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FCALLS CAREERS OF BONERS ~ LIKE RYAN AND KETCHEL Unlike Present Day Titleholders, Never Hedged on Giving Losing Opponent Chance to Win Back Champion- ship—New Middleweight King Wit Have to Engage in Two Or Three Good Bouts to Prove His Victory Well Earned. By Robert Edgren Copyright, 1920, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World), Tong will Johnny Wilson, the new middleweight champion, last? 24 He's not entirely an “acctient,” for he won the title from Mike _ O'Dowd in a tweive-round bout, knocking the champion down once in the second and out-boxing him thereafter, Hector McInnis, the ref- eree who gave Wilson the decision over O'Dowd, ts a veterah sportsman and a capable official, not at all like! to make # mistake. Yet In a way Wilson is an “accl« dent.” Until he beat O'Dowd he was prac- tieally an unknown boxer. Although he has been fighting for several rs He never rose far enough above the Class to be rated among the “contenders.” No doubt O'Dowd him as just one of the fairly good second raters he could meet it special training, to fatten the old bankroll and keep his hand in be. wee mcre important ring engagements. If Wilson is of championship us it ip odd that he never showéd it before. fighters have won champion- } that no one on earth expected ) 4, Cniines t6 eat ‘them win. But as a rule they page RG the sghic yan. ene te "As, MECON”, Tam womeeT ‘Deon first-class men with good | tear into me every day, and I held CHEESE - CHAMPION We EVER MAD, ; “ back my punches and learned all I QUIT Coro Te MKE O'De td bd could from him. A couple of days be- “we SIATH Round. -..+ Micoy Hated as among contenders for | fore the fight I cut loose and jabbed Was one of Thusa. " the championship honors. sh is in @ position slightly dit Stent from that of other champion- 1 ip winners. His one win over “ d will need to be supplemented ‘ him pretty hard, and never let him FACENDENTAL CHAMPIONS. & a it on meat all. Later I learned it Tommy had $1,000 bet on Fitz, ‘but after I out loose and showed him what £ had he rushed around and it and put bis money on me. Tommy was a fox. Billy Papke, the Illinois Thunder- bolt, was @ really great middleweight. He fought Ketchel a hard ten rounds in Milwaukee, losing a close decision, om) bet same Carroll (two roun a ‘ank Mantell (one @ make a lot of money on the stage | round) on the same night in pA So moving pictures, like other new bo ipped Sailor Burke in New in these commereial days. | X< e days later, I saw these have to go on fighting | ‘2°°° fights, and will never forget the off for @ year or #0, good i be generally recognized as the st man in the middleweight class, eh though he holds the title. Con- qliently he can't very well go out Bah a Serene Sa STAND UP BeroRe cue) UNDTRBAT Baty’ PAPICE WMEN Papire WAS Goo. | LIVE WIRES Stanley Ketohel out in twelve rounds of fighting that the Californians still talk about. Jim Jeffries says it was the greatest fight he ever saw, and that Papke, that after was & “e-% & middieweight king. Neal R. O'Hara Georriah, 1908, ty The Press Publishing On, (The New York Brentng World) Carpentier-Levinsky fight will show whether Carp is making a hit or @ sacrifice in stepping up.to Bat. . . . ° the Indianapolis auto race was a success from every standpoint except man in the but he took | the local undertakers’, ne) 1 beating that day,” ofe Noy, fe they eevaoeia, i “ag to ‘The mortality rate of crap shooting is still ahead of auto racing. Rene The ranks have alw: ‘ igs time of If they didn't climb, wasa ie ve fuys gone up a’ ime of year, ey in" imb, merreen them, They were | they blew, f m ns After Ketchel died Papke reclaimed Pe ri tt in his bi a! ts he knocked out wil Lewis ry TION. cisco, and this the Ketchel out = in eleven rounds. oe BABE RUTH WOULD BE THE GREATEST SINGLE ATTRACTION IN BASEBALL IF HE WASN’T THE GREATEST FOUR!BASE ATTRAC- i in three rounds, knocked out Dave Smith, Australian champion, in nN seven rounds in Sydney, Austra! Mh) ir the Yanks play now it's a question whether Babe or the revel and knocked t EB it bust the fences, Welght Champion Jim Bullivag | Og ali They named a tire after McGraw and a truck after Connie Mack to prove they were used to rough roads. fe standing up to the clever, eh 58) 1 Joe was regarded as a