Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 December 1950 — Page 12

Sis fn son

gees

Lop

An

Clevela

Right Off Bat

Against Yankees, Giants

nd Gets Early Fling

~— By EDDIE ASH, Times Sports CLEVELAND baseball scribes will

tunity to shoot the breeze on

Under the new management of Indianapolis’ Al Lopez, the Forest City club will battle the World Champion New York Yankees in six exhibition games, all to be played in Arizona, at Tucson and Phoenix . . . Cleveland is to spring

. train at Tucson, the Yankees at Phoenix. This six-game series with Casey Stengels’ Bronx Bombers will put Senor Lopes on the spot right off the bat. . . . But don’t think he won't be prepared for the ordeal. . . . He realizes the Cleveland writers will be watching his every move despite all battles with the mighty Yankees will be staged In March and early April It will be something special to/ write home abéut because Cleveland fans are a cinch to be hungry for on-the-spot pointers anent Lopez's managerial style. Some baseball men attach little importance to the outcome of} exhibition games, . . . Not so the] managers. . . . They want to] “win ‘em all,” same as in regular season. . . . It stirs up interest|

back home and swells the sale of | UNEMPLOYED professional of going too far, lest the Justice Department crack down on antiopening day and season tickets. basketball players will be glad to| trust violation charges. About the only thing the majors promised

Winning also spurs the baseball writers to magnify and glorify

their stories. . . . It's much easier! (painho rena) is entering the! Would be in dire jeopardy. They were blacked out during part of to write a “winning story” thanigead . . . Abe Saberstein, owner., World War II to conserve materials, manpower and transporta|manager of the Harlem Globe-| tion, and they likely would be among the first to feel the pinch Baseball Commissioner A. B. (Happy) Chandler when his present

a “loser.” . » - | AFTER COMPLETING a spring series with the Champion Yankees; Lopez's pastimers will take on) New York City’s other big league; entry, the Giants, : | Cleveland and the Giants will come north together, meeting 11 times enroute . . . This long series also will be important to Lopez’ prestige as a freshman major league manager « «+ + Leo the Lip Durocher, Glaats’ master mind, who Is one of baseball's leading goatgetters, is rough on any foe. But Senor Al has been around in the majors as player and coach and there are few tricks he doesn't know about , Indianapolis fans will bet on him to hold his own, get at least an even break with the Yankees and win the majé rity of tilts from the Giants, - » ” ” _.XDNALD DAHLKE, rookie | Infi)ider on the Indianapolis Indians’ roster, won't be on hand for a tryout with the Tribesters next spring . . . He has entered military service . . . Dahlke, an ex-collegian, was farmed out in the little minor leagues the past season. 3 ~ . THE Indianapolis a great gate attraction for their 1951 opening day at Victory Field,| Apr. 17 . . . None other than the) Milwaukee Brewers to: be managed next season by Charlie Grimm, baseball's Jolly Cholly. ... He's always good for a laugh, even when losing . , . Charlie was away from the American Associa-| ..-tion. last season, at Dallas in the Texas League , .. It will be New| Manager Don Gutteridge vs. New Manager Grimm when the start-| ing bell rings on the AA's Golden! Anniversary season , . . Put your| money on Gutteridge to outshout| Grimm on the coaching lines and| leave it up to Johnny Hutchings| to outdo Cholly in comedy. { . ” .

{ { WHEN Danny O'Connell, In- |

~ I Indians drew

dianapolls’ ex-shortstop who Fiaduaied to the Pirates last uly, goes into military service after the first of the year, he will have plenty of pen pals + +» « Danny said he received a load of fan mail from Pittsburg girls who asked that he | correspond with them while | away from the diamond . . . | The New Jersey Irish lad made | a solid hit in the Smoky City and attracted a host of admir ( 5 ; .

NN i ~_F1| E YARDS McCARTY, fam-! ous ¢ hiversity of Chicago football # Rr in 1923, 1924 and 1925]

historic Illinois-Chicago 21-21 tie game played in 1924 . . . On the! Illinois eleven was Red Grange, the Galloping Ghost . . . McCarty | gained five yards nearly every time he handled.the ball and at one point the Maroons were! ahead, 21 to 7, .. But Grange, who had authored Illinois’ first| téiuchdown, caught fire again and sgored two more times to make!

tie .. . Austin R. (Five Yards)! y was ranked as one of the tern Conference's greatest!

