Evening Star Newspaper, October 8, 1935, Page 12

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— Detroit Frenzied A £3 NEW CHAMPS NOT CLUB WITH CLASS Glaring Weaknesses Seen, in Outfit That Trimmed Foe None Too Smart. BY FRANCIS E. STAN. Btaff Correspondent of The Stal ETROIT, October 8—Mad, delirious, unrestrained, De- troit today celebrated its first world championship, but by the same token, paradoxical #s it may sound, the Tigers’ base ball dynasty seemed to be crumbling in the moment of their greatest glory. For two years rulers of the Amer= jcan League, the Bengals today be- came the first junior circuit team |ley Hack didn't run an inch out of the | the Tiger dugout, getting there sec- since 1932 to down the National League for world supremacy. Yet base ball critics, stolidly analyzing | the four-games-to-two conquest of | the Bengals qver the Cubs, could not predict, with any assurance, that Micky Cochrane’s tossers will repeat as contenders, much less as cham- pions. | ‘The Tigers won the championship | fair and square, Umpire George Mor- jarty notwithstanding, but it wasn't |aged to throw all that confetti and and children—until the terrific crush | a great ball club that clinched the | ticker tape out of the windows before | forced even the bluecoats out of| title yesterday when Goose Goslin | Goose Goslin had even reached the |Sight, into the tiny doorway leading singled home Cochrane in the ninth | inning for a 4-3 victory. On the | contrary, it was a team in the state | of decline, but which still had enough | to capitalize on the mistakes of a potentially stronger team which has much to learn. | 'ODAY the 1935 world series Is dead and buried, only a memory. Fans will talk far into the Winter of Moriarty's almost unbelievable con- duct, of Phil Cavarretta’s doubtful plays, of Augie Galan's over-ambi- | tion and of Hank Greenberg's flop, but already the Tigers’ American League rivals confidently are plotting and expecting the downfall of the winnahs and new champions. Weak spots which more or less| escaped critical eyes in the regular league campaign stood out in the post-season classic. Marvin Owen proved such a pitiful figure, for in- stance. that not even the stanchest | Detroit rooter could laugh off his per- formance. Jo-Jo White was no bar- | gain and Bill Rogell has shown that he will get no better. Flea Clifton played a nice deren-} sive game in the series, but Flea does | not appear to be a major leaguer, day in and day out, and, to stick the old chin out a bit farther, even the | now-immortal Goose Goslin and Al- vin Crowder have not many days of | stardom ahead of them. | Schoolboy Rowe seems. to have | reached his peak, as has Eidon Auker. | Hank Greenberg has several good | vears ahead of him and probably will | continue to be a star—in play against every-day pitchers and ordinary ball games—but Hank is one of the few exceptions on the new champions. Cubs’ Play Lacks Smartness. 'HE vanquished Cubs never will be | convinced that they were beaten | by a better club and in this belief they | sre joined by many critics and all | Chicago fans. Too often the breaks of the game. plus what seemed bad | decisions by Moriarty, were the dif- ference or appeared the difference be- tween victory and defeat. This s not intended to belittle the Tigers' victory. Detroit, most loyal | base ball town in the world, waited patiently for decades for a world champion and stuck by its various contenders to the last. The Motor City deserved its victory and so did | the Tigers, who won without the serv- | fces of their best hitter, Greenberg. | But this very “handicap” under | which the Bengals worked may serve to strengthen the belief that Mickey Cochrane’s club is not so good as it might be. It certainly is not flattering | to the Cubs to have been beaten by a club with 25 per cent of its power missing. HROUGHOUT the series, even| down to the last couple of plays, ean be traced weaknesses in the Chi- eago team and odd circumstances that | helped toward the Bengals' triumph. There was Moriarty’s silly act ot‘ throwing valuable Chicago players out | of the game in the third tilt of the series. There was Cavarretta running down a base runner between first and gecond while another runner scored In the same game. There was the overconfidence of young Galan when he dropped a fiy | ball for a