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HE Shows Rickard Isn’t Taking Many Chances. ; Omori Rts Yor Brcclne Worst) one is to judge by the result of the first day’s sale of tickets for the Willard-Moran fight, Tex Rickard wil! lose very little money in promoting the battle. Indeed, he may make considerable on his $70,000 ven- ture. Up to late yesterday only box ta wore available at Madison Garden, It seems that the wise ter turned them out first, Be- 6 o'clock in the afternoon more than $6,000 worth had been purchased, One man passed $900 to the agent tn ‘the box office and got thirty-six of to ee gd teboards, rd believes that the $25 seats will be his best seller, for as he sald to-day everybody seems to want a box seat. By to-morrow seats worth gg 15 and $10 will be obtainable at arden. Only the $5 and $3 seats will be held out until a few days be- fore the fight. “ In addition to the receipts from the first day's public sale Rickard says Preliminary orders for seats from over the country have been re- colved. Coming a month before the fight thoy to Rickard a financial success he hadn't dreamed of. VERYBODY thought Tex was crazy when ho offered $101,000 for the Jeffries-Johnson fight ‘and not a few think he has let hi ood nt run away in standing @ tap of $70,000 on the Moran- Willard . ir. , however, has promoted more than one championship fistic event and he has yet to stage a ‘financial faltu re, selection of Charley White as referee for the Willard-Moran fight adds to the attractivencss of the occasion, Few if any in the sporting world know about boxing than White, his weputation ts above reproach and his personal acquaintance with the big- of men in every walk of lifo him stand out among referces ®@ box office attraction. Charley ite may stroll down the principal ughfare of any of our cities and & cordially greeted by men of af- Day in and day out White meets men whose friendship might be considered an honor by the big- in the land. There are other competent and trustworthy, none of them is nearly so well favorably known as White, Tex is fortunate that “Old Good ‘was selected to officiate in the Garden ring on March 25, WINNICH of No. 85 Sachen: Strect, New Haven, writes to know {if Battling Levinsky Hi 3e ; Hi UP-TO-DATE AND NEWSY Sale of Willard-Moran Tickets ” hid Ce BO) Sree Ge I PE LOE re — THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1916, THE EX-FED ORPHAN UMPIRES x SOR, A aT SHB Copyright, 1416, by the Press Publishing Co, ras BP BED raKe an Sa on Sse HS OUTRELD ‘‘Home Run’’ Baker Says Maisel Should Play Third Base for Yankees But There’s No Escape for Opposing Pitchers Because J, Frank- | lin Tells Col. Ruppert He Would Like to Play the Out- field Very Much and That He Prefers It to Any Job. By Bozeman Bulger. FRANKLIN BAKER may be @ Simply taking a rough guoss, but ho certainly gave the gang a surprise when he declared in the presence of Col. Ruppert: “It's no cinch that I will be the third baseman of the Yanks.” “Just what do you mean by that?” some one asked. “Well, in the first place, I can play in nearly any position in the infield and also in the outfield, and the New York club already has one of the best third basemen in either league.” Ip other words our Home Run hero ls of the belief that he will have to fight for the third base job and that if it develops that Maisel is a faster and better man, he (Baker) had just 48 soon jplay somewhere else, “I am not trying to run @ ball club or anything like that,” he says, “but Maisel is a mighty fast man to take out of the infield, He would be a corking outielder, but think how much more his speed would count Inside.” ‘Was ever stopped or knocked out by| J, Kranklin has revealed another Jack Dillon. After scanning the rec- ‘secret in his life b ave that he to refresh our memory, Mr. use be a r and algo h ‘ich ts herewith told that within Jast five years Levinsky and Dil- lon have met five times. Once in a #ix-round bout in Philadelphia, three ‘times in ten in Indianapolis, Roches- ter and Brooklyn and once In twelve in Butte, Mont. On cach occasion the last round saw Levinsky battling | with the enthusia m of a cham- pion, Of course, there have been} differences of opinion at the end of each bout, but Levinsky never suf- fered much by them. Dillon himself | gays that Levinsky is the toughest heavyweight in the business for him to lick, and that he is one man he al- | ways trains for, Most fighters who have met Dillon have shown little anxiety for a sev- rack at him, but with Levinsky it is different. here is one man that I like to figh! ys the Battler. OMBARDIER WELLS is ati!’ “heavyweight champion of Eng- jand,” while Carpentier is still); “somewhere in France” soaring the skies as an aviator searching for the careless enemy, Bombardier ts cred. ited with the title for knocking out Dick Smith in the third round of their bout in London yesterday. Dick Smith never set any pugilistic rivers on fire. - \third he quite a lot” in his early days. outfield very ‘ve played out there before and I like it better than any job on the ball field, Honestly, 1 think when it come to a showdown that 1 am as likely to be in the out- field as Fritz Maisel, 1 know I can’t play third any better than he can.” Having paid his respects to New York in # Visit lasting just two hours Farmer Baker went right back to his Maryland farm, where he will begin getting in shape before going South with the second string of Yanks next Monday, When Baker had gone Col, Ruppert ‘and the office staff made an insp tioa of the roster of players and dis: covered that Donovan has an extra man for every job op the team, For s Maixel, Baker and Bau- mann; for second there a jedeon, Boone and Mullen, and two of those can also work as extra shortstop in of accident to Peckinpaugh. There are enough outfielders on the for a minor lei There is just on one-—on the club that said Col, Ruppert. “I refer to Kd, Sweeney. That fellow has a con- tract with two years to run at $8,000 a year. If you can find anybody who'd an—and onl d like to se Iron Is Greatest Builders, Says Doctor * ASecret of the Great Enduranceand Power of Athletes of All Strength Ordinary Nuxated tron Will Make Dell- eate, Nervous, Run-Down People 200 Per Cent. Stronger in Two Weeks’ Time In Many Ca | Most people foolishly seem to think Rostrum of narcotic drum . & mpecialiat of th Tact, real a ne from tu ften fail to Ket food, hecause they their blood to en- it to change food into Mving mat- otrengt! able . From their weakened, they know ey can't tell what y commence dor or kidney trou other ailment ffon in the blood for years, wis agony. If you W are going to Ket renewed health and fength from some stimulating med owe ti to your test: Bee how long you y far you can walk without b Next tak five-grain. tab of ordinary nuxated iron three times p after meals for two weeks. Then how much you have gained, I have ho were Alling all the while, dou- their rength and endurance, and ae rid of all symptoms of dys- p to taking fron in the a they had in toring benefit reduced tr fron stip must t | the | aur defo: many giori tron OTF: Dr. hatter 1 with affray down the tran while to luck of has 6 simply us for Hogewan, " Kalish other drigyina,—Ad like to take him off our hands we will pay fifty per cent. out of the salal In other words we'll give any club $4,000 a year to take Sweeney off our hands, Whilo in a@ talkative mood the Colonel explained how the rumor started about Maisel being traded for Joe Jackson, of the White Sox. ‘We had a telegram from Rowland saying that he would like to nego- tiate for Maisel !f \.e would consider @ trade,” he said. We wired him that ‘@ would give him Maisel if he would give us Eddie Collins, the man for whom he pald $50,000. That stopped all trade talk immediately.” Over in tho office of tie Giants there is genuine ploasure over the outlook for the Yanks haviag a pennant con- tending team. John Foster saya that if the two New York teams are in the race from start to finish it will be of vast benefit to both, It is now an understanding be- tween the managements of the two teams that the Yanks and Glants will play a series of games every spring. } once again a healthy citizen. | |] the champion has recovered from hi | the big Kansan in ten days. The to him for silence, Jones, helped train him. champion weighed about 255 when around 250, It will be mighty casy or 2456 when he meets Moran.” Willard Now Exercises Outdoors And Weighs but 250 Pounds Jess Willard has thoroughly knocked out the grippe germs and is According to reports from Chicago to-day permitted him to take a stroll yesterday, health, started to tell how fine he felt when Manager Tom