then move to Kansas §& (City to conclude the series. Haley's §& mound opponent will be Marvin [Breuer who pitched the Blues to|j [three of their four victories over St. Paul in the final round of the Association playoff. R Newark banged four pitchers for |i 18 hits to swamp the Blues yesterday. Jimmy Gleeson, who lives in Kansas City, set a new Little World Series record when he got five hits
Bob Feller, right, young Cleveland pitcher, is shown with Catcher Frankie Pytlak after he struck
record for strikeouts in one game. Despite his efforts, his team lost to Detroit in the first half of a
Times-Acme Telephoto.
[the Cubs’ partisans cite the flamling spirit of Gabby Hartnett’s team
lan. the Cubs’ best outfielder, is out
in five trips to the plate, one of them a home run. Joe Beggs scat- | tered nine to the Blues over the] route.
looks like no contest. In rebuttal
as the factor which will offset the apparent supremacy of the Yanks. |
Most Yankee supporters will take Atlanta One Game exception to any tendency to give NY Short of Dixie Title
the Cubs the edge in spirit and they have facts to back them up. 0 team has ever been harder to beat] BEAUMONT, Tex, Oct. 3 (U. PJ). than the Yanks with the blue chips | —Atlanta’s Crackers of the Southon the line. ern Association still needed one
As is usual with the National] . i : | y : League entry, the Cubs arrive at more victory over Beaumont today
: " > ‘to take the Dixie baseball chamthe World Series tired, Weary and | onship pennant now flying at Ft. crippled. The dog-eat-dog fight to rth overcome the Pirates in the Na= The Cra ckers. who won the first tional League race frazzled them... ..5 threatened to make it Their swash-buckling leader, Gabby | oor straight. were delayed bit Hartnett, has two fingers of his _ Ep . By > vesterday when Beaumont pushed
out 18 Tigers yesterday to break t
Pitcher Who
Practice Slave Is
United Press Sta NEW YORK, Oct. 3.—A man whose first name is either Paul or
meat hand split by foul tips. He| iehth beni ; will play in the World Series, ut] 2CTO an eighth inning run that how long he'll last is in the hands
: ray it st y ) i y of the Gods. Left fielder Augie Ga- way it stood when the game finally
| was called at the end of the 13th ; > oe . because of darkness. with an injured knze. Captain and second baseman Billy Herman has|
a spiked toe. Pitcher Vance Page is
Baseball at a FINAL STANDINGS AMERICAN LEAGUE KE. 61 66 30 36 83 93 93
(Second Game 000 216 #01 — Philadelphia 100 000 100— 2 Gaddy and Campbell: Mulcahy, Smith, Lanning, Burkhardt and Atwood.
Brooklyn 13 3 i 1
Pct. 17 391 366 345
New York ... Boston Cleveland .... Detroit Washington ....... Chicago . St. Louis Philadelphia
Pittsburgh . 001 #20 100— § 12 © Cincinnati 200 001 11x— 3 7 @ Tobin and Todd; Vander Meer and Lombard. {
Boston . New York .......ss. 200 006 10x— 3
Turner and Mueller; Gumbert and Danning.
$ )
{ {
020 912 00— 5 8 3
. 121 210 ¢Ox— TT 10 4 P. Dean,
| Chicago { St. Louis . | French, Epperiy and O'Dea; . Cooper and Owen.
LITTLE WORLD SERIES Kansas City (AA) .. 100 #03 000— § 9 1 Newark (IL) 104 510 O01x—12 18 1 Piechota, Bonham, Washburn, R. Miller and McCullough, Riddle; Beggs and osar. |
NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. . 89 53 “ 86 . 83 82
Chicago Pittsburgh . New York Cincinnati Boston . St. Louis . ee 1 Brooklyn .......0.. 69 : Philadelphia 3 3 * |
i
..| For Boxing Show
sansa en
MAJOR LEAGUE FINALISTS
Batting 565 500 489 z . 480
Five of the bouts to be held on 3'the boxing program at Tomlinson ss Hall Wednesday night were an22 nounced today by Matchmaker Lee - 3% Bess. In the main event, Milton Bess, al Negro who won the interna- | tional Golden Gloves lightweight! championship last spring, will meet | Joe Tronna, Apache Indian from Jacksonville, Fla. They are carded to battle over the five-round route. | "2: 3132. The three-round supporting scraps . 128 glready billed follow: ...| Leroy Dycus, Bess A. C,, vs. Bucky errr 220 Cunningham, Oliver A. C., feather-| 198 weight. | 1! William Reed, Bess A. C, vs. Jimmy Jones, English Avenue Boys’ Club, flyweights.