two-base error in Al Crow- | cer’s game, putting the winning run on base and in a position to score when Bill Jurges made his only bad play of the series. Not once was there any burst of power on either side that would defi- nitely indicate the superior ball club. Rather, the team that got the “break” won out, and that team, four of six times, was Detroit. HAD even victory-mad Detroit cared to pick apart the thrilling finale, 1t surely might have taken an edge off the joy supreme of winning. Umpire Moriarty, the irrepressible, made &n- other screwy decision that might have | hurt the Cubs’ cause, Charley Grimm committed a doubtful piece of strategy | when three Cubs tried to get Stan| Hack in from third base in the ninth, and Cavarretta tried to keep his cake and eat it at the same time in the Bengals' ninth, just before Goslin's single. | The Tigers had ganged nicely on Larry French to take a 1-0 lead on singles by Cochrane and Gehringer and Petey Fox's double in the first inning. In the third the Grimm Reapers tied it up on singles by Jurges, Galan and Billy Herman, who probably was the best player in the| series. Galan hurt the Cubs’ chances of going ahead wen he tried to take third on Herman’s single, which was too perfectly hit to right fleld for any- body to take third base. Thus far, though, the game was nicely played and so it was when Herman cracked a homer in the fifth with French on base to over- come the 2-toe lead which the Ben- gals built up in the fourth frame on hits by Walker and Rogell and infield outs by Owen and Bridges. PFrom then on, though, the. per- fection of it all was gone. With Grimm’s Strategy Odd. | (See NEW CHAMPS, Jpge 13.) Moriarty, Weather, Grimm Strategy Make Weird World Series. FRANCIS E. STAN. ETROIT, October 8.—So base D ball ends and to moth balls for the scorebook, but firat to get rid of series notes, if only because it required soul-trying effort to knock icicles off frozen fingers and Jjot ‘em down. Impressions: That George Moriarty forever hurt himself by actions almost unpardonable, especially yesterday, when even on mild protests he de- risively waved his hands at the Cubs, even when they had dropped the sub- ject and were on their way to the dug- out with backs turned . . . that Stan- base line when Moriarty called him out on that score after he had ducked | under Flea Clifton's arm in the sixth inning. Wonderment: Why the world series isn't played two weeks earlier and the prohibitive weather conditions that marred the 1935 series avoided thusly to some extent . . . How downtown Detroit offices man- dressing room following his game-win- ning, series-ending single. Thistles, Posies for Umpires. OUBT: That Moriarty ever again will be named by the American League to officiate in a world series... | that the junior circuit ever will care to risk another shocking performance such as the fiery umpire’s . . . that George will escape with anything less than a heavy fine when Judge Landis announces his punishment. Add impressions: That Bill McGowan and Dolly Stark did masterful jobs of officiating . . . That Stark potentially is one of the very best umps in base ball , . . and is the spryest. Add “wonderment: Why didn't Charlie Grimm send up a pinch-hittor for either Bill Jurges or Larry French or both after Hack’s triple to open tie ninth? . . . Why Kenny O'Dea, who knocked the cover off the ball in his only pinch-hitting try, wasn't intrust- ed with the job of scoring Hack for the run that would have sent the Cubs ahead. Cavarretta Has Time. REDICTION: That Phil Cavarretta, for all of the criticism directed at him in the last couple games, w1l blossom into one of the best first base- men of this era ., . The fact that he is only 19 seems to have been overlooked ... Which may be an indirect tribute to his “action” and his at least out- ward assurance. Admiration: For Phil Wrig- ley’s corps of uniformed ushers, who could pass for a regiment of West Pointers. Especially when they line up around the diamond at the end of games to protect the diamond from the feet of thousands of spectators. Sympathy: For Marvin Owen, who resembled a fugitive from the Miller Furniture Co. nine . . . he seemed s0 outclassed it was almost pitiful. Gripes: The frigidity of what Grantland Rice branded the coldest series in his memory . . . and the necessity of having to beat a path