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—_—>—_ flitchie Evidently Has Little , With Freddy Welsh. Seer, HS: Bee Tock Went ne i BEE that our slippery old friend Freddy Weish has wriggied out of the promised return match with Wiille Ritchie, Freddy has just © given out his ‘ms in London and they're absolutely impossible. Freddy doesn’t want much, In the @ret place, Ritchie must make 133 Pounds ringside, although Ritchie, as m, accepted the English it Limit of 135 pounds and let the @o with the match. Tho stipu- that Ritchie must make 133 Pounds ts ridiculous. Ritchie must allow Welsh $25,000 of ‘the puree, with the privilege of tak- fag 60 per cent. of the gate money if Chance of Getting Return Bout; Be wants to. Fair enough. That was '@ Proposition when he was @ampion. Ritchie must make a $25,000 side bet. | _This te Weish’a most adroit wrig- $e fh sautmine out of the match, :f knows that no fighter ever beta, ‘ever will bet, any such sum on a a Of courae Ritchie wouldn't do M6 And if Rit:hie did put up $25,000 & side stake Welsh would never the wide world cover it. If there was @ay inclination to make such a side Welsh knows as well as Ritchi it would be impossible unde: ‘nia State law. That kes it ier for Freddy in his little iy ‘8 & safe wa; t Fred ‘Willie won't meet nwieh ‘fve Gloves on in a long, long time. ~ FORD Wemyss of England is said to have played golf for ninety years. Motbing at all! A mere detail! We know ame people who think ball players are dickering ‘ with a rival league, attending fraternity -meetifigs, getting fp “strikes” and haggling over their 4 aoe time do they have to game? Judging by some > seen this season, not ve! ‘ EW ORLEANS, under ita new Jaw, is going to stage a num- ber of twenty-round bouts. % a one of the few places in this i where twenty-round fights e allowed. New Orleans should| SET at teinty roones, aie renty roun wit Feferee’s decision at the end of its it to draw all the best men—the who are genuine! jteat~ a Giice, ee y contest. John E. Madden wine the rich Futurity at Saratoga with his colt, Vanitie, Alex Smith Cochrane #'il Fealime he overlooked something by ‘ot purchasing the colt as a yearling. had an option on six of the Madden bred yearlings last year, and ome of them was named Vanitic, after | the yacht with which the carpet turing millionaire hopes to i gy Aten Sir Thom: Cochrane allowed the option ts Racers ae to Madden, Vanitic 0 Be ever owned," ‘Be beet PERMITTING women jo see ring /% bouts may be all right in Paris, London and even in San Fran- “elwoo and Jos Angeles, but New | York should get along without temalo patronage at its boxing shows, Last me st the Olympic Athletic Club of ® number of women were Bt t near the ringside, ‘red McKay in his bout Soldier Blaney. Down at Rocka- too, women are “passed” in to its. There may be no real in it, but it doesn't seem just ‘The Boxing Commission should i fmto the matter. Hoxing is a fi 8 sport. —_—e——_ WINDSOR ENTRIES, WINDSOR, Ont., July 21.—The en- for to-morrow’s races follow: BACE—Pune $000; four year-olty and siniaenit, ails. —Unlatory, ‘wuford, 104; *Ghin: and on F: Pra” Neds i06, Nha sad Cig aNhig ee nl i ine of spend P ee, pending that much time diamond. Fred Pfeffer, ers. tendance, left. Magee was out, Cruise out, Cutshaw to Daubert, RUNS. to left singled to right, sending Cutshaw to third, and reaching second when Wil- son threw the ball scored on a wild pitch and Hummel reached third, gins to Dressen, Hummel scoring. O. Miller fanned. Pfeffer was called out on strikes. TWO RUNS. filed to O. Miller. mel. wing bunted safely. Wingo to J. Miller. to the left-fleld fence, Huggins to Dressen. agsinst PFEFFER IN BOX FOR THE DODGERS ABANSTST.LOUS Brooklyns Mix Hits With Mis- plays and Score Twice in Second Inning. BATTING ORDER. Brooklyn, Bt. Louts. O'Mara, as. Hugains, 2b. Daubert, 1b, Magee, cf, Dalton, cf. Cruise, If, Wheat, If. J, Miller, as, Cutshaw, 2b, Wilson, rf. Hummel, rf. Beck, 