Evening Star Newspaper, April 23, 1935, Page 14

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

A WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 1935. Nats Optimistic as Long Tour Starts : Rooks Play Leading Roles in Majors CHANGE OF SCENE HEDBATINGAD =7 Spurt in Attack Is Club’s Vital Need—Series Lost to Cronin’s Bosox. BY JOHN B. KELLER, Staft Correspondent of The Star. HILADELPHIA, April 23.—Away from home for the first time P this season—and due to remain away for quite a spell, too—the Nationals are*hopeful of better days. Maybe the boys are blessed with second sight, for they seem to sense » great improvement coming in their play in the stretch of fighting on for- Iz eign flelds scheduled to begin this afternoon in a clash with the Ath- letics, markinglthe I::nemng o: sonl;nlm delphia’s American League se 5 !?suauy reluctant to quit Griffith Stadium, the Nationals this time ex- press keen satisfaction over the move out of Washington. They have not been hitting and they feel that a change of scene will do them a lot of ood. : Certainly the revision of the batting order that became effective yesterday in Washington failed to help the Na- tionals, After Bucky Harris shuffied the deck the new deal got nothing more than a 4-to-2 licking by the Red Sox. And it was no great task for the Cronin-led Boston band to leave the Capital with a sweep of the three-game series. Nats Bat .250 at Home. - A S THEY won two and lost three games in Griffith Stadium the Nationals cracked no more than 41 hits. Only a shade more than eight hits to the game on an average. They clattered across home plate just 16 times. Only a little better than an average of three runs per game. But that was about all that could have been expected of the Nationals, hitting exactly .250 as a club. Harris and his players are expecting free swatting to begin any day, but it had better be soon if the Nationals are not to sink so far it would take & team of Babe Ruth's to get their heads the Washington club manage to roll up as many as 6 runs. Twice it scored at all The Nationals were not without fine stay, but too often they failed fo produce the scoring punch.* They had the renowned Wes Ferrell was far from being at his best. Yet they had Whitehill Skids Twice. ]’_“ERREIL and Earl Whitehill dueled Nationals’ left-hander skidded in the fifth and sixth innings, each went the ball-game. It was & two- bagger by Wes and a single by Max score in the fifth. In the sixth a pass to Rick Ferrell, followed by Almada’s one-baser accounted for 2 Tuns. - walks off Whitehill before he gave way to a pinch-batter in the eighth. Washington southpaw’s side. He singled the first time up, doubled and again in his third trip to the plate. To make it a perfect batting day, two were out in the ninth inning and tallied for the second time. He got after covering first base, failed to hold a throw from Joe Kuhel that above water. Only once at home did 4, once it got 2 and once it got none scoring opportunities in their home their winning chances yesterday for nine left on the runway. evenly for four rounds then the time after two were out, and away Bishop that got the Red Sox their Julius Solters’ two-bagger and Mel The Red Sox got 10 hits and 2 ‘Wes Ferrell was the big thorn in the sccred the second time, then singled Wes tripled off Jack Russell after home, however, cnly because Russell, should have retired Bishop. Myer Blazes Way to Runs. HE Nationals got to Ferrell for eight safeties spread over five innings, but got little from the Tot. 1t looked as if they would find the plate in the second session when with one out Jack Stone doubled and Jake Powell singled. This put it up to Lyn Lary, but all Lyn managed 1o do was drill into a double-play. Firally in the sixth inning the Na- tionals got home to end a string of scoreless innings that had extended to 19. It took a triple by Cap Myer at the outset of the round to ring up +he run. Cecil Travis fouled out, but Manush flied to Solters in deep left| and Cap rode to the counting block | on_the loft. | Red Kress went up to swing for Whitehill in the eighth, only to wave futilely. Myer again came through, however, this time with a single. Tra- vis skied out, but Manush walked and Kuhel nicely