[ties earn a living by play for pay

{get around to his age group by next baseball season, Pettit said| he hopes the Pirates will place {him where he can pitch regularly. {The kid is not likely to be farmed | ito Indianapolis, however, because {Pirate scouts have decided he is

rom p— have ample opportheir typewriters next. spring.

grid players over a three-year period in the days when the University of Chicago was a power in major college football. r - - 2 CHRISTMAS EVE is upon us and yet the professional footballers still are at it, playing a deep-freeze brand of the pigskin sport, Browns vs. Rams in Cleveland today . .. The champfonship will be decided In weather unfit for football ...on a

| as a good year, although far from a record one, but the outlook

g

‘Shrouded In Doubt Sports Editor Gar, nictons a2 1050 fied 5 Moy aah er discriminating. He not only wants to see a winning team when

_ By LEO H. PETERSEN, United Press NEW YORK, Dec,-23 (UP)—Sports looked back on 1950 today jade into for 1951 was shrouded in doubt. ; |____ ‘There appeared to be a good chance that there wouldn't be I “sports as usual. There was the question of manpower, for one a thing; television for another. : - GENERALLY, attendance and receipts were down in 1950 as The manpower was tied in with the national emergency which compared to 1948. But even with the drop, sports still was a President Truman declared shortly before the end of the year. It big—business. was accompanied, by reports that total mobilization was not only Professional football, its Intra-game feud resolved by merging possible, but very probable, in the very near future. If and when into one that comes, the future of sports will be in jeopardy on day fo did ; day basis. - College football attendance d 6.3 per cent, major league © That's the way it was during the darkest days of World baseball 16 per cent and Se robe § betting + og race War II and that's the way sports wants it—and expects it to be— tracks declined 4 per cent. That was proof enough to the proif the country is again forced to fight for its way of life. moters that a war-jittery public was watching its pennies, and they feared that might get a lot worse before they get any

!

champion gain undisputed t vyweight championship—so far ey Ant Culmone winning jockey honors and coming record set back in 1906 by Walter

gridiron in such condition that it will be impossible for either | team to play anything resem- | bling its best game . . . How | silly ean professional grid sports | promotors get? . .. Consult the calendar men, before arranging next year's schednle. ”

|

learn that a new independent pro! team to be based in Chicago!

trotters, is the angel’... The-quin-tet will be known as the Chicago! Majors. . . . However, since there are not many good independent pro teams operating, members of |

[this new quintet probably will] {have to seek other employment

along with their basketball activi- .. which is no easy way to

athletes, ” n THE HORSES run for the college athletes nowadays, in Florida, that Is . .. In that way, the oat burners gallop for Dear Old Siwash . . . Florida's athletic scholarship fund picked up $38000 from racing at Tropical Park last Thursday . . . Uni. versity of Florida recelved the major slice . . . Florida State and Florida A. & M. alsa shared in the gravy.

a sisal 2.8 - . PAUL PETTIT, the Pittsburgh |

Pirates’ $100,000 bonus baby, is AY, attending Harbor Junior College, Bee's team last night, 90 to 71. Wilmington, Cal. . . , Although| subject to the military draft, the! young lefthander has not yet re-| {ceived any classification from his

« +» « If the Army doesn’t

| | not ready for triple-A competi-|

” 0» ~ DUTCH ZWILLING, the Indignapolis Indians’ oldtime “spread eagle” center fielder, Is the new manager of the Quincy Three-1 League Club + + + Quiney is A member of the New York Yankees system . . . In the old Washington Park days here, Zwilling was the fans’ idol because of long-ball hitting and unique style when camping under a tall fly . spreading his arms before making the catch. . .

| RAGS MITCHELL, general |manager of the local 16th Street Preak so midget and stock car race track, |

and his wife, Peggy, took to the air last week to give a Christ. mas party for their sallor son,

mas plans and flew to California to play Santa Claus before Bob shipped to sea. » » » JOHNNY WOODEN, the old Purdue star, has produced two Pacific Coast champlonship basketball teams in two years at UCLA . ; . The coach from Hooslerland has lined multiplicity of jobs to take care of deserving basketball players + + » Among other activities, It is said Eddie Sheldrakd, the UCLA captain, Is eampus agent for a beer wholesaler . .. It's a big campus, too. . . . Must be a lot of Phi Tappa Keg fraternities at that college, °*