3b. Egan, 8b. Wingo, o. | 0. Miller, , Dressen, 1b, Pfeffer, p. Perdue, p. Umpirea—Byron and Johnston, At- tendance—3,000. ROBISON FIELD, ST, LOUIS, Mo., July 21,—Having settled thetr difter- ences with the National Commi the Cardinals and Superbas, holding cards in the Baseball Players’ nion, ion, to-day resumed their strifo on the Manager Huggins sel jected Hub Perdue to antagonize the enemy, while Wilbur Robinson put it up to the About 3,500 fans were big right-hander, O, Miller and Wingo were the catch- in al FIRST INNING—O'Mara singled to Daubert bunted safely, Hugging called out on at Dalton sacrificed, Perdue to Huggins, who covered first. J. Miller ran out into short left fleld for Wheat'a pop fly and, with a great throw to Wingo, doubled up O'Mara trying to score. NO RUNS, rikes. Egan to Daubert. No SECOND INNING—Cutshaw singled and stole second. Hu home. Egan was out, J, Miller lined to W eat, Wilson NO RUNS. THIRD INNING—O'Mara out, to Dreasen Daubert Daubert out ste: Dalton Wheat NO RUN! min Cutshaw Hug- Beck flied to Hum- Hug- again aling, tripled out, 8, Egan and Daubert retired Wingo. Dreseen out, O'Mara to Daubert, Pi due filed to Cutshaw, TO VICTORY OVER DELA Fred McKay scored another v In the NO RUNB, peti WOMEN CHEER M’KAY ON NEY. letory over Soldier Delaney in their ten- round bout before a big crowd at the Olympic A, C. the bout McKay was slow and awk- ward, but managed to hold Delaney , | OM with right hand uppercuts that ‘ly yart of had plenty of foree behind them, McKay fought lke a whirlwi the last four round hap due to the cheering of ind ti it wi ral women spectators who made thelr appea: ance near the ringside soon after the They occupied corner and cheered the big fellow when he came to his corner at the end of the round. sixth round began. seats near McKay's pee Cincinnati day in ~~ ye Bert Dantels. Manager Herzog of the Cincinngtt club has purchased Outfielder Bert Daniels from the Baltimore club of the International League. Daniels is expected to arrive in Cincinnati to- time to into the game | War! also struck | pennant aspirants. hop was sent in to pitch to him was Covaleski, count of his arm being cast. there were 5,000 fans on the start. Mai left. stopping at second. out to Cree. the bases. Kavanaugh strikes, zell. NO RUNS. threw out Nunamaker. tossed out Maisel. on Peck's error, allowing Bush to score to go to third. Hartzell third, right forced Boon the left-field bleachers run, Burns filed out RUNS, and Purtell Purtell Crawford, and out to C Peck filed out to lined and sending Hartzell to centre, scoring Hartzell Cree to third, hit, filling the bases. flied out to Peck. to Cree. Veach lined out to Cook. Hall threw out Cree, out a hit to third. Nunamaker hit the for a triple, scoring threw out Maisel, called out on strikes, a aingle to centre, Kee batted for Hall, NO RUNS. Boehler now pitching Warhop drew a pass. walked, a double steal. left, scoring Warhop Boone scoring. sending Peck to second out to Veach, the bases. Nunamaker Bush. TWO RUNS, BEVENTH INNING out Boehler, centre, scoring Bush, called out on strikes. Covaleski threw out Cook. Kavanaugh drove one FIFTH INNING—Hellman Mied our Roone threw out Crawfor) Cook walked, Hon To THe PLAYERS - “WELL, WHAT ABOUT “THE EVENING WORLD, TURSDAY, JULY 91, 1914: IT? Copyright, 1914, by the Presse Publishing Co. (The New York World.) (T_Loors SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YO “Te How tT _LooKs TH MAGNATES. \—7 | | ~AGHLANDERS (Continued from First Page.) landers set about their Job of treating | reported to-day to the Reds and was the Tigers just as they ha To do this War- other and opposed the former Glant killer of unhappy memory. Ty Cobb is not with the te m on ac- in a plaster Expecting oxcitement of some kind, hand to see FIRST INNING—-Bush flied out to Purtell shot a single into; Heilman singled to left, Purtoll Crawford fivd Veach walked, filling forced out Veach, Boone to Peck. NO RUNS. | Boone