filled the clean-up role to which he had been ‘assigned just :etor-, the game by singling Myer ome. Three Left on in Ninth. N THE ninth the Nationals made rallying gestures and Manager Harris threw into the game a flock of reserves. One was out when Solters backed to the left-field stand wall and let Powell's hoist dribble through his hands for a two-base er- ror. Sington grabbed Lary’s bat and coaxed a walk out of Ferrell. Here Harris sent in Bluege to sprint for si‘nleum and Redmond to bat for Rus- sell. Redmond waited for a good one and swung for what looked a hit as the ball headed toward right field. But Bishop darted to his left for a spec- tacular stop and barely flagged the pinch-batter at first base. With a string of left-hand swingers coming up Manager Cronin decided to lift Ferrelll and substitute the southpawing George Walberg. The Red Sox pilot’s strategem looked none too good as Myer got & base-filling pass. It proved sound, though, when L4 SmorHIoIRE coamsRmIHO SrocomBoLHP cooonococsc® on §Bluege Totals . Batied for Yarvlo min {Ratied tor Russell in ninth. Ran for Sington in ninth. : Boston . 000 012 001—4 Washington :, 000 o1 010-=2 tee In—Bishop. TS, o modanManush, Kunel. . Two-base Bite— Slone. Bolton. W. Ferrell. 5 - base hits—Mver, W, Perrell. Stolen base— Werber. Sacrifice—Bishop. ‘Double to Myer to Kuhel. Bishop to Cronin o Dablgren. fefy on bases “Roston. 8 W. Ferrell, 3: off Walberg. 1: c Whitenill 2. Btruck out—By W, PerreP. 2; by White- hill, 2. Hits—Off W. Perrell, 8 in 8% in- Y "inning. ~ Winning Rn.é jer—W. Ferrel - tehill in eighth. nning. i ttcher-Whitenill. _ Umpires— Mesirs. Ormaby and Gelsel. Time—2:08. —e—————— SPOUSES ROLL AGAIN. All couples entered in the husband- wife tourney at the Arcadia bowling alleys are asked to roll their second block on Wednesday, Friday or Satur- day nights of this week, if possible, so as to enable the Arcadia to award the silver trophy to the winners before other tourneys get under way. Washington at Philadelphia. Alexandria High at Central High, 32:30. Montgomery Blair at Priends, 2:30. Tennis. American U. at Catholic U, 2:30. Lafayette vs. G. W. here (courts not announced), 2:30. Golf. Roosevelt vs. St. John's, East Potomac, 3:15. Track. McGuire’s School “B” Squad vs. Episcopal High “B” Squad, at Episcopal. TOMORROW. Base Ball. Washington at Philadelphia. St. John’s (Annapolis) at Mary- land, 4. National Training School at Episcopal High, 3. George Washington at Wash- ington College. Tech at Washington-Lee High. Track. American U. at Catholic U., 3. Tennis. St. Albans vs. Central, 2:30. St. John'’s at Friends (Prep School League), 2:30. THURSDAY. Base Ball Washington at Philadelphia. Wrestling. Chief Little Wolf, Trinidad, Colo, vs. Gino Garibaldi, St. 19;)1.;. Washington Auditortum, 8: Track. Montgomery Blair and Fred- ericksburg at Alexandria High, 2:30. John Marshall High at Episcopal High, 2:30. Golf. Devitt vs. St. John’s (Private Scl;ool Golf League), Rock Creek, 3:15. League Statistics American. RESULTS YESTERDAY. Boston. 2 . Lou! Chicago, Others not scheduled. TEAM STANDING. Boston .. Cleveland hicago . ORI e Detroit . . Philadelphia GAMES TO! . Wash, at Phila. Detrolt a Chicago. 8t. L. at Cleveland. St. L. New York at Boston. National. RESULTS YESTERDAY. New York, 8: Philadelphia, 1. Others not scheduled. : : : »E e Cincinnati B New York Chln:o . Ehiladeipkia Pittsburgh . GAMES TO] . GAMES TOMORROW. Sl AT OB T, Siae ¢_Brooklyn. innat!. WA Louis. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. Nationals when they got here today was Alphonse Thomas, jr. . . the veteran right- hand pitcher remained in Wash- Travis put up a modest foul to the third sacker. Homer Standing By the Associated Press. Home runs yesterday — Bonurs, ‘White Sox, 2; 4 1 Ott, Giants, 1; Vosmik, Indians, 1. The leaders—Camilli, Phillies, 5; Foxx, Athletics, 2; Frey, Dodgers, 2; ‘Watkins, Phillies, 2; Hartnett, Cubs, 2; Ruth, Braves, 2; J. Moore, Phillies, 2; Bonura, White Sox, 2; Oft, Giants, 2. League totals—National, 30; Amer- dcan, 15; total, 45. ington to be shipped no one knows where as yet . . . probably to Al- bany . . . Cambria, president of that club, wants him . . . Minne- apolis turned him down . ' Boston at New York. Boston