Evening Star Newspaper, June 30, 1931, Page 39

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JOHNSON MACHINE CREAKS ALL OVER B Must Speed Play Generally'h to Shake Western Jinx. Drop Sox Final. BY JOHN B. KELLER. T. LOUIS, June 30.—Trans- |¥ formed from a thoroughbred racer to a broken-down cart horse since it left homeé the middle of the month, the Wash- ington club now encounters an outfit that has been setting the American League afire the last|3ie two weeks, the St. Louls Browns. Three games are scheduled here : and the Nationals will have to ning speed up considerably to make X any headway in them. ‘There must be improvement all along the line if the Johnson band is to show a respectable record for this second Western invasion of the campaign. Al- ready it has lost 6 of 13 engagements In this sector of the circuit. Wabbly pitch- ing, a slump at bat, slipshod fielding and in many instances dumb base ball have kept the Nationals back. In fact, the Washington club has suf- fered a general breakdown due to.a re- currence of the Western heebie-jeebles that wrecked its pennant chance last year. Old Dr. Johnson must soon find some way to tone up his patient if he would stave off a disastrous decline. At that the Nationals have some- thing to be thankful for. They're do- ing as well as the A’s out this way, and with only three games here they can't do any worse than they did in Chicago. Two out of five was the best the pen- nant-aspiring Nationals could do in their Windy City series with the last- place White Sox. They took it on their chins again yesterday, the score being 9to7 . Had two of their pitchers not been allowed Wbobmn ol{xfil:ent.lfll t:e take good drul it mi ve been a different story, though. Sam Jones, who started, and Al Crowder, who relieved Sam, were kept on the job after it was quite evident they had with which to baffle the oppos- ONES was slammed hard in the first frame, and again in the third, and when he gave way to Crowder the Sox had made six hits for three runs. So weak was Jones in the third that he went to a three-and-two count with three successive batters before they got on the runway, Blue by singling, Reyn- clds by walking and Fonseca by singling. | And three wide ones were pitched to both Reynolds and Fonseca before a strike went over. Crowder was punished to the extent of five hits and six runs in the fourth, then gave up a hit in each of the two innings following. Irving Hadley fin- ished, l“fl"&m more - pass. The te Sox got to Crowder right at the start of the fourth, but not until he had walked & batter and been knicked for four singles was Had- | McBri ley sent from the dugout to the warm- Joe Cronin made matters worse with an error afleld and a bit of wool-gath- , all in the fourth frame, to help ‘White Sox toward two runs cer- tainly and perhaps toward three. | Off Victor Frasier, right-hander, the | Nationals got 11 safeties, one a homer | Tr by Buddy Myer with no one on, and | and another a homer by Cronin with one on, and four passes. Seven of the hits and five of the runs came in the last three innings, but before that Manager Johnson indicated he had conceded the game by withdrawing several regulars and sending second-stringers in to the Washington line-up. MY!R got the Nationals away in the front with a fluky homer. He hit the first pitch of the game and ' dropped a fly in short center. Watwood | siipped and fell as he tried to get the ball and it bounced by him to the deepest part of the outfield. funs gleaned from three singles and a wild pitch by Jones. With a single, a| pass and another single, they picked up a third run and chased Jones from | the hill in the third session. 1 Sem Rice’s bunted single, Cronin’s walk and an error by Kerr filled the| bases with one out in the Nationals'| Sand the Track 1"“’"0“-4 A‘l. .| O. = - cooscooow> rrounSorunco P ] oororooNRoooma - *Batted for Hadley In ninth. . AB. R. SR § Blue, 1] Reviiolds, | Ff. Fonsecs, ' If. Runs Fonseca (3! @), Hargra —Myer. ings s, Wild_ pitches— her—Jorzs. Um- r.. Losing pi a 2. Time of 42 Minuten.” HUMPHREYS LEADER IN 3D CORPS GROUP Captures First Half in Play for Area Honors—Also Is Busy With Other Games. ALEXANDRIA, Va., June 30.