Evening Star Newspaper, September 17, 1935, Page 14

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Lipps Makes Baer’s Work Look Wrong 3 LIST OF HEAVIES | Foening Star Sporls WAS : Max an BAER PROTECTORS EYES BOYS” L3 HELD NOT SO HOT S HINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1935 d Louis Serious in Camp Toil FROM THE Landing of Lucky Held to Be Only Hope Against Louis. BY JOHN PRESS BOX Haymaker by Baer LARDNER 4 IOF GETS LESSONS INARTOF FEINTING PECULATOR, N. Y., September | head, clipping, back-handing and Louis Go Is Mark Here. Furr Fails Again. BY JOHN B. KELLER. | HERE may be something wrong | as the California cut-up points for next Tuesday's battle with Joe Louis, dark Detroit devastator. | Maybe it's Tony Cancela. among the ex-heavyweight champ's sparmates. But if Tony hasn't been | giving Maxie more of a workout than | he did Joe Lipps in the feature of the night Madcap Maxie can't be making much headway in his preparation for the melee in New York. Cancela came here to substitute for had to forego the meeting with Lipps after taking a gashing smash on the | mouth in a training tilt. With Can- cela came Harold Steinman, pmwm-‘ is,the sole manager of King Levinsky | and incidentally that Cancela has done more than any other punch- taker at Speculator, N. Y., to get Baer So helpful had Cancela been to Baer, insisted Steinman, so soon as he had settled for his brief stay in ‘Washington, that Baer couldn't miss &omething wrong about Steinman's reasoning—or Cancela’s spirit under | fire. Lipps Makes Sap of Cancela. Lipps, unheralded until he came here from Ty Ty, Ga., last Summer, mage a sad sap of Cancela. He car- ried the fight from gong to gong to stable and never looked a loser. In fact, concensus of press row opinion gave Lipps five of the eight | rounds with two even. Cancela was gathering of Capital followers of pugil- ism before the contest had fairly | started. Both parties began cautiously and thereafter Lipps piled up points so“ quickly that the reputation Cancela | had brought here as a “club” fighter | of note and kingpin of the Baer An exasperating right jab and al Jarring left shot from short range | made Lipps look far the better of the | two men in the ball yard ring. i seventh round did Cancela become | the aggressor and land the effective punches that had built him up as one | of the best of heavies short of the | At all other times Lipps made it look that he, instead of Cancela, | should have been picked to prep Baer for the Louis encounter. JBACK of the Lipps-Cancela fiasco the Turner-Ahearn boxing show card had numbers that entertained the slim attendance at least if it did not There was a clown to enliven one bout that otherwise would have been worse than ordinary, there was a | sparkling burlesque put on by two corking bout between slightly over- | weight feathers and there was a wel- | ter wrangle that had its good points. | The welter affair was the semi-| is legally entitled to claim the Dis- trict championship in his weight class, | but who has failed miserably in his ef- | forts to show why he should be enti- | Fighter Prepping Pal for at Max Baer's training camp, | Tony is supposed to be the tops fight card at Griffith Stadium last | ‘Terry Mitchell. Brooklyn terror, who ing principally that he, Harold, stll | in trim for the milling next week. beating Louis. But there must be | I THEIR eight-rounder last night | the Tampa truckhorse of the Baer | canceled as a fighter by the meager fought to an even first round, but| training retinue soon was blasted. Not until the fight had gone to the championship-contention class. It Was an Amusing Show. enlighten it in pugilistic niceties. colored fist flingers, there was a final, setting off Phil FPurr, who still tled to the crown since he won it. For the second time this Summer Phil- | bert engaged Frankie Blair, a bundle of battling stuff from Camden, N. J., and points south. And for the sec- ond time this Summer the District champ took a bloody beating from | the Jerseyman. Phil did get & bit farther in last night's engagement than he did the first time he stepped in against Frankie. There is this to sey in Phil's favor with regard to the sec- ond encounter. He fought some of the time, instead of bicycling about the ring all the time as he did before. Phil Finds Beak in His Way. BUT Blair evidently has a style of fighting that doesn't appeal to Purr. Frankie insisted upon keeping on top of Phil, even to the extent of taking a blow to pass out three. Every time Phil attempted to match Prankie's style last night it simply was too bad for