Jones waved “All these bear stories about Willard’s condition are pure bunk,” said “They have been spread by some soreheads in Chi Jess is now feeling so much better that I wouldn't be surprised if we landed in New York before the end of the week. The even ten pounds before March 25, Remember, Jess expects to welgh 243 i# cold go quickly that his doctors It was the first exercise for champion, rejoicing over his good who he started training. Now he tips for him to drop off another five or Leach Cross at Last A Knock Out Victim Milburn Saylor Takes Five Rounds to Do Long- Expected Trick (Special to The Evening Wy CINCINNATI, Ohio, Feb. Mil- burn Saylor of Indianapolis knocked out Leach Cross in the fifth round of thetr scheduled ten-round bout at Heuck’s Opera House here last night. The end was not at all unexpected, as 4.) Cross was weak in the third session. Cross went to the centre of the ring when the gong sounded for the fourth | round showing signs of still further weakness and soon was sent to the floor with a short right hook to the | By stalling and clinching he} face. managed to last the round, but was even weaker when the fifth started, Vainly trying to guard his Jaw from the furious assaults of Saylor, Cross Was sent to the canvas with a snappy left hook, He took the count of nine and was no sooner on his feet than another blow, this time a right, sent Cross into dreamland, (The Now York Evening World.) ome" 3 — _BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK Bronx Palace Bowlers Win From Central Trio | And Give Fans a Surprise —o— | Rupprecht a Busy Pin Man in’ One of the Most Interesting Matches in Evening World Tourney. LL of the four representative Bronx trios World three-man amateur |tournament were in action last night. Jand the fans of that borough were {treated to exceptionally interesting |bowling. Particularly at the Bronx Palace, where the Bronx Centrals un- jexpectedly ran into a triple defeat, were the tenpin followers fortunate in witnessing one of the most hotly contested matches of the big series. In the opening session here Rup- precht kept the home team in the lead with a five-timer and eventually won out in this game for the Palace trio with a 235 score. Tometz put over a |bronze medal score in this game. After showing the way in the sec- ond string and going into the seventh frame with a 40 pin udvantage, the Bronx Centrals weakened and Dick Walsh this time came through with @ three timer, making it a tle game. In the roll-off the Palace three totalled 66 through Rupprecht's double header, while the visitors were only able to score 53, In the third session the home team just barely led all the way by a few pins and won out for their third vic- tory by but one pin. The scores: Broax Cantral— | Bron Palace — Biemneisiic int 109 Nockler 2u8 192) Kupprectit High —Kupprecht, 235; Strang, 207; Nockier, 208, At Heise & Kleinert's Crotona al- leys, the Metropolitans were the vio- tims, the Crotonas going through the visitors for a clean sweep and getting a better hold on third position in the standing. The Mets lost their only chance for &@ gamo in the middle affair after giv- Murray and Man In Tennis Finals For Indoor Title R, Lindley Murray, the tall Califor- nia youth, and Alrick H, Man jr, will meet in the finals to-day for the seventeenth national indoor tennis championship on the Seventh Regi- ment Armory courts, Murray, who ruled a strong favorite as soon as the drawing was announced, won his way to the final round without the loss of a single set in any match, The championsh{p doubles tn wihch imental title holder, oppose Arthur M. Lovibond and Dr. William Rosen- baum, will be decided before the sin- gles match, Following these two bat- tles Yale's tennis team will tackle the nual meet. 2,500 Prize Dogs In Garden Show ‘The fortieth annual dog show of the Wostminster Kennel Club opened at Madison Square Garden to-day ac- companied by a roaring chorus from nearly 2,600 canine actors and act- resses, ‘There were big dogs, little dogs and the doggiest dogs from Europe, Canada and the United States, many of them sporting blue ribbons won at previous exhibits, The first dogs owned by Americans to be benched were the Genesee Valley Hunt's foxhounds owned by Major J. W. Wadsworth, ‘Two sections of exhibits that attracted much comment were the prize-winning wire-haired fox terriers owned by Mrs, Roy A Rainey and George W. Quintar, These two exhibits represented an outlay of nearly $100,000, aa ; DUFFY OUTPOINTS LEWIS IN BOUT AT BUFFALO. BUFFALO, Feb, 22.