—Fort Humphreys Engineers, leaders in the Tace for the champi of Group 1 in the 3d Corps area titular series, will oppose Fort Washington at Fort Wash- ington in the opening game of that section’s second-half schadule Saturday. The winner of the title in Group 1, |V com| of Fort Humphreys, Walter n.em:m and Fort Washington, e by ‘Bdgewood Arsenah. 1930 fo W nal, cl s; Fort Hoyle, Fort Meade and lisle Barracks, in a three-game series on July 18, 19 and 20 in the semi- final round of the 3d area games. ‘The winner of the round will face the winner in the southern section of for the southern crown. Sergt. Nat Perkins, who %u:hed Fort, Humphreys to victory over Walter Reed and Fort Washington in the first-half schedule of Group 1; Paul F. (“Rusty”) Rhine and Pvt. Elmer K. (“Bum”) Baumgardner comprise Fort Humphreys’ strong pitchi: staff, de- veloped this year by Head ich Lieut. Miles Reber. Other members of the Humphreys aggregation are Corpl. Willlam T. Rowe and Sergt. Chuck Heaton, catchers; Pvt. Michael Selenack and Sergt. Louis , first basemen; Sergt. Albert john 3. Reynolds, ; Corp. James C. Sum- ney, shortstop; Pvt. Orland Dermanuel and Pvt. Albert E. Giles, third base- men; Sergt. James C. Whitt, Sergt. ‘Walter W. McKelvey, Sergt. Joseph A. de and Sergt. Walter Zaludeck, second outfielders. ‘The schedule announced by Lieut. Standish Weston for the remainder of the season follows: rt Meade. at Fort Me: i ington. Fort Wa: & a nals: . Quantico Marines, at Quantico, Va.; 27, Quantico Marines. August- 2 and 3, open for 3d Corps Afea finals. Stars Yesterday By the Associated Press. Roy Johnson, Tigers—Hit home run in fifth and scored Tun in ninth to beat Athletics, 6 to 5. Chuck Klein, Phillies—Hit home run, triple and single, drove in five runs and o Box came’ right back for two|foUigd fouf to help ‘beat "Cubs, 11| wes Willle Kamm, Indians—His four hits | B drove in six runs and piayed a big part in double victory over the Yankees. Johnny Frederick, Robins—His home run over the right wall with the bases E londed licked the Reds, 6 to 4. ay down with four hits to win his fifth fourth batting turn, but the only run that crossed came after Watwood bag- | _.ged Bluege's hoist. After that the| Johnson band, although it managed to | make the score close, was not in the | ball game. i N their fourth turn at the plate the | Sox batted around and then some, with Jeffries starting and ending the affair. Six runs were registered to leave the Nationals far back. Jeffries walked and swiped second, being given a great start by Crowde: rolonged wind-up. Tate fouled out. gul. much happened before the second out was made. Prasier singled Jeffries home and took third when Kerr hit for # base, Johnny making the middle sack on the throw that failed to head off Vie. Blue’s single tallied Frasier and, " when Crgnin let Reynold's skidder go through Tor an error, Kerr found the plate and -Blue reached third. Fon- saca then hit for a base, sending Re nolds to the far corner. ‘Watwood put up a twisting foul that gave Spencer plenty of trouble and -right after it was caught Cronin suf- fered & mental lapse that gave the White Sox two more markets. Fonseca headed for second after the catch of the foul, but would have been caught by Spencer’s throw had not Cronin grabbed the ball in front of the base, for Myer was in.position for a Joe wheeled, but apparently bewild: by the sight of Fonseca tearing toward second, delayed a 15-foot relay to Myer just too long. So instead of a side-retiring out being recorded, Fon- e g: into position to score with Reynolds when Cissell singled, . | A FTER walking in the first inning Cronin tried to take second when & pitch got away from Tate, but . Jones proved s second sessfon - in v gle with two out in ninth scored two | and downed the Giants, 5 to 3. 