Evening Star Newspaper, June 27, 1933, Page 29

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* ¢ Foening Sfaf. WITH SUNDAY MORNING: EDITION WASHINGTON, Eiuege, Batting Sensation, Inspires Griffs WALLOP IN OF LINE-UP PROPELS TEAM TO Declared “Through” by Winter g Leaguers, Ossie Having | Greatest BY JOHN B. KELLER. LEVELAND, Ohio, June 27.—One of the big reasons why the Nationals today are settin the American League pack third baseman that rumor river last Winter. Far from being “through” as FAR END MANY WINS Season. g the pace for the remainder of | is Oswald Bluege, the 32-year-old | 5 had lined up for shipment down | the base ball gossipers figured in | the off-season when those in charge of the Nationals were reported | to be hopeful of having a youthful Southern Association phenom make the grade at the far corner of the infield, Bluege has developed into a most important part of the Washington machine that prom- 1ses to roll smoothly along the championship trail. Fielding as brilliantly as ever »—and for nearly a decade there Here he is a .276 has been no better defensive third baseman in the American Yeague—and doing the best bat- ting of his career in the big show, Bluege has been among the lead- ers of the Nationals’ drive through the West that has resulted in 10 victories in 11 engagements and lifted the club above the world champion Yankees, who had con- sidered themselves securely set- tled in the driver’s seat. With remarkable plays Bluege time after time during this swing through the West has checked offensive threats when the opposition might easily have made trouble for the Nationals in the early going, and been an inspiration to his teammates. While the Cronin crew has scored decisively in most of its vic- tories in this sector, much of the time it has waited until the late innings to | P! send across the majority of its runs. Early tallying by the ogpumon might well have changed this, but with Bluege on the job in such a thorough manner { Washington’s rivals were quickly dis- | any couraged. Playing Errorless Ball LUEGE has played errorless ball B at third base this trip and the fans in _the three citles in which the Nationals have performed have marveled at the skill and perfection dis- layed by the veteran around third E:se. How the ousting of Ossie from his infield position by any player avail- able in the minors anywhere could have been contemplated is beyond the com- rehension of those who have watched gls superlative play in the West. beenwthe At bat Bluege has | did not soar above the .315 mark for season’s -Nationals are greatest surprise. career hitter, slamming the ball around at a .320 pace for his 55 games. On this western tour, Ossie has gone hit crazy with the rest of the Nationals. | In the 11 tilts he has slugged for an | average of .426. Twenty hits have| sprung from his bat, two of them home | runs and two of them doubles. | Since the first game in the St. Louls series, the opening one of the swing, | when he went up five times for a fat zero, Bluege has not had a hitless game. And the Nationals have prof- ited by his hitting, too. Qut this way he has driven over 14 runs and carried across 8 himself. Splurge Is Sensational. LUEGE'S batting splurge this year | is nothing short of sensational. Never before as a big leaguer has | he carried along for a better than .315 ace over a stretch of 55 games. He is authority for this. In 1928, when he had his best batting season, he clouted .297 for 146 games, but even then he great length of time. He is in a_ wonderful batting stride these days, though, and his spurt all season has given the Nationals some- thing they had not had in years—a potent punch in the lower end of their batting order. ‘They may have thought of shipping Ossie down river back in the Winter when the base ball moguls had their heads full of barters and boys. If so, the who might have grabbed him off, but did not consider him worth while are doing some deep thinking now. But Joe Cronin and his top-notch grinning broadly. Griffs’ 15th Win in 16 Starts Over Tribe, 4-3 11th Triumph, 1933 Loop Mark By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. LEVELAND, June 27—In 30 great & winning mood are the | Nationals during this Western | swing they are able to bag a| - ball game even when their heavy artil- lery bogs down. For the first time since June 8, when they took a beating in Boston in the first game of a double- ‘header, Griffith’s hands yesterday failed 1o muster more than nine hits, yet the nine were enough to get a 4-to-3 vic- tory over the Indians and run a win- ning