—Jimmy Duffy won a newspaper verdict over Ted Lewis ten rount rather slow nund it impo: arouad Duffy's fast left Dufty beat vis to_the punch t of the’ tim roking Ted's eff left hooks and crosses tr for a knockout in the later stuxes, j Junmy fought @ cautious battle’ and made him miss frequently, King Smith and Arthur 8. Craig reg- | Seventh Regiment players in their an- | News of Sports Told in Shorts BOSTON, Feb, 22.—Prestdent Joseph J. Lannin of the Red Sox has decided to tear his world’s champions apart in places and has asked waivers on at least four of his team. While {t was dented at one time that been asked on Joe Wood, cher, well founded informa: tion to the effect that waivers had been ‘on Wood, ‘Thomas, Cady and been received. According to the story walvers were also asked on another player who at performed marvelously in ‘a This player Is an outs fielder and it is expected that he too) will find another abiding. place. | | NEW HAVEN, Conn., Feb. 22.-An-) nouncement was made here to-day by |the Yule rowing authoritics of the se- lection of Mather Almon Abbott, for| | many years coach of the Gre hool crews, a8 permanent assistant coach of the Yale navy | The announcement was made soon after it became known. that the Yale Corporati appointed Mr, Abbott assistant pi rw of Latin in the col-! lege, Mr. Abbott will be permanent a: sistant to Guy Nickalls, hi h of all Yale crews, and will receive no sal-| ary. ‘The appointment {ts along the line of greater fucully interest tn athletics, ituation and is in a way similar to the Spaeth is a at Princeton, where Mr, member of the faculty, HANOVER, N. H., Feb. ~A goal from the fleld by Sutterby in the last minutes of play won for the Cornell basketball team here to-day in the fast- est and closest game y Dartmouth court thi | % to 19 after having practically the game on {ce by a s hand overhead shot put the Green in the lead at 19 to 18, ——_—» | EMPIRE RACING STAKES. Entry dlanka for stakes to be held at| Empire City yi2 the ok at to 29 were { fifteen tant event run an aggregate of ® given In purses meeting om da which will } $81,500 will }. ‘Phe two most valuable stakes will be the Whirl and Hast View for two: Jolds, each having @ value of § ontant af upward ¥ | vear olde and | $2:h00 added i} Ac fark ove Nine thousand | Matributed | » threo-years uner | vd ot] added Stakes, w is, ‘a total of $4,000. {| dot Important two-year-old they aggregate in purses $18,000, and |had @ sha ATHLETICS. City Hall to Coney Island handi- cap walking race; start 2 P. M. Bronx County Marathon; start 1 P. M. Dickinson High School inter- scholastic meet at Fourth Regi ment, Jersey City; etart 2 P. Greek-American C. games, at of St. Anthony games, at Thirteenth Regiment Ar- mory; 830 P. M, Young Men's Hebrew Association road run; start 3 P. M. BASKETBALL. mus Hall at Poly Prep; 3 Boys’ High ence at Pawl- a Walter S. Kinsella, champion, vs. Stephen J. Feron; first match for world’s professional title at Squash Club. DOG SHOW. At Madison Square Garden, HOCKEY. Harvard Club vs, Hockey Club at St. Nicholas Rink. TENNIS. Final of the national indoor championship at the Seventh Regi- ment Armory; 9 A. M. Yale at Seventh Regiment. Mandot Defeats Johnny Dundee NEW ORLBANS, Feb. 22.—Joe Man- was awarded the decision over Johnny Dundee by Referee Tommy Burns at the end of thelr twenty- round fight In the Louisiana Arena last night, Dundee took a big lead |in the early rounds, but Mandot made a strong finish, though the decision in his favor came as a big surprise on account of Dundee's aggressive ness in the majority of rounds, Dundeo started off like a winner, smashing Mandot time and again with rights and lefts to the jaw. Atter the fifth round Dundee had the shade in only the sixth, ninth and thirteenth, ace ee Toohey Beats Tommy Houck, ‘Tommy Tuohey, the game and ag- ressive featherweight, of Paterson, N. 1, kept up his winning streak last night by deelalvely outpointing Tommy Houck, tho Philadelphia fighter, in @ ten-round bout at the Olympic A, C. of Harlem. In another ten-round scrap, Jack Sharkey the better of Abe Friedman, the east elde boxer, t Regiment