lined out to Bush, Hartzell j singled to left and stole second, Peck fied out to Veach. Cree shot a single to right, scoring Hartzell, Kay- anaugh threw out Mullen, ONE RUN, SECOND INNING—Burns flied out \ | | sent into the game, making a shift in the line up and batting order. D&n- fels played right fleld and led. off while Moran, who has been leadins: off, went to sixth place and shifted) to centre. Demaree and Benton were the pitchers, Snodgrass went to left) and Stock to third, with a southpaw working for the Reds. FIRST INNING—Bescher grounded to Herzog. Doyle singled, Burns fanned. Doyle stole second and took; third on Erwin’s wide peg. Snod-/ Herzog walked. Twombly, attempt- | ing to sacrifice, popped to Stock. Nel-| ante hoff fouled to Myers, Groh singled to! of ¢ left, Daniels scoring. miss of Snodgrass's throw to the] gtar plate. Moran grounded out to Fle cher, TWO RU? | but SECOND INNING—Fletcher bound- | * to Cree. Stanage was called out on Covaleski fied out to Hart- Bush Kavanaugh NO RUNS. THIRD INNING—Bush was safe Maisel then* mado a wild throw of Purtell's grounder, and Purtell Heilman flied out to remained on Crawford smashed a single to scored, Veach Maisel to into for a home scoring Veach ahead of him. ree. FOUR Warhop was thrown out by Bush. Boone cracked 4 single Hartzell was hit by a pitched bali Crawford, into left. Cree ers filed to Moran., NO RUNS, Mollwitz walked, Bescher muttea| "™ Twombly got Besche's fly, NS, NO RU . Nethoff filed to Bescher. Groh walked. Moran beat out a bunt. Moll- wits was thrown out by Fletcher, and Groh, who tried to xcore from second, Burns was hit. Snodgrass forced Burns, Gro. to Herzog, Doyle going single into left, scoring Roone second. Mul- len drove a corking single to right and sending Cook beat out an in- field hit, scoring Cree and tying up the game, Mullen stopping at sec- ond .Nunamaker also got an infleld Maisel flied to Crawford. THREE RUNS, FOURTH INNING—Hartzell made a great catch of Burna’s short fly to left, High batted for Covaleski, High Bush drew. a pass. Purtell singled to left, but Bush was out at the plate, Hartzell to Boone to Nunamaker, NO RUNS, Ha now pitching for Detroi Warhop cracked a single to_ left Boone sacrificed, Hall to Burns. Hartzell filed out to Veach. Peck fied out to Veach. NO RUNS. NO RU Mullen beat Mullen was oul stealing second, Stanage Cook got an infleld hit to deep short. right fleld wall rey ONE SIXTH INNING—Kay Bu Ruri ond, Stanage filed out to Cree, Mc- Burns was out stealing third, Nunumaker to Matsel. to Hush. ‘ook. Pustell RUN, ugh was cracked ns stole se tor Detroit, Roone also Warhop and Boone worked Hartzell singled to and sending Boone to third, Peck forced out Hart- zell at second, Bush to Kavanaugh, Cree singled to left, Mullen flied filling flied out to —Peck threw Bush beat out a bunt Hush took second on a wild pitch. Purtell lined a long single into right Heilman was Crawford flied out to Cree, ONE RUN. Matsel was called out on strikes. out on strikes, | out, Boone was UNS, to third. On a double steal Doyle | 4nd scored, while Snodgrass was being | run down, Erwin to Groh. Fletcher fanned. ONE RUN. Demaree tossed out Erwin, Dem- inner home, Borgo aree threw out Benton also. Stock |t® chase the w' frew out Daniela, NO KUNE "| back in the middle of the bunch, FIFTH INNING—Merkle filed to] saved ground on the rail and got Moran, Herzog threw out Myera.|third money. easily. Stock singled to left. D See eae a RAGE. hounced to Renton. %O RUNS. : Herzog filed to Burns. Merkie| Mater finally made good in the pulled down Twombley's foul fiy.| second. After grabbing the lead Stock threw out Niehoff. NO RUNS, tor in the first fit rd SIXTH INNING—Reaoher walked | fom Aviator in EMO Rime Mey ound and took necond on a balk, Renton| he was never caught, booted Doyle's slow bounder, Bescher | she had two lengths lead over Lohen- taking third, Burns hit into a double play, Herzog to Groh to Mollwt Reacher scoring. Snodgrass sinicl to centre, Snodgrass stole se Groh got Fletcher. ONE RUN. | EMPIRE CITY ENTRIES. MPIRE CITY RAC TRACK, R8, N. ¥,, July 21.