Bowl-Bound Texas Linemen Gain Weight During Season

AUSTIN, Tex., Dee. 23 (UP)

-= The aiready-hefty University

of Texas Longhorns, who meet Tennessee in the Cotton Bowl here New Year's Day, thrived on the 13-week grind that brought them the Souhtwest Conference title and the automatic bowl bid. The average weight increased in the line both on offense and

defense, but the backfield—which The s will canter into

did the leg work-—lost weight,

winning Miller; pitcher Jim Konstanty of the Phillies, setting a new modern relief pitching mark; Stan Musial of the Cardinals and Billy Goodman of the Red Sox winning the National and American league batting championships, respectively; Art Larsen winning the men’s national singles crown; and Mrs Margaret Osborne du Pont the women’s ‘for the third straight year. » ” ” » » ~

problems, too-—television and radio. Much of the decrease of nearly 20 per cent in minor attendance in 1950 was attributed to television and radio. The minors claim that the majors flood their territory with so many television and broadcasts of their games that the average fan's appetite is filled by that alone and as a result fails to go out to

see his hometown minor league team. : : a8 8 vl ~~ IN TEAM COMPETITION, it was the New York Yankees in THE MINORS asked the majors for relief at the winter baseball; Australia in the Davis Cup as the U. 8. finally lost the baseball meetings at St. Petersburg, but the majors were fearful trophy; OKlahoma in college football; City College of New York in basketball; and the U. 8, in most of the international compe- * tition, like the Wightman Cup, Curtis Cup and others. was not to expand their present television and radio networks. I] 4 Should total mobilization come, the nation's race tracks also over Army. os The biggest sports bombshell of the year came when the major league club owners voted not to renew the contract of

again, Even should the national emergency not affect sports any

term expires on May 1, 1951. Before that, Connie Mack had been

sports fan was becoming more he spends his money, biit he wants to see a good performance, too. |

league, enjoyed one of its most prosperous years. 80 |

victory

ousted, affer 50 years, as owner and manager of the Athletics, -

ox Will So

lsn’t Perfect

Pro Grid Leagy

: . 2 : :

ue Diced by Profits, Not Competition NEW YORK, Dec, 33 Himoelf a family man whose

likely to be remindful of a Carribean cruise, the finalists in ; Mr. Bell's league, the resident

pin-ups who lean so heavily the pass. Admittedly, there is nothing wrong with the pass if you can win with it and the answer as applied to the Rams is

end of the league. ” - »

THERE ARE SOME who contend the Rams would not have reached the finals if they had

the stronger defensive teams, that their passing attack, as a consequence, would have suffered ——as it was they broke practically all the records in the book—but this is academic. They had no

Wooden Lauds LIU Rebounding

Says Bradley Would Give Hard Battle

‘NEW YORK, Dec. 23 (UP)— Coach John Wooden of UCLA said today that Long Island University has the “best rebounding” basketball team he has ever seen but that Bradley would give! Coach Clair Bee's jumping jacks plenty of trouble. Wooden's defending Pacific| 3 Coast Conference champions | played both Bradley and LIU this week. UCLA lost to € - Forddy Anderson's Bradley Braves on Tuesday, 79 to 74, and

Hat Trick Forwards

Ping Pong Helps

‘Feel Old Speed Returning,’ He Says

sharpen his timing and regain once murderous punch

reflexes.

heavyweight king said.

ping nong.

Wooden has been a winning He contends

coach since he stopped starring for Purdue in 1932 but he was plenty impressed by LIU-—espe-cially by Bee's two tall boys— 3 6-7 Sherm White and 6-9 Fay|, Felix. “We couldn't handle them at all,” Wooden explained. “When we concentrated on one of them, the other killed us with shots and rebounds. I'd say LIU is the best rebounding club I've ever seen.” Although his men gave Bradley {a far better tussle than they gave| 1,16, the friendly UCLA - coach believes a Bradley-LIU meeting-— {a clash that very well could be

fistic comeback. pong seriously

mented. > At Ontario Lodge

Phil Maloney (left) and Ray Hannigan, veteran Pittsburgh I Avens:

forwards who registered "hat—tricks' forthe Hornets last week, will be in the lineup against the Caps when the American League [5et up In the National mvitation| hockey rivals complete their week-end. home-and-home series to- | Tournament next spring—would| Morrow night -at the Indianapolis Coliseum.