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR. LOYSIUS drubbed Columbia 101 in a 24-5 game in the District League. lus got 22 hits off Watson and Willhide. Bob Kummer, winning pitcher, allowed only seven. ‘Widmayer and Wilkinson hit well. Car Department nine, leader in the Railroad Y. M. C, A. League, was unable to hit Tommy Thompson, Southern pitcher, and lost an 8-0 contest. Off ' Crowder, before Hadley threw a third strike by him .. .. Myer helped himself to a homer, double and two singles in five efforts, his one miss being the second time up between the home run and the two-bagger . . Judge crashed the game for the first time since his appendicitis attack of May 1. He batted for Hadley in the ninth and bounded the ball to the second baseman. & | ernment, Kemper, Pirates “Let the Braves Bk victory. . Jimmy Collins, Cardinals—His sin- ' Griffs j}i-cklingBodndiI{gBi:? REAL FLAG FIBHTS INWEEK-DAY LOOPS First Half Victors Unlikely to Repeat in Three of Organizations. ANDLOT base ball folk who watched with some concern of runaway races in the four week- ‘day leagues are concerned no longer, for if the first two weeks of this second series may be taken as any in- dication, G. P. O.,, Commerce and Eld- brooke, first-half champs of the Gov- Departmental and George- town Church Leagues, possibly will trail some rivel at the erd of the loop sea- sons. Only the Constructioneers, Industrial League leaders, have been able to main- tain the pennant-winning pace they set in the first half. G. P. O., though it won, 17 to 10, over the Union Printers yesterday, is not picked by the majority of the Govern- ment League prognosticators to repeat its first-half triumph. The Printers al- ready have been iten by Interstate and have shown s of falte: 3 Eldbrooke is the ‘:i:ohx to nr::;‘n sec- partmental League and its chances are slim now. HOULD other nines than those which won the first series in these loops win the second, it will mean a three-game play-off series for the right to get in the city series battle. Impar- tial sandlot followers, at least, are pull- inz for a play-off, especially if they re- member the hot tlits in the Government and Georgztown Church Leagues last ear. Only these circuits were forced to have play-offs last year, but there is every indication that there will be at least three this season and possibly a fourth. Commerce took it on the chin from D. C. Repair again yesterday, the Re- pairmen_getting off to_a five-run lead in the first inning. Though they ral- lied, the Commerce tossers were forced to bow, 6 to 5. ‘West Washington Baptist, runner-up to Eldbrooke, met with une: op- position yesterday from Metropolitan Baptist and was forced to content itself with a 5-all tie. ‘Washington Terminal, which still has hopes of winning the Industrial League flag, stayed close to the Construction- eers yestorday by downing Raflroad Y. M. C. A, Tto The G. P. O.- was a_slugfest from ever, made 20 hits to the Union Print- ers’ 11, and won, 11 to 10. Public Parks and Public Buildings won the first half championship of the Colored Departmental League yesterda; ing Special Delivery, 13 to 0. ‘Thompson Insects want games wil strong nines. Call North 2843-J be- tween 4 and 5. Mount Rainier Seniors want a game for Friday. Call Hyattsville 1043. The ;| team was to practice today. Knights of Columbus Peewees won their third straight game when they swamped the Jackie Hayes, 16 to 10. Swagger and Philla each hit safely four times for the winners. Hillcrests defeated Argyles, 17 to 5. ‘Washington Grove Insects are chal- lenging all teams in their class. Call Metropolitan 8984 between 3 and 4. Records of Griffs : a-uo-u-.—.-.-uno.-u—'fi conomounon-EEEuniitEey HEEEE e dElE EhibEhy 825 SNENE! [OPNURPIIN 0 -+ I i PR+ L easneseesouninaeivkusl co0o-000000uonrar Il 00000000000 mnrorreminl] suoneuounss EEE8a LS HERas S NENRa2Y » & =83 SNEmEnNa ...m.q;_ gsiSesin conatend By the Associated Press. Home runs yesterday—Kieln, Phillies, 1; Ruth, Yankees, Foxx, 'Athletics, 1; Myer, Senators, 1; Cronin, Senators, 1; Vergez, Giants, 1; Jol 1; Frederick, Robins 1; rates, 1; Bissonette, ins, 1. ‘The leaders—Klein, Phillies, 20; Ruth, Yankees, 18; Gehrig, Yankees, 18; Foxx, Athletics, 14; Hornsby, Cubs, 12; Arlett, Phillies, 11; Averill, Indians, 11. League totals—American, 256; Na- tlonal, 250. Total, 506. ‘Standings in Major Circuits TUESDAY, JUNE 30, 1931, American League. YESTERDAY'S' RESULTS. Washing ton, 7. 5.4: New York, 6-2. ladelphia, 5. National League. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS, 5; New York, 3. Cincinnati, 4. 4751 61111411241.631 81 5/ 6.788/261.504 4137510/ 8/35:391.547 41361311537 3473 1.807 2306 8i—] nméf%% 1073 41731 B[ 4/—| 5125/431.368 | 441731 20 41 3—I 61251391391 331 11 41 91 6/_31—i24145/.348 g0 31731 0 41 41 41 6/—(23/41.360 | _Games lost 133/29/33137138.43 41— — ‘Games 10st. . 24i25/29/31133/36{39 46 F—i—' GAMES TODAY.. ~ GAMES TOMORROW t_Chicago. * Phila Cleveland. ~Ph b New York at Detroit. New oit. GAMES TODAY. ~ GAMES TGMORROW. Chicago Pitts. &b tom beni WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION | LIFE’S DARKEST MOMENT. @ ammntt SAY, BUB, IF YUH CARE ANYTHIN A TALL ‘B0OUT Youe CAT YuH BETTER NOT FEED THET FiSH TO M1, THEY TELL ME THEY'S. SOMETHIN' IN Tif RIVER WHUT TH FISH 1S FEEDIN' ON THET MAKES ‘€EM SICK, YA BETTER BURY THET FISH RIGHT THE OAYS WHEN YOou BELIEVED EVERYTHING — | AWAY 1 B 1981 w7 vYRIBUNE, e WASHINGTON, D. (., TUESDAY, JUNE 30, 193L.% wns : Bottomley Recoveg'ed; But Cannot Oust Rookie —By WEBSTER % \w‘\w Friday night. Max Schmeling and Bill Stribling must anfie that one or the other rates a position at the top, and to do this the winner must turn out a much bet- ter brand of stuff than either has shown to date. They are both capable ringmen, strong. well conditioned, and possibly the rest of it. But neither is going to win high ranking merely by winning a_bad fight, The golf professional who makes only a pretty good showing at Inverness won't finish in the money. Merely first- class golf won't land in twelfth place. The winner will have to travel at a whirling clip for three days, and you can gamble he will more than earn his spot. And those who fall won't knock over & dime. Schmeling and Stribling face the op- portunity to prove that one of them can stand out as a real cl n, and theréby wipe out a number of somewhat feeble appearances. The two are great- looking athletes, but in sport they don't pay off on looks. The winner of a bad fight won't be much better off than the loser, so far as future rating is concerned. | _ Stribling has only to beat Schmeling. Schmeling has only to beat Stribling. The winner at Inverness must beat Armour, Mac Smith, Walter Hagen, Dutras Quite a different job! Inverness Possibilities. 'OMMY ARMOUR starts at Inver- ness Thursday morning wearing three of the glittering coronets of golf—British or%en. Canadian open and P. G. A. match-play crowns. How will this bid for a fourth big w‘lfi affect his mental will the ess to hold four mlu affect hnmer;u, ltl?l‘ has affect- 80 many. pasf ‘The ownership of three titles may impose an #&dded burden on the dark Scot, but he is such a fine golfer that he must be rated at least on a level with any other candidate in the field. He has such a sound, all-around game and so much smartness in his play that if any one man is picked, he should first choice. But it is difficult to pick any one man above and Sarazen, the wa: they tting the ball, and for the first time in two years Hagen will back with the keen ambition he brilliantly | header with the New York “ul{-nk s s87E B7 £ g » y $100 and THE SPORTLIGHT BY GRANTLAND RICE The Open Championship. 'VELAND, Ohio, June 30.