pres- ve Dempsey for gears & 4 heavyweight champion: venteen rounds. At that And they named the gasoline companies after the Pittsburgh ball time Carpentier was a middioweight, |.club for an altogether different reason. of course, and not. the great fighter 8 © he afterward became, but a very us re) Denti Srgece Census report shows Philadelphin has gained 110,000, or almost as Champion Pape loot 10 Freak Kinus | &mes as Philadelphia has lost ene of Pittsburgh, in Paris, ® foul in, oes apnion That wound up his: Frank Kiate wasn hardy gnter, [of rugged, aggressive, byt not quite In et | “inet 5 by G ne , ; Chip of Neweastle. Chip looked as it Kumagae Beats he might have quite a little glass, He Vi cent Richa Is had fought a lot of good men with For Tennis Title fair success. But in one of his first fights as champion he inte hard luck, in Ichiya Kumagae proved that Vin- cent Richards ts not capable of te- He met Al MoCoy Brooklyn and was knocked out in the first round, The inside story of that fight may never have been printed. As I had it from Chip, long after- ward, MoCoy's manager, Jack Dough- peating—at least ao far as the Jap. anese wizard of the lawn tennis renenet is concerned. With truly Oris ental persistency, Kumagee poked the ball into Richards's backhand until, in the final of the Eastern New York erty, came to Chip before the fight and sald: “George, you know you'r champion and this youngster hasn’s State championship tournament on the courts of the Amackassin Club, Yonkers, he had won in four sets, a chance with you. He's coming along nicely and doing pretty well, Of mi ba final tally was ¢—l, &—6, 6-8, Kui te now the New York course you can knock him out any time you want to, but it would spoit him if you knocked him out too quick. ter up I want to ask you if you won't let him go three or four rounds before you cut loose, to give him a chance State and Eastern New York State title holder. By the system of his at- tack the Japanese took all the pep out of his young rival's attack. There was mighty little siz or sizzle about the volleys Richards played, There was to make some showing before you | practically little aggressiveness about finish him, It won't be so bad for him if he goes a few rounds. the young American's backhanders, and It was soon evident as the sets ‘Chip magnanimously promised to easy” at the start and got into progressed that Kumagae had found the way to tame his rival. *e « 1f Wood and Johnson can't win in Chicago they're going to have lots company. The Braves and Phillies can't win there cither, At Belmont Paul Jones, Upset and Wild- air Are Popular Entries in Classic Turf Event. HE thirty-fourth renewal of the Suburban wil take place at Belmont Park this afternoon, and given bright skies a crowd second only to the amazing horde on Memorial Day will journey to the picturesque inclosure to see a real horse race, Paul Jones, winner of the Ken- tucky Derby; H. P, Whitney's Up- set, which ran secopd in both the Kentucky Derby and The Preaknass, and the same owner's Wildair, which chased Man O' War home a week ago in that record breaking mile, were most talked of in the paddock ye terday_ and about the hotels last night. But the race Is decidedly open. Ten horses have been named over night as probable atarters, and they are not lacking in quality. In fact, it promises to be one of the best Sub- urban Handicaps run in recent years and the winner will well deserve a place in the select list at the end of th gruelling mile and a quarter, Sam Hildreth will pin’ to live in Butte, only @ skinn; @ terror. You'l ever gets OUt- | the ring full of careless confidence. %: middieweight class has haa|™’COY THE REAL CAMEMBERT. (/Beine cheese ciiampions since Ketchel | Al MoCoy had only one qualification, () died. Before Ketchel’s time some of | as a fighter, He stood with his right the 1 champions in the world | foot anced and by dropping his ere ights. ‘There was Jack | left hand almost to the floor he could e1 the famous Nonpareil, who| hit a terrific blow and land it on any itely invincible among mid- | ne who wasn’t looking. Chip rushea in bare knuckle or|MoCoy to the ropes, where McCoy jays. Fitzsimmons, | doubled up as if he wanted to quit. ‘aut, | Chip ig cy us hands laughing, not sana ‘touanl Kay ian) |. | Pressl) is as ntage. fought matches In semi-final