streak to eight games, a record for the American Leazfie this }slewnup Another league mark was hung up, too, as the Nationals increased their Jead over the second-place Yankees, idling in Detroit, to two full games. Alvin Crowder, the pitcher who turned in more wins than any other in his loop Jast year, was credited with the hill triumph over the Tribe, making his | total of successes for the current cam- | paign 11, more than achieved by any other Harridge circuit hurler to date. Rout Best Righthander. O score their fifteenth win in their last 16 games, the Nationals routed Oral Hildebrand, a p\tcherl yated by the profession the best right- | hander in the league. They got eight | of the nine hits while Hildebrand was | on the hill, three of the eight being of | healthy proportions. Org was Joe| XKuhel's sixth home run of the year, an- other was Goose Goslin's seventh triple and still another was Ossic Bluege's fifth double. Kuhel's homer, a tremendous clout to the far reaches of right center, put the | Nationals in the ball game in the early | going. Bluege's two-bagger was wasted, but Goslin's three-base drive paved the way to the winning rally late in the fray and started Hildy to his downfall. | The Indians, too, got nine hits, all | off Crowder. They gave him a good | pesting in the second inning. bunching | Tour blows to put over three runs after | two were out and wrest the lead from | the Cronin crew. The General seemed | on the verge of slipping several times | thereafter, so when Boss, first batter up in the eighth, after the Nationals had forged ahead, slapped a single, Cronin promptly lifted Crowder and called in Jack Russell to finish the fight ! Griffs First to Score. ITH a single by Schulte and Kuhel's homer, the Nationals stepped out in the second round, but the Tribe came right back Nationals Now Fear A’s More Than Yankees Shibe Park a Jinx Field—Cleveland Lauds Griffs—Stock of Bats Runs Low. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star LEVELAND, June 27.—Al- though they are seven and a half games up on the third-place Athletics and hold but & two-game advantage over the runner-up Yankees, it is the A’s more than the Yanks the Nationals are watching these days. They have decided that the New Yorkers will not be thereabout when it s all over, but they fear the Philadelphia club has enough to make it dangerous right to the fin- 4sh unless others besides them- salves make a lot of trouble for it. “We have beaten the A's seven , Nets Crowder to go them one better. Kamm doubled with one out and after the second re- tirement Knickerbocker doubled, Hildy tripled and Galatzer, the new Indian, singled. After that, until the eighth, the only real scoring threats were made by the home side, but the Nationals had the eighth inning to themselves. Goslin began it with a three-bagger driven be- tween the left and center fielders. Cronin rammed a single to right and the score was even. That blow by Cro- nin brought Willis Hudlin to Hilde- brand's relief. ‘Then a good piece of headwork by Cronin blazed the way to the decisive counter. Schulte tried to sacrifice, but anly succeeded in fouling to the catcher. Kuhel followed with a long fly to the right fielder and Cronin, who had run down the line a way, raced back to tag up at first base. Watching the rookie, Galatzer, closely, Joe waited until the right fielder started his throw. Galatzer, evidently thinking that Cro- nin would not dare break from the base, merely lobbed the ball to the infield. That was what Joe was waiting for. He set sall for second and reached it well ahead of the sluggish heave, to be in a position to carry over the win- ning marker when Bluege looped a single to short center. R way in the eighth with the aid of a double play brought about largely by Averill's headless base run- ning in a hit-and-run play. Averill had forced out the singling Boss and had a | Poor Base Running Helps. | USSELL got the Indians out of the | play on with Vosmik. But Vosmik only | lofted an easy foul chance to Kuhel. Averill, though, never looked to see what had happened: he tore on madly past second, and all Russell had to do to retire the side was romp to first base for a throw from Kuhel. The Tribe flared a bit in the ninth | when Russell's control went awry and Manager Johnson threw in several ex- tras in an effort to break a losing streak | of six games. | Kamm walked, and after the next | two- batters went out Burnett grabbed | Hudlin's bat and drew a pass. was rushed in to run for Kamm, and Hale to do the leg work for Burnett, who has a bad knee. This did the Tribe no good, however, for Galatzer ‘WASHINGTON. yer. 2b. e 1 e 1 Horr DS enO Russell, 'p...". Totals ... B 3 er. Hildebrand. p. Hudlin {Burnett iHale . SosorastomLDw0 Totals ..... 