The evening world. Newspaper, January 28, 1911, Page 9

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COLLEGE HOCKEY TITLE AT STAKE WOLGAST THREW UP JOB, ENTERED RING AND MADE FORTUNE FOR HIS FAMILY Five Years Ago Lightweight Champion Was a Poor Apprentice—Built a Home for Father and Mother and Now + Has $45,000 in the Bank. BY VINCENT TREANOR. D WOLGAST, lightweight champion of the world, is probably the A most remarkable as well as the most picturesque figure-in the boxing game to-day. Five years ago he was a nonenity in a lit- tle Michigan village, struggling along on an apprentice’s wages, his family w up his job and entered the ring. in want. He th has done: Won the lights Put $45,000 in the bank. Bought a 260-acre farm and stocked it, Built three houses in his native city. Bought Up to five years ago W tackled avery job on the ¢ little success. He had been a boot- black, a farmer, a baker, a blacksmith, @ teamster, a cigarmaker and ‘even a head cook in a lumber camp. He was most a full-fledged cigarmaker, hay- ing but three months more of appren- ticeship to serve, when te threw up his Job and took to the boxing game. All this time Wolgast, as he says himself, had been “a crazy bug, just wandering around.” Ploughs His Own Field, To-day Wolgast, only twenty-two, 1s well off, a prosperous farmer, owner of rich producing iand which he p $5,500 automobile. the corn, potatoes and wheat for the mar- ket and talke crops as glibly and in- telligently as he talks fight, In addi- tion to the products of the ground, he buys and sells live stock and conducts @ money-making horse-trading bust- ness. Right now on the farm up in Cadillac, Mich. he has 12 head o! sheep, 70 head of hogs, 87 milch cow: and 27 horses, not to mention hundreds of chickens, turkeys and geese. “I'd rather be up on any place thet I know of, tle fighter to-da: there than anywhere else, and when- ever I am tired travelling and fighting, I go back and rest up farming. Ito I get real re and I ¢ he farm than sald the lit- too. planning now to have six or se {Jal fights in February and March, so that | Screw I'l get back to the farm in time to do|* the plou Likes His Automobil it all myself b “Ye use I'm the if rin the family e The if there are a I ta lot of | Wolgast fun out+ot my auto too, after 1{ him, y work around the I run the car myself, wauty, too, seventy ) finish sald. ower | It and she can up home." will Wolgast 1s the fourth child nea ble] Wole family of ten, all allve and he Both his parents are Hving, too. He has ie three sisters younger than himself and | 1” two kid ers. baby” eight ye never had m nt to the elgh but he will permit the other young- stérs to suffer from lack of proper edu- cation, “I want my young brothers and ters to get a good start in life and apend all the money [ can earn to glve| and the b ib to them,” he sald he ‘i (ions—Bat Bought Girls a Piano, He positively “T have bought the girls a plano for! eave he can beat $700 and they're all taking-lessons. I'm | tin, is what he ight championship of the world. Builta home for his mother, father and nine brothers and sisters. self pretty well. monds as Sig as lumps of sugar. has two of which he ts very proud. One Welghs 64 carats and the other nine. He wears them on every possible occa- sion, “and outeide hi is ra which he swings nattlly, Wolgast Is at Home. Wotgast {s very much at home tn hi Fernswood training quarters. farmiike surroundings and. the old was built «i as two centuries of his- torical connections. man Hutt, dia- training quarters fash years ago and who has bgen four times a member of the Pennsylvania State Legislature, a boxer himself of years ago, who stil takes a healthy interest Hutt has a fine, well which he “had built for his own use, and though he has passed the forty ‘mark clses appointed with the glove: bag. He gets a lot of fun out of his and it's not etretch- y he can still “go as Wolgast says. There wasn't much chance to get a good line on Wolgast's style in his bout with Hatt, the bouts with Wolg: ing the truth to some,” but he displa: good footwork, a heavy w ability to get away from h leads. ponaily manages and tills. He = the game. Mr. inside work is very effective, can have more fun |, In action Wolgast hag a sneer on his Fret that Kid