eyrgy Arata fob Lhe hia ert hand hang down below his round of the lawn tennis sing’ re knees as he crouched and half turnea sulted in Mra, Robert Le Roy and Mis, gwray, and suddenly throw every- with colors fying on. the courts. of the thing’ he bad into @ tong, upward Sionteeie Athlete Clube Montclair, tang Canes atively, oft ie guard i yesterday. oat agi 7 Ri Seine , Miss Florence no sea useckd aes Sarkis ous wee WE Want Bide Metis GR id soot MeMillen oy defeated faith to Corn Tassel, which won a year ago for and knoc! = bass in the other on-|®. T. Wilson, and Thunderclap; white he Jay helpless while the referee agement Mrs, McMillen outplayed the| Willis Sharpe Kilmer is counting on counted him out. {unio ‘Mias Martha Bayard by a score | Exterminator, the Kentucky. Darby MoCoy was the worst ‘cheese of3 6. 69% Ib winner In 1918, and Commander Ross champion” we had. on, Boniface. would risk anything but a short, no. decision battle, and he veloped a gusine cover-up and a swift back- ap that saved him knocked out by better coupie of years the He nove: Willie Ryan Knocks Out Wil LONG BRANCH, N, With a heavy right hand to, from being | stomach, Wille Ryan, the rugged New men, Aft Bi N. Ju wel perweagh knock- fe “Williams Philadel- reise ee, hia, in the second round of the main geiniad Saas ne ent at the Ocean offered on the score of Park A. A. here last wight és boxing pondition. | ach, one has cov any more easy money. 1@ met O'Dowd, a toar- ame ee i eae tert "it he aN 2 aed m= with Fitzsimmons at Coney RYANS AROUND NOW to shake me with some three-year- ling that the winner will come from the younger lot. The weights are so nicely adjusted and every horse has been wor ‘ull distance in or bet! the track is not deluged the track record brilliant, race SE in be PEC Rte NN hah oe ‘ tal ates " THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JUN®@ 5, 1920. ‘DEFEAT OF O'D0W) [BEST SPORTING Sige: ar — WU MDDLEWEIGRTS ARE a oom. Lot WHEN Comparen with MEN LING MOOLEWEIGHT BoB Fitzsimmons, WHO POVENT ALL THE HEAVIES 2 FROM THE GIANT ISFRRIES Downy, — 5 Per PAGE IN NEW YORK POSIPONE YACHT TIIE NEW MIDDLEWEIGHT KING AND SOME EX-KINGS Copyright, 1920, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World). ° WREN WE was AN Sunmtonn® STANLEY KET \ a Won OUT of 39 AGuts “nn Dyer’s Pheno TO-DAY’S SUBURBAN FIELD. Horse. Weight. Jockey. Ext inator vi eee) Boniface ite “sna: (Famous Player Eliminated pica tron ame Kummer From Jersey Tourney, Al- Ew nell ie ec though Putting Up a Good +Upset 106 Johnson Game. ¢Wildair 106 Ambrose Cleopatra or MoAt Doria Maven |! 0 miers By William Abbott. “Hildreth entry, ¢Whitney entry. UDDEN reversals of form, which occur more often in golf than any other sport, unexpectedly punctured Jerry Travers's come-back on the links, The four-times w:nner of the National amateur title and once holder of the open trophy had N. Y. A. C. Holds Marathon Today New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Pitts- burgh and Chicago, not to mention many other big cities in the East, will have representatives in the Marathon race of the New York Athletic Club, which ell begin at 12.30 o'clock to-day, starting from the club house at 59th Street and Sixth Avenue and finding its welcome ending at the Winged Foot's country home on Travers island. The race will be run over a carefully selected course, which has been so wed that it will be necessary to make a full lap around the track to complete the full Maratlion distance of 26.56 miles. While the lithe-muscled athletes will be striving for rail and pole positions on the fough, hard roads, about 400 of their contemporaries will be busily en- rounds of the New Jersey State championship, which was to signalize his return to tournament form, For the third round yesterday the draw stacked Travers up against Frank Dyer, a tall, husky chap from Mont- clair, While attending the University of Pennsylvania a fow years ago Dyer performed creditably in inter- collegiate circles and he's figured rather prominently ever since in tournaments, But against Travers Dyer shot sev- eral gears above his regular speed. Par for the first nine holes at Arcola is 3, and that was exactly the score Classic Suburban Handicap battling for honors on the soft. | the Montclair entry pulled off against proerieeee a ineeg Pah and fold | nig veteran opponent. Now Jerry's game was good enough to win most ames of the Mercury Foo! i ry Foot organisa | cheounters, but it couldn't cope with ton, Hagen Turn; In Good Card on English Links Copyright, 1920, by The Presa Publishing Oo, (The Now York Evening World.) LONDON, June 6.—Walter Hhgen, the open golf champion of the United States, played in a four-ball match yes- Park To-Day O' War tn The Withers and Upset’s eneral consistency and quality give . P. Whitney a strong hand, and the better of the two Is likely to carry off the prize and the honors which go with it ¥ enki Jones and Thunderclap may be lterday at Addington, Surrey, with A. C. 6 contenders, ‘erm| dangerous, particularly if the track |Croome as a partner, Haat Jim \s heavy and sloppy. In fact, if the | Barnes and Jack Ro: latter conditiona prevafl he and Paui| Hagen turned in a score of 75, and Jones should fight it out, played sound golf, although his side was beaten in the mornng round by three up and two to play, In commenting on his invasion of English courses, he said to-day: Gov. Coolidge xing Bil in Massachusetts, BOSTON, June 6.—Gov. Coolidge last night signed a bill to legalize ten-round |” am playing fairly well, but I have boxing bouts in this State, The ill! too high regard for the skill of Vat- spectties that decisions are to be given don, Braid, Taylor, Mitchell, Duncur by two Judges, and ff they are unable|and Ray {o think’ that 1 am sous to agree by a‘referee. A club wishing | through to an easy victory at Deal.) to conduct bouts must have at least ajam just hoping to run into my gan. ear'a lease of {ts building, and all|and do well, Lena managers, Le reer, judges’ or others’ associated’ with the |g, 0-1 Match sport must be licensed by the State, ‘The |2* & SOSNeT Weiae Sistale. Mate State will collect 6 per cont. of the gross at We er. receipts from all bouts, Surprise followed surprise th the - ae Westchester County Golf Association Brennan and Madden Box Draw. At Bayonne last night Bill Bren- nan and Bartley Madden, two of the best of the heavyweight crop, fought tweive hard rounds to a draw. It was championship” tournament continuea over the links of the Dunwomlle Coun- try Club yesterday. To begin with, both Charles Paul, of Gedney Farms, and a nip and tuck battle all the way. Mad-|John G, Anderson, the Siwanoy cap- den butted Brennan in the tenth round, | tain who had tied for the medal in the causing a big cut over Brennan's right stroke competition, met defeat in the first round, G, lL. Conley, winner of the West- chester title a year ago, disposed of Paul, after the first named had been 4 down with five holes to play, Conley won the fourteenth and fifteenth halved the sixteenth and then won the seventeenth and eighteenth, Pau weakened at the second extra hole, In the mean time, Charles H. Brown, former Hudson River champion, de: feated Anderson, Brown made the round in 73 and finished 1 up. He also stood 1 up at the turn and held that eye. which was partly closed fram wild jabs. Brenan was the aggressor most of the way, but Madden scored many blows throughout. Mexican Joe Law- son was scared when he faced Kid Norfolk in th eother feature twelve- round bout and was knocked out by @ volley of body and jaw smashes. in the firt hround. ‘folk sure ja an- other “black demon" and in action re- minds one of iT his best. Jerome Draw. At Wright King Club of Beacon, N. ¥. inst night, Frankle Jerome of New York, ‘ork, and Johnny Curtin of Jersey City, boxed one of the fastest bouts geen aroul same margin at the thirteenth. The ind that part of @ country | last five holes were halyed. J. 8. Worth- to a, draw, ‘ ington, a clubmate of Anderson, then , to take Brown Into camp b: emer eae Seaian SEL Rai. Sie come along famously in the early} menal Golf Checks Jerry Travers’s Attempt at a Come-Back the brand that Dyer cut loo: the turn Dyer was 4 up. Inst slowing down he incr: te 4ve holes, which was his final margin of victory. So Travers had io join the defeatist class and tem- I Sorarily postpone his come-back. This round was tough on another favorite, August Kammer of Baltus- rol. This gterling” match player simply could’ not get going against F, F. Turrell, a tall pill swatter from the Morris County Club. One prime reason for this situation was/ the utter refusal of Turreli to let his opponent get