Armory; |) Fistic News and Gossip By John Pollock George Chip, the former middleweight champion, who has made two unsuccess- ful attempts to regain his title from his conquerer, Al McCoy, the present hold- er, will engage in another important fight at the matinee boxing show of the Broadway Sporting Club of Brooklyn to- day. In this contest Chip will meet a much better fighter than McCoy, for he 1s going to face Jake ‘Young’ Ahearn of Brooklyn, who {s one of the fastest and cleverest middlewelghts in this country. Although Ahearn was knocked out by Mike Gibbons in one round, he will oppose Chip with more confidence than he did Gibbons, for he knows he must win decisively to-day in order to demand bouts with the other top- notchers in his class, The bout ought to be a slashing one, as both men expect to score a knockout. Battling Levinsky will be the next hoarrweight to go against Willie Meshan, the chubby Leavy: weight of Cailfornia, ‘They will meet for six rounds at the Olympte A, ©. of Hartem on March Levineky also fights ‘Wild Burt Kenny at the Long Acre A. A. on Monday night, Kenny again at Bridgeport, Oonn,, on March 7, and Jack Con- noms at the Palace A, ©, of Yonkerson March 10, Pal Moore, the crack bantamweight of Mem phis, Tena,, has arrived in town with bis man ager, Joo Levy, in search of bouts with Johnny Extlo or any other real good bantamweight that will make 116 pounds at the ringside, Moore has ‘4 decision over Ertle and Pete Herman, the New Orlans bantam, and got @ popular newspaper ver diet over Kid Williams, ‘The Clermont A. ©, of Brookiyn will also hold ‘a matinee boxing show to-day at which four ten- round bouts will be fought, In the main go Andre Anderson of Chicago will mest Jim Stew art of Brooklyn, while in the other scraps Billy De Foe of St, Paul goes against Young Drisooll, Frankie Jao boxes Young’ Jamey and Danny Gil- bride hooks up with Young Henry, Thirty-four rounds of fighting, consisting of two ten-round contests, one «ix-round go and two four-round battles, will be staged at the boxing show of the Grupp A. C. at One Hundred and Sixteenth Street and Eighth Avenue to-night, The fighters who will clayh are Pinkie Bare and Johnny Russell, Joe Moran and Young Mundy, Kid Rows and Tommy Watson, Johuny Bush and Young Brown aud Packy Agati and Smiling Wille, Danny Morgen, manager of Jack Britton, the classy welterweight fighter, has signed Britton up for two more fights, On Feb, 28 he will ox- change wallops with Wille K, O, Brennan, the Buffalo light middleweight, in a ten-round bout at the Queeusbarry A, OC, of Buffalo, and on March 13 he will go against Frankie Nottor, the oval fighter, at the Olympic A, O, of Harlom, in The Evening; STANDING OF THE TEAMS IN THE WORLD TOURNEY. ing the home team an easy victory in the opening session. The Crotonas took the third game by the biggest margin of the tourney, 213 pins, by rolling a 675 total with Miller's 267 and “Doc” Brown's 236. ‘Chis was the second clean sweep in two days for the Crotonas to Carl Kleinert’s un- bounded satisfaction, The scores: or 190 168 ist a, 236; Fi The Mets need a few more speed demons like Falk to make a winning Although the Bergman stars rolted well at the Hunts Point academy, they were only able to take one of the three sessions from Lowenthal's aggregation. The Hunts Pointers were in front up to the sixth frame of the first string, when they ran into @ number of bad breaks, giving the Bergmans the lead for their only game. In the next two ses- sions it was Hunts Point all the way, outplaying the Lenox Avenue boys by Just enough marks to win. The scores: roman Bros. \Hunte Poipt— ‘af BAS price ...tm8 fot ier Freemat 158 Hiaberer 190 Soe 1kg Brolt'd 180| B’kstone 6171 170 177 High Scores—Breitenfeld, 210; Freeman, 208; Haberer, 208; Resenteld, Sa, There are no games scheduled for to-night, LEAGUE SCORES, Life Insurance—Fidelity and Casualty Ins. Co, 04, a8, 82, ve, Mutual Ins. 40, Freddy Sepp defeated Leo Mareno 11 their match series at Bergman Bros.’ alleys last night, winning six of the first ten games, Leonard Scores Great Victory Over Jim Murphy PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 22.