Mannie Seamon confided.

Louis Build Power

8 DETROIT, Dec. 23 (UP)—Joe Louis is playing ping pong to his

The Brown Bomber, wearing a smile for the first time in weeks, sald the tame but fast parlor game of table tennis has been like a shot of adrenalin to his aging

“Why, since I've started playing ping pong I can just feel the old speed coming back,” the ex-

Louis is dead serious about his

that if he had started playing sooner Kzzard| Charles wouldn't have spoiled his

“I've only been ‘playing ping three weeks now but I feel I'm moving faster than I did before any of the Walcott fights” Louis com-

| He developed the. ping pong thabit-while training at his Belle River, Ont., Lodge for a Jan. 3| with Freddie Beshore at|

| A hearty session of table tennis soon became an important part] of Louis’ training, veteran trainer!

up » |

| produce a real “dream” game. | “I've never seen anything to match LIU's rebounding but {Bee's kids aren't the power under {the defensive board that they are! loff the offensive hoard,” Wooden,

. |said. “That's because they don't

{move down court too fast and] {that's where Bradley would: give] them trouble.” Wooden's club uses the fast he could appreciate Bradley's speed. | “Bradley goes at top speed all] {the way,” Wooden said. “They're {fine shots and aren't as green as

{Bob ... Stationed at Great Lakes, imost of my boys so they would {young Mitchell suddenly departed give LIU quite a game.” {to go on destroyer duty, and dad| {and mom quickly changed Christ-|

Felix Gives Edge | Wooden sald the towering Fe-

Chandler's Inability to Get Along With Factions Hurt

Managed to Divide Magnates As Well as Baseball Press

By HARRY GRAYSON, Times Special Writer ALBERT BENJAMIN CHANDLER was dismissed as commissioner of baseball as suddenly and unexpectedly as he was named. All sorts of reasons have been advanced for the major league owners’ refusal to grant Happy Chandler a seven-year extension of his agreement. They range from the state of his present popularity in Washington to the swimming pool he once fell into in his back yard, with a wide accumula-, tion in between. “iin, to s&traighten this out, and But the biggest rap against create another genuine czar.

{Chandler was the fact that he The way things are now, ChandHx, who produced —hts second divided baseball into two camps, ler was nothing more than a. Louis went up to the lodge with!

“A lot of people might think [Profit motive than any real Je-

that ping pong is sort of a ‘sissy’ | game for a fighter to play, but] let me tell you it's done wonders

|with Joe,’ Seamon said. |

| | - He pointed out that J vision. ‘Among the results is a| i oe. has mockery of the over all league!

{to swing the paddle right-handed {and that's the same hand that {has been the most disappointing |in his two comeback fights, | “The motions of ping pong and fighting are a shoulder swing is important in both,” Seamon added. | ' Power Breaks Balls { After breaking an average of 10 balls a week with his terrific power shots and busting two legs on the table lunging for the ball, Lois is wondering whether the game is exactly made for a burly 215-pounder like himself.

straight good performance, made Where the principal purpose of his highly-paid and glorified cop, a a brand new axe, expecting to get

the difference against UCLA.

TT Felix's improvement, coupled

iwith White's usual smooth play,| {the 100 per cent improvement of Leroy Smith and Capt. . Adolph] {Bigos' aggressive style, may give {Bee his best. team in five years.

{playing so well that Bee can joke about them. | “I'd like to use White and Felix {in a doudble pivot but they're iso big they don't have room to

{maneuver in that kind of aj {setup,” he explained. {- That's prosperity, basketball style!

DALLAS, Tex, Dec. 23 (UP) -George Trautman, president of the minor leagues, will be the

will average about 212 pounds. ‘ Tackle Ken Johnson started

| the

touchdown passes but never dropped a pound. _ The probable forward lineup, with weights as of today, for the Cotton Bowl! includes: 3 Offensive—Ben Procter, 195, and Tom Stolhandske, 210, ends; Gene Vykukal, 215, and Ken

will{Jackson, 245, tackles; Bud MeFadin

, 235, and Joe Arnol 220, guards, and Dick Rowan, 205, center. : With Dawson and Townsend, backfield Tennessee will be Ben Tompkins, 175, at quarterback, and Co-Capt. Bubba Shands, who gained from 180 to 185, at right half. Defensive—D on Menasco, 180,

principal speaker in Texarkana when J. Walter Morris will be honored for 50 years in baseball at a sports banquet, Jan. 11. Widely known in league baseball throughout the country, More ris played his first professional game with Corsicana of the ol Texas cireuit in 1902. ; ‘He has been player, manager, owner and league president over the years. He also served as an organizer in minor league circles.