going. While Kammer was erratic and inclined to be wab!'y his conqueror was shooting dead ..r the pin and was never in serious trouble, The results cf the double-match play rounds yesterday catapulted Frank Dyer and William Reekie to the thirty-six-hole finals for the title | to-day. In the semi-finals Reekie, | who captured the qualifying medal with a 78, took the measure of Tur- rell, Reekle was never down to his man, and after being 1 up at the turn st.rted to move away rapidly from Turrell on the remaining holes, the final verdict being 4 and 2. The Dyer-Risley match was @ ding- dong scrap all the way. Both played brilliantly and poorly in spots. Ris- ley dubbed his drive and lost the very first hole. Dyet dropped the short third when a short putt stayea out. The long fourth over a big mound went to Dyer when Risley failed to get on in 2. Risley, stymied, lost the fifth. It began to look Itke a walkover for the husky Mr, Dyer. quick change came at the seventh, where Risley holed a forty-footer. This great shot apparently un- nerved Dyer, On the long eighth he drove two balls out of bounds, one falling just outside, in the left side, while the other went sailing through trees on the other side. Dyer, natu- rally, conceded the hole, squaring the | match. On the hill ninth both were about ten feet away from the cup. Dyer got his putt and took the hole and lead when Risley missed his at- tempt. On the outward trip Dyer became steadier and increased his advantage, although his smaller opponent hung on like a bulldoj Dyer won, 3 and 2. Mprray Injur to Substt- tute for Him, Johnny Murray received a cut over the eye during his knockout victory over Artie Root Wednesday night in Philly and will be unable to box young Andy Chaney in the all-star card at the Armory A. A. of Jersey City Monday night, Tommy Noble, the clever Eng- lish boy, has been substituted against the twice-congueror of Champion Kil- dane. Jeft Madden, who meets Gene Tun- ney, the A. E. F, light. heavyweight champion, in the second twelve-round is hafd at work preparing for 18 encounter with the soldier“ boy. Madden has been doing all his boxing ecently down in Panama, where he byat Very heavyweight he met, winning the title for the class. In the two eight- round numbers Freddie Reese, Brook- lyn’s aggressive battler, hooks up with Johnny Yarns, the Jersey featherweight with the kayo wallop, and Johnny Bute, the Skeeter bantam, tacklea Victor Ritehie, the Harlem! ee ‘Ten Referees for Army Boxing Tourney Next Week. No less; than ten referees will be on the job when the big army boxing arnival is staged at the Sixty-ninth Regiment Armory on Tuesday and Wednesday nights of next week. De- cisions will be rendered in each con- test. ‘The men who will judge the bouts wre Billy Roche, Patsy Haley, Kid Me- Partland, Eddie Pollock, Harry Stout, Billy Joh, Johnny McAvoy, Dan Sulli- van, Slim Brennan and Harry Brtle, The Mist includes practically all the orominent referees in the Bast, — BASEBALL ‘TO-MORRO' Lincoln Giants pla; Bridgeport joubl ader against nd Waterbury, at Oathoilo un ds TESTING. RACES INT MONDAY Resolute Goes to Bristol to Have a New Spiral Steel Mast Stepped. NEWPORT, R. I, June 5.—Failure of the Herreshoff shop to send Reso- lute’s gaff, that was ordered shipped here, caused a postponement of the second racs of the America’s Cup defense yachts, which was scheduled yesterday, A gaff was shipped from Bristol to replace the one broken on her in the race Thursday, but it was not the one ordered by Robert W. Emmons, her managing owner. He told the Regatta Committee he did not want to i. the one sent ita error just for one rdce, and tt waa decided to wait until to-day be- fore holding another contest. Reso- lute then was taken in tow by her tender Montauk to Bristol. It was expected the topsail spar would be replaced there and that she would return here immediately to race to- day. Instead W. Butler Duncan, Chair- man of the America’s Cup Commit- tee, announced late this afternoon after communicating with Mr. Em- mons that it had been decided to put another mast in Resolute and that there would be no more racing before Monday. Resolute’s other steel mast will be stepped in she lost her wocden mast off Ni Haven on Mav 22. Mr. Emmons told Commodore Duns) ean he had decided to change Reso- tute’s mast after to-day