McCoy in his palmy day is an expres- that almost says to the other fel- : “Gee, you have af awful nerve to behind the} be fighting me.” "t let anything inter-| One punch that seems to be Wolgast’s fere with that part of my life, I am | specialty ts a doubte left hand hook and a reminder of Kid might have envied. McCoy's cork- to the face then draws it back @ couple of . Jaw in kni kout fashion, 110-pound Hutt every time he landed tt. Arm Not Worrying Him. on the wrist’ and the elbow, is easily felt. @ real fight will tell how good said the little champion. is the first test it “Only . that arm Is, some on those reads | “Knocko: st has no hard and fast set of In fact, he says he has ned but twice in his life, and then is naturally strong, ithy. | training rules. ‘ rugged f the! other fighters who owe much of their 's old, success to a clean, model life, Wolgast schooling. | likes to enjoy himself. grade,{or ale whenever | doesn’t | smokes, He drinks beer he feels like it and| it hurts him any. , and, as he says, little too much at that, Hates Nelson and Murphy. Wolgast has nothing but good will t of feelings for everybody has ever fought, Nelson and hates Nelgon, and phy. A Smusieen s eneaimmmenasin i HE EVENING Woo. I SATURDAY, JANUARY 328, NEWS OF ALL -BRANCHES- OF. SPORT Wolgast, Champion Lightweight, at Work in Field and Telling of the Snug Fortune He Has Made in Ring |Ad ga nvr tnt nn tong ne EDITED BY _. ...; ROBERT EDGREN Holmer to Sail For Match Race With Bouchard —_— the champion dis- is considered Loula Bouchard, tance runner of by all European authorities to be the best man they c have not reco they received @when the Powder the surprise thon race at first of the yea Bouchard’s backers sure that he can de- him against ms champion for # ne time early In M that distance # Holmer says anxious to run against th for the world's sail for the othe the engagement. In the Powder Hill race Holmer waa ttle and will side In time to keep ELEVEN teams will comp Trophy.in the Central Y, M. C. A Brooklyn, to-night, when MEN JUNIOR, » for the Manrique) of| |night in @ swimming meet. One of the} GOSSIP x YALE AND THE COLLEGE OF THE City of Nichol; ights Institution tank fencing rules of the Amatour Fencers’| best players on the Blue team is “Kip” League of America will have thetr first tryout. THE SWEDISH who has shown such good form in his races since arriving in thls coun-| try, has been notified that his presence | is wanted before the Registratfon Com- mittee of the Amateur Ahtlettc Union next Tuesday night at the Irivh-Amerl- can A. C. to explain why he has been changing clubs so often. If his ‘explana- tion ts not satisfactory he will be sus- pended, When Ahigren first arrived here he ran in the colors of the Oza- nam A. C.,, @ club affiliated with the Catholic Athletic League. Next he competed in just one race for them—a ten-nj affair, He then severed his connection with the Winged Fist Club and since has been running unattached. PS, THE FAVOR- FLYING FOOTST neck. THE: POLY PREP STRE Greater New York Schools b¥ its 4 feat of the Adelphi Academy team in the Adeipht Gym at Brooklyn by a score of }18 to 16, R. H. BRYSON OF INDIANAPOLIS has been re-elected President of the American Bowling Congress, and A. L.| Itary. Milwaukee has been practically |decided upon as the city where the 1912 | tournament will be held. COLUMBIA’ | the intercolles |the serfes for the championship, when{ & bug on anusic, but never could Play | testy for his behavior after thelr t]he ten-men team shot for a total of anything myself.” fellow, quick witted and has pi edge in his travels. If Piightly flattened no Picked out for anything He 1s of swarthy ¢ jawed and thic sixteen-inch | cc youngster of iimbed, well and comp low all over, be! il, He tsn't an it wa pitt, stilt 5 feet near as st got big as sc weights. he is to fi \ can A. C, of Philadelphia on Feb. 8% !and I o looks at least ten pounds bigger than| When Wo Wolkast. ~ i ,, [hie system | Hicnt now. Wolgast @oesn't welt | denied more than 1% pounds weighed in for the Bat with all his fight gloves, and even ant bathrobe, and didn't move t reat Wolgast has just started training for his Eastern campaign on‘a farm at| Fernswood, a 8\ ward- ‘tany lose trunks blg enough to es robe of a prima