Evening Star Newspaper, November 24, 1936, Page 35

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- [Cswomsnens | @he “~blocked punt and added three other WASHINGTON, D. Foening Shae WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1936. * Classified Ads PAGE C—1 G.W.-W.Va.Aerial Battle Looms : Minnesota AgainA. P. Grid Leader & Each Has Been Weak in Air Defense, However—Ap- pear Nicely Matched. 'O matter how persistently par- tisan followers hope, neither team in Thursday's George ‘Washington-West Virginia foot ball game at Griffith Stadium figures to enjoy a decided edge. Nothing in past performances, current praccicel‘ reports and mere guesswork by ob- servers indicates the battle to be any- | thing other than an evenly-contested | affair in which breaks of the game ! may prove decisive. | In an examination cf past perform- ances 1t is found that both teams have | displayed strong aerial attacks and | somewhat weak aerial defenses. Hence | if the game develops into a forward- passing flurry no one should seem sur- prised. George Washington hasn't yielded a single touchdown through its line, but has given up four touch- downs through the air, while its Thurs- day opponent has been scored on by passing much more than by rushing and at times has looked worse than mediocre in trying to stop enemy aerials. Each team can thank its passing at- tack for a lot of its success this year. West Virginia’s celebrated Kelly Moan, a “chucker” of exceptional ability, pulled the Western Maryland game out of the fire for his team by tossing three touchdown passes in the ‘last quarter. He was chiefiy responsible with his strong right arm for West Virginia's 40-6 triumph over Cincin- nati, a team that held Georgetown to a 6-0 score. Again, it was Moan who led the Mountaineers to victories by passing over Washington and Lee, West Virginia Wesleyan and Centre College. \ Colonials Turn Trick, Too. | EORGE WASHINGTON, with Joey ‘ ? Kaufman in the chief passing | role, beat Arkansas and Wake Forest | with aerials in two of its major vic- tories. Even in its only defeat, the | Buff and Blue threatened the con- quering Rice Institute team by taking to the air lanes, scoring its lone touch- down on a heave from Kaufman to Pete Yurwitz. But pass defense lapses caused G. W. to lose to Rice ands West Vir- ginia to drop a game to Western Re- serve. Pittsburgh was too strong for West Virginia, both in passing and rushing, but was the only team able consistently to penetrate the Moun- taineer line Georgetown, the third team to beat the Mountaineers, scored on a pass following recovery of a touchdowns on pass interceptions in | the fourth period. On the ground the teams appear evenly matched, with West Virginia holdinga slight advantage in weight, especially in the line. So if they COLONIALS’ CAP’N KUTCH. S HOW AM 1 DO-EEN’ KUTCH? How Zey NEED e AH, My BRRVE MON Dy COMRADES ... FU. YesTe AM Een ZE YESTERDAY 1 L AMCenTeg, ME To maKE ToOocH DO WNs ! 4, HIs BELGIAN ACCEN / IS RESPONSIBLE L /FOR HIS NICKNAME.... GENERALS, TERPS DETERMINEDFOE Both Have Big Reasons for Wanting Victory Badly in Baltimore Game. \WO determined teams will meet when Maryland takes on Washington and Lee in the Baltimore Stadium Thursday for the first meeting of these elevens in the Monumental City. Maryland, after losing tough games to V. M. I. and Georgetown, is deter- mined to make the Generals suffer, while the latter, with an even break in eight games tlis. year, is eager to fin- ish on the right side of the ledger. Then, too. there still is another with each having won five of the past E3 -".\—»' =5 ¢4 A, A VICTIm OF Two SEASONs oF INUURIES, ,,, KAVALIER.... ~---RETIRING CAPTAIN OF GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITYS TEAM....WHO HAS RECOVERED SUFFICIENTLY FROM CRACK-UPS TOTAKE AN ACTIVE PART IN THE 7 TURKEY-DAY GAME AGAINST WEST VIRGINIA......c00 < | INGRAM BIG NAVY Drop-Kicking Skill as Well BY GRANTLAND RICE. ' ARRY MEHRE, Geofgia's able coach, rates Louisiana State one of the strongest teams he has seen in several years. “They are easily on a par with the | Alabama team of 1934 that beat Stan- ford,” he said, “and possibly a little better balanced in all-around speed | and power. L. S. U. has 24 men who | angle that makes both anxious for a | are 6 feet or over, who weigh 190 | | victory. It will be their twelfth meet- | pounds or better. Stewart is one of THE SPORTLIGHT C(;orgia Grid Coach Willing to Back L. S. U. Against Any Team in Country. The Hard-Luck Team. AN into Red Blaik, Harry Eliinger, Joe Donchess and Andy Gustaf- as Running Add Greatly to Middies’ Hopes. NNAPOLIS, November 24.