.. 437 Home Runs CX e { |
12
a2 oe 143 130
3 132
18
1 son between the two rivals.
Falls City Nine
favoring a twisted ankle. Winning
on an outstanding sports team. That's just what Schreiber (either | Paul or Walter) has achieved. His success story was revealed when the | New York Yankees gathered in an
the National League flag took a lot] out of the Cubs. The Yanks move into the series] fresh. rested, relaxed. They've J zidding for the past two weeks. ee ig Brg Pore in a row| The Falls City Hi-Brus today were to the Browns in mid-September amateur league baseball champions won't be the team the Cubs will face. of Indianapolis, having defeated the Offensively, there is no compan Ie C. Atkins nine, 2 to 1, in a ninth 300 hitter— inning rally which thrilled the estiHack. They mated 4000 who saw the city series
| ida finale yesterday at Riverside. hitters. Rip Collins leads the club nf ‘ with 13. The Yanks have five men| After Hodapp’s double and Adams (DiMaggio, Gehrig, Dickey, Henrich single accounted for a tally in the and Gordon) who've hit 20 or more. fifth inning for the Sawmakers, Altogether the Yanks have blasted Ehrdman and Robold pitched air173 homers: the Cubs a mere 64. tight ball until the ninth. Sweeney, From top to bottom every Yankee Hi-Brus' shortstop, collected his is a potential home run clouter and third straight hit to open the ninth when Ruffing is on the mound they after Birge popped out. Staller’s inhave a whole nine of sluggers. (field fly fell safe in front of the box, . sending Sweeney to second. Slim Edge on Defense After fouling off seven pitches, Defensively, the Yanks must be Gib Smith tied the score by his given the edge but not by so wide a single to center, sending Staller to margin as on the attack. Crosetti third. Roboid was struck by a and Gordon form one of baseball's pitched ball to fill the bases. Greasty finest keystone combinations, and Altop then executed the squeeze shade Jurges and Herman a trifle. 'play to score Staller for the winning In double plays the Yanks lead by | run. Score: 172 to 146. { E. C. Atkins In the outfield the Yanks have it|™ghra
all over the Cubs. DiMaggio is one Ruse : : of the greatest ball hawks in the| The Falls City nine captured the
business. Henrich is capable and Industrial League pennant while has probably the sharpest throwing | Atkins won the Manufacturers’ arm in the majors. Either Selkirk League flag in gaining the right to or Hoag in left have the edge over play in the City Series. Bowers Enanything the Cubs have to offer. velope, Big Six League winner, was All things considered the Cubs’ eliminated a week ago in the twoouter patrol is no bargain. The and-out elimination series while loss of Galan hurts plenty. Demaree | Beech Grove, Municipal League is no ball of fire. Reynolds, an titleholders, lost out Saturday.
American League castoff, has made | Indian Gridders
Is Local Champ
{
Cubs have only one lead-off man Stanley have no game-wrecking home run
000 010 000— 1 7 2 000 000 002— 2 7 1 and Bucksot; Robold and
a grand comeback but is on his last | legs. Cavaretta is a reformed first) baseman. Marty is the Cubs’ best
land $7000 if the Yanks win—and
‘doesn’t believe that the Yanks will
atmosphere of solemnity and lini- | ment to vote on how they should split their 1938 World Series money. | When the ballots were all in, one of the 28 full shares allotted was to Schreiber, whose name is either Paul | or Walter. Schreiber is the Yankees’ batting practice pitcher. Forced out of baseball by a sore arm, he was sitting on one of those high, spindly stools that bookkeepers sit on, writing figures on a ledger, when Joe McCarthy engaged him to pitch to the Yanks before games. That was in 1936.
|
Salary and Bonus
He was paid $150 a week all through 1936, and then given $1500 of the series money of that year. He went through the same chores in 1937 and the Yanks, in the series again, voted him another $1500. Now, having been voted a full share in the 1938 series swag he figures to draw down between $6000
scouts of the state sanity commission report that they have yet to find a man, woman, or child who
win. Schrieber’s name has never appeared in a Yankee box score. He has never pitched a ball in a game or made a hit, or stolen a base. Yet, financially, the series will reward him just as amply as it does Gehrig, Gomez, Ruffing, DiMaggio, Dickey or the other New York stars. Three Years, $18,000
He is so little known, so completely obscure, that even the writers who report the doings of the New York club don't know for sure what his first name is. Some call | him Paul while others call him
Gets Full Share of Swag
Three Years Off Bookkeeper’s Stool, Yanks’ Batting
By HENRY M'LEMORE
America is the land of unbounded opportunity. . : Other countries may be able to match our rail-splitters who become tied the score 3-3 and thats the | statesmen or our mechanics who became industrial giants, but try and name me a nation, other than America, where a bookkeeper with a sore arm could rise to prominence®
| needs is control and an ability to
double-header at Cleveland, 4 to 1.
Fines Simmons On Last Day
Owner Griffith and Veteran At Loggerheads.
he major league
Can’t Pitch
Doing All Right.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 3 (U. P.)— Clark Griffith, owner of the Washington Senators, precipitated a crisis with Al Simmons today that threatened to terminate the career of the hard-hitting veteran outfielder as a member of the Washington Club,
: Griffith fined Simmons $200 after duck, especially the latter, because [the former league batting champ when sluggers start teeing off on engaged fans here in what Griffith “nothing” balls they are likely 10 | aid was a profane argument. The
ff Correspondent whose surname is Schreiber, and Walter, offers the latest proof that
Feller Fans 18 in Setting New Recorc
Greenberg Fails to Tie Ruth Homer Mark; Cleveland Loses Twin Bill.
By United Press A private niche in baseball’s hall of fame was reserved today for Bobby Feller, new strikeout king of the major leaguers. Ringing down the curtain on the 1938 season with a dramatic last act, the 19-year-old Cleveland fireballer fanned 18 men. Feller, who struck out 17 Philadelphia Athletics in 1936 to tie the record created by Dizzy Dean in 1934, set his record against the Detroit Tigers yesterday at Cleveland in the first game of a double-head-er. Despite his performance the Vitt=
| |men lost both ends of the twin bill,
4-1 and 10-8. Walks Three in Sixth
; It was a typical Feller pitching Job—spotty. When he was good, he was. perfect, once fanning six straight men, but when he began to lose control the other side began to make runs. Bob gave up five bases on balls, three of them in the sixth when the Tigers made two runs. Chet Laabs was the chief victim of Feller’s fireball, striking out five times. Big Hank Greenberg, the man who most of the 27,000 Cleveland fans had come to see try and break Babe Ruth's home run record, fanned twice, and his longest hit was a double, leaving his homer total at 58 for the year. The New York Yankees nosed the Boston Red Sox 3-2 to make their American League winning margin 912 games. The defeat left Boston runnerup by 3!2 games over Cleve< land, who finished three games ahead of Detroit.
Cubs End in Defeat
St. Louis and Chicago divided a doubleheader, Buck Newson scoring his 20th victory, 4-3, for the Brownies in the opener, and Chicago coming back for a 3-0 shutout in the finale, cut ‘to 52 innings because of darkness. Philadelphia and Washington also split, the A’s scoring 4-2 behind Caster’s five-hit hurling in the nightcap after Washington had won the opener 5-2. The Chicago Cubs, who clinched the National League flag on Saturday ended the season in defeat. With only five regulars in the lineup, they fell before the St. Louis Car=dinals 7-5 as Paul Dean and Mort Loder combined to pitch eight-hit all. The defeat left the Cubs’ triumphant margin over Pittsburgh at two games as the Pirates were nosed 6-4 by Cincinnati in the finale. The 1937 champion New York Giants finished in third place, one game in front of the Reds as a result of beating Boston 3-2.
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decapitate the man on the mound. |.jub owner also cited Simmons to Schreiber must throw the finest | president will Hamridge of the “nothing” ball of all the men In| american League and K. M. Landis, his odd business. Else the Yanks p.ceball's high commisisoner certainly wouldn't have voted him| gimimons immediately charged | a full share. To make the World |Grimith was motived by ‘erces | Series even, © give the Nations! nary” considerations. He charged Leaguers a chance against the |. mth cracked down wit Mighty Men of Manhattan, it would | ,,¢ of ey om ali be sporting of Joe McCarthy to : : 3 : he has an agreement whereby he start Schreiber in the first game. : : : Tu ear . '|receives a bonus for batting over Against his “nothing” ball the 500 for the season national leaguers might even win|’ B : as . : y collecting two hits in the first a game and carry the series to five | ooo of a double-header with PhilaZRInes: delphia—the closing show of the
3 Season--Simmons Joosted his seaStein to Appear son's average to .301. On Armory Card |
“Griffith apaprently was mad about that and slapped this fine on Ben Stein, 214, grappler from Yonkers, makes his first local ap-
me when the business with the fans prarance at the Armory tomorrow
came up,” Simmons said. night where he is scheduled to meet Rudy Strongberg, 225, Mil-| waukee. It is a one-fall opener and! completes the weekly mat card. The feature tussel finds Ralph! Garibaldi, 211, New York, in de-| fense of his clear record when he] takes on Louis Thesz, 224, St. Louis. | Garibaldi has taken “four in four” | in local action and hopes to con-| tinue against Thesz who formerly! was rated tops in the game. Al-| though Ralph will be the underdog in the match, he hopes to pull up| with a triumph. Buck Weaver, 180, Terre Haute, gets a chance at “Lord” Lansdowne, 182, an English-| man, in the semiwindup. Advance reports say that Lansdowne can “give and take” in real style.
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RESULTS AMERICAN LEAGUE First Game) ... ODO O02 020— § . 000 000 1— 1 4
Detroit _...- 3 Cleveland ....
lak
Y innings: darkness) 561 300 1—10 13 800 311 3— 8 11
Tebbets; Humphries, Smit!
(Second game; Detroit Cleveland Harris and and Helf. (First Game)
St. Lous vev-. DOO 100 030— §& 12 Chicago ... 000 300 000— 3 8
Newsom and Sullivan: Lee and Tresh. Ss ame: 6 innings: darkness) (Second £ 3 8 mningy: A 3
Eisenstat and Tebbetts; Feller and Pyt-
| Claude Banks, Bess A. C, vs.
{James Young, Northwestern Com-|
munity Center, middleweights. Robert Simmons, Bovee A. C,, vs. Lee Prettyman, Bess A. C, bantam- | weights. | Four other three-rounders will complete the card.
AUSSIE ACES MEET IN TENNIS FINALS
1 0
1! 2 h
defensive man but will play only when Gomez pitches. Individually, only three Cubs (out{side the box) can be given as mu\ as an even break or better with the Yankee Goliaths. Gabby Hartnett can’t be tossed off lightly even in comparison with Dickey, the vears All-American catcher. In shape, Hartnett is a better receiver {than Dickey but those two injured | fingers, 37 years and the burden of running the team make Hartnett's problem a tough one. Billy Herman must be given the nod over rookie Joe Gordon at sec-
{
Down. Soldiers
The Indianapolis Indians stuck to straight football yesterday and | plunged to a 6-to-0 victory over the | heavy Ft. Harrison team. The In|dians made 14 first downs to the |Soldiers’ four, but were unable to | score until the fourth quarter when | Hop Howard took a Ft. Harrison punt and raced from his own 25-
Walter. Only in America, the land of unbounded opportunity, could a pitcher who can't pitch make upward of | $18,000 in three years. Because a batting practice pitcher can’t pitch very well; his value lies in the fact that everything he throws up to the plate looks as large as an adult cantaloupe. It is his duty to throw balls so utterly lacking in “stuff” that even the weakest hitters on a team can knock them to the furthermost reaches of the outfield.
3 1 LOS ANGELES, Oct. 3 (U.P) — and The finals for the Pacific South- | west singles tennis championship was an all-Australian affair today
St. Louis Chicago Bildill Rensa.
pa | 200 10x— 3 and Harshany: Rigney
(First Game) iphias . 000 010 001 — 8 © Rar . 000 041 0Ox— 10 1 Reninger, E. Smith and Hayes; Krakauskas and Ferrell. (Second Game) i 210 160 00— § 8 rion - 20 000 200— 2 3 Caster and Wagner: Chase, Monteagudo, Appleton and Giuliani.
5 captain of the Davis Cup team, meeting Adrian Quist. Hopman might very well have 2 been a “playing” member of the Cup squad as he defeated Jack Bromwich, top ranking Aussie, in 010 020 #30— 6 I straight sets to reach the finals yesBoston 000 001 000— 1 9 terday. Quist had beaten
Gomez, Sundra and Dickey, Glenn; Budge n Saturdav . Dickman, Harris and Desautels. [certs on Saturday for his finals
railg
0 3
vii rin.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
(First Game) 000 001 303— 7 15 300 000 000— 3
| Hopman paired with the Aussie Cup 1 team alternate, Leonard Schwartz, | to pliminate Budge and Gene Mako |in doubles play.
Brooklyn ... Philadelphia
Nahem d George, Hayworth; Passeau, a Davis. x
with Harry Hopman, “nonplaying” |
Don |
: ii ok : Besides his singles achievement,
ond base. Herman despite his off Vard line to the Ft. Harrison 35. vear in batting, is probably the | There Ivan Albright, former Cen-
greatest all-round player in the Cub tral Normal star, took the pigskin machine. If he has a great series, 2nd scored on a series of plunges. the Cubs’ chances will increase im-|_ Ellington, Pardue, Smith and 'measurably. Stanley Hack at third A Massachria, were outstanding for base can hold his own in any com- the Indian linemen, while Thomp‘parison with Red Rolfe except in Son and Kaiser were best for Ft. extra base power. | Harrison.
i lL Ad PR I . . { (George Kirksey discusses the Y AUTO AND DIAMOND
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