at New York. Yard FRIDAY. Washington at Boston. ‘West Virginia at Georgetown, 3. Lee-Jackson High at Alexandria, 2:30. Roosevelt at Augusta Military Academy. Rockville High at Friends, 2:30. Track. Georgetown, Maryland, Catholic U, Howard and Tech in Penn relays. Randolph-Macon st Gallaudet, 2:30. Eastern vs. Maryland Freshmen at College Park, 3:30. Lacrosse. Hopkins Jayvees at Maryland Frosh. ‘Tennis. Bridgewater at American U, 2:30. Devitt at St. Albans School League), 2:30. Golf. Georgetown vs. Penn at Prince- SATURDAY. Base Ball. Washington at Boston. ‘West Virginia vs. George Wash- ington, at Grifith Stadium, 3. - (Prep Virginia Tech at Maryland, Eastern at Episcopal High, 2:30. Roosevelt at Greenbrier Academy, Lewisburg, W. Va. Montgomery Blair ai Mt. St Joseph's, Irvington, Md. Lacrosse. Penn State at Maryland, 3. Tennis. Maryland at Washington and Gilman at Episcopal High. Central High at Maryland Frosh. Golf. Georgetown vs. Princeton, Georgetown vs. Willlams, both matches at Princeton, N. J. Track. Georgetown, Maryland, etc, in Penn releys. Minor Leagues International. Baltimore, 10; Rochester, 9. Newark, 3; Montreal, 2. Buffalo-Syracuse (cold weather), Others not scheduled. . American Association. Minneapolis, 9; Milwaukee, 0, 8t. Paul, 7; Kansas City, 4. Others not scheduled. New Orleans, 6; Atlanta, 1. Texas, Galveston, 5; Beaumont, 1. Tulss, 7; 3. Fort Worth, 19; Oklahoms Ciiy, 2. San Antonio, 12; Houston, 4. Pacific Coast. No games listed. OPEN SOFT BALL TILT. Breeches Mechanism soft ballers drubbed Steel Foundry, 14-4, yester- day in the opening game of the Navy League. Admiral Defrees, com- mandant of the Navy Yard, tossed out the first ball. g 2 it i i o sbe: §Ep EEgeE B8 £ i Hil bt { ; &k E BY JIM BERRYMAN. PRING training grind number 2 now is on! Washington’s sand- lot stars and starlets are earn- estly digging their cleats into the soggy sod bordering the Monu- ment’s base. The belated arrival of base ball weather had the boys worked up to a feverish pitch, but all the has been loosed, sounds with cracks, thuds and shouts .l.;x !':’lndldl'zl for team berths do their The scent of Spring blossoms is not 50 noticeable as the aromatic fumes of liniment. Flippers, which had spent the long Winter months tickling typewriters by day and dealing bridge decks by night, ery out more piercingly than mocking ‘Tin the Ellipse birds. clack louder than the clattering crates along Constitution avenue. And tender thighs which have relaxed comfortably on padded office furniture blush blue and black from mistreat- ment about the bases, There are stiff necks, twisted ankles and split fingers. But no sick bay for these injured members, no Mike Martin to croon and pet them back to normalcy, no ex-rays and waiting while the extent of the injury is made positive on the negative! N THIS base ball business there always is an argument—always a bet or a debate to seitle. Back last Fall we were asked more than once to name and rank the first 10 foot ball coaches, in order. This happened to be an assignment we ducked. There is no such animal. The two leading coaches of the two previous years—Howard Jones of Southern California and Harry Kipke of Michigan—lacking the material, got nowhere in 1934. Now a fan group from base ball steps in with this order: “To help settle an argument, would you mind naming the five leading base ball managers for 1935—in order of ability?” | You can figure it after this angle— !in 1933, Bill Terry and Joe Cronin | were the tops—in 1934 the act switched to Mickey Cochrane and Frank Frisch. Given the material, you can’t over- | look Hornsby and Bill Mc- Kechnie, two of the best. The same goes for Casey Stengel, the Dodger boss. And there is a young fellow gether bowled over 19 flag poles, were almost exact opposites. McGraw was a hard driver—Mack & philosophical leader, who also could Griffs to Ship Thomas, Probably to Albany Just Shy of Being 10-Year Man—Powell Makes Great Catch—Ferrells Shine. §§§s§ ] Ei‘ i f E i ¥ ] E il 23: 8 £gs il (] i §ic g . ; it % ik s & g ¥ ; z s g % g ! : H - i } i i g i "3 o ¥ i H : H i No sir-ree! These young diamond hopefuls play themselves back into shape. If the right forefinger is bent like & parking lot fender, chances are that the left