through a wall of humanity in the lobby of the Book-Cadillac Hotel. Bridges All Heart. DD sympathy: For Charlie Root, who might have pitched in a winning world series game if Grimm had sent O'Dea to bat for Prench in the ninth. Add admiration: For little, skinny Tommy Bridges, whose heart must occupy every inch of space in his sparrow chest. To him must go thanks for one of the greatgst of all thrills—setting down three men in order while hold- ing a three-bagger hitter on base with the pressure on. Disappointments: Clark Griffith’s failure to grab a_ younger pitcher or a promising shortstop in the draft. « + . Our own failure to pick ‘em right again . . . we called a six-game series, but neglected to mention that the Tigers, not the Cubs, would win. BEARS PLAY RED DEVILS. Chevy Chase Bears and the Red Devils will clash at 10 o'clock Sat- urday morning on the Kensington and Meadow field. Series Figures DETROIT. October 8 (A.—Pinal facts and Ngures of the 1935 world series: Team Standings. Detroit (A, L)__ Chicago (N. L.)_ Warneke and Hartnett: rane Second Gai Chicago Detroit _ Root. Henshaw. Bridges and Cochrane. Third Game (st Chkm)i (at Detroit). R. Deteolt _ ... Chicag- (11 innii Auker. Hogsett. Lee, Warneke, Prench and Detroit Chicago Crowder and Cochrant and Hartnett. Fifth Game (at Chl Detroit - Chicago Rowe an Hartnett Sixth Game Statisties. sioner’s share, $22,13265. ¥41.384.8. .000 " frog ‘Tadio. tIncludes radio cut. l!orl‘ share In first four games only. @he Foening Slar Sporis WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, COCHRANE, GOSLIN TIGERTOWN “KINGS Winning-Run Combine Given Great Ovation by Fans Emotionally Wild. BY EARL J. HILLIGAN, Associated Press Sports Writer. .| Auker, "p_ | Hogseit. p. ETROIT, October 8 —Perhaps the wildest, most hilarious scene in Detroit's sports hise tory broke loose the instant | Manager Mickey Cochrane crossed | | the plate to score the run that gave | Detroit its first world base ball cham- | | pionship. i Roaring “We want Goose!” thou- | sands of fans made a wild rush for onds after the Bengals had fled into the tunnel leading to their club house. A solid mass of humanity—good na- tured and boisterous—formed a deep ring about the dugout, shoving, shout- ing, yelling to make a din almost as Joud as that which prevailed when Goslin smacked his single to win the game. Officers good naturedly held the ex- | cited fans—hundreds of them women to the corridor connecting the play- | ers’ bench and dressing rooms. ‘ Escort for Cochrane. ANS ran from one base to another, inspecting the spots where the bags had been, measuring off the distance between the bases. Three officers formed a ring around the pitching hill | as fans started to pull the “rubber” up, !and as many officers, reinforced by attendants, had to guard the home | plate. Concessionaires did = land-office | business. The instant the game was | over they appeared with boxes, selling | everything from toy “Zeppelins” to | ball bats. Hundreds of fans remained in the stands and in the bleachers to watch | the wild scene around the Tiger dug- out. Then came a terrific roar. Mickey Cochrane, surrounded by | four burly patrolmen, swung into view | in the stands, coming out of a runway. Instantly the crowd broke from the dugout, and only some fast sprinting by the officers and the grinning Tiger manager kept the crowd ahead of their | wild-eyed pursuers until Cochrane climbed into a car near the Tiger front office and sped away, motor cycle offi- cers clearing a way through the huge | snarl of traffic. Roar for Goslin. | “WE WANT Goslin,” the fans roared | i as they seethed back to the | Bengal dugout. *Bring out Goslin.” Fully an hour after the game the huge crowd of fans still remained, and might have remained for hours longer had not Goslin appeared. Surrounded by another four officers, Goslin was | rushed through the dense throng, the | patrolmen shoving autograph hunters | | and well-wishers aside gently but | | irmly. Only when Goslin disap- | | peared did the crowd start slowly to | disperse. Soon the field was almost deserted. | High above the fleld, in the high | press box, typewriters clattered and the ; telegraphers made their “bugs" click | | & steady hum and stretching out, far and high and empty, stood the im- | | mense temporary stands which only a short while before had been packed with & roaring, screaming crowd of 19,000. Goslin, hero of the game which had touched off the spark, was unable to get into his hotel. He arrived near the entrance in a cab. Some one saw | him and a roar went up. Police at- tempted in vain to clear a path to the | hotel entrance. They finally cleared | one to the opposite curbing and the “Goose,” a broad grin on his face, tlipped away. TO BUILD NEW TRACK. MEMPHIS, Tenn., October 8 (#).