—Entries for as follows: hrwe year-old 00K rlac str iret ruck fitiiew Mt Ww Int side ry m « 4 Cutie rT 2} r BRIN ACE et une multe ant meventy Sands fe 3s all but mo! Anyiade The te Flo } tiny loo lary Warren, 9) hree-searoldf aod up by evel STAR GAZE BEST IN THE HANDICAP AT YONKERS TRACK Wins Handily From Donald| MacDonald, the Favorite— MPIRE graas grounded to Herzog, NO RUNS. yonK Danidis walked and stole second.’ aze, the vanquisher of Buckhorn, came Herzog scored; nome Donald MacDonald and Guy and Groh reached third on Myers’s| Wrisher, t-\ position until well into the stretch, ‘The early pace of the race was made ed to Herzog. Merkle fanned. Mey-|y. Hee James Butler started the day with a victory when his Peter Pan filly Tamira won from start to finish over was doubled, Merkle to Meyers, NO|the maidens she met in the opening RUNS. dash, She was three lengths In front FOURTH INNING—Doyie walked.|at the end. | Brian Boru chased her all the way might come on at the stretch turn he stopped badly, leaving Busy Edith, who had been third to the stretch, grin, who beat the good thing, John | D, Wakefield, half a length for the | { winners, LrOUN) he galloped to the back stretch and then gave way y away. badly: Working Lad up to $1,100, which was | #500 over his selling price, but the stable retained him Azylade won the fifth ali the Working Lad Second. cITy ¥.. RACE TRACK, July 21.— Star PRS, back with a very credit- victory in the handicap, fourth; he card here to-day, by beating} Essentially a rail runner, didn't get into her favorite Go then he came away. Star Gaze ran behind in the back stretch, with K. 3 Ing to find an opening on the rail. juy Fisher, FIRST RACE. just when he looked as if he| Song of Valley chased Mater | e. to the stretch onfy to be swallowed | up in the gene 1 closing up in the teh. Wakefield and Lohengrin | in the ruck early and never did clear sailing, but when they did | erything except nd Belray in t the k all the way THIRD RACE. Jorking Lad was a real good thing | he third. Breaking from the out- position, Kederls whipped him the first turn and thereafter Odolia chased after him | to Rayberry die gnd Ex. ecutor, who ran in the order named the way to the finish, Oakhurst finished out good and strong and all | of. third | was | out Helen M Marquette ran nipped Executor y on the post Ae) FIFTH RACE. way, e being started Just before the yalened Lali storm, on a dry track ude looked a good thing, but in she was not expected to run her race It didn't rain anyhow, and she won herself, Undaunted chased her ry step of the journey and finished in second place in front of Scallywag, ie, OF Por ete iy no speed and trailed the way, ’ {ou Bout Wit Tom McCarey Substitutes Johnny Tillman for Battle at Los Angeles, July 28. By John Pollock. T looks as though Joe Rivors, the Mexican lightweight, is afraid to meet Lea: . Cross in another bout at Tom McCarey’s open-air arena at Vernon, Cal. After accepting a guar- anten of $4,000 to fight Leach on July 28, Rivers sent word to McCarey to- day that he was too ill to go through with the match and asked that the; contest be put back for two months. As Johnaoy Tiiiman, the crack West ern lightweight wno gave Ad. Wol- gast such a lacing in a bout two months ago, is in Los Angeles, Mc- Carey signed him. up to fight Cross on! the above date. Joe Levins, the former manager of Eddie McGoorty, received a cabl gram from him in which he stated that the foul biow which lost him his | Joe Rivers Calls Off h Leach Cross ‘ hopt tight with Jimmy Clabby at Sydney, Erwin's long fly. Benton, trying to| putwell on Guy Fisher, however,! custrulia, on July 4, was uninten- sacrifice, forced Mollwitz, Demaree| would not pull out, and finally Star| onal, ae Clubby ran into a left hook to Stock. Daniels bounced a single Garo