chance that W either 0! ed with steel, double locked, and on all | ko, four sides 1s emblazoned in big white, | fo bold letters: dvew Kandrat Ad Wolgast, Lightweight | tore ty Champion of the World, [to keen i Cadillac, Mich. the rest of the hour, "4 A complete Detective Story, in Book will be gly: Slgast's | Morrow's Sunday World (in Greater Don't miss this Great Wolgast has his name 8} across lis chest on all bis sweaters. | porn, ed that anager Tom Jones expla here was no empty pride | round bout in Pittsburg. ac Woigast is a remarkably sharp ttle} a" iixe a fool then in saying he beat| He} me because the newspaper men had dividual score of J, Bhriick is two points vote, it In the dressing room he|vetter than the former record, which think he had he/tast winter, his card being 187. ed up a lot of worldly Kknowl-| toa him so. asked me Sf I didn't beaten me, and when I sald offered to flight me all over again right | Tom Jones told him I wi dressing room fighter.” Wolgast contihued there, and sneered as h “T've often fought ance to get phy will never kny money with The only time Murphy is when T know T can piece chance to make me in Ve tight get him and knock his head off sure, ast got this trade out of became normal and again and he offers to | «Gee, about twenty het he can fight at 126 within six days. | times, He sat » only weighed 12% when he term going wth a girl for a year and foug Nelson the first tine, andl@ half now, ma battle with {getting married yet, es, hoes, |on fighting. shirt and|make a di at | money-making 133 pounds: There isn't anythin’ ng. make $1,000 easier at, 18 there Has Started Training Wolgast has about two weeks In which to work for his bout with K, Naturally, he says he'll win hampion and moreover looks I want to go right as long ag I can It's the -best | “oui! Honeymoon Trip eetneren rb of Philadelphia. |he ty the He arrived there yesterday with two | tho part, vand-| WATPSRBURY, C he wrestler, lost Jan, %8.—Zbys @ match here by to throw Peter Nogert and An- . Zoyezko Nogert in forty-two minutes fits ndrat managed ers off the mat for, phe Tigers are a strong team and | should make all the others hustle, Teams | have been known to come back, and|{n tho 20-yard dash, w yatem, but an observer couldn't help | New York). reeling that the little fellow likes him-/ Detective Story, ‘ecord, held by the was 1,870. Tho in- The prev’ versity of Row was made by A. P. Lane of Columbia BILL CARRINGTON, WHOM THE Boston Americans procured from the Holy Cross nine, declares that he will not play for that team the coming se son unless he gets the salary that was given him last year. President Taylor | doesn't think he earned his money in 1910, #0 ‘he cut a big slice off it. Carri gan, who tw the best backstop in the Ban Johnson league, declares that If Taylor doesn't agree to his terms he will stay at Le ton, Me., where he says he can have be’ ter fun running his grocery store, joined the Irish-American A. C. and| ite, won the feature event at the Oak-! land track, beating out Dareington by a| ‘ED ITS| claim on, the basketball title, of the| Langtry of Milwaukee re-elected Secre-! RIFLE TEAM BROKE| «nutes. ate record in @ match in| years ago was rated about! }number Bla!r had only reached Schmitt, who used to sport the colors of the C. C. N. ¥. IN A ONE-SIDED HOCKEY. t St. Nicholas Rink, the Stevens Prepa- ratory School defeated the De Witt Clin- ton High School by a score of 7 to 0, The Jersey lads skated better and man- aged to work well together. COL. ROBERT M, THOMPSON OF/ te of the Naval! this city, @ gradu Academy, has presented the thirteen middies who participated in the grid- fron triumph over the Army la with the date of the contest and the score. IN ONE OF THE MOST schoolboy basketball games played in Greater New York the Commerce quin-| tet defeated Richmond Hill in the Pub- ye Schools Athi League cham pio: ship tournament on the court of Irish-American A. C. by a score of % to 17, but It took them an extra period to accomplish the feat, , OF BROOKLY> was beaten by George Moore. holder ¢ the htgherun record at thr slion billiards in the national intercity AL. GARNAL ‘billiard league at Keeney's billiard academy in Brooklyn by a score of to 4. C. RESSONICO, OF THE LIGURIA A. C., won the