Phil. Also for Phil's beak, that protrudes too far for the good of the District welter champ. Blair polished that beak to a ruddy glow before the first two of the eight | rounds were finished and after the third heat the nasal knob dripped gore continuously. Evidently there is some- thing about Furr's training regime that must be modified before he be- comes the good fighter he promised to be when he was bowling ’em over with startling regularity up to the time he first ran into Blair. The corking bout was provided in the eight rounds between Joe Temes, who was a great guy to Washington ringworms before he bumped into Petey Sarron, and Eddie Reed, a Hartford, Conn. junior lightweight, who substituted for Danny London of New York. Joe and Eddie whipsawed one an- other right regularly until the last two rounds when Joe suddenly spurted and socked enough to get a two-to-one decision in his favor. Clown Laughed, But Lost. clowning and the burlesque were v furnished by the thumping glove- men of the four-round tussles. Wade Allison, Charlotte, N. C., junior light- weight, shimmied, thumbed his ears and wiggled his fingers through a fun- fest—for him—with Joe Doty, local light. But Wade’s humorous antics failed to keep the verdict from Doty. A sooty Washingtonian dubbed Flash Gordon and a saffron Nat Wright of Baltimore, husky enough to be heavies, gave the few cash customers at hand the big laugh of the evening. Flash threw plenty at Nat in the first round, but faded in everything except color therenfter to hit the deck repeatedly for counts of ‘With their 15-round battle at Yankee Stadium, New York, listed for next Tuesday night, Joe Louis and Max Baer have shifted into high in their training. At the top the Brown Bomber is seen industriously pound- ing the big bag at his Pompton Lakes camp as a large crowd looks on (Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto), while ex-Champion Baer is shown in, the lower view taking a row on Lake Sacandaga, Speculator, N, Y, as part of his conditioning program. (Wide World Photo.) THE SPORTLIGHT Some Who Picked Braddock Over Baer Now Are Naming Max to Defeat Louis. BY GRANTLAND RICE. EXT Tuesday the h»athrr-]c»vinzl It was Louis-Baer or Baer-Louis all clientele from California to|week long. And I discovered that Maine will get the correct those picking Louis were at least 3 to answers to & number of fog- | 1, although Baer had supporters who | i enshrouded questions now breaking | were certain Max had too much power out in a general rash. Here are just | and experience for any young fighter a few that should finally come out of | to meet. the mists: 1. Is Joe Louis, with 15 months of The Sudden Turn. N OLD-TIME fighter, walking into N. B. A. Ranks Only Six as Ten Are Rated in All Other Divisions. I OUISVILLE, Ky., September 11! let it be known today that! situation. vacant, the association picked 10 rank- | titlist; Max Baer, Joe Louis, Max Rankings: I’“McCoy. Al Gainor. Ambrose ~Palmer. llard. Freddy Steele. Jack Gibbons By the Associated Press. —The National Boxing Asso- | sociation, in convention here, | those in charge of the sport are far from happy about the heavyweight In every other division except the | flyweight, where the title is officially | ing fighters. But only six heavyweights were mentioned, Jimmy Braddock, Schmeling, Ford Smith and Primo Carnera. Light-heavyweights—Olin, Maxie Rosen- blocm. Abe Feldman. John Henry Lewis. Fony Shucco. Jack McAvoy, Joe Knight e Middleweights ~Teddy " Yarosz Lo Pirrone, Frank Battaglia. Ken Over- red Hennebury, Young Corbett. Babe Bep Van Klaveren. Jack Curall, | o _Garcia, Harry Dublinsky. Kid [Eddy” (Kid) " Wolf.” Teddy " Loder. | Lightweights bers. Clet Klick. Wesley h Eddie Cook, Tiger Horney. M Maurice Holtzer. & Catanova_ Henry Vernion Cornier. Mike Belloise. on. Filo Echeverria, ell antamweights cobar. N olgast Lou Salica. Sixtg Es- Pablo Dano. Young 1. Little | (Title vacant) Benny | nch. Jackie Brown. Pob McGee, Joe Mendiola. Maurice Hugenin. Tommy Par- doe. Small Montana, Joe Hardy, George Gregeson, ' MACKENZIE RECEIVES 'GUARD RING MEDAL | Medical Department Lightweight Gets Main Award—Others Also Honored. IIRANK MacKENZIE of the Medical | Department has been declared the | outstanding boxer in the District of | Columbia National Guard and will be awarded the Julian S. Oliff Medal. | MacKenzie, a lightweight, won the championship in that division during the recent tournament held at Camp Sims to determine the local Guard champions for the field training period, 1935. Morris Wolfe of the Headquarters | and Service Company, who won the | heavyweight championship, was voted | honorable mention and received the John W. Oehmann Medal. Langdon McAninch, who came back after 10 years' retirement to win the middle- weight title, also was deemed worthy of note. The following were awarded the | District National Guard Medal for the enlisted men showing the most inter- | est in the promotion of boxing in the Guard: Master Sergt. A. G. Mouton, | Technical Sergt. Harry Nelligan, Staff Sergt. Paul Worksman, Sergt. Clifford Garrison and Pvt. George P. Delancey. | BOOST GRAPPLING CARD Emil Dusek and George Lenihan have been added to the week's wres- | tling show at Griffith Stadium Thurs- day night and will occupy the semi- | final spot, just before the Jack Dono- van-Dick Daviscourt feature bout. | Ex-Champ’s Intentness Is Shown by Questioning About His Rival. BY EDWARD J. NEIL, Associated Press Sports Writer. PECULATOR, N. Y., September 17.—Just how serious is Maxi- milian Adelbert Baer, greatest of all the heavyweight playboys, facing this miss-and-out assignment | of Joe Louis, the chocolate massacre | man from Detroit? Well, a party of the yes boys from | Broadway who couldn't let him rest | as champion and couldn't remember his name after the Braddock catas- trophe hove into sight over the week end to resume old acquaintances, stir | up old memories and prepare for bigger and better parties in the future—in case he licks Louis in the Yankee| Stadium just one week from tonight. Some of them should be back in New York now, but it's doubtful that they'll ever be the same. They were | attaches assigned to cover just such eventualities. They left here a-run- | ing about them while Baer himself led the cheers. Has Scores to Settle. “I'VE got lots of scores to even with those guys,” said Max today as he planned to get back to work at his boxing chores, on edge, weighing 211 | and expecting to fight at 208. “I couldn't seat all those good-time | friends of mine in the Yankee Stadium | after I knocked out Carnera,” he sald bitterly. “After Braddock beat me all I had with me in my room was a radio.” | S resting on his oars and reviewing the T 17—Having completed two consecutive workouts, one good and one terrible, Max Baer is events of the past week end. “I'm leading a wild and dissipated life,” said Maxie bitterly. “Saturday night they let me go to a movie, and I stayed up till nearly 10 o'clock. Then there was some talk of letting me look in on a neighborhood barn dance, but they decided I couldn't stand the pace. “Sunday morning, on account of the terrific binge the night before, I only had w cut down three trees in- stead of four. Then they let me shake hands with my wife. I recognized her right away, though it must be about 25 years since I last saw her. Ancil Hoffman says he would buy me a milk-shake, but he is afraid I would get plastered and start singing ‘Sweet Adeline.’ ” ‘S Max Envies Brother. PEAKING of singing, my brother Buddy is the smart guy arcund o P this camp. He pulled a bad shoulder | "Weiterweights—Barney Ross_ Jimmy Mc- | met with a storm of abuse by camp | the other day, so he don't have to go as this Turner, and he's a better through with his fight with Ford Smith. That makes him an elk. He Lou Am- | ning, coat tails flapping in the snappy | can go over to Mike Jacobs’ beefsteak k. | mountain air, words and missiles beat- | party. where those newspapermen are eating themselves sick and singing around the piano, and he can eat and sing _tco. shoulder myself. I only need one arm to lick this Louis.” Max's summary of Mike Jacobs’ beefsteak party is correct in most de- | tails, though, of course, the newspaper | & puncher like me. men did not eat themselves sick. They behaved with great dignity and re- straint. Two or three of them com- plained that your correspondent was singing “Heart of My Heart” so pow- | erfully that he drowned out Buddy Baer, but I suspect they were only kidding. Mike Jacobs danced a horn- wrestling. | Training Makes Baer Irritable. 