—There will be 161 entries in the open golf championship at Inverness. There will be only two entries in the heavyweight boxing championship at Cleveland The big show at Toledo will last three days, and at least 25 of the competitors have put on more than one brilllant performance. Any one of 20 men could win at Toledo and stand up as a real cham- pion, counting in his past-performance chart. count of that rare caliber. Hagen had figured 285 would be good enough, “but,” as he put it, “Dudley showed me I was five strokes wrong.” It took a ccunt of 296 to win at In- verness 11 years ago. It will take bet- ter scoring than that to lead the grand march this time. It will take scmething under 290, not forgstting the nerve and mental strain that always accompany an open championship. This is one side of golf no cne can explain, as mental attitudes change so rapidly and so often, and unknown conditions affect these mental attitudes. No one can foretell what a set of human nerves will be from one day to snother. That is one of the reasons golf scores change 50 abruptly and in such myste- rious and bafiing fashion. It is one of the things that make the preblem of Inverness such a tough one to guess. (Copyright, 1831, by North American News- paper Alliance, Ine 7 GUEST,VPOLOIST, INJURED International Star Suffers Broken Collarbone in Practice. MINEOLA, N. Y. June 30 (&) —F. W. C. Guest, one of international polo's greatest stars, was nursing a fractured collarbone in Nassau Hospital today. He‘was hurt in s practice game at John Hay Whitney’s private o field yesterday when his lflp'n mm?:lled and {'erlidmhe:lum h.l:n Gene Tunney, re- the small crc"‘t:l 'Elw wn‘l:“ S sald United teams which op- K«l Argent in 1928 and England 1930, is handicapped at nine goals for outdoor lpom and at the maximum or of 10 goals indoors. 0’DOUL LOSES FIVE DAYS Suspension of Robin to Expire in Time for July 4 Play. NEW YORK, June 30 (#)—Frank (Lefty) O'Doul's suspension has been fixed at five days by John Arnold Heyd- ler, president of the National League. ‘The Brooklyn outfielder was fined nded “indefinitely” Sunday, when he el in a -v:: nrg;ment with Umpire Bob Clarke. will return to the Robins' line-up in time for the Fourth of July double- —_—— CHISOX BUY OUTFIELDER. CHICAGO, ‘June 30 (P).—The White ive outfielder, from the Musk <lub of the Western Association, 01';: will re- port at the end of the Western Asso- T —— PHIL OPERATED UPON. Ba Ruth, Yankees, .404; Mor- _nn.m‘!u. 5 = GIRL SWIMMING STAR | T0 JOIN W. S. C. TEAM Jean Smith Takes Three Titles in A. A. U. Meet—Rote Is Best Among Men. ‘Washington Swimming Club girls, who saw a 15-year-old youngster, Jean Smith, wade through to victory in all three of the woman's events yesterday at the Glen Echo A. A. U. champlon- ships last night, may have the newest local nautical star as & teammate. Miss Smith, an easy victor in the 60-yard free style, 120-yard free style and the 60-yard back stroke, has an- nounced her intentions of joining the Washington Club. Onalene Lawrence of the W. S. C. was the only girl to give Miss Smith any competition. Miss Lawrence fin- ished second in all three of the wom- an's events. Miss Smith learned her aquatic tricks in Honolulu, where she was & member of the Women’s Swim- ming Association. Max Rote, former Central High School winner, took first honors in the man’s events. Rote won two of the four firsts, triumphing in the 120-yard free style and the 60-yard free style. John Broaddus won the fancy diving, defeat- ing Joe Lyman and Vincent Gomez, other local stars. Capt. Walter Farrell, Washington Canoe Club, won the 120- yard breaststroke. Summaries: WOMEN. (f0:7ard free siyle—Won b Jeans (Woren's Swimmine Association lulu): second, Onalene ywrence 2 Smith. 120-yard :fi"r:&:{"x&' by Jeane me. 1:35. back siroke—Won by Jeane th: d. On: \wrence: _third, Ehere Thune (mk&'e’"m).nm-. 0:50%. MEN. 60-yard . le—W Max Rote ol X do! - ihird, “Beverly Carter (unatiached). Tim 0:38. socond " Beverty " Burrer: "eniza. Vaursncs Butcher (Wasninsion Ganoe Ciib). Time, ~120-yard breast stroke—We Cavt. W. 23, Pl, TERLERE s, By s, Richard Maurer ‘Canattached). Time, Fancy diving—We John _Broa: e e e ST mi b 97.88: thiy it Sulmming' Gluby, des, Coer (Ampassador Major Leaders By the Assoclated Press. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Runs—Gehrig, 61; ‘Yankees, tors; Chal Y Doubles—Webb, Red Sox, 31; Ma- nush, Senators, 27. X Trip] , Senators, 8; Manush, Senators; Johnson, Tigers; Lary, Yi 3 d » Yan- kees; Ve .mdhm,'l.dmm' kees, 18. " b , 20. Pitching—Fischer, Senators, won 9, lost 1; Grove,.Athletics, won 14, lost 2. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Batting—Davis, Phillies, .375; Klein, Phillies, .358. Phillies, 67; Terry, bly | Giants, 52. LT nhan, ‘within | Hornsby, . Phils Got Arlett On ‘Lucky quak’ YORK, June 30.—PFrom the LAST-MINUTE SHOT WINS POLO BATTLE War Blues Eke Out Victory Over 6th Artillery When Col. Swift Finds Posts. A perfectly placed shot in the last minute of play enabled the War Blues to nose out the 6th of Fort e e Ly p polo series Fort Hoyle's riders maintained the lead, thanks to a 2-goal handicap, until the fifth chukker, when Col. Adna Chaflee, Lieut. Strobehn and Col. Swift scored goals and gave the Blues s 1- pt. Mallonee, Artillery, then came | & Caj through In the sixth to tie the score at '56;-“. but Col. '?t‘l;“t blls:ed th: !A:- lery’s hopes a goal that cams just before the final wh'l:ue. % 6th Pield Artillery. -Lieut. McAulifte Capt. Mallonee eit. - Downer o ne leut. Dasher ore by rie ‘War Blues RM (3 o1 “oin Field Ariiiery 0 10 1 8 Goals—Swift (2), McAuliffe, Matlones (3).. Chafiee (. Rotores Licat: Roge: ‘BD:P—LIWI. ‘Wood. &ofll‘r Serst . Time of chukkers—7% “6th Fleld Artillery, 3-goal handicap. Minor Leagues International League. Montreal, 8; Toronto, 7. Rea imore, 0. Kansas City, 7: Minneapolis, 4. Indisnapolis, 13: Columbus, 6. St. Paul, 9; Milwaukee, 5. Others not scl Southern Association. 4; New Haven, 0. Others not scheduled. Three Eye League. Springfield, 16; incy, 8. Decatur, 8; D-n?uluz‘c’m b Terre H , 11; Evansville, 4. Peoria, 7; Bloomington, 6 (10 innings). New York-Pennsylvania League. Wilkes-Barre, 3; Williamsport, 1. Scranton, 7; Hazleton, 6. Greenville, 5; Florence, 3. Texas League. Fort Worth, 2; Houston, 1. Shreveport, Galveston, 4. San Antonio, §5-0. Western League. Des Moines, 9; Topeka, 6. Denver, 2; Oklahoma Fity, 0. ), 8; St. J x4 Wichita, 21; Omaha, 12. Pledmont League. Raleigh, 8; Charlotte, 1. Durham, 4; Winston-Salem, 2. Asheville, 6; Henderson, 1. Greensboro, 15; High Point, 11. PAGE D—-1 COLLINS 1S GLUED OIS OLD POST Supplies Punch to Conquer Giants—Macks Trimmed. Browns Stopped. BY GAYLE TALBOT, JR. has recovered from the several weeks ago, his chances of champions appear to be slim. when Bottomley went out, Assoclated Press Sports Writer. LTHOUGH Jim Bottomley A injury that knocked him out of the Cardinal line-up reclaiming his old post at first base for the National League Jimmy Collins, the slugger from Rochester, who got his chance tin- ues to hold down the initial - ion like a veteran and his Iiting has been hard and timely. “Sunny Jim” back in If Collins makes the be the second rookie to the veteran combination the campaign for the cham .. per Martin, another from the Rocheste! “farm,” has fought his way to a regu- lar berth in the outfield. Collins Hits in Pinch. Collins supplied the the Gh:!“l. Ll'g 3, in t for a clean single that drove across the winning runs. The victory increased the Cardinal's lead over the Giants to two and a half games. =8| who Zachary yielded homer by Phillips. Tigers Joit Macks. Detroit scored its first victory of the year over the Athletics, 6 to 5, when ANOTHER BERGER CLOUTS Fred, Brother of Walter of Braves, Due to Advance. PORTLAND, eg., June 30 (A).— Base ball critics believe the family will be doubly represented in the big leagues next year as the result of the speedy development of Fred Berger, Portland outfielder. Fred is a brother of Walter Berger, bard-hitting outfielder of the Boswou Braves. Like his brother, Fred is a right-hander, and his lusty wallop; have attracted the attention of many major league ivory hunters. Walter went up ‘from the Pacific Coast League two years ago. Berberich’S F ST. at TWELFTH Final Close-Out Prices MEN’S - SHOES - Due to Termination of Departmental Lease Every Pair of Men’s JOHNSTON Shoes for Men Values to $14 Shoes Must Be Sold & MURPHY Now $9.85 ARCH PRESERVER SHOES - For Men Values to $12.50 Broken Lines: Values from $6.00 to $15.00 ~ $3.85 & $5.85 NUNN-BUSH SHOES At Substantial ‘Savings

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