little finger will be twisted to match before the week is out. The playing equipment of these various teams ranges anywhere from two dried-out bats and three coming- unstitched balls, to a complete rig for the lucky lad who will spend his Sat- urdays and Sundays masked, chest- protected, legginged and cleated in full regulation splendor of a big league backstopper. The assortment of uniforms makes the use of the word uniform about as appropriate as a dinner jacket at a hill-billy concert. But there is hard- ly & player on the fleld who isn't sporting at least one piece of the popular game’s customary garb. Here will be & baseman in golf knickers, foot ball stockings, a collegiate sweater, tennis shoes, but he's got that little peaked flannel cap, monogram- med with the insignia of some lost league. There = pitcher winding up for his plateward toss, and the late after- noon breeze flaps his wide-bottomed slacks about his gyrating hoofs, but on those hoofs he wears the right and proper covering for the slab. A first sacker has bicycle clips holding his trouser bottoms tight so not to trip & runner by snaring his flying spikes. All Types Are Represented Among Managers Successful in Base Ball. BY GRANTLAND RK be hard enough when hardness was ' needed. Joe Cronin of the Red Sox has| shown himself to be among the best. ' Cronin is more or less of the cheer- | ful, optimistic type, who look on life and the game with keen, undisturbed eyes. Frank Frisch is a pessimist, one of the hardest losers base ball ever saw. “I'll admit,” he said in Florida this Spring, “T hate to lose even & prac- tice game when we are trying out some rookies. Isn't that the main idea—to win? It has to be on my team.” Frank looks at his athletes with moody, somber eyes. Bill McKechnie of the Braves prob- ably is the quietest manager in the National League, while Casey Stengel is replete with eloquent as well as sarcastic oratory—and yet these two opposites are among the best that base ball has known for many a Spring and Summer moon. Bench and Playing Managers. HERE was a time when the bench manager was largely in the lead. hy of the Yankees, McKech- nie of the Braves, Charlie Dressen the Reds, Casey Stengel of the Dodg- ers and Walter Johnson of the Indians stars | said Smith. (Copyrignt. 1035, b North _Am fewspaper Alllance, Ine.) lons “Ruthless” Yanks Outdraw Braves. YORK, April 23 (#).—The “Ruthless” New York Yan- spectators, bearing the name of an ice cream company and his headgear is an old felt hat whose crown outlasted the brim, but what & mitt he flashes—it’s & big-time model, copied after Lou Gehrig’s and stamped with the famous swatter's signature. From s distance it appears a motley crew, but, rest assured—clothes may make the man, but not the ball player! And right in this same dele- gation are some of the brightest local diamond jewels! There is some high-calibre playing material under that harlequin assort- ment. Many ex-college athletes who used to fit their classes into spare mc- ments from the ball field, now take concentrated doses of their chosen sport between office-out and sun- down. Minor leaguers who heeded the call to business are lured back for late-in-the-day sessions, and scat- tered about over the city's sandlots are more than you'd guess of the boys who saw service with one or the other of the major circuits. A few more weeks of training and tryouts, and the crazy costumes will give way to natty matched-up flannel suits, the ragged flelding will click with more machine-like precision, wild pitches will steady down to strikes and bungled bunts be scored infleld hits or outs—not comedies! ONLY RICH STAKES TOGETCAVALCADE Too Great an Attraction to Run for Small Coin, Trainer Declares. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, April 23.