'HIS extra-strenuous period of train- ing has done two things to Baer. | It has made him nervous and irritable | and it has improved his physical con- | dition enormously. Against Louls he won't have to stand off and gasp for breath, as he did against Carnera. His lungs are strong enough to keep him going at full speed for several rounds. And that, of course, is the object of his handlers. They know | he can’t afford to stand off against | Louis. He'll have to keep on top of | the Bomber all the time. | But Max's boxing is no better than it ever was. When he comes in to swap punches or wrestle, he leaves | an opening as wide as Lake Superior. A kid heavyweight, named George ‘Turner, just starting out in life, was | able the other day to hit him 15 times | to the minute with both right and | left hands. Even when Max got sore and started punching himself, he couldn't stop the novice's attack. Louis punches six times as hard boxer. You can draw your conclusion from that. Logic tells you that Baer, in the big fight, will last only as long as he is able to stand up under Louis’ punching. His one chance is a lucky haymaker to the chin. That's been it's inescapably true about this one. Max continues every day to issue confidence bulletins, such as: | *“Louis has never been up against And: “Louis is too raw. He can't expect | to go right through the heavyweight | division in one year.” | I think Max is repeating this stuff | because there isn't anything else to say. I think he’s hoping in his heart | that he’ll land that lucky haymaker Baer asks newcomers constantly | pipe for 15 minutes, which means that | before it's too late. greatest punching sensation since Dempsey. Some of the boys think he’s | worrying. Some feel he's more intent | on this fight than any before in his hectic career. Victory, on top of his $250,000 share in a $1,000,000 gate, will mean another $500.000 in radio, movie and exhibition tour profits. “I know just how Louis thinks, what's in his mind,” he says. “When | I was 21 I was flattening a lot of bums, too. I thought I could like the world. Then I met a few fighters who didn't do what I wanted them to. They were smarter, better. I started to learn to fight all over again. “Louis will have to do that, too.| He's never met a fellow who will take the play away from him, outgame, outsmart, outpunch him. He's just too young, good as he may be, to lick Max Baer when Baer is the real Baer. Knows How Louis Feels. “SAY‘ when I was 21 I was fighting Paulino 20 rounds, Johnny Ris- ko, Tommy Loughran, Ernie Schaaf. I had to learn things the hard way. There's no short cut for a fighter. Louis will have to take it, too. “One night Ernie Schaaf hit me a | right-hand smash in the stomach and I thought, ‘Gee, I wish I was home in bed’ But I fought back. Louis has to go through that yet. “You know, there's plenty of rea- sons why I've got to beat Louis, then | win back the title from Braddock—| money, pride, glory and all that. But| when I was 10 years old, milking cows | in Livermore, Calif,, I heard the word | that Dempsey had knocked out Wil- lard and was the heavyweight cham- ~ Abe Coleman and Ed Meske, orig- | pion, Did I ever think that some day | inally scheduled to go on before the | }o:g'be my pal> That he'd jump into finale, have been shifted to & 30-min- | 4 ying throw his arms around me and ute match. Dusek and Lenihan will say, ‘Kid, you're heavyweight cham- grapple 45 minutes. professional experience, fighter as he looks to be? 2. Can the Baer, who iooked so moth-eaten against Jim Braddock, |jump back to championship form three months later? 3. What will happen if Max Baer | happens to plug in one of his heavy smashes? 4. What chance has Baer to nail with a right hand as good a boxer as Louis looks to be? 5. What will happen if Louis sud- i denly finds himself in the middle of & real brawl, with no Carnera or | Levinsky to act as punching bag? 6. What will happen to Baer if Louis nails him with a solid left or a solid right on the crest of the chin? It was surprising at Cleveland last week, with a golf championship un- der way and a National League pen- | nant race smoking hot, to find how many in the galioping crowds were handing out queries along the lines noted above. a5 much as nine in the third round. Coming out for the fourth round and last, Wright was heard to say “don’t you want to take it easy this time.” Gordon's reply couldn't be heard at ringside, but it was notice- able that Wright did nothing more than push punches in the final heat. At last Nat pushed a trifle stiffly and Flash dropped to let his seconds toss in the towel. Associated Press Sports Writer. canoeing at Speculator . . « Max is trying to be a good fight men say he's liable to crack Louis. he looks cutside , . . he went Sunday . . . Jack Dempsey, who BY EDDIE BRIETZ, EW YORK, September 17 (#), N —When Max Baer goes some one in camp keeps an eye on him with a spy glass fellow about that. rigid training routine, but he hates it . , . some under the strain long before he climbs into the ring with Joe A lot of people would like to know if Max is as good inside as through two dandy drills Thurs- day and Saturday, but was sad picked him to win, took one good