—As A the Navy team enters its clos- i great objective, Saturday's clash with the Army eleven in Phila- ther to the front as the chiei threat to the Army, both as a ball carrier and Special Dispatch to The Star. ing days of preparation for its delphia, Young Bill Ingram comes fur- drop-kicker. In practice last week THREAT FOR ARMY BY I HAIGRTY |Poll Makes L. S. U. Second, Drops Northwestern to i Seventh Place. BY ALAN GOULD, Associated Press Sports Editor. EW YORK, November 24— Minnesota's gophers are right back where they started—at the top of America’s collegiate foot ball heap. Ballots in the sixth or semi-final ranking poll conducted by the Asso- ciated Press restored Minnesota to first place today after trailing North- western for three straight weeks. The assist is credited to Notre | Dame, which achieved what Minne- | sota failed to accomplish by wallop- ing the sluggish Wildcats in their final game. Northwestern thereby dropped abruptly to seventh place in this week's “top 10” despite the team’s otherwise all-conquering record. ‘The two leading aggregations of the deep South, Louisiana State and Ala- bama, movd up into second and third place on a wave of voting support. They face final tests this week against Tulane and Vanderbilt, respectively, with Rose Bowl and Sugar Bowl in- vitations at. stake. Gophers Picked by 30 of 42. INNESOTA, receiving 30 of a pos- | sible 42 votes for first place. ac- | cumulated 391 poin.s of a maximum possibility of 420. Among the ex- perts contributing to the country-wide sampling of opinion, 10 listed Loui- | siana State at the top. Onme first- place vote went to Notre Dame and one to Santa Clara, the only major college club still unbeaten and untied Here is the tabulation of this week’s poll, based on a 10-9- 6-5-4-3-2-1 system for point scorin First 10. Points. Points. | 1. Minnesota_ 391 6.U. of Wash. 191 | 2.L. 8. U..._ 338 7.N'western. 151 . Alabama__ 281 8.Fordham.. 129 | Pittsburgh. 275 9. Notre Dame 128 | . S'nta Clara 201 10. Nebraska.. 50 Second 10. 44 16. Yale. 11. Duke . Duquesne._ . Penn..____. 24 18. Tex. Chris.. . Dartmouth. 19 19. Tulane. 15. Marquette_. 15 20. Wash. State. 6‘ Marquette, whose winning streak | up. but the boys tried to wring a fight was broken by Duquesne, and Pennsyl- | venia, which did not play, dropped out of the “top 10" to make room for —By JIM BERRYMAN. THE“] BES]’ ]’EAM i npopp , N G OFF Ytan. Boxing Steps Backward . . . And Upward. ton finds itself approximately where it started and probably better off for it. Hobo Williams and Buddy Scott, a pair of nonentities out- side of the District's little cloistered world of fisticuffing, drew nearly 1,500 customers last night to pack Turner’s Arena and register the first profit of the indoor season. Shades of Gal- lagher vs. Lamar . . . and Frankie De Angelo vs. Billy Landers. Local boxing has been something like the case of Peter Pan. It has never grown up much, probably because its promoters and matchmakers never have grown. On a niggardly scale, es- pecially indoors, they have tried to go “big time” without possessing the requisites and the business has curdled. Now boxing in this bailiwick seems to be back in a class as humble as its cradles at Kenil- worth and Fort Washington and Portner’s Arena. Actually there was nothing startling in Williams and Scott packing a little local arena, for the whole history of boxing in this neck of the woods is re- HIRTY-ONE months old today, I legalized boxing in Washing- plete with similar instances of no-| Mascia helped Washington get off to a bad start in legalized boxing two years ago in the abandoned American Legion arena and was thrown out of the ring. So they brought him back, two years older and wiser in the ways of being a staller. One-third of the fans whe watched Buddy Scott fight his first main bout last night turned out to see his brother Howard, who happens to be ranked among the 10 best lightweights, such as they are, of the land. Now, years after the doors of Kenil- worth’s barn and the Portner brewery | have been closed to boxing, they are | gotng back to the old die, and tem- porarily, going to stop trying to cram | down washed-up “name"” fighters down the throats of too few fight fans to make importing anything else worth ‘while. Mann Knew His Scope. OLDIE AHEARN, who does the matchmaking now, helped to set the pattern he