3 *Batted for Hudlin in ninth. tRan for Kamm in ninth. 1Ran for Burnett in ninth, Washington... 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 0—4 Cleveland..... 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0—3 Runs _batted in—Cronin. Kuhel (2), Bluege, Galatzer. Knickerbocker. Hildebrand. bits — Kamm, __ Knickerbocker, Three-base_hits—Hildebrand, Gos- runKunel. ” Sacrifice —Crowde ul play. t on bases—Washington, e First base on balis—Off Hiidebrand. 3: off Crow- 1 . Struck out-—~By Hilde- i by Hudlin, 1. Hits B nnings (none out 1 in 2 innings: off innings in eighth): off Russell. none in 2 innings. Winning pitcher—Crowder. Losing pitcher —Hildebrand. _Umpires—Messrs. Geisel and Moriarity. Time of game—l hour and 59 minutes. CRONIN, CROWDER ON ALL-STAR CLUB 18 Named to Represent A. L. in Chicago Game Bat for Average of .318. Crowder. 9 in 7 By the Associated Press. HICAGO, June 27.—A team with a collective batting average of 318 to date, exclusive of the five pitch- ers, has been named by President William Harridge to represent the American League against the National League’s stars in base ball's game of the century at Comiskey Park July 6. The squad of 18 players which will be directed by Connie Mack, manager of the Philadelphia Athletics, and his assistants, Eddie Collins and Arthur Fletcher, includes every one of the standouts in the judgment of the 500,- 000 fans who voted in the Nation- wide poll. Following is Harridge’s list: Inflelders—Lou Gehrig, New York; Charles Gebringer, Detroit; Joe Cronin, Timmy ouk, PhisAoRA ant y Foxx, lade! , and Ton; Lazzeri, New York. s . Outfielders—Al Simmons, Chicago; Babe Ruth, New York; Earl Averill, Cleveland; Ben Chapman, New York, lng all:n We;tmst. Louis. ‘atchers—; Dickey, New York, Rick Ferrell, Boston. i nd Pltchers—Bob Grove, Philadelphia; Vernon Gomez, New York; Wesley Fer- rell, Cleveland; Oral Hildebrand, Cleve- land, and Alvin Crowder, Washington. Yankees Provide Six. world champion Yankees will provide six members of the squad — Gehrig, Ruth, Dickey, Gomez, Chapman and =Lazzeri—and every club in the junior league will be Tepresented by at least one man. Cleveland has three places in Pitchers Wes Ferrell and Hildebrand and Out- fielder Earl Averill. Washington, cur- rent leader of the American League, will contribute its manager and_ shortstop, Joe Cronin, and Pitcher Al Crowder, while Al Simmons and Jimmy Dykes will be the Chicago representatives. Rick Ferrell, Boston catcher, draws a place, and for the first time in the major league careers of the brothers Ferrell they will be on the same team. Detroit and St. Louis will send Charlie Gehringer and Sam West, respectively, into the game. Harridge also announced that, unlike the National Leaguers, the American League players will wear their own club home uniforms. The National League has decided to provide gray uniforms, which will be given as souvenirs for its players. The National League team, not in- cluding the five pitchers, to date has a team batting average of .298. AMERICAN YESTERDAY’S RESULTS. Washington. 4: Cleveland, Philadelphia, &; Chicago Boston, 13: St. Louls, 5. t New York-Detroit, coooscoccanM | :C TUESDAY, JUNE 27, 1933. NATIONALS CALLED HEADS.IPPLAVERS | Prove Mettle in Overhauling| Yanks Despite Handicaps. Factors Pointed Out. BY FRANCIS J. POWERS. HICAGO, June 27.—Wash- ington players are jubilant over the manner in which they overhauled the New York Yankees. The Washington climb was accomplished after a poor start and during a stretch when some of its regular players re incapacitated. t one time or another Washington has been without Bluege, the star |third baseman, Outfielder Goslin and | Myer, second baseman. Neither Manush nor Goslin hit during the early part of the season and recently the Goose has suffered from a leg ailment. Alvin Crowder, pitching star, wabbled at the beginning of the season and Monte ‘Weaver has been useless since June 2. Washington players kept their heads up and once more are in top shape. Manush is in the midst of a batting spree, Goslin is hitting and running well, Crowder has pulled to the top of the pitching clan and Weaver is ex- pec&ed shortly to be ready for service again. | | | wel Cronin Clever Leader. ‘OE CRONIN is proving a success as a manager, despite his youth. He lets the team play its own game, except the pitchers. Joe wastes no time in getting a wabbly pitcher