look and rushed back to New as great a | a group of sporting writers, fired | this shell: “A year ago vou fellows were all saying that Max Baer was unbeatable. You were even saying there was no one around for him to fight—that he hit too hard and was too hard to hurt. He was all by himself. Then he puts on one punk show where he gets over- confident and careless, and after that one flop the champion is only a bum. “In the meanwhile a kid fighter, with hardly more than a year's nro- fessional experience, moves into the picture by knocking over a flock of punks, the last two already softened up by Baer. “And you figure this kid fighter, who never has been up against any class at all, is going to stop a very different Baer from the Baer of the Braddock blow-up in five or six rounds. It would be all right, only it doesn’t make any sense. “I think every one will admit that the Baer who meets Louis will be an entirely different Baer from the fellow who let Braddock beat him. They say he can't hit Louis. Well, they said he couldn't hit Schmeling. But he did, in the first round. “This Baer's a pretty cunning fighter when he makes up his mind to start working and he’ll hit Louis Just the way he did Schmeling—either a left to the body or a right to the head. Then you'll all be wondering (See SPORTLIGHT, page 15.) York ... maybe that's a tip, Here's another: Speculator never has turned out a losing’ heavy- weight . . . both Gene Tunney and Max Schmeling«conditioned there and won , . . the village’s only failure was Jim Slattery . . . Kid McCoy was the first boxer t6 pick Specuiator as a training site. Baer was smart when he signed Izzy Kline as chief trainer . . , he's the buy who rubbed Barney Ross fnto two or three ring cham- pionships . . . Izzy was shocked to learn somebody floored Barney twice on the coast a few nights back . . . Ancil Hoffman, who swore off cigars two years ago, strayed from the straight and narrow on his 5lst birthday last week . . o Max Dean Detton, a Midwest husky, will make his debut here in a 30-minute exhibition against Dobie Osborn and Silent Abbott, Turner's personal pro- | tege, tackles Marshall Blackstone in | another 30-minute preliminary. American. RESULTS YESTERDAY. Chicago. 9: Washington. 1. 8t. Louis. 5: New York, Detroit. 5; Boston. 3. Cleveland.’ 8; Philadeiphia. 8. Major League Statistics TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1935, pion of the world. Do you know what that means?’ *I didn’t know then. But I will the next time. I'm heading straight back.” He boxes again today after & 24- hour lay-off. National. RESULTS YESTERDAY. Chicago. 8; New York. 3. 8t. Louis, 1: Brooklyn, 0. Pittsburgh, 5. Boston, 3 Cincinnati, 3; Philadelphia. 2. P Z “uoIsUIUSEM -~ -purusq sawen e -=-08%0140 ~ puseano ——uows Tindiapriud 18 --peuupuy — T L e, Loy LU ~udingsiig | |Esenscaaggy ~amwquadIag ~=-puyaq I 8/11112/10/14180 10115012 3| ---usoorg 9 1 = SlE= =l 5IalE EE R at Wash., hi. at Wash.. 3:15. Chi | 8. L. at New York. St. | Detroit at Boston. Cleveland at Phila. Experts Hold Training Grind May “Crack” Baer Still Hates It—Dempsey, Who Picked Him to Win, Sees Sad Workout, Flees Camp. ting down to business once called for something special. Buddy Baer has gone native .. . He marches around Speculator with a ferocious looking hunting knife dangling from his belt ., . . Willie McGee, Max’s colored sparring partner, was scared out of his wits when he encountered a bear while doing an early-morning road jaunt the other day . ‘Willie dashed back to camp in nothing flat. Judith Allen denies she will split with Crooner Jack Derl—even if he can't fight . . ., The punches he took during his boxing days have left Artie McGovern almost com- pletely deaf . .. CUff Montgomery, Columbia’s Rose Bowl captain, whose pro debut at Brooklyn was accompanied by & fanfare of trume GAMES TODAY. GAMES TOMORROW. New York at_Chicago. New York at Chicago. | Bkin. at 8t. L. (2 Bkin. at St. Louls. Phila. at Cinci Phila. at Cincinnati. Boston at Pittsburgh. Boston at Pittsburgh. pets, is in the minors now . . . He's playing with the Orange (N. J.) Tornadoes this year . . . John Roxborough and Julian Black, who swore they wouldn't drink for six months if Joe Louis knocked out King Levinsky in one heat, are breaking training rules. Down in North Carolina, where less than 1 per cent of the popu- lation is foreign born, State Col- lege’s foot ball line-up will include such good old Anglo-Saxon names as Farfala, Mastrolia, Siniscalchi, Pjlosenos, Berlinski, Rhyneska and Kuxma . . . Three cheers for the alumni . . . But the best foot ball player