belatedly is copying | with his newly announced policy of | featuring club fighters. Ten years bodies outdrawing the somebodies of | *80 Ahearn fought Al Foreman (for the racket. It was the rule rather than | 60-0dd seconds, anyway) and had the exception, and no particular lellci-“ trouble getting into the Kenilworth tation of anybody connected with the | arena for the people who wanted to matchmaking is in order. That fight | 18V it on the line. Heinie Miller, then last night, strictly on the alley-brawl & matchmaker, cleverly built up sec« side, practically had to make money. Ond-rate fighters and equally as clev~ Nothing else Turner’s has offered did. °rly knocked them down as a sacri- fice to a new sensation when the old was on the wane. Frankie Mann never won any medals for his matchmaking, but he knew his limited scope, and wherever he went—Fort Myer, Washington Barracks and Portner’s—he entered the fig- ures on his ledger in black ink. Portner’s was no bigger than Turn- er's Arena, but in a couple seasons Alexandria citizens succeeded in rais- (See POPPING OFF, Page C-2.) Going Back to Old Die. | AMONG (he dismal flops was a waltz by Johnny Jadick and Jimmy Leto. a pair of “names” among welterweights. Jadick, the more illus- tious of the pair, definitely was washed out of him, anyway, and failed. Wasn't there an odor of camembert that| night? Another was the Howard Scott- Pete Mascia thing, which was worse. | son of the Dartmouth coaching staff. “This Dartmouth team.” said Blaik, | “is one of the best I've seen—and the most unlucky. Ray is the best center I've seen in years. The team was well-balanced. But so was the tough luck they ran against.” This happens to be true. Dart- and this Ingram is doing better Lhani ever in both lines. | With teams apparently so well| matched as the Army and Navy it would not be surprising if Ingrlmi | should get a chance to break a dead- lock by a try for field goal, just as Slade Cutter, big Navy tackle did in | | Notre Dame and Nebraska, two of last Saturday’s big winners. Fordham, tied unexpectedly by Georgia, fell to eighth | place after three straight weeks at No. 3. L. S. U. Climbs Steadily. SINCE the Associated Press began its weekly rating poll, in mid-October, | ing as Southern Conference rivals, the best centers I've seen in a long He's a fast giant, around 6 feet | time. | mouth outplayed Holy Cross, came within an inch of scoring and then | lost on a long run interception near the game of 1934, when his field goal = only four teams have been in the top from placement accounted for all the Sih eosey wodk. Tiuy aos Miont- points. sota, Northwestern, Pittsburgh and don't deviate from past performances | §3Mes With last year's clash at College | ¢ in height, welghing 215 or more. | ;" Q1 0 08 W, (RAFCPHCE MO ‘Thursday's rivals should do each other | little damage by battering tactics. | The Colonials have been outweighed | in the line in a majority of their games, but have managed through | sheer determination and fight to bal- ance the scales. Nothing indicates they will show less fight Thursday afternoon. Prominent in West Virginia's for- ward wall are Babe Barna and Charlie Eller, ends; Sam Atty, 206-pound | guard; Paul Hodges, 200-pound tackle, and Oley Hedrick, 185-pound center. Eller and Hedrick are great defensive | players. Lively G. W. Program. 'HE Mountaineers will arrive here at 5 o'clock tomorrow afternoon at about the time George Washing- ton’s alumni homecoming program will be in full swing. The lads from Morgantown will hustle out to Grif- fith Stadium for a final practice and then repair to their headquarters at the Willard Hotel. They will be ac- | companied by 500 or more home State | rooters, who have hired a special train. | George Washington's homecoming program is listed to open at 11 o'clock tomorrow morning, when the old grads will join students and school officials | in the first of three “pep” rallies in- cident to the game. This and a sec- ond rally scheduled for 4:45 p.m. will be held in the university yard at ‘Twenty-first and G streets northwest. ‘The third “pep” meeting will be staged at the Rialto Theater, starting at 11 pm., and will be embellished with musical entertainment by the G. W. band and glee clubs and a movie pro- gram, including slow motion pictures of the G. W.