Youngstown Battier Wins 7th Round TKO

weight from Youngstown, O., was awarded a seventh-round techni or

| ix [ue Honor Oldtimer lonandier off in the fall of 1945, {the year he was named. He had

[two strikes on him in the first

office was to bring rival factions man together. —

- » - n CHANDLER NOT only split: out the magnates who ultimately! repudiated him, but also the country’s newspapermen who

carrying an umbrella, al-

squawks against Chandler was {that he popped off too much. The new man no doubt will have

The latter was by far the more... "ot and look wis fm dicult job, but Chandler, in his | 08 SHUT BEC 190K, TRE AAC {total inability to attune® himself’, .., ; Corse and gets—trom to a nation-wide and big-league ;, league presidents. press, succeeded in doing it. . | A lot of competent judges didn’t

The undefeated Blackbirds are Mr abou: Lhe game. lenough sense to sit still, keep his

» . » . CHANDLER'S ill-advised state- tion too bad, but he had been

consider Chandler's administra- Canadians Leave for

in a few good licks at the wood

f But Joe and his handy man,

“ONE OF THE numerous Freddie Wilson, discovered the

ping pong table right off and the axe hasn't moved out of its case. { “I must have run a hundred miles around that table trying to {beat Freddie but I'm getting the {hang of the game and will really itrim him one of these days” {Louis said.

al ment regarding total mobilization one-gallus politician too long to Amateur Hockey Tour spelling the end of organized base- change, or for baseball people to| HALIFAX, Dec, 23 (UP)—The

ball might have been the last log Set used to,

much farther, He was totally miscast,

Defend Track Title

he owners discussed paying

the case of Judge Kenesaw Moun-

tion, Dec. 31. tain Landis. sos ~

" » THAT WAS BAD psychologi-/ cally for Chandler, who cam-| pained for the post as well as the new contract. Whent the one-tigpe Kentucky governor and senator attempted to get a brand new deal a year ago, the moguls gave {him the back of the hard, going

and

'flar to the Black Sox mess on the jtall of which Judge Landis rode}

~ LAST-MINUTE GIFT SUGGESTIONS e Coliseum Office Open Today Til 6 P.M. ~ Everything for the Skater All the leading makes of ice skates, costumes for ladies for men and skate guards and numerous small

{Lethbridge Maple Leafs were

| | Happy Chandler wasn't big or Europe-bound today aboard the Trautman to Hel on the fire, but the resentment (PIF CAT EF WON nie. | Cunard Liner Scythia on the first iwas much deeper and went back sinner of baseball. leg of a trip they hoped would

bring them the world’s amateur hockey championship. The Western Canada {mediate titlists, chosen to repre-

STILLWATER, Okla. Dec. 23 sent Canada in the 1951 world place ‘because baseball did not/(UP)—Bob Brandeberry, Bill Wil-| tournament, will be away apcome to him hat-in-hand and liams, Ralph Taylor and Anchor proximately four months on a pleading, “We want and need youiman Paul Wells will defend Okla-| British and continental tour badly; as a matter of fact, we homa A & M’s mile relay title in which will be climaxed by .the can't survive without you,” as in the Sugar Bow! Track Competi- world championships at Paris in |S March. i! Be

"

items. We

|coast.

lot alike—the!