—Caval- cade, king of the 1934 3-year- olds, will race this year, but it will take plenty of money to get him to the barrier. So says “Whistling Bob™ Smith, who conditioned the little bay for his victories in the Kentucky, Amer- ican and Detroit Derbies and the Arlington classic last year. “He's not going to race for any five or ten thousand dollar purses,” Smith declared. “Cavalcade is & drawing attraction. We see no rea- son why he should be run in cheap handicaps in which he would be heavily burdened and stand a chance to lose to a lightly weighted horse. I am not going to run him to lose. “Why, do you know that the mutuel handle at Santa Anita, Calif., jumped up $70,000 one day and $125,000 on another after it was advertised Cav- alcade would have a public trial be- tween races? The crowd waiched every move of the colt as if it was an actual race.” First Start in Deiroit. THI Detroit Racing Association al- ready has arranged a $25,000 H challenge handicap to be run éluu 29 at the fair grounds. That [will be Cavalcade’s first start, Smith said. “John Hertz of Chicago aiso is considering such = special race for the July meeting at Arlington Park,” “I suggested that Cav- alcade carry § pounds less than scale that other nominees be graded down to 100 W}nfi. That should offer & race.” th also would like to see Bel- He's wrapped in a generous zipper coat¢———————— — - ('i) “WJ‘ MONUMENT “DiamenDs. 3INNING HURLERS TRIBE'S MAIN GUNS Johnson Points to Use of Quartet in Three Wins in Four Starts. BY HERBERT W. BARKER, Associated Press Sports Writer. OUR games, four pitchers, three victories—that's part of the reason why Walter Johnson dians will be a constant threat for the American League pennant this year. ‘The Indians have done very little hitting, but they haven't needed to with pitching such as Mel Harder, Oral Hildebrand, Monte Pearson and Willis Hudl’a have flashed. Harder and Hildebrand gave up only 17 hits in winning Cleveland’s first two games, & pair of 14-inning, 2-1 victories, and Pearson was touched for only 10 in losing & 3-2 decision to Detroit's champion Tigers ‘n 13 frames. But it remained for Hudlin, the veteran of the staff, to top all these yesterday with the Tigers as his victims. Hudlin Blanks Tigers. N MIDSUMMER form, Hudlin set the champions down with three hits and won & 5-0 shutout. Two of the Tigers' hits came in the seventh but a double play ended the rally and rescued Hudlin from his only difficulty. Joe Vosmik’s home run with two on climaxed Cleveland’s four-run out- burst at Tommy Bridges’ expense in the third and Hal Trosky’s double followed by Sammy Hale's single ac- counted for the final Indian run in the eighth. Cleveland’s pitching “big four” has allowed only five runs and 30 hits in 50 innings, by far the most im- pressive record of the early season. Zeke Bonura’s two homers drove in | five runs for the Chicago White Sox in the first three innings of their game with the St. Louis Browns, but the Browns scored six in the same span and won, 6-5. Jim Walkup, re- lieving Dick Coffman with one out in the third, held the White Sox to | one hit the rest of the way. Hubbell in Command. ARL HUBBELL regained bis pitch- ing form in the only National League game of the day. The slender southpaw held the belting Phillies to four hits, one of which was Dolph Camilli’s fifth home run of the year, and the New York Giants | earned an easy 8-1 victory. Mel Oti's | home run and Dick Bartell's triple. double and two singles were the main factors in the Giants’ 15-hit attack. An exhibition game at West Point cost the New York Yankees the serv- ices of Fred (Dixie) Walker, fleet out- fielder, for two weeks. Walker dis- located his right shoulder when he slid into second base in the first in- ning. It was an injury to the same shoulder which kept Walker out of the game virtually all last year. SANDLOT TERRITORY DUE TO BE DIVIDED & | National Federation Wil] Have Stars Yesterday By the Associated Press. ‘Wes Ferrell, Red Sox—Pitched and batted Red Sox to victory over Sen- stors, getting triple, double and two Zeke Bonura, White Sox—Hit two home all five | two singlcs. w Districts—Cleveland Likely to @et Title Tourney. By the Associated Press. MICAGO, April 23.—Plans for C dividing the United States into distgicts for the first nstional for membership in the H here last month, semuan [ oy is certa’a his Cleveland In- | post TON OF BUCS N TOP SLAB FEAT Hughes-Berger Allay Fears of Indians—Reds’ Young Outfit to Fore. BY ALAN GOULD, Associated Press Sports Editor, EW YORK, April 23.