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Clouting FALL INTO SLUMP WHEN GIVEN TASK Powell the Latest — Myer, | Needed in Third Spot, Is Only One to Succeed. BY FRANCIS E. STAN. F MODERN ball players are as superstitious as the mustachioed blades who needed peeks at a | wagon load of barrels to get base hits, Manager Bucky Harris might | be expected to start batting the Wash- | ington pitchers in the clean-up posi- | tion any day now. It's silly. of course, but not as silly as it sounds. Boss of one of the hardest-hitting clubs in the American League, Bucky can place a team com- posed of six .300 hitters on the field. | Yet apparently there is not a clean- up batter in the bunch. | As his Nationals today seek to slice | another hunk off the Athletics’ sixth- place lead, this problem seems to have blossomed to a new high in perplexity. It might even be called a jinx, this failure of exactly 10 dif- ferent Griffmen to fill the clean-up, or fourth position batting job this cam- paign. Stone First to Fail. LATEST to apparently feel the weight | of the assignment has been Jake Powell, easily the strongest right- handed batter on the Washington club. A couple of weeks ago Jake was challenging Capt. Budd Mver for the team’s stick supremacy. He was 80ing so good that Harris switched him from sixth in the batting order to fourth. Jake was hitting well in the .320s then. Today he is batting .313. His demise began when he was shifted to the clean-up position. He has lost exactly a point a game for the last week. In his last 27 times to the plate Powell has made only four hits for an average of .148. Coincidence? Maybe. But in view of other records by National clean-up batters this season it assumes a deeper significance. Hearken back to last April, Johnny Stone, perhaps the longest hitter on the club, was picked by Harris in training camp to bat fourth After 8 week in this niche, Johnny was demoted for getting only one hit in 14 trips. He was given back the Job thrice since but the result was the same. For the season Rocky boasts a .314 average. Fcr 11 games as clean-up hitter his pace was .236 and his runs- batted-in total showed only five tallies. Kuhel, Travis, Manush Follow. JEXT to be nominated for the job was Joe Kuhel. He served nearly | three weeks and at the end his average, as fourth-place hitter, was only .233. | His batting pace for the season is 40 points higher. | During one stretch as the clean-up | hitter Joe did absolutely no “cleaning up,” going 10 games without knocking over a single run. For his full 17 games in this niche, Kuhel accounted for only five runs driven across. | Cecil Travis was tried as the clean- up slugger and while the young third | baseman is batting .315 for the season, he hit for only .262 in fourth place| and batted across only 10 runs in 15 games. Red Kress, Fred Sington and Lyn Lary served one-game terms in the clean-up niche, but got only one safety among them, a single by Kress. None batted across a run. Next to inherit the job was Heinie Manush, who took care of the clean- | up post for 28 games, or the longest | term of all. Heinie did a passable Jjob, batting for .306, but most of his hitting, as usual, was done while the team was on the “road.” When the Nationals came home, Heinie flopped, | socked for only .277, and was removed. Manush never was noted for his ability to bat in runs, anyway, and | his lean total of 16 for the 28 games | ‘was not surprising. | Only Myer Is Successful. | RED SCHULTE had a crack at it, tpo, and the veteran outfielder elso was a failure. While batting 255 for the campaign, Fred hit only | 059 in his four games as clean—up‘ hitter. He made one hit in 17 at- tempts and batted in no runs. | The only successful gent of the 11 fhat Harris has tried was Buddy Myer. In seven games Buddy batted .346| and drove in half a dozen runs, but | Harris could not keep Myer there be- | cause the third batter in the line-up | 8lso is pretty important and Buddy | was ideal in this spot. So Powell was | elected. | Jake has the happy faculty of being | able to produce hits when runners are on base, so regardless of his .286 aver-i c age since being ‘“promoted” to the! clean-up job two weeks ago, Powell's runs-batted-in total has not suffered. While the Griffs were winning the’ first game of the Athletic series yes- terday, Jakie drove in three of the| runs that helped to a 10-to-7 victory. This brought Powell's sum of runs batted in to 12 for his 14 games in fourth position. | But he drove in yesterday’s runs, for | Instance, with a single hit and a long | fiy and for the day he showed only & 200 batting average. This is way under par for the fleet centerfielder. | It furnishes plenty of food for thought on this Washington clean-up business. Stars Yesterday By the Associated Press. Earl Whitehill, Senators—Outlasted b Athletics to win tenth victory of sea- Myer son. Hank Lieber and Dick Bartell, Glants—Hank drove in three runs,| g one with homer, to beat | Bolt Dick two, Dodgers, 5 to 4. Al Hollingsworth and Don Brennan, Reds—Between them held Cubs to| single run and eight hits, dropping| Chicago four games behind Giants. | J9 Ralph Winegarner and Earl Averill, | Indians—Made happy Steve O'Neill’s| debut as Cleveland manager; Wine-| garner by holding Chicago t six hits, | Averill by hitting homer, double and two singles. Orville Jorgens, Phillies — Snuffed eut Braves with three hits. Red Ruffing, Yankees—Beat Red Box to end personal four-game losing \ | of the ancient god. I happened to he Nats Lack Clean-up WAS THE SPORTLIGHT Hagen’s Buddha-Fa Wes Ferrell Follow! ce Solaces Hindus; ing Ruthian Route. BY GRANTLAND RICI OE KIRKWOOD, the golf wan- derer, was unrolling a pythan skin in his room. The brown mottled skin was 22 feet long and 32 inches across, which is something of a snake—as snakes go. “I'll give you one for the book,” Joe said as he dropped the python skin and picked up a golf club with the shaft made from a rhino’s hide. “You know in India millions of | them worship Buddha. They kneel before the heads of Buddha or statues looking on one day at a bowed, bent worshiper and suddenly I caught a familiar sight. This particular Buddha looked like an old friend. “I moved up closer and found ing achievements as he is of his home run barrage. He switched to out- flelding to get an every-day job. The time may come when Ferrell will do the same, Any pitcher who can hit four home runs in two or three succes- sive games as Ferrell did recently would be even more dangerous bat- ting every day. ‘The Red Sox star is 6 feet 2, weigh- ing 195 pounds, with ice water travel- ing through his veins in the tough spots of the game. He hasn’t Ruth's color, but he has a lot of the stuff that belonged to Babe's are and the Babe's batting eye. And at 27 he still has a long way |to go—at least another dozen years. the face was a photograph of Wal- ter Hagen some one had planted. | “You know, the Haig has a sort of Buddha look, anyway, and the native | apparently didn’t know the difference. | I hope to take Walter back with me | on my next trip and show the old boy | Louis and Levinsky. HERE will be no championship touch to the Louis-Levinsky fight, but at least it has this interesting angle—both men are willing to make a fight of it. . This alone makes it a rarity and [ HINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1935. Hitter : Some Experts Favor Levinsky Over Louis 13 | Some Feel He'll Not Stick to| BY ANDY CLARKE, doffed his managerial garb, | who predict he eventually may pilot batters with a ball that came down The American League bestowed on | cross studded with 20 diamonds. the reins of the Newark Bears in the | i JOHNSON 15 SEEN Farm—Indians Victors Associated Press Sports Writer. is retiring to his Maryland | & minor league club. | the alley with velocity something akin | him its highest award, the distin- ‘Then he became a manager. | International League. In 1928 he| AS MINOR LEADER in O'Neill's Debut. WALTER JOHNSON, having farm, but there are some | For more than 20 years he baffled to a bullet. | guished cross of base ball, a maltese | After a long illness he took over went back to pilot the Senators, the in his new role of an Indian god. You | fives the reason for 50.000 or more | team with which he had spent his big could see Haig's picture had been there some time, so more than a few Indian prayers had been sent to him. Collects Golf Oddities. I_ OOK at these—.” Here Kirk- | “ wood brought out a dozen or more clubs made by native golfers around the world—gnarled wooden knots for the head and small tree Imbs for the shaft—clubs made out of coiled wire—clubs carved from sticks with 2 curl at the end, looking something like a cane with a curved head, where a small spot of lead had been stuck on in some way. “And the surprising part,” Kirk- wood added, “is the distance and the accuracy many of these native play- ers—India, Ceylon, Borneo, Africa, | Malay, Japan, Mexico, South Amer- fca—can get from these weird imple- | ments. “Some of them can drive a golf ball over 200 yards with a club | few golfers could use at all.” You can sit an hour in Kirkwood's room and circle the entire globe as| Joe takes you along on the record | golf journey, illustrated with pictures and golf mementoes from the thick, | tough hides of the hippo and the rhino and the big snakes. | | schedule. [ this dchedule gets scrambled up is The Ruthian Reincarnation. 'HERE probably won't be another Babe Ruth around for some time, | but the nearest approach is a young | fellow by the name of Wesley Cheek Ferrell, star pitcher and home run hitter of the Boston Red Sox. Wes Ferrell was born in Greens- boro, N. C., 27 years ago and he now is in the middle of his greatest year, both on offense and defense. His pitching and batting combined have made him one of the outstanding stars of the game. Ruth still is as proud of his pitch- | League Statistics TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1935, American RESULTS YESTERDAY. Washington. 10: Philadelphia, 7. New York. 10: Boston. = Cleveiand~ 4: Chicago. = _ Other clubs not scheduled. GAMES TODAY. GAMES TOMORROW. Phil. at Wash.. 3:15. Phila. at Wash. (2). Chi. at Cleve.” (2). Chicago at Cleveland. New York at Boston. New York at Boston. Others not scheduled. Others not scheduled. Naticnal RESULTS YESTERDAY. w Brooklyn, 4. S oeks, O, Recoklyn. 4. Philadelphia. 9 Boston. 1. Other clubs not scheduled. asnasng viaepeug asmooig GAMES TODAY. Pitts. at Chicago. Cinci. at St. Louis. Brooklyn at N. Y. Boston at Phila. GAMES TOMORROW. Pitts. at Chicago. Cinci. at 8t. Louis, > | e 1 1 % 0 Bl mosuwertissro > DR i % cmssrwoneS = romarcomco? 5| wrersnnzsss> o orromm il B | mossurismsuclt Totals _ Philadelphia - 002 002 300— Washington ~ 040 402 003—10 Runs batted in—Whitehill. Miles (3) hnson (2). Kuhel. Powell (3). 2). Doyle, Myer. Foxx, Warstier. - base hits—Johnson, Stone, Foxx, Wagstier, Higgins. _Three-base hits—Miles, Kuhel, Powell, Dbases— Powell . ble plays—Kress to Myer to ). Doyle to Foxx. Left on bases—Philadel: hia, 9: Washington, 6. First Dalls—Om Benton. 4: off Mart Doyle. 1: off Whitehill, 3. By Doyle. hi Benton, i s ®© g by _pitel Wild pitch—Benton. | highly excited citizens headed for the show. Another answer is Joe Louis. Up to date he has taken his place as the leading fighter in the game, so far as boxing, punching and all-around style are concerned. But it has been some time since Louis was thrown against an opponent who wasn't suf- fering from a slight attack of the ague, sometimes known as the quiver- g pulse. Unless Levinsky changes his past habits he at least won't be afraid to start heaving leather—and let nature take its course. The chances are that he won't hit the clever Louis with a single hard punch—but there always is the chance that he will. And if he does it will be interesting to see what happens—as the bomber | | hasn't had to take any bombing since | he scrambled up around the top. That is the sole point yet to be proved so far as Louis is concerned —what will happen if he gets tagged properly? * Louis Methodical Worker. OUIS works along methodical lines. So far no one could list him | among the inspirational fighters. He knows his stuff and follows a set Just what will happen if one of the reasons for so much Chi- cago interest. An unorthodox fighter, such as the Chicago Kingfish, has the |“better chance to put over some sort of surprise, even with the odds heavily | against him. If you follow the chart Louis should win inside of 10 rounds—but this has been a bumpy year for _sporting charts in more fields than one. Any one who tried to follow the chart of the National League race, for example, or the United States and | British open, would be goofy by now, f locked up in a padded cell. (Copyright. 1935. by the North American Newspaper Alliance. Inc.) BEAN GOES TO MIT.LERS MINNEAPOLIS, August 6 (#).— | President Mike Kelley of the Minne- apolis American Association base ball club has announced the outright pur- chase of Belve Bean, right-handed pitcher, from the Southern Association Chattanooga club. The price was not announced. Bean, with Toledo in 1932, was sent to Chattanooga recently by the Wash- ington Americnp League club. | league tenure, | Different As Manager. | IN 1932 he relinquished that position | and took the helm at Cleveland. With the years the cheers turned to Jeers. | He wanted to buy the Oakland club in the Pacific Coast League in 1924, making a cash offer of $385,000. Many a ball player has slipped into some comparatively quiet town after his arm lost its whip or his batting | eve dimmed with the years and man- | aged a minor league team. Four of them are in the Southern Association—Clyde Milan and Doc Prothro, formerly with Washington; Fred Hoffman, who once caught for | the Yankees, and Eddie Moore, who | | was #ith the Cleveland Indians in | 1934, In the Texas League are Hank Severeid, veteran catcher of the | Browns, Nats and Yankees; Art Griggs, who was with Cleveland: | Alex Gaston who was with the Red | Sox some years ago, and John Heving, | | who caught for the Athletics and | Red Sox ‘ | _ Five more, including Art Shires and | Billy Meyer. who was with the Ath- letics, are in the New York-Pennsyl- vania League. Tribe Plays Headily. THE Cleveland Indians got off to & good start under their new man- ager, Steve ©'Neill, yesterday, play- ing heads-up base ball to defeat the Chicago White Sox, 4-2. & Ralph Winegarner, a Tribal rocklt.' was sent in to pitch and turned in a masterful job, holding the Sox to six hits. Shortstop Mike Appling, who drew a walk in the fifth, was the first Chicagoan to get on the paths. O'Neill resumed his usual position as coach at third place. Once when the White Sox complained that Wine- | garner was not keeping his foot on | the rubber as he pitched, O'Neill| | settled the dispute in true managerial fashion. The Yankees walloped the Red Sox, 10-2, and Washington turned back | the Athletics, 10-7, in other Amer- ican League games. In the National League the Giants beat Brooklyn, 5-4; Philadelphia beat the Boston Braves, and Cincin- nati beat the Cubs, 3- SEEKS UNLIMITED FOE. | Georgetown A. C. seeks unlimited | opposition for tomorrow. Call Al Crampton at West 2908-W after 8 o'clock. " Kress, Who Is Adding Sna PPY to Hitting Prowess, Is Ace in 10-7 Defeat of A.’s! | Lelchuk, Ci man Fielding ASHINGTON'S “Cinderella shortstop,” who in private life is Red Kress, is stav- ing off the story-book stroke of midnight not alone with his booming bat since he was installed regularly in the Nationals' infield nearly two weeks ago. Always rated more of a hitter than a flelder, Kress appears to be strength- ening his hold on the shortstop job as much by his defensive work now as by his batting, which has been little short of sensational since he was “released” and recalled within a few hours on July 24. In the dozen games Kress has played since his sensational come- back, Red has handled 65 of 67 chances in faultless fashion, but, brighter still from a Washington viewpoint, has been his teamwork with Capt. Buddy Myer around second base. Despite Kress' long lay-off as a shortstop, Red apparently not only has retained his ability to work well on double-plays, but seems to be im- proving. Starts Two Double-Plays, 'WICE the veteran Kress and the steadily brilliant Myer teamed up yesterday to provide a pair of fielding features that stood out in & game otherwise marked by unadulterated slugging. ‘While outhit, 9 to 13, by the Ath- letics in a series opener, the Griffs were off to & big lead, but, as has been the case so many times of late, it was none too large. Smart de- fensive play by Kress and Myer helped Earl Whitehill to gain his tenth vic- tory of the year, 10 to 7. In the fifth, to spoil a promising Philadelphia rally, Kress made a nice Play on Jimmy Foxx's sizzling ground- er to start a double-play also killing off Flit Cramer, who had singled to open the frame. Then, after Bob . | Johnson had opened the ninth with & single, Foxx again slashed a hot shot to Kress, who started a second double killing. Due Makes 11 of 13 Assists. T damage by the Athletics this play prevented never will be known, but unquestionably it would have provided cause for worry, for r°~ | Pinky Higgins followed with & double. hards. Losing pitchep—Benton. gi'rcu—umu Owens, p—fl:cflwn and Quinn. Time: i | Then the fast-tirifg Whitehill hit Eric McNair before finally getting k | Rabbit Warstler for the final out and cutting the sixth-place A's lead over | the Nationals to 215, games. | Of the 13 assists made by the Na- tionals, Kress and Myer made 11 of them. Griffs Close Stand Tomorrow. STORY from out of Cleveland pre- dicting that Buddy Myer would | succeed Bucky Harris as manager of | the Nationals next season brought Washington front office . . . “Aren’t job,” it ran, “without trying to meddle with our affairs?” Washington's pitching is looking up ... in the last seven games the op- position has “made” only 95 hits . . . or an average of 13!, safeties per game . no wonder the Griffs are down. ‘Tomorrow will be the last chance for Capital fans to see the Nationals in action until August 31 . .. they wind up their current home stay with a double header against the Athletics | and then head for points North and West . . . tomorrow's twin bill slated for 1:30 o'clock, will find Buck New- som and Whitey Hayes hurling for the Griffs, probably against. Vernon Wil- shere dand Johnny Marcum. Ump Owens Suffers Here., ONE of the Athletics prophesied that the year’s attendance at Shibe Pagk would not exceed 200,000 . . . but Washington’s mark isn't likely to be much over 250,000 William Doyle, who worked the last four innings for the A's, reported the morming of the game from North Carolina . . . he was a free agent when signed and formerly of the Central League . . . but he made an auspicious debut when he fanned Cecil Travis, first to face him, and then singled on his first time at bat in the majors. Umpire Brick Owens is having a tough term here . . . last Saturday he passed out from the heat.. . . and yesterday Alton Benton fouled off a | pitch and Catcher Clif Bolton, looking around for the ball, noticed Owens gesturing toward his throat . . . there was the ball, lodge between his mask and chest protector . . . it struck Owens’ adam’s apple with such force that Brick was unable to speak for & couple of minutes, F.E 8 ) \® | burgh, forth one bitter remark from the| g, they satisfied with getting Johnson's| 5 * K King Levinsky, Chicago's ex-fish peddler (left) and Joe Louis, the Brown Bomber of Detroit, collide at Chi- cago tomorrow in a match that is expected to lure upward of 50.000 cash customers. Joe's assertion as he wound up training, while the King confidently claimed “Louis can be had." “I'll outrush him " was A. P. Photo. 0., TYPO TEAM ON RAGGED EDEE Breaks Even, Protests Loss to New York—Stringer Leads Golfers. By the Associated Press LEVELAND, August 6.—Wash- ington Typos. facing elimina- tion with another loss unless their protest game against New York is upheld, had their backs to the wall here today in the twenty- fifth annual Union Printers’ base ball tournament, but-were confident of re- taining their title following a 10-7 victory over Detroit. Charging Bill Cross, New York hurler, with using a spitball delivery, the Capital City nine played under protest as they dropped the fray, 8-6, after scoring five runs in the first in- ning, Mosedale Hits Homer. (GEORGE MOSEDALES Home run to deep right center field fea- tured the win over Detroit. Reverdy McPherson, catcher, smacked out a brace of doubles and a single in four trips to the plate. Fred Stringer, Washington's de- fending champion, led 120 golfers in the first 18 holes of a 72-hole tourna- ment for the Walter Hagen Cup by | shooting an 80 over the Ridgewood Country Club. . Other scores in diamond tilts were: Twin Cities, 17; St. Louis, 3. Pitts- 13; Cleveland, 9. Baltimore, 12; Buffalo, 2. Boston, 12; Cincin- nati, 9. New York, 10; Chicago, 4. Scores: FIRST GAME. Wash. AB.H.O.A. N. Petr'lo.rf Leichuk.c Cross.p__ McPh'n, 2 Reid.2b 4 Totals_30 4 24 15 Washington .. 10—t New York__ 130 210 01x—% Runs—Barron (1). Cooney (2). Licato. ross. Schneider, Edwards. 0 el | wsmzsmonmanng . 5 New 3 hits—Edwards. Petrazzola, Cross. play—Dalglish’ to Edwards. in—J. Haves (3). Tomasulo (3). 3 Cooney. oft —Bv Cross '5: by bases—Washington, Umpires—Speich 1 behind Ahearn on the b S B > d £ & ® Washington Detroit .’ McGavin. (unassisted) Numbers. 5 runs. 5 Home runs—Moset bases—Mosedale, Sch Edwards. Waple. Holbr: —-Off Heany. 1: off N neider. e Sacrifics ook. Ba: bers ses on balls i off Lug- pitcher—Ludwig. Umpires—Messrs. Klem and Neal. - Scorer—W. Smith. Twin Bill to End Nats’ Home Stay HILADELPHIA and Washington will face in a double-header tomorrow in the final frays of the four-game series at Griffith Stad- fum, the first game starting at , 1:30 o'clock. The games will be the last before the Nats set sail around the circuit. Should the Senators win today, sixth place will be at stake in the bargain bill. Buck Newsom and ‘Whitey Hayes are probably start- ing pitchers for the Nats. BASE BALL 9% 3:15 P.M. Washington vs. Philadelphia Tomerrow. Double-header, 1st Game 1:30 AMERICAN LEAGUE PARK Tickets at Park, 9 A.M. |8 BY CHARLES DUNKLEY, Associated Press Sports Writer. HICAGO, August 6—A gate! that may reach $200,000 was in prospect today for the heavyweight fight at Com- iskey Park tomorrow night. between Joe Louis, Detroit’s knockout sensa- tion, and King Levinsky, the glcri- fied ex-fish peddler When the box office traffic was opened today. Promoter Joe Foley announced $110.000 already was in the strong box. He predicted another $100,000 would come rolling in before the walloping Chicagoan and the. Detroit Negro started throwing punches at each other’s chin. If Promoter Foley is right in his predictions, Louis, just 21 years old, and yet to have his first shave, will See $200,00‘0 Gate for F ight; King Weighs 198 and Joe 194 earn $60.000 with his fists tomorrow night. Louis, who quit work in a Detroit automobile plant a year ago to receive $50 for his first fight, has been guaranteed 30 per cent of the receipts, with 20 per cent going to the Kingfish While the fans were storming the box offices. the calmest were the two fighters themselves. Louis, weighing 194 pounds, which was a bit lighter than he expected to be, was resting at the Summer home of one of his managers. Julian Black, near St Joseph, Mich. He wilt remain there, doing nothing more than a light ex- ercise, until time to return to C cago tomorrow noon, for the weigh- ing-in program Levinsky, after taking a long walk end a bit of light exercise, planned (See $200,000 GATE, Page 12.) HOSS AND OTHERS PCKING KINGFISH Called Greatly Improved, Point to His Ability to Give and Take It. BY FRANCIS J. POWERS. HICAGO, August 6.—For some reason, several well-known experts, in the fight business prefer Kingfish Levinsky over Joe Louis when the two heavyweights meet in a 10-round go at Comiskey Park here tomorrow night. Among them are Barney Ross, welterweight champion of the world, and “Whitey” Ekwert, who has trained such fighters as Pancho Villa, Tuffy Griffiths, Tod Morgan and many others Ekwert was found near the ring side, watching Joe Louis in his final day of training. “What do you think?" Ekwert was asked. “I like Levinsky,” replied “Whitey.” “I think Levinsky is too tough for Louis to knock out. I know, you'll tell me Baer knocked him out. But how many times did Baer hit him before the Kingfish went down? He hit him no less than a dozen clean punches. Levinsky was not in the shape for his last engagement with Baer that he is today. I was with Levinsky on his Southern and Southwestern tour last Winter and I'll tell you he is a greatly improved fighter. He has shortened his punches and he is using better judgment in the ring. Likes Louis’ Style, “J OUIS never has been really hit since he turned professional and Levinsky has hit some of the best heavyweights of the time. He usually | is able to get in at least one good | punch and T want to see how Louis | will react if the King does tag him. “Louis is & great boxer, but it is boxers that Levinsky likes to fight, and it'’s boxers he usually hits. Levinsky is sure to carry the fight to Louis. Hell be throwing punches all the time and will be the toughest man Louis has fought so far. “The King's best punch is an over- hand right, and it packs plenty of power. I don't know how he throws the punch, for it seems to come from all directions. Both Sharkey and Loughran told me it was impossible for them to guess from what angle the King was throwing blows “The King also can weather & lot of punching. and his ability to take it makes me like his chances against Louis. I am not underrating Louis skill as a boxer or hitter, although I am not certain he can punch any harder than the King. But I believe that if Levinsky can hit Joe as he did Sharkey, Walker and Loughran, he will have a swell chance. And all (See PICKING KINGFISH, Page 12 ’ Thes s the Last Week! Sale FLORSHEIM Han Specials— All Sports Shoes Those good-looking white shoes that saved you $1 at regular price, REDUCED! Regularly $5.50! Genuine white China buckskin or with black or brown..... 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