—In the most sensational bout seen here in years, Bennie Leonard knocked out Jimmy Murphy, the local sensation, in the sixth round at the Olympia A. A. last night. The local pride wag dropped three times before being counted out. It was tho first timo that Murphy had ever been floored. In the past two years he has won every decision here with the excep: tion of his battles with Johnny Dun. dee, which he lost by a shade. He defeated such boys recently as Fred. die Welsh, the world’s light-weight champion; Johnny Shugrue, Ad Wol- gast and Eddie McAndrews. Billy Gibson, manager of Leo: directly after ‘the fight. got in tae! graphic communication with Jimmy Johnston at Buffalo for the purpose of trying to arrange a match with Freddie Welsh at the Garden’ on March 8. “If Pollok agrees to the match," said Gibson, “New York will have its first lightweight champio For Pile Sufferers: Hef, stops ttch- ing, bleedin or protruding piles, hemorrhoids an all rectal troubles, in o in p send us coupon FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY, 629 Pyramid Bide., Marshall, ‘Mich, Kindly send me & Free samp! ft PyramidPilsTreatment,in plain wreppor, Name Street City... verses, be EDITED BY ROBERT EDGREN PUTTING *EM OVER With “Bags” Baer Copyright, 1916, by The Press Pybliching Co, (Ths York 14.) Brening World,| RABID RUDOLPH- ave 66° HE Early Fish Gets Hooked for the Same Thing the Early Bird Gets Credit F You never hear of white hopes in Poker, They gotta be blue. As every training camp has two or three of ‘em, why not give the fans wholesale rates on the Ty Cobbs. Fighters seem to 1 that the State Commission's edict against mixed boxing mixing, Any traffic bull would pinch @ chauffeur who crawled like Vollmer, Boxing todtudes Nice of Frank Gotch to warn the public he is coming back, es~ pecially when there isn’t any law compelling wrestlers to wear Klaxons. Compalsory plausible, but why « FACTS NOT WORTH KNOWING. The cricket season will soon be booming. Unfortunately, it either doesn't boom loud enough or the acoustics are bad. Possibly every~ body is deaf, Indoor yachting and radtator baseball are ante- dated by cricket. Years ago Dickens wrote “Cricket on the Hearth.” itary training for youths sound Hier inside the ring? Even if there will be a million autos sold this year, few pe- destrians will be able to indulge in the luxury of being wallopped by more than one at a time, A glance at the cognomens of bowling teams reveals how the bird who names the Pullman cags keeps in practice when the weather is too cold for outdoor practice, a FEEBLE FABLES. na time there was @ mbed citizen who pi~ rouetted between second and third of athletes known 3. When it came to greatest procrastinator in the works. Each spring he wae carded for the Ozarks, but each summer could find him cavorting around turning two-baggers Inta assist Next to divorces and manufacturing munitions, the greatest export of the town wae rs to this O-kneed gladi«- An index system showed ator. emphatically that succeeding him | was no succe: The origin: drummer boy of the Civil Wan was only outnumbered by the graduates from hie job, Although senile and tottering, he always managed to shoo the flies away MORAL—HAVING ONE FOOT IN THE GRAVE DOESN'T ANNOY A CENTIPEDE. Why does Mr. Willard get 10% enthusiastically and profusely sick? Did Mr, Jones reverse the charges on the New York-Chicago telephone chat? There's a lot more to golf than you by would suspect some of the golfe just looking at Boxing Commission has ment of 175 pounds constitutes « raft, which ruling makes Jess Willard « flotilla, FIRST FOAL OF YEAR AT JAMES BUTLER’S FARM. The first foal of the year has ar- rived at James Butler's East View Farm, Eust View, Westchester Coun- ty, N. Y., viz: Bay colt, solid col- ored, no white; foaled at 3.30 A, M., Tuesday morning, Feb, 15; sired by Imported Out of ch; dain, Pier~ rette, by Ben Brush: i dam, \Pink’ Domino ( winner), dam of Sweep, Cabaret, Sweepaway, Selec! Philand ‘uriosity, Novelty, by Domino; third dam, Imported Rose, dam of Imported Royal by ‘Beaudesert; fourth dam, Monta Rosa (a win and Montezun Craig Mile : fifth dam, Hedge Rose, by Nep= sixth dam, Woodbine, by the St well, &e, ‘his is the first fos eding of Mr, Butler's by Imported Out of Reach, &c,, and is also te, she being now only four years old, Young Young Brow sive eust sid Pranks bout at the night SPORTING, Pinkie Bums v3 Miuwell, Sean Young Munday y ‘Tomn ag? 40 Huan, ‘Tickowa on’ way Spite Club its To-Day. 0.30 wor Young Adear ead others.