on the squad is Everett (Git Along, Litile Doggie) Robinson, & hard-riding cowboy from Wallace, L% { what they think of Louis, boxing's | the Baer-Louis fight will draw a mil- lion dollars. Let's get back to Max. After re- sembling a world-beater in one public workaut, he looked perfectly dreadful in the next. That was the day when a section of the grandstand collapsed and a dozen people were injured. Max used this as an alibi. “You noticed I didn’t look so good today,” he said. “It was on account of that grandstand. I was so worried about the people getting hurt that I couldn’t concentrate on my sparring partners.” But Max's sparring partners con- centrated on him. Even before the collapse of the grandstand they were | hitting him at will. . Afterward they hit him about 5,000,000 times. Max didn't like it. He became so annoyed with Willle McGee, his Negro part- ner, that he began to rough him, clubbing Willie on the back of the (Copyright. 1935. by the North American Newspaper Alliance. Inc.) e THOMAS TO RACE HERE | Noted Singer to Drive Myne in President's Cup Regatta. John Charles Thomas, noted bari- tone, has entered his speed boat, Myne, in the President’s Cup Regatta, to be held on the Potomac September 28-29, according to an announcement by L. | Gordon Leech, chairman of the Race | Committee. Victorious in many Chesapeake Bay |regattas this Summer. Thomas will | | race for the Mexican trophy, & som- fhrero de charro in pure silver. Mrs. | | Jack Rutherford, wife of a former | President’s Cup winner, will accom- | pany Thomas as a mechanic. BN R e I'll kill him.” | Blackburn Trying to Teach Him Craft He Employed By the Associated Press. OMPTON LAKES. N. J. Sep- P coach and trainer of Joe Louis and a veteran of 325 the art feinting, a science which the old-timers declare is a lost art. in his fighting days, donned the gloves with Louis in secret yesterday, at- false signals to an opponent, make him drop his guard for a blow in the Scribes were told that Louis would not box, but on sauntering down by thud of gloves and the animated words of Blackburn as he drove home a in Ring Years Ago. tember 17.—Jack Blackburn, fights, is trying to teach his pupil Blackburn, not as nimble as he was tempting to show him how to give stomach and then get it in the head. the indoor gymnasium they heard the point. Dixon Gives Assistance. '[‘HE elevated Leonard Dixon, said to be the tallest heavyweight in the ring, was there, too. He was there for the purpose of permitting prac- tical application of Blackburn's the- I think I'l pull a bad | said before about other fights, but!ories, the latter having gone by the stage when he enjoys standing up be- fore the lethal punching of the Brown | Bomber. The boxing instructions followed a showing. also private, of the Baer- Carnera moving pictures. during which the passive Louis sat like a sphinx, drinking in knowledge from the pi tures and the words of Blackburn which he hopes will aid him in bla ing Max Baer out of the heavyweight scene on September 24. | That was the only work Louis did vesterday and he did it with the prospect of enjoying his favorite past- time today, sleeping. He weigh: 7 vesterday, approximately the at which he will enter Stadium ring, and Blackburn has no | intention of training him down too fine. Braddock to Look On. HE WILL resume boxing tomorrow and among the spectators we expected to be a man who will watch him with more than passing interest James J. Braddock, the Cinderella Kid and the champion, signified hi | intention of watching the battler he may have to face with his champion- ship at stake. Dr. William Walker, representing the State Athletic Commission wes due to examine Louis on Friday, afte: examining Baer at his camp in Spec- ulator, o I R e~ FLORSHEIM SHOES —But Only By Wearing Them Can You Disc Feeture Arch Styles $10 Most Florsheim Styles, 8.75 BiVE you: comfort you never over the Everlasting Comfort of the FLORSHEIM FEETURE ARCH The human arch is a miracle of mechanics. With every step hundreds of tiny bones move in perfect harmony—and upon this delicate mechanism rests the entire weight of your body. The Florsheim Feeture Arch is designed and built to flex with every movement of the foot yet to remain rigid when you’re standing.. It’s an arch that actually walks like a man, affording complete and perfect comfort at all times. Try a pair of Florsheim Shoes with Feeture Arch —they’ll strengthen weakened arches and preserve the strength of normal ones. They’ll Men’s Shops 14th & G 7th & K *Open Evenings *3212 14th

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