The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 21, 1935, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1985 Demon Eleven Romps to 26-0 Victory Sioux Conquer Moorhead Peds, 13-6; Bison Turn Back Concordia, 13-0 © STRONG BEULAH TEAM SNOWS ST. MARY’S UNDER 37-7 COUNT| Two-Month Reign +) HLORSON,SHULT