out of the game. He always has some one warmed up for relief and makes his switches rapidly. Jack Russell, obtained from Cleve- land, has done some excellent relief work and has earned his keep. Bill McAfee is another who has been of great value in relief roles. With White- hill, Crowder, Weaver and Thomas pitching at top speed, Washington has | a good quartet of starting hurlers, | The batting of Schulte and Sewell | has been surprising. With St. Louis, | Schulte was no outstanding batter, al- though a splendid fielder. Sewell sel- dom hit better than .260. Boken Proves Big Help. NE thing that helped Washing- ton was the utility play of Bob Boken. Clark Griffith purchased | during the Winter largely to give Kansas City some operating capital and it proved a good move. The lanky Southerner can play every infleld posi- tion well and his hitting has been timely. | Griffith’s preference for young man- | | agers no longer can be ridiculed. In | 1924 Stanley Harris took over the team | and led it to two championships. Harris | was just 26 then and immediately was | dubbed the “boy manager.” Joe Cronin is about the same age. ALEXANDRIA EAGLES MEET. ALEXANDRIA, Va., June 27.—Alex- Pandria Eagle bail team will meet to- night at 8 o'clock in the lodge rooms to map future activities. Griffs’ Records | | | | Boken | | | . 3b.Hr.Rbi. Pct. 2 o Cronin. [ | Schulte. 3 Manush Goslin Bluege.. | Boken Sewell. Harris 38 Kuhel.., Myer..." B: Berg. Thomas. 20 Whitehiil Rice... 32 o amead Weaver. | McAfee. | Burke. . | Bolton. | Kerr. | Crowder | Russell | Stewart. coo0000omooN! PISEEIRIIEN So005000H0S TR ooos0000000HL CLUB BATTING. |G. _AB. R. H. 2 3b. Hr. Rbi. Pet | 66 2401 300 742 126 87 34 376 500 PITCHING. BB. 50. IP. G 10 11 49% 14 12 39 10 10 39 49 3 21 30 30 | | Russell, | McAfee Burke. . @ . C 2 anuamosst e | ZSRBES | | Weaver. | Stewart. Thomas. omomQ FEFETN rrtery Crowder Wh'hill. FR PR a3 ® 2530 S oo NATIONAL YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Pittsburgh-New York, rain Cincinnati-Brooklyn. wet grounds. St. Louis-Boston, wet grounds. Chicago-Philadelphia, rain. 93wue01d| e = g 3 WOIIUTYSIA TIYI0X MaN] Bost Pytlak | =2 GAMES TOMORROW. Wash. at Cleveland. N. Y. at Detroit at Chicago. at Cleveland ¥ at Detroit Phila. at Chicago fouled to Bluege. times in & dozen starts, but we gave them six of those beatings in Wash- ington,” Cronin points out. “We have won but once in five starts in Philadelphia. Shibe Park seems to be & tough spot for us, just as it is for the other rivals of the A's. And of the 10 games we have yet to play with Connie Mack’s club, 6 are sched- uled for its own lot. “I'm confident we will give thern more trouble than we have when we play them: again in Philadelphia,” Cronin says. “But every time some club gives the A's a trimming these days I feel much better. “It's different with the Yankees. Playing them in New York or Wash- ington, it seems to make no differ- ence to us. We take them in both . Boston at St. Louis. Boston at St. Louls. towns. But that Shibe Park. Oh, boy, that's tough.” They rate the Nationals an A-1 pennant club here. And not solely because of the way the Cronin crew has walloped the Indians in the series. Cleveland critics have fol- lowed the splurge of the Capital outfit with interest and to a man they and the fans here, too, are eager to see the Nationals carry on to the championship. Ed Bang, veteran base ball critic, writing in the Cleveland News, is lavish in his praise of the Washing- ton aggregation. Says he, in part: “A great ball club, the best in the American League and probably the superior to any team in the Na- tional as well. Z am here to tell you Peaupuo| £l 13 & g 3 GAMES TODAY. Pitts. at N. York (2) St. L. at Boston. | Chicago_at_Phia. Cincin. at Brooklyn. Cincin. at Bkin. Chicago at Phila. Joe Cronin is piloting the best-look- ing club I have seen in the majors in several years. No wonder they are on top of the American League. They belong there and something will have to go decidedly awry with their machinery if they are nosed out for the pennant.” And Bang has a lot of reasons for writing that. ‘There has been so much free-swing- ing by the Nationals in their drive to higher places, their supply of bats is getting low. Four to half a dozen flails have been broken daily lately. Orders are in for a load of wood to be delivered to the Washington club in Detroit, though, and, says Gos- lin, “We'll get busy right away breaking up those new ones.” - D. C, TUESDAY, JUNE 27, 1933. Comics and Classified PAGE C—-1 Set Season Mark for Wins in Row Giants Shouldn’t Be at Top, But They Are Experts Laughed at Terry for His Pre-Season Optimism. CRONIN'S PITCHERS REACH FOR LAURELS Have Allowed Only 2.5 Runs a Game for Last Eight. N. L. Washed Out. 5. %8 BY ORLO ROBERTSON, Associated Press Sports Writer. HILE the Washington Senators have been hit- ting the ball to all cor- ners of Western ball parks in their march to the top of the American League, Manager Joe Cronin’s pitchers also have been playing an important role in establishing a season’s major league record for consecutive vic- o v o Above are three reasons why their critics contend the Giants have no business leading the National League. cm.:" [Gus MANCUS BLONDIE RYA and Ryan can’t hit, much; Mancuso is erratic and O’Doul can't peg a ball from here to there. But they win ball games, which, after all, is the main idea. BY GAYLE TALBOT, Associated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, June 27.—One of the most pleasurable afternoons available this vacation season is one spent in the press box at the Polo Grourss, observing the puzzled expressions worn by the base ball experts of the metropolitan sector. They are the same jolly group who had & peck of fun late last season with Bill Terry, who at that time was very serious about rebuilding his Giants. “Yessir,” Bill would say, “we might not win that flag next year, but we'll be up there in the race.” And how the boys would chuckle and wink wisely when Bill wasn't looking. It was good —Bill wrecking a second division club and making a pennant contender out of the pieces. flabbergasted. ‘They The more they watch the “Jints” the less they believe it. “It must be what they call a ‘team of destiny,’ or something,” one veteran | observer sighed after watching Bill's | rascals make five errors and four hits and win a ball game going away. They've done that so many times this season it has ceased to be a_novelty. Maybe it is “destiny.” It's bound to be something. The Giants have been getting sensational pitching from Hubbell, Fitzsimmons and Schumacher. That's granted, but even pitching isn't enough to account entirely for the miraculous success of & team with so many uncertain links. HE club can’t hit. Only Mel Ott and Johnny Vergez of the regu- lars are over the .300 mark. At last reports, Blondie Ryan, the club’s shortstop, was pasting that apple at a .204 clip. Hughie Critz at second don't believe it.| But what do you think of this, my dear Watson? Ryan, with 38 hits, had | driven in precisely the same number | of runs as has Chick Fullis of the Phil- lies with 94 safeties—23 apiece. Ryan | had knocked in only seven less than | Pepper Martin of the Cardinals, with a .349 average. ‘Then there’s Critz. He, like Ryan, has a habit now and then of kicl | & ground ball all over the infield -an | then heaving it into one of the better | box seats. He and Ryan at times col- laborate in kicking the ball around until they have filled the bases and ‘grought down the wrath of Giant fan- i dom. ‘Then, with that setting, they’ll come up with a couple of chances that would knock your eyes out, retire the side | with a flourish and trot to the dugout | with the huzzahs of the multitude ring- ing in their ears. It’s almost uncanny. | Mancuso they call “butter-fingers” |in the press box. In mid-June he was tories. With a 4-to-3 triumph over the Cleve- land Indians yuurdg‘. the Senators games over th tl?flflr Ymh:. fl e le won their eighth successive game their flfmen(.’flhin 16 lhm" ane pitch- Just how effective Wi ers have been f\ shown in :mu opposing Russell and Crowder. N yesterday's conquest, the third oyer the Indians, Alvin s S ead against thes White With blg Jim Peterson itosms Svee flfflm;! ball pounded out an 8-to-2 vic- pounding out four hits, including & pair of doubles, the Boston Red Sox was_hitting 216, and Gus Mancuso, SO they're sitting there each after- average. B L Hoing well, | catcher, Tiad & 244 Crowder -Off All-Star Team? Griff Seeks to Conserve Energy of His Mound Ace for Nationals’ Pennant Drive. l pitch for the American League team in that all-star, world fair battle against the National Leaguers at Chicago, July 6. 