— Dover J. Barrett, Memphis sportsman, sald that the new owners of the Arkansas Jockey Club will build a track at West Memphis, Ark. It will be ready to open early in April. OCTOBER 8, A night of pandemonium eclipsing Armistice celebration signalized world series victory of Bengals over Chicago's Cubs. In this post- “Nice going, boy.” were Charley Grimm's words to Pilot Mickey Cochrane as the Cubs' manager came to the Detroit dressing room after the game to offer felicitations. By the Associated Press. Batting—Fox, Detroit. 385: ringer, Detroit, .375; Herman Klein, Chicago, .333 each. Runs—Gehringer. Detroit, 4; Her- man and Jurges, Chicago, 3 each. Runs batted in—Fox and Gehringer, Detroit, 4 each; Herman, Chicago, 6. Hits—Fox, Detroit. 10; Gehringer, Detroit, 9; Herman, Chicago, 8; Hart- nett, Chicago, 7. Doubles—Gehringer and Fox, De- troit, 3 each; Herman, Chicago, 2. Geh- and Triples—Fox, Detroit, 1; Hack and | Herman, Chicago, 1 each. Home runs—Greenberg, Detroit, Demaree, Chicago, 2. Stolen bases—Gehringer, Detroit, 1; Hack, Chicago, 1. Pitchers—Bridges, games; Warneke, games. 1; Detroit, won 2 Chicago, won 2 L4 and Infielder Heinie Schuble. 1935. After Tigers Topple Cubs for World Bas — midnight tableau the goose is for Goslin, who singled the Jungaleers into the title, ’ %, Pt L & i A blizzard of tattered paper hit the Detroit business district from office windows as Bengals brought the town a world championship after 48 years of waiting. Blue Monday? Not for these five ebullient Bengals, shown in shower, richer by some $2.000 apiece than they would have been had the Cubs copped. Left to right: Pitcher Vic Sorrell, Rightfielder Pete Fox. leading hitter of the series; Marvin Owen, who held down first base after Greenberg was hurt; Catcher Ray Hayworth —Copyright, A. P. Wirephotos. G. AB. 19 o isie PETEPSE SRS DD mI D D B D S2200~033: B ABDURBIIRAN EEEe (SRR 23205~03B00~oH Crowder, Composite Score, 6 Games By the Associated Press. The composite box score for the six games of the world series: DETROIT (AMERICAN LEAGUE.) > [ D130 [EENIOTRE TP TR 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 2233230520~ RTINS > Totals *Batted for fifth game. -- 6 206 21 2b. 3b. 4710 Ha 3 &IINI‘ 38 arneke." "B . Root. B> Lee, ' p. French, 0232922023953~ oD=is: Auker in seventh inning of third game and for Owen in nintl CHICAGO (NATIONAL LEAGUE.) 9 063 28 > ] 5 3l msuomsat 80. b =} SO00HHOIIRR TR DR B Hr. Rbi. BB, Pet @iie e 160 i oa ERC RPN~ ST R oo9029220% Smooss~zI=EIm So~o33202moH02~D sl o252530938-30550~ Batted for Kowalik in ninth inning iBatted for French in eleventh inning of PITCHING aQ 3 oaBus] o o o #95505 nalesl o ceabtac® e of secons third game and for Carleton in seventh inning o! $Batted for Warneke in ninth inning of third game. ane. y and Stark (Natjgnai Leasue). 164 74 Jurges in ninth e 5 17 11 game. fourth third game. RECORD. £ =B ] W Rasd e, sl Surud omo5950F 50555% S30000ug oamrng comuorol Sonssl ressomni® S nmal o 2 S 2000 1000 PRy o B 4 0 3 0 0 Sacrifices—Lee (3), ‘Walker. Double [ o Hartnett. Lind- 1ys—Cochran TRAvell to GeRringer : Roge! Yo, Cavarretts (5 'on bases— Balk—Carleton. _Umpires—Mo 1—21 0—18 riarty es of TWO PLAYERS BID FOR ROLE OF HERO Gehringer, With Flawless Record; Fox, Best Hitter, Stars of Contest. BY ALAN GOULD, Associated Press Sports Editor. ETROIT, October 8.