had to come to the outalde. He| while he was on his toes. over Demares's head, fling tho! aiq this at the stretch turn and soon ; oii , the Indianapolis mid- bases, On Herzog's grounder Erwin| was in front to go on to a handy! aR caer eee KGa Renter ane was forced, Doyle to Meyers. | victory, the next few days, for in that time Twombly lifted to Snodgrass, NO ;| he will indulge in two ten-round bat- skh Donald MacDonald after running) B aa tm Spey aeons ae nary third all the way, just caught Guy) sicnockout" Browr of Chicago at THIRD INNIN tock hoisted to] msher in the final sixteenth and was| ‘Terre Haute, Ind., and his second | Twombly. Demaree popped to Moll-|q handy second. with Howard Morrow of Syracuse, witz. N. ¥., at Muncie, Ind, on Friday | night. Fight fans in Brooklyn and also those at Rockaway Beach will have weight who went a chance to-night to witness some | good fighting, Levinsky will tackle Dan (Porky) at the Rockaway Beach A. WINNERS AT WINDSOR. FIRST RACE—Purse $600; Can: dian bred two-year-olds; five furlongs. —Smithfleld, 115 (Goldstein), 4 to 1, 7 to 5 115 (Gray), 8 to 6, 2 to 6 and 1 to 3, second; Hampton ‘Dame; 109 (Obert), 3 to 1, 6 to 6 and 8 to 5, third, Time, 1.02, John Thompson, John Peel, Oke- mus, Shrove Tide and Photographer also ran. SECOND RACE—Purse $900; thre nd upward; selling; matd- en Je five and one half fur longs—Miss’ Declare, 101 (Carter), 1 to 3 and 1 to 6, first; Sure Get, ‘Ay Malone), 12 tot, 4 to 1 and 8 to 5, second; Anayri, 109 (W. Brown), io 1, & to and 7 to 10, third Timo, 1.05 4-5. Amorct, Astrologer, araniywine and Sack Cloth also THIRD RACE.—Purse $600; Wind- sor Club Cup; three-year-olds and up; one mile and a sixteenth--Great Brit- ain, 14 (Obert), 3 to 5 1 to 4 ant , first; Rudolfo, 115 (Burns), 7 to 10 and out, 5 9 to 1, 1.442 = 106 (Tehan) third, Time, Iso ran, FOURTH 8 to'6 and out, . Ray of Light RACE.—Purse, $700; Broadway @ 9th St. At the Broadway | Young Gradwell of Sporting Club of Brooklyn Battling; bout at the Brown A. C, and 3 to 5, first; Harry Bassett, | pirer also ran, Vacation Suits $25 to $50 Materials, $18 Light and medium-weight two and three-piece suit ends in large variety. Striking and plain effects. thing for mountains, country or seashore. Coat and trousers, $16, Arnheim mels Station, Young Drummie of Jersey City will clash with Willie Jones in the main go, Tony Caponi, the Ciicago middle- weight, who hi been fighting for many years, has filed a voluntary petition in bankruptey in the United States District Court In Chicago, He scheduled liabilities of $948 and as- sets $11, Caponi has retired from the fighting game and is now a bartender in Chicago. 5 For the next show of the Fairmont A. C. on Saturday night, Manager Billy Gibson has signed up three ten- round bouts between the following fiehters: Tommy Houck and Walter Brooks, Pinky Burns and Mickey Dunn, and Milton Bleir and Billy Myers. 1 “Aimy Mack, who is now in control of the IrvingyA. C. of Brooklyn, will stage threa-ten-round bouts between fairly good" fighters at the show of the club on Saturday night. K. 0, Eecers will swap punches with Kid Sollivany | ory anaoe Gg meet oung Zu d_and Jimm will battlewvith Johnny Keyea, iia George Chip, the rugged and heavy- hitting middleweight of Pittsburg, Nas been made favorite in the betting at 10 to '& for his twenty-round battle with Sallor Petroskey, which is to be fought in San Francisco on July 31. Chip knocKed out Petroskey in a bout at Log Angeles several wee! ago, and bis followers think he will re: peat the. trick, Now that Georges Carpentier has declared that he will hot give Gun- boat Smith a return fight before next December or January, the prospects are that Jim Buckley will pack up and hurry home with his big fighter. Phil th Bloom, Brooklyn light- in his fighting fter his great fights againat’ Leach | Cross and Freddie Welsh, is in fine shape, and he expects to get back into the limelight again by defeating Rockaway on Friday night. three-year-olds and upward; six fur- longs—Pan Zareta, 120 (Burns), 5 to . 