5 ‘The Washington chieftain appre- ciates the honor, and all that sort of thing, but doesn’t want to run the risk of weakening his pennant-chas- ing club by having its star finger overworked. “I'm wiring Crowder for permis- mission to have his name with- drawn,” Griff asserted today, “and SPORT SLANTS By Alan Gould: RGANIZED base ball, over a half century of existence or more, has been slow to make any radical changes in its conduct of the national sport, but it has been’ through major upheavals before and it may go through another one, if con- ditions do not take a distinct turn for the better by the close of the 1933 campaign. It is no secret whatever that a majority of the big league clubs are “in the red” for the second consecutive year, despite sweeping economies, the reduction of player limits, the move of a number of clubs like St. Louis, Cincinnati and Boston in the National League toward established bargain double-headers, and the steps taken in both major circuits to strengthen second-division outfits. Major league club owners still feel they are offering more for the sporting follower’s money, at 50 cents or a dollar, than any other professional sport, but the fact is that the customers are staying away from the games through the week on very large numbers, indeed, meanwhile taking advantage of the double bills on Saturdays, Sundays and holidays. This presents the combined problem, (1) of making a radical change in the schedules for 1934, with the double-header idea domi- nant, and (2) necessitating a possible rescaling of prices. In other words, the current tendency to offer the fans more for their money with synthetic double-headers has the effect of making them feel a single game is not worth the same price. E] P of the New York Giants to attract increased attendance coinci- dent with their sustained and sensational pennant drive. If I heard the magnates complain once in National League circles last season I heard them deplore a dozen times the fact that their biggest town, New York, was away off in attendance because the Giants were wallowing around in the second division. It sounded plausible. John McGraw was out and the team was going nowhere. But it bounded upward this Spring, with a rush. The team has flayed the kind of ball that figured to appeal most to fans satiated with power house base ball, as ex- emplified by the slugging Yankees. Yet the cash customers have not bounded up to the Polo Grounds. Why? Your guess is as good as mine. It may be that the apathetic fan of 1932 still has a hang-over. It may be that the out-of-town buyers or convention delegates, their visits to the big town greatly curtailed, no longer have the time to spare for a ball game when they do hit Gotham. Whatever it is, it is a pain to the club owners who trusted the biggest of base ball publics to support a winning team. T or the other, the idea being to shift one of the St. Louis franchises to another city for the financial benefit of one and all, but this is more easily suggested than accomplished. Montreal would like to get a big league franchise. At one time it was felt Detroit was big enough to support a team in each league. Buffalo and Newark, International League towns, have been mentioned, too. Developments by the end of the year may force a change, but it will take a lot of argument, backed by heavy financial induce- also making this request of Presi- dent Harridge and Connie Mack, who will manage the American League team. “Crowder undoubtedly will have to pitch against the Yankees in New York on July 4 and it would be too much to ask him to pitch again two days later, especially in view of the fact his arm has been troubling him lately. "ll{'x Ossie Bluege that the Ameri- can League team should draft from the Washington club in addition to Cronin,” Griff continued. “He's the greatest third baseman in the league and the way he’s hitting now it's a %‘ohk:‘w pick Dykes in preference to F Clark Grifith has his way about it Alvin Crowder won't Still They Stay Away. RHAPS the most puzzling development of the year is the failure Magnates Are Wary. HERE has been talk, of course, of a split in one major league e Yarikess snd Tigsre_taied an get into action when rain inf - while all of the League were L e NG RECORD leading the backstops of both leagues in Dballs. of his at- like a combination of every good catcher who ever trod on an umpire’s bunion. BEAT ROWI latest addition to the “destiny” team's family circle is | However, if you think any moment you don’ Giants. Chances are that any base who tries to take advantage of Lefty's weakness will fall and break | bones and be tagged out while he | there in pain. | | All our Men’s "Hahn Special’ P ~>SPORTS Instead of Upping Prices to meet the rising market— down, go all “Hahn Special” sports shoes! Genuine White Bucks —black or brown trims—smart square toe or ventilated styles. 60 styles ments, before the magnates run the risk of leaping briskly from the frying pan into the fire, 4 a3

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