-Rice game played at Houston last month. At 4 o'clock tomorrow afternoon ‘women graduates will be given a tea and reception in Strong Hall, the uni- versity’s new women's dormitory lo- cated on the .outhwest corner of ‘Twenty-first and G streets. One hour later the entire university will stop functioning while dedicatory exercises are conducted for the new social sci- ence hall on G street near Twentieth. ‘The street will be closed to vehicular traffic. President Cloyd Heck Marvin, Head Foot Ball Coach Jim Pixlee and other Colonial notables, will participate in the various ceremonies. Coach Trusty ‘Tallman of West Virginia has been invited to speak at the theater rally. Park a scoreless affair. Dunlap Calls Signals. ASHINGTON AND LEE has a big, heavy line which is mainly vet- eran and fine ba which Sophomore Don Dunlap, former Central High gridder, calls the signals. Wilton Sample, 200-pound fullback, who has scored 43 points this year: Preston Moore, another veteran and triple-threater, and Bobby Long. rockie blocking back, complete the first four. Dunlap is the team’s best passer. The teams appear so well matched that Bill Guckeyson may prove the balance of power. Outside of him, the Generals are just as well equip- ped for ball toting as the Terps and are better fixed with line reserves, as have been all of Maryland’s foes this year. Guesses at Terp Plays. LEXINGTON, Va., November 24 (#). —*“All we know is what we have read in the papers.” That was what Coach Tilson said as he sent his Washington and Lee squad against what he thought might be plays that Maryland would use Thanksgiving day in Balti- more. The Generals were drilled for 30 minutes yesterday against Maryland offense based on newspaper reports and scouting reports from last year. The Generals and Maryland have a non-scouting agreement. So the teams will face with little knowledge of the other’s offensive. The Generals spent the rest of their practice session polishing up their own plays, High Bear Kicks Upset Stanford BY JAMES PHELAN, Washington Coach. SEATI'LE. Wash., November 24. —1In seeking a solution to Cali- fornia’s victory over Stanford last Saturday one must consider the element of kicking. because Cali- fornia’s wel'-placed, hizh punts stopped Coffi- on his rcturn . California won, not because of a superior offense, but beccuse of close checking defense, and per- haps the Stanford scouts had over- looked the fact that Chapman was always a dangerous offensive threat and passes should not be thrown in his territory. eld quartet for| Tinsley is a really great end. Back of a big, quick moving line, they have all | the backs anybody wants. I'll take | 'em against any team in the country. “How about Minnesota?” I asked. | “I haven’t seen Minnesota.” Mehre said. “but they must be just abcut as good. Any team can have an off day and lose. “But a téam that can lose a tough one and then pile up 102 points to 0 against Iowa, Mich- igan and Wisconsin must have lenty. “TI'll say again they’d need plenty to beat L. 8. U. Tinsley, Rohm, Stewart, Coffee, Crass, Milner and Mihalic are all close to all-America country. These seven stars average 6 feet 1 in height and 200 in weight. And there are others — yes, many others.” Changing Teams. “TEAMS change a lot as the season advances” Mehre said. “Notre Dame has come a long way since that | Pittsburgh game. Tennessee is now | one of the best, after a bad start. Look how far Harvard has moved up since the Army game. California is | another that today is entirely different from her October strength. The Georgia team that met Ford- ham was far better than the team that was beaten, 46 to 0, by Tennessee. “Injuries, sickness and other ailments never gave us a chance to get back on our feet until the Florida game. We never. had the reserves to plug the . gaps.” Harry Mehre's Georgia teams have been rattlesnake venom for Northern teams for the last 10 years, including some four or five consecutivé vic- tories over Yale. They've all had spirit and they've all been smart. Considering her lack of ruervej strength and backfield weight, you | can pass the cherry blossoms to Yale this season. Facing Cornell, Penn- | syivania, Navy, Rutgers, Darimouth, Brown, Princeion and Harvard with | only one defeat is top tribute to Pond, | | Neale and company—also to Messrs. Larry Kelly and Clint Frank. You can slip the same blossom wreath to Harlow and Harvard for holding the combined Princeton-Yale scores to 28 to 27 after coming on from nowhere. losing to Yale, after outplaying El, on a pass penalty, and then getting a tie with Princeton on the same penalty, which Dartmouth at least figures was undeserved. At any rate, Red Blatk and staff gave