anyway, and that he did not care to bring her back from Bristol after changing her gaff just for one race. 0 affair Commodore George Nichol: fle fit to race and she m ere, hey in place of the one she has had Eo ’ There surely has been plenty of time | ° to get both yachts read Resolute is a speed marvel, becomes necessary to repair her change her tig atter every race s is not the type of boat thi mind when the America’s Cup was deeded to the New York Yacht Clvb to be raced, for, There was a twelve mile northerly breeze to-day which had flattened the fea, and conditions were ideal for the triangular race hoped for, In the race Thursday it was conclu- sively shown that Resolute is faster than. Vanitle going to windward and running before the wind. ‘There haa been no comparison of their reaching qualities under their new rigs ins breeze yet. Vanitie still may be able to reach a little faster, but in a serice of yacht races under varying conditions that would not enable her to “bring home the bacon."" She may win a race or two, but it is a fore; that, barring accident, the ‘yacht chosen tor’ t meet Sir Thomas Lipton's Shamrock TV, The yachtsmen here are more inter= estedin what the Shamrock IV. will do undef sail than they are in the defend- ing candidates. Word of every move that, is made in connection with her is with the keenest interest. She {8 the unknown quantity in the coming international con: a. BRISTOL, R. I, June 5.—The sloop | Resolute was towed here tox | from Newport, and immediately a spiral plated stecl mast, used in 1915 and re- cemy placed in readiness for an emer- Foncy: was stepped, together wit! low wooden rr eaiar Test spins | expected to eld in Narragansett to-day. ‘he new mast is two fect longer | than the one which was pronounced faulty off Newport yesterday, and with the hew topmast will give the yacht & loftier sail spread. New rigging stays and new aluminum gaff also were Installed. Trial Yacht for Shamrock Here at The twenty-three metre Shamrock, | Sir Thomas Lipton’s yacht which will ) act as a “trial horse” for his cup chal- Jenger Shamrock 1V., arrived at Quar- antine yesterday evening and was taken inp tow for City Island by a tug at 6.30 o'clock. The visitor was first sighted yester- day morning about six miles off Sea {Girt by the steamship Panaman, which reported the fact by wireless ‘shortly PAs PSS dalava ty pad. weatnes dh us ys we er 1e “trial horse’ finally” left. England. ‘on Mey 6. "She way of the Azores ' Was thirty daye 1 aking the ‘as thirty days in mi the vi |see, She came under dug re of the YAW! description. As she left Quaran- ine she displayed from her jiggermast rge replica of the Irish Knlght's'pri- ‘ate signal, a green shamrock on @ White field." She has a crew of twenty- three, with Capt. Alfred Diaper in com- The work of stripping off her ju rig cM Substitution of the racing ig r w mn to-day, . Rei Sir Thoma: ny represent ative, is anxious to put the yacht through their paces at the earliest per sible moment, As soon as the twent: three-metre is ‘racing ri be taken, with the challenger, orseshoe, Sandy Hook, they will make daily excursions to the Ocean for practice spins. News of the arrival of the twenty- fhree-motre Caused an apprec: among the challenger’s | personnel City fotand, and'« tug wad immedsately started for Quarantine to meet her, The challenger Was not under sail yi day, nor is it likely she will have other trial before to-morgow, as designer, Nicholson, is sdid discovered | other th Weak ‘points’ beaide nts readers in her top hamper, 7 ‘The employment of « trial horse for | the challenger is an innovation. intros duced by Sir Thomas in 1901, when he brought Shamrock I, over to race against Shamrock If, When Genesta, the first English single-sticker chal lenger, came here in 1885 she met the New York Yacht Club's cruisi ua.~ dron at Newport and’ participated “im several of the port to port ruus. Ale a ward cre vthough she always — took ‘course expertenced yachtamen pretty fair idea of her sped | AT BEAUTIFUL BELMONT PARK TODAY THE SUBURBAN 2\6-MILE STEEPLECHASE and 4 Other Brilliant Races BEGINNING AT 2.30 IAL WACK ThalNy Penna. Station, 33@ St. ana 7th iso from Flatbush Av, Brooktyn, p to 1.50 leave ay | —_—_—_—_—_————— Bratsotory gro Tremeht av near | THUM cova. were tue ce 4 F race. but if | ry ble stir +