‘IBen Morgan to Lead

inter- 50th

part in drawing up the schedule. What they were assigned to do they did well enough to achieve a ticket to the play off. Win, lose or freeze the Browns, still playing a dozen members of their original cast, have effectively routed the libel that inferior football was played in the AllAmerica Conference, the league, now defunct, which challenged the monopoly of the enduring National, at a cost of millions to both sides. : 2 » » ~ THE BROWNS AT least were big league. Nobody could “eat them in the Conference. “No wonder they always win,” old league loyalists countered. “They're playing bushers.” Well, thé end of the first year of the merger is at hand and there are the Browns in their customary spot. If the Rams can't stop ‘'em tomorzow you must accept them as the best—and who is going to prove they haven't been the best for .the last five years? Around here you can get an srguient, Didn't the Giants beat ‘em two out of three this year? s = =» PRO FOOTBALL is back and (will, Joe Handlebars permitting, {continué to move forward. The | merger which grew out of travail, (rancor, and grudging concessions with the survivors drenched in red ink, has not résulted in a per- | fect operation. » » # TO START WITH, the physical structure with 13 entries is awkward and the schedule, now as in {the past, is dictated more py the

sire for competitive balance. Some clubs are never scheduled for the Others play home and home with teams in the same di-

figures, Still the league is in a healthy financial situation for the first time in several drawn over two million paid. This

of the league itself at stake. » ” »

anteed to be swift and lasting.

Minors’ Celebration

‘had to mingle more often with]

years, having

time a year ago it was a question of survival with the existency

FIVE OR SIX clubs lost dough during the regular season put only Baltimore, the 13th or swing club, was wounded prieviously, and it remains to be seen if the stockholders are willing to come out for another round. In this connection I hear Ar'thur Godfrey may buy into the club: This is probably moms thani| mere rumour, Godfrey has reached a point in life where he|| does. not know what to do with his money. Pro football was invented for the purpose of relieving any distresed individual who happens to find himself in such a tragic position. The cure is guar-

Plans to Attend - Tris Speaker Dinner DALLAS, Tex., Dec. 23 (UP)— Henry (Hank) Greenberg, general manager of the Cleveland Indians, will be the principal speaker ‘at a luncheon here Jan. 11 when Tris Speaker will be honored as the first athlete to be named to the Texas Sports Hall of Fame. Greenberg,- one of baseball's

that they finished on top in their greatest hitters in his playing

days, eariler had said he would have to turn down an invitation to speak at the luncheon honoring the former Cleveland manager who still is in the Indians’ employ, I "IT'had to re

n - ing dates in the Cleveland area to clear the way for ma to get to Dallas, but I'm happy to do so," Big Hank said. “I have always admired Tris Speaker and I want to be on hand when he receives this fine award.”

First To Get Award

Speaker was elected to be the first recipient of the award sponsored by the Texas Sports Writers tAssociation, for -his long, recordbreaking career in the major leagues with Boston and Cleveland. He is a native of Hubbard, Tex. : 2 Greenberg, who performed with Beaumont of the Texas Lea before starring at Detroit, will be making his first public appear ance in Dallas since the Indians and the Dallas Eagles signed a working agreement for 1951.

Gavilan vs. Young

NEW YORK, Dec. 23 (UP)— The International Boxing Club announced today that Kid Gavilan, the Havapa welterweight contender who won a close 10round decision over Joe Miceli of New York last night, has been matched for a 10-round, 160pound limit bout with Paddy Young of New York at Madison Square Garden, Jan. 26.

Amateur Basketball

Today's acheduls for the Class C indedent baske tourney at the Dearis: Bland Boxing vs. Aero Club, i Allison Appren vs. Baker Cleaners, 1 p.m; J.J. den vs. Texaco, 2 . m.; Vonnegut Hardwargs vs. Electric p. m.; Koch Ne vs. Royals. 4 .m, and Greenwood Li r vs, Vic's harmacy, 5 p.m. i

i

yours today and In the years to come.

LEON TAILORING

NEW letic Comn to handle tighter, Co ly to elimi The Ci some even

when it | ghastly in the case of ny Boy) | outrage. We have trict attor murder su licity on.a might be 1 national C fatal fight Percy Ba press relat West ws lightweight juries Thu hours afte: out at St. Featherwei phia.

Was (

Like ev *censed in | was under pervision e the ring. Commissio when he | the sevent

Moreove! West was | to St. Clar ifmmediatel of attentio . all boxing other fight the world’s ing city. » fight on rs vision. Under th did not th New York on hand a tions man take over ficiently? \ pensing jot fit that « washed" it had it bee: for West's Wr Within t legst two suggested that his Cc licity man -press, the . mission. B ganization luxury of

——geh-an-en

The box would be b if the Com sports writ tanti, Ed Brown in Commissio potent dep

°

Presents for the WH