intial run of the Flor- ence A. C. of E. R, ¢ fleld of competttors. He cove ance of four miles In twenty- ° BILLY STRONG HAS BEEN BLEC- ted captain of the football team of t High School of Commerce for this yea He beat Edward McLaughlin by one Ing 9 to 8 when the ballots Were counted, Strong was the centre of the football team last season, CORNELL HAS REFUSED TO PLAY the Harvard football! team on Nov. 1, the date offered them for next fall. They have out-of-town games with Michigan and Pennsylvania and did not feel as though they could stand three. JOHN MGRAW, THE MANAGER of the Giants, !s some bélilard player, He defeated James Blair, the Metro- politan three-cushion champlon, In tne handicap match, Blair was supposed to score 150 points to McGraw's 120, but when the latter had made his requisite Mack Back Home Alter Extended Connte Mack, the manager of the world's champion Athletics, is back home after having taken an extensive honeymoon trip through Europe with his bride, whom he married at the close of the big title series, Connie was mighty glad to get back to thts coun- try and seemed a little lost for a while when asked to talk baseball, However, the shrewd manager had this to say on the outlook of the race in the American League: snd running in the American League, even {f it fails to land a fourth flag, must be more than seriously considered, The Boston Red Sox may be contenders,” { { ny club that has won three pennants | #0-yard run. New Records Expected at Meet O: High Schoois ool Indoor cham- ‘The annual high Plonship games will take place to- at the Thirteenth Regiment Arr Sumner avenue, Brooklyn. ive hi dred entries have been John McHugh and the meet promises to sur pass that of other years. Fourteen events will be decided, four of which will be for evening higa| schools, In the one-mile run such talent as Woodcock of Manual, Baliis of Clin Lembach of Morris and Keime af Co: merce will be seen, ‘ew records are likely to be hung up + and the In the former Van Wine kle of Boys’ High and Friend of Man- al are the favourites, but they will be pushed hard by of Clinton, Riemers of Erasmus, and Trefry of Commercial, = y Rouchard at the fifteen mile mark, the Frenchman’ slower than world’s record made by Appleby when he defeated Shrubb | some years ago. ‘Newtown Leads in Race for the Basketball Title BASKETBALL STANDING. Queens Boys Will Probably ‘Carry Off Honors in the Schoolboy League. Eastern District. N spite of all the talk going around boy athletic circles that the n District has the P, basketball champlonship cinched, New- | the medals and will In winning out un- disqualifications thelr standing their star forward Richmond’ Hill fall al set of gold cuff links, suitably inscribed | have little trouble the first since 1906, newcomer on the Fifty-ninth street five, to turn the trick on a diMeult one hand <CITING | shooting foule taken on Goldt He shot elght bmemerce's. 1 Stuyvesant game. ibers's account has been the offictals of the Public but ft is true the seas on ¢ Schoolboy basket ball fans. were eur- prised to see two old-time high school Players officiating | Schools Athletic Leagu the Stuyvesant~ and Dowling, § has been declared a ern District would be | but he has not; THE org ee Tompeet metinst An love next Tues- DeWitt Clinton and nmerce meet at 21 from a large | School of Ce 4 tho] WM. , FAVERS: 1AM oi THE FAUN | sient Corps, il | mances Newtown their season with a v © will be between Ei: us Hall at the Cannan, Comedy 4g, fis, WILLIAM, Ce ae # irasmus gym ith beh way & Wi ‘WatTo'Day 2.0. Stuyvesant's defeat at the hands of i * The fs mblers «en, DeWitt Clinton on Thursday night was et wee 16 Years at This A juress \j cans Something GO TO REMEY’S toLearn to Dance gaping Ele MARRIAGE A theante’ a THEDEEPP! MAJESTIC#Y:: 61 SS WAY. OWNEAST! 