—The aftermath of the 1935 world series, marked by fewer record performances, but more arguments than any champion- | ships in years, found base ball's fol- | lowers sharply split today in their | nominations of No. 1 hero of the battle won by Detroit's Tigers from the Chicago Cubs. As far as the final game was con- cerned, the hero was Goose Goslin— “Yea, Goose”—by popular acclama- tion. Manager Mickey Cochrane and Pitcher Tommy Bridges played out- standing roles in the de:iding *victory, but the Goose’s $50,000 wallop in the ninth was the torch that set fire to the wildest world serfes demonstration since 1924. Over the full six-game stretch, how- ever, and taking all departments of play into consideration, it is & contest between Detroit'’s Charley Gehringer, king of the major league second base- men, and Ervin (Pete) Fox, the 0 | strong-armed, hard-hitting right flelder of the new world champions. Gehringer’s Play Flawless. GEHRENG!R played flawlessly, set- ting a new record for total chances accepted, 39, for a six-game perform- ance around second base. He was & constant threat at the plate. MwFMonflle (See TWO PLAYERS, Page 13, FROM THE PRESS BOX Umpire Moriarty Became Detroit Hero, But There Is Confab With Judge Ahead. BY JOHN ETROIT, October 8.—Notes on the late and somewhat la- mented world series: Joe Medwick, target of the fruit blizzard last year, has always been a hero to little Augle Galan, so little Augie did his level best to emu- late him ir the final game. He got the bleacher fans sore by squawking on a play at third. Medwick did the same last year. Galan is a left fielder. So is Medwick. The fans booed Med- wick to the écho. They did the same for Galan. But, yes, there were no bananas. All the fans could muster this year was one solitary orange, and it missed Augie by 20-feet. Another play at third, by the way, renewed the Chicago feud with Umpire George Moriarty. Hack was on second base when i happened and Moriatry was officiat- ing at third. Clifton, the Tiger third baseman, took & grounder from Jurges and began to chase Hack back io- ward second. He caught nim and lunged, but Hack ducked and Clifton chased him the other way. No one was more surprised than Clifton when Moriarty called the runner out on the first tag. The Cubs were not only surprised. They were boiling. Moriarty was hissed and hated in Chicago. Here in Detroit they cheered when he sat down at the piano— or, rather, when he took his sta- tion at third base. Malone’s Hatred Bitter. Your correspondent blushes to ad- mit it, but he called the result of each game right before the series started. He was kidding, but the Tigers weren't. RELERT Pat lllpl. s former o LARDNER, | referring to the Tigers when he said: ‘“We will finish this series today.” Pat does not care for the Cubs, and | the feeling is extremely mutual. Hank Greenberg was expected to | play Sunday, and again yesterday, | but he watched the last game from | the sidelines while his substitute, Owen, made a blooming hero of him- self. No one cheered him louder than Hank, as they say in the movie scenarios. All the series substitutes did well, Klein hitting nobly after Lindstrom'’s injury, Clifton playing & fine game at third, and Owen coming through for Greenberg in the pinch. Some Work for Landis. JU'DGE LANDIS is planning a series of conferences with Moriarty and some of the Cubs, including Jurges, Stainback and Grimm, but the of it. Pete Fox made two magnificent plate in the fourth game and one to Tigers. Tommy Bridges, though he won two games and lost none, was the wildest and most erratic of the series pitchers. In 18 innings, Thomas' average of close to five. He wasted plenty. There were plenty of heroes, chief among them being Warneke, Bridges, Klein, Herman, Gehringer, Owen (at the last), and Goslin. 5 a « ht. 1935, by the North A n o wabapér “Alliance, Tnc. chances are that nothing will come | pegs, ome to cut off Jurges at the | catch Galan at third in the finale. | Pete throws from right field for the | pitches per batter must have been | ‘The series produced no genuine goat. | e Ball Laurels [ 4 FANS WILD OVER BENGALVITORY Celebration Is Greatest Since Washington Raved Over Win in '24. BY EDWARD J. NEIL, Associated Press Sports Writer. ETROIT, October 8.—Detroit woke up today with a terrifie hangover — emotionally and otherwise—but it came out of the ether happier than ever before in all its base ball history, automatic- ally acclaiming its first world cham- pions, Mickey Cochrane's Tigers. If heads could scarcely lift from the pillows, bosses whispered Loarsely to their stenographers, policemen walked around in a daze, and street cleaners muttered to themselves as they carted away the debris, Cochrane was to blame. Cochrane and the an- cient eaglebeak. Goose Goslin, his par- ticular copartner in the slaughter of the innocents, Chicago's young, scrap- py Cubs. It was the beloved, bow-legged Goose, nearing the