Dartmouth one of her best all- | season teams in a stormy Autumn. After Minnesota. ' ID you ever notice,” commented a Western coach, “what happens to a foot ball team after it meets Min- nesota? It isn't very good after that. Nebraska was never quite the same again. Michigan took a big drop, and Northwestern had little left.” “What's the answer?” I asked. “The amount of power thrown against you. Their blocking and tackling are both terrific. Big, fast men keep coming in, and, when the game’s over, almost every man on your squad has taken a heavy battering. “Not that Minnesota plays rough foot ball. It's merely hard foot ball, hard all the way through. It has been that way for the last three years, which helps to account for 24 victories | in 25 starts. It takes a lot of foot ball to pile up that count, figuring in the schedule Minnesota plays.” About Sants Clara. "WHAT about this Santa Clara team?” I asked a scout from the Far West. “A good, strong, well balanced team,” he said. “It is a’team of even strength in all departments, with Nello Falaschi, at quarter, one of the best on the Coast. He is probably the best blocking back in the country. Her schedule hasn't been any too tough, but Santa Clara is still a hard team for anybody to beat, with fine defen- sive strength and backfield smarte “What about Washington and Wash- ington State this week?” we asked. “A tough game for Washington, which is slightly the better team. Phe- lan has several stars in Starcevich at guard, Haines and Cain, but Washing=- ton State bas Ed Goddard, also a star, and Washington State is ready to shoot all she has for that Rose Bowl assignment. Or a chance for it, any- way.” ‘Copyright. 1936, by the North America® Newspaper Alliance, Inc.) Braddock to Get Big Sum for “Airing” His Life Starts Broadcast December 1—Being Syracuse Pilot Leads to Better Things. BY EDDIE BRIETZ, Associateo Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, November 24.— N Jimmy Braddock goes on the air December 1, under a year’s contract calling for $1,200 a week . . . The program will dramatize the fairy tale story of his life . . Jimmy Thomson consistently outdrove Denny Shute 60 and 70 yards, but Shute won the P. G. A. championship, tough- est of them all . . . proving Bobby Jones spoke a mouthful when he sald it's the game around the greens that counts . . . Base ball men are packing up for the minor league pow-wow at Montreal next . month . . . Coach Steve Owen got so angry when a Giant pass failed to click Sunday that he almost sprained an ankle stamping his foot. If you want to get along in the world, just get a job managing the Syracuse ball club . . . Ex-star pilots are doing all right for them- selves . . . Frank Shaughnessy, ‘31, is president of the Initernational League . . Burt Shotton, '26, now pilots Columbus . . . Hi Myers, '35, is bank president, and Bill d to & wrestling match, Gov. Allred made him an honorary member of the famous Texas Rangers . .. Old Rajah Hornsby rates 100 per cent with the new owner of the St. Louis Browns . . . Youw'll have to look a long time before you'll fird a smarter fighter than Fravkie Kiick, the San Francisco veteran . . . Cor- respondents who usually know what they're talking about say the Southern Conference’s Graham plan is headed for the rocks, sure as shooting . . . Cornell is the Eastern team to watch next sea- son . . . Leo Durocher and Joe Medwick of the St. Louis gas housers are around town. * One paper says Jimmy McLar- nin has more dough salted away than any other fighter or ex- fighter except Jack ‘Dempsey . . . How about Gene Tunney? . . . He's not exactly flat, you know ... Neither 1s Jack Sharkey .. . The 1936 Princetons don't even look itke cousins of last year’s team . . . Barney Ross is expected to hurdle Izzy Jannazzo Friday night... Barney is a 3-to-1 shot now and ‘may-be higher at post time unless a lot of Jannazeo money shows up .. The newspaper men will miss Yale's Larry Kelley . . . Ho was foot ball's No. 1 copy furnisher this season. ¢ Shows He’s in Form. INGRAM has been drop-kicking for points after touchdown with great regularity this season and in the Notre Dame game scored all the points by kicking a field goal. In practice Sat- urday, Ingram scored twice in this way against “B” squad, both from substan- tial distances. Ingram's running effectiveness is shown by the fact that he has gained a total of 1,276 yards this year, running from scrimmage and on runbacks. He carried the ball 112 times, making an average gain of 11.3 yards. This total, it is believed, established an all-time Navy record. Also, Ingram is prac- tically fumbleless. Offers Rival for Meyer. TB! Navy, of course, is heavily on this son of a Navy captain as an offset to the Army's flash, Monk Meyer, son of a colonel of that service. Both will be speciglly watched by the opposing teams. The Navy, under Tom Hamilton and his aides, also is working on the “spread” plays, which were a feature last year, with a team trained spe- cially in these formations. The unex- pected return of Tom Edwards and Bill Mason from the hospital list has fa- cilitated work along these lines, as they were the principal backs on the “spread” team last year. There is no special team for these plays this year, however, all the players being drilled in certain plays of this kind in addi- tion to those from the regular forma- tion. Holding Pep Meetings. 'UGE signs and cartoons appealing to Navy to defeat its chief grid- iron foe are hanging in Bancroft Hall, and the regiment is holding pep meet- ings nightly preparing for the game. The Middy team leaves for Phila- delphia Thursday night and will take a light workout Priday in the Munici- pal Stadium. Sports lirogram For Local Fans TODAY. Foot Ball. Gonzaga vs. Western, Western « Stadium, 3:15. TOMORROW. ‘Boxing. Gene Buffalo vs. Lambertine Williams, 10 rounds, feature bout, all-colered card, Turner’s Arena, 8:30. THURSDAY. Foot Ball. George Washington vs. West Vir- ginia, Grifith Stadium, 2. Maryland vs. Washington-Lee, Baltimore, Md., 2:30. American University vs. Hamp- den-Sydney, Farmville, Va. Lincoln vs. Howard, Howard Sta- dium, 2. ' ‘Washington-Lee High us. George ‘Washington High, Ballston, Va., 10. Central vs. Newport News High, Newport News, Va. ‘Washington. | Louisiana Stafe is the only team on the list to show a steady upward curve since the rankings began The Tigers’ week-by-week position: 12-8-7-7-. | The see-saw contest for West Coast | leadership finds Santa Clara a few | points above Washington for the sec- ond time in three weeks. Texas Christian, on the basis of this week’s poll. goes to the head of the Southwest Conference class. but the champion- ship has not been decided. | CADETS STRIVING TO REGAIN “EDGE” Physically Fit Again, but Blocking and Tackling Worries Davidson. B> the Associated Press. EST POINT, N. Y., Novem- | ber 24—Gar Davidson, { Army’s head coach, has | two worries as the annual | battle with Navy draws near. One is that his team, though fully which caused trouble in midseason, has not regained the form shown in early season. The other is that the blocking and tackling are not what they should be. Davidson pointed out yesterday that only four days of practice were left in which the squad could regain its “edge.” As for the blocking and tackling, he wants the players to de- vote every possible minute to efforts to improve their work. If the cadets bring their funda- mental performances up to the re- quired standard, they should be able to handle Navy's attack, for the coach has given them intensive work on the scouts. e QUINTS IN LOOP GAMES | N. B. M. and Clover Win Openers in Southeast Circuit. With three more games scheduled for the Southeast Community Center Basket Ball League tonight, combat- ants were hoping to duplicate the achievements of the Northeast Busi- ness Men and Clover quintets which won in the loop’s opening games last night. Play takes place in the Hine Junior High School gymnasium. ‘Tonight's program gets under way at 7:15 o'clock with the Shamrock Clean- ers meeting Congress Heights, followed an hour later by the Marvins-O'Don- nell's game and concluded at 9:15 witn the Trojans-Bovello Plumbers fray. Northeast Business Men pulled a real thriller in last night's opener, nosing out Clark’s Service Station, 16-14. The Clovers had a much easier time, disposing of the Navy Yard five, 26-15. GRID TILT WANTED. An unlimited or &o-mmz recovered from the influenza attacks | defense against the plays reported by ‘Night Life’ Florsheims Distinction afoot, when you don “tux or tails.” Plain toe dress oxfords of glove-fitting patent leather or supple, dull b some, correct! Florshe something” in style and lack calf . . . neat, hand- im gives you that “extra quality. 8.75 OTHER HAHN DRESS SHOES, 3.95 and 5.50 "SPATS . . . Imported Church’s Boxcloth 3.50 Other Spats, 1.00 and 1.95 SILK HOSE FOR DRESS______35¢ to 1.00 HAHN MEN’S SHOPS—14th & G @ 7th G K @ 3212 14th

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