2 CIRCLE. Wivay i MRS, LESLIE Cantu WEST END baat ne Matinee'ro- Day, free) ‘individual, instruction Beginners Any Tims “iy :\) be Yemiys® 1892» § sc bral do it (5481) fend for Large Free Booklets, a ure Would you wash your| THE NEW hands in the same water W, dala rc si ve REPUBLIC REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK F THE TWO ORPHANS “Barry of Haliyin | VALERRA SURATT Why then sacrifice your stained Shavin er for the Seale Sterilized Cup, Brus Them's White El 4 Broudway, te of weave | at me Permitted Leader. of the Netioes League Says Fred Merkle Is the) Type of Man Needed to Make Decisions. Y BOZEMAN BULGER, T™ first qualification for an at pire, according to President Tom | Lynch, of the National League, {a sand, grit, nerve or whatever you may be ploased to call that quality thet | ermables a man to stand up and look you In the eye and tell you to go to~ weil, every one knows how the cowboy expressed ity Y: said Mr. Lynch, “Sand and | grit are of more importance ta picking out an umpire than judgment. Any man who does ,not get nervous hi good judgment on a play. If the man In the grandstand gets at the right angie he can see a play ax well an the umpire. But there ts a lot of difference | between sitting in the grandstand and passing on a clone play and standing on the diamond and doing it. The crowd 1s at an umpire like a pack of wolves, but to be a good one he must ‘shake Public opinion off his back like so much water and render the decision as he is what takes the nerve. “In selecting umpires this. season T have paid particular attention to the | lection of men with grit. I will net an- nounce my list until the first or #ec- ond week in February, and there may be some surprises in store. When He Loses Nerve, “The first sign of an umpire losing his nerve Is when he begins to show symp- toms of belng what ts called @ ‘home um- pire’ It {9 comparatively easy for an umpire to get along when he gives the close decisions to the home club. The crowd always agress with him. But tt is a detriment to the game, You can rest assured that any mann my staf will be released the momept he begins to show algns of being @ home umpire. He 1s lacking in nerve.” “The best example of @ man who has the qualities that make an umptre,”” went on Mr. Lynch, “is Fred Merkle, first baseman of the Giants, That fel- low stood more abuse than any player in the history of the game, but with nerves of stecl he @hook ft off and kept plugging away until he became « great ball player, I venture to aay there is not one player in @ hundred who could have fought through that @blise and come out victorious. ‘That ie Ithe kind of stuff that we need fn um- pires. I belleye if Merkle was an um- pire he would make one of tho best indtcator handlers in the business. “T have actually seen ball players burst into tears when the crowd began to roast them," said Lynoh, referring ‘to the time when he was an umpire. “I remember on one occasion when one of the best hitters the game ever knew broke down and orfed at Boston because the fans roasted him. He was at the hag and when he missad the first strike thd crowd began to yell: ‘Get somebody In there who can hit!’ “What do you think of that? he said, turning to me, ‘After all that I done for them,’ and he began to “What do you mean” I replied. ‘Are you looking to me for sympathy; Get up there and hit the bai and pay no attention to them.’ That stung him an he made a two-base hit. It put him baok on the road to success and he ‘ed the league. ‘Another thing thet, ts needed in an PRESIDENT LYNCH SAYS SAND AND GRIT. MAKE GOOD UMPIRE. [having made a mistake—an honedt jcertain plays to the official scorer, but tule. For instance, when there are two sees It regardiess of consequences. ‘That | EMPIRE 45.0 sin i ETHEL BAR" YMORE jy, KNICKERBOCKER, | iw, res, #10 shar Maude Adams Chantecar x, the Katire Right Weeks nt on tie! Accompurited L by Om . LYCEUM it! Aone gu bc ras j THe PHILOSOPHER I (THE APPLE ORCHARD ICK Mats.To-day & Wed, at 2.15. TOMOND BREESE {8.7 Fonow BLANCHE BATES ' yandny | CRITERIO 2 TA Vive BB | OTIS SKINNER” | Nitham's GLOBE F | | MISS BILLIE BURKE | rsiteve “WR Aico. way Five, #08 HUDSON Wri ttt re Mats. Today & Wed. 2.20. . ‘ef ELSIE GANIS REALS | MEASANTE “SHaRY | NEY AMSTERDAM THEATRE!4 SPECIAL Mom. ly [MATING rir e's! LiGERT Math. WedMe wat pial CHRISTIE MACDONALD | In THE SPRING MAID | jew YORK® Siz, atbat Mile, EMMA TRENTINI tn NAUGHTY MARIETTA with ORVILLE HARROLD NS) GaT- men QoicK | | am WAL FING >ORD | DOWN Mec! | kt ae ey hu UNTER Ni suit WINTERGARTEN thf . Qt Mine Coo MET TY Yyeut Fie nar | WALLACK'S Wiig ded ake Si POMANDER WALK’ .Xqr Jt AMUSEMENTS. | CARNEGH ICE HOCKE et | wx ‘GRAND lS VAUDEVILLE