end of his trail, but still a great money player, who slapped a line single to center field with two out in the ninth inning of vesterday's sixth world series game that scored Cochrane from second with the run that beat the Cubs. 4 to 3, won the series four games to two, and loosed a celebration unequaled in Detroit history. Nothing like it has happened in base ball since Walter Johnson and Washington's Nationals won the title. Wild After 28-Year Wait. ’I‘WENTY-EIGHT years, from the time Detroit wonits first Ameri- can League pennant in 1907, the base ball-mad faithful of this city that ruined the future of the horse have been waiting this moment. Four times, from 1908 down through last season. when the St. Louis Cardinals thwarted them in seven games. they've hoped and cheered and screamed in vain. Then out to center field. closing out one of the most thrilling duels of modern series history, boomed Goslin's $50.000 shot, and Detroit was on the loose. From the throats of 48.420 people, almost half of them in one huge bank in the bleachers beyond the left field wall, poured wave after wave of hysterical sound. Above the clamour rose one soari thrilling er) “Year, Goose . . . Yeh, Goose." People poured out on the field, wouldn't leave for almost an hour until they'd had the pleasure of per- sonally chasing old bandy legs through an exit gate, and downtown. With the flash of the victory word. came the start of the celebration. Every autoe mobile horn in Detroit. city of auto= mobiles, pressed down and stayed down until batteries died under the electric drain, Every factory whistle tooted. Series Final Dramatic. INTO the streets went a steady fall of ticker tape that left the hotel section looking as .hough it had been hit by a blizzard. Elbows bent, songs rose on high, the clamour increased. and at dawn, roaring hotels still were madhouses, boasting and toasting and revelling in Cochrane’s champions. The end of this million-dollar bat- tle, one of the closes, most exciting in all the long history of world series, ended on the same high note of throb- bing drama, of fierce argument, and bitter action that sang through every one of the six games, three of the last four decided by a single run, the fourth by two runs. It ended the third wealthiest of series, with $1.173,794 taken in through gate receipts and the radio, a new record for a six-game series. It rewarded the Tigers with full shares of $6.831.88 each, the losers $4.382.72 each, far surpassing any previous in- dividual returns to the victors and the vanquished. It was the first American League victory since the New York Yankees | shattered the Cubs in four straight games in 1932. It wiped out all the unpleasant memories of the past. two world series beatings from the Cubs in 1907 and 1908, another by the | Pirates in 1909, the fourth and most bitter by Dizzy Dean and the Cards |in the vegetable barrage of 1934. Cubs Battle to Last. IT WOUND up with the Cubs—young, | 7 hard - bitten, desperate, clawing against the inevitable, fighting the Tigers and their personal natural enemy, Umpire George Moriarty, to | the last ditch. | Twice against the nervy little bunch of rawhide who beat them in the second game, slender Tomy Bridges, | they came from behind to tie the score. Crippled by the loss of Lonnie | Warneke, anchored to the bench with | 8 pulled shoulder muscle, they did the best they could with the most they | had left, Southpaw Larry French, and it just wasn't quite enough. Final (6th) Game | CHICAGO (N. L) ala Hack, #b__ Jurges, 'ss__ Prench. p__. s baniknl reiom D300 X muoncLous O s33z=2sca™ L S DETROIT (A. L) | gutton Ty Walker, cf_ Rogell, ‘ss__ Owen.’ 1b. Bridges, Totals *Two out when winning run scored, Chicago 001 020 000—3 Detroit Z 100 101 001—%¢ Runs batted in—Herman (1), Fox. Bridges. Owen, Goslin, Earned runs—Chi- cago. 3; Detroit, 4. Two-base hits—Fox, Gehringer. Hack. Rogell. Three-base hit—' k. Home run—Herman. Sacrifice— Double play—Gehrinser to Rogell en. Left on bases—Chi 7 Bes troit, 10. Pirst base on ball: (Waiker, Owen) (Owen. Clifton (2).” Cochran Rogell): by Bridges (Hartne ( Demaree, Gaian, Cavarretia U o Mess Eey . (N ate: McGowan (A" L} ‘st arsl’ Sfark’ ¢ T a oriarty (A. ). at third. | Tid¥ 17 womnarosss > & vuass—sesd> 393a~0225M al s - G Fren . Jurges): L ‘:l

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