4 to S$ and 1 to'4, first; Back Bay, 111 (Obert), 5 to 1, 8 to 5 and 8 to 5, second; Mirimichi, 103 (Nathan), 16 to § 11 to 10 and 8 vo 5, third, Time, 2. Southern Maid and Knights ee | READ THE EVENING WORLD EVERY SATURDAY FOR ROBERTSON’S AUTO TIPS. George H. Robertson, Vanderbilt Cup winner in 1908 and one of the coulfry's leading automo! au- thor gives expert advice The Evening World every Satur- day to auto owners as to how their machine troubl may best be ides giving valuable and mapping out leasure route Send an account of your car oubles in writing to George H, obertson, Automobile Editor, Just the $18 Newark in their | of Far! Battling | Flynn of Boston for ten rounds, while, Lahn and Mike Rosen meet in the . Ham- | other ten-round scrap. eo RARE com ROR CRN San’ BASEBALL ATRUST, ISCOURT'S RULING HAL CHASE CASE Injunction Dissolved and First Baseman May Play With Federals. BUFFALO, N. Y., July 21—Organ ized baseball suffered a legal defeat to-day when Justice Herbert F. Bis« sell vacated the injunction secured by the Chicago American League base~ ball club restraining First Basemal Hal Chase from playing with the Buffalo Federal League club. The lack of mutual obligation im the so called ten day clause of the contract under which Chase was playing with the Chicago team, whereby the club could terminate the contract on ten days’ notice, while the player was bound under erat provisiona of the “national agrees ment," formed the basis of the di cision vacating the injunction. That organized baseball is a violas tion of the Sherman Anti-Trust law was denied by Justice Bissell on t ground that he cannot agree that “ business of baseball for profit is inter= state trade or commerce and, there- fore, subject to the provisions of the Sherman act.” ‘ The Court held, however, that it was monopoly of the baseball business in contravention of the common law, Chase was served with injunction papers June 21 while he was playing with the Buffalo team at Federal ‘ark. heen on the beach davit upon whie! the motion to vacate the injunctton was based Chase alleged that he gave the Chicago Club ten days’ notice of his Intention to leave, at the expira- tion of which time he signed the Buffalo contract. In his ruling, the Court says: “It the plaintiff insists upon the require- ment of an ‘option clause’ in eac succeeding contract, the defendant can be held for a term of years. His nly alternative is to ab O- cation. Can it fairly be claimed that there is mutuality in such a contract? Justice Bis lared organized , baseball ts as e a monopoly of the baseball busin: oly can be made. tion of the common law that it is a combination to restrain and control the exercise of a profes- ston.” The injunction wa $10 costs to the defen oo BOBBY WALTHOUR STARTS TRAINING AGAIN TO-MORROW. Pete Drobach will make his first ap- pearance behind the motors at the Brighton Beach Motordrome to-morrow night. He will te in a thirty-mile motor-paced race nd against him will be Worth L. Mitten, Percy Lawrence nd Menus doll, It will be the first pearance of Lawrence since he de- feated Clarence Carman In @ race about vacated with t. three weeks ago. Bobby Walthour will. art training to-morrow, The Dixie Flyer was at the beach to-day and while the wounds re= ceived there a week ago last Sunday have not healed completely, he believes that riding will do. im good, / SOFT COLLAR NO FASTENERS REQUIRED. Triangle Collars 2 for25¢ ‘an Zandt Jacobs &CoTr SEE LITTLE CIGARS 10 SMOKE THEM ALWAYS [ia WITHOUT A REGRET Is SPORTING, AT ALL DEALERS RACING Empire City Track (BET, YONKERS & MT, VERNON) TOMORRO NEGINNING AT 2,30 P, Mm SIX RACES, INCLUD! $2,500 MIDSUMMER STAKES SPRUIAL RACE TRAINS leave Grand Central St vie iE ioe? gh Ri nutes later, and sv, 100 mnt y te lar rand tlon, ai CATERING HOM YoRKS. F PEE Tes LY, MOUS KESTAURATEGR OTORDROME cto TO.wiguT. ae ae