FESTIVAL. ‘EMPIRE; umpire,” continued Mr. L¥nch, “Ie dplomacy. By the use of salve he can ket rid of a lot of kick» that would otherwise break up the game. The umpite should never fight back at @ Dlayer. F ange I have made close decisions at second when f was in doult myst and the player would ftatt for me “He didn’t touch me, hel weuld bes gin. ‘Well, he had the in time’ I would reply, ‘and if he did miss you st Was by not more than a hatr. That would give the player the impressloy that I respected his opinion and Gril there was a possibility of the umptre [one—and he would stop kickin t know that the umpire Js only human and hates to be abused Fie name as the ball players do, It ie natural for him to get back on the pinyer, but by the use of a@ little diplomacy he can avoid tt “Another way that an umpire oan often avoid trouble ts by explaining I do not belleye in that as a geperaber out and @ runner starts to steal second and the batter doos not atrike atethe ball. A play: is wade at the base, and even if the man ts safe the umpire ot the side out, He does this net om t of the play at seoand, but 'be- a, Yo batter, had stradk “out ‘owd foes not séem to understand this, as they are of the impression that the umplre has called the man’ out at sec- ond. ‘That is a case where the umpire should explain to the press "box that the batter was called out, and. rot the runner, The crowd usually héneh, this, and instead of raiging a. how? they are satisfied, A big majority.of, the kicks from the grand stand are beeaude the mpectators do not ugderstand, the play. Tam always opposed to the umpire ad- dressing any remarky whatever to the frand stand, but he ban explain a de- cision to the scorer and that will have ge the same effect. Hurst Had the Nerve. — “One of the nerviest decisions T havell® ever heard of was made oy Tim Huntinee at Cleveland. The home team was op run behind and there were two men of bases In the last half of the ninth, tna! hing, The batter had been warned eral times for stepping out of the bo: and meeting the ball too autckly. nD did not regard this warning and. whem, the ball started he ran up eight feetua: and hit It to the fence for two e coring both runners. The crowd w: wild with Joy and were leavin gmunds when Hurst held up ke ae ead called the batter out, thus e the game to the visiting team, The crowd was so dumbfounded at his nerwgive that they didn’t even make a protem® sud ‘That is perhaps the greatest exhibit of courage ever shown by an ut a He could haye given it the other and got away with ft, but Hurst ‘wal® not that Xind of « mai + ae ——————— ong YOUNGSTER WITH “K, 0.” WALLOP: WANTS Flonret: There's @ kid fighter In town: ctuenaorte ing for recognition from the fistic fanacve He ts Bub Egers, a New York boy. Betiy fights just like Knockout Brown, with his right hand out, and has the “K. 0.";, wallop, He wants to f\ght anybody, weighing from 112 to 14 pounds. 4 has twenty-one knockouts as his ri among them Eddie Gillespie, Tiger?" ~ Young, Harry Smith, Young Hommey?®\s and Terry Smith. Mee ers particularly wants -to fights « Packey Hommey, Young Shugro and, », Sammy Kollar. He will probably box, Young Solsberg in the semi-final to ie Young Sammy Smith Leach Cross at the Empire A ' AMUSEM ENTS. — MANHATT. FARES SgUsE at" bea Bey M we ae ‘gia tte ae SELL O'BRLEN, LOM NAWN, rt High, Yeaitity ., OR OAND fs fi H TilG, VAN HOW, NER! * 0, va mr Onitent wt AY HAMMERS FEAN’s Ev .25e to St. Dati; VS GERTRUDE “gi OU tCE One. HOFFMANN E3 company 06 40, % “rai SELON Vint SEND MILES a COy Pik LYRES: Bogie s@houle, Tage ant th ars Chickering "hans, COLONIAL hat 6.6 odwin& Co, wi Tighe’ Mat. I Chandler, Testi Nt ALHAMBRA seine Gone & Av, & 120 et. | Chas peli. aie.” | Willteme a RONX 149 at 3 Ay, Mat. Dally, 266, Dally Ata, ally xe AMERICAN |) dat, tT ar, | Had, Gey oa Sa 7 a pnetle, ‘ot of ASTOR "$s 384, 8, ten at Ew LENA astiveLt Like ya NEXT MONDAY--Seate Mothronts te Opera Houre Ph &rused™ 1WICE DAILY ™ 4g ts On MEADLINE, mL, #4 ae Me AMOR 14k MAS bolt eM Nelnum, i Nasen Ari Broadway & Kalph x ‘the WORLD ot PLEASI Amat, Huckner's Concerts veiinaal AYION'S LEE AVE, a Priel (we HOUSE NEXT Doon, | MAT, DAIL a Sunday World Wants Work Monday Morning: Wonder: ik

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