—1t still is too early in the major league campaign, topsy-turvy as it has been so far, to revise pre- season calculations, but it is not pre- mature to emphasize the important roles played by new talent in both big circuits. Approximately & score of newcomers | have been conspicuous in the first | week's box scores. This is well above the average for the freshman class. Moreover, the performances of the rookies rank among the most sensa- tional of the Spring’s numerous and intriguing developments. The best pitching feat in either league so far is rookie Cy Blanton's one-hit shutout of the world cham- pion Cardinals. This Oklahoma right- hander came up to the Pittsburgh Pirates late last year from the Albany | Internationals. He's another addi- 'tion to the National League’s speed- ball ranks and he looms as the answer to the Pirate prayer for more and bet- ter pitching. Solace to Cleveland. | HE brilliant work of Cleveland’s freshman keystone combination, Roy Hughes at shortstop and Lou (Bozie) Berger at second, has made Indian fans forget the illness of {Bmy Knickerbocker, a 1934 yearling sensation at short. Hughes and Berger were all right in the Scuthern Association for New Orleans, the railbirds reasoned this Spring, but how could they figure to stand the big lezgue pressure® Worried itself, the club tried to get & more seasoned replacement for Knickerbocker, It's conceivable now that Knjcker- bbcker may have to fight to get his | job back, so successfully has Hughes { combined with Berger under fire. Many Young Reds Shine. VINCINNATT'S rookies are the sen- sation of the National League's first week, even though it must be conceded the freshmen infield has been steadied by the influence of a -graduate comeback by “Sunny Jim” Bottomley, who replaced Johnny Mize. The Reds hardly can hope to stick in the stratosphere, but they already nave proved the wisdom of the club’s policy in cleaning house and starting all over again. Kampouris, Myers, Riggs, Goodman and Campbell, to list only the outstanding freshmen on the club, are the nucleus of an up-and- coming varsity. Two rookle first-sackers have got- ten away to good starts. They are Alex Hooks, who replaced Jimmie Foxx for the Athletics, and Ellsworth Tenney (Babe) Dehigren, the sen- sation from San Francisco, with the, Boston Red Sox. Dahlgren is one of the main reasons for the early season rush of Joe Cronin’s greatly fmproved club. | Ouifield Crop Good. i HE outfield is cluttered with new talent. Besides Ival Goodman of the Reds, there's George Selkirk, who seems = fixture in Babe Ruth's old post for the Yankees, and big Hank Leiber, whose hitting finallv seems sufficient to clinch a regulaz job with the Giants. Chester Morgan, Texas League re- cruit, has crashed the regular line-un of the champion Detroit Tigers, whilsy Pete Fox remains on the bench. Roy (Beau) Bell and Wally Moses, who played in the outfield of the Galveston Texas League club last !year, have won jobs with the St. Louis Browns and Philadelphia Ath- letics, respectively. The Cardinals, im expected, have assigned Terry Moore to the centerfield post, suc- ceeding Ernie Orsatti. The Chicago ‘White Sox have a pair of new- comers on the ramparts, Vernon (George) Washington and Ray Rad- cliff, both up from the American | Association. TERP NINE TO TAKE " ON AN ANCIENT FOE Entertains St. John's Tomorrow. | Keller Hits in Ninth to Beat | W. and M., 6-5. ARYLAND'S hustling base ball team, which conquered the William and Mary Indians, 6-5, yesterday for its eighth win in 11 siarts this season, engages its tra- ditional foe, St. John's of Annapolis, tomorrow at College Park at 4 o'clock. ‘Tody Riggs. former Maryland ath- leie, is the St. John's athletic direc- tor, and also tuters the diamond com- bination. A sharp single by Charlie Keller, bard-hitting Maryland sophomore center fielder, in the ninth with the bases filled, counted the tying and winning runs against Willlam and Mary. Stout pinch-piiching by Vic Willis, who has won five of the eight games captured by Maryland, was a big help yesterday. Griffs’ Records > z H > oooceccocccHoceoouNNa Y P MO OISR OB S B RO T [ - R ol '§ b eeeaeeeaee-wv—»—-anm:.fig . - : B ) soocoooos0uRwoRU e T seccsoooouuATHaRameE cocoooccsorceHsNoses’ osesescoscocosscscca ~ é | 5 o o . - 2 I1900000000 0 - 1 wanT) *FR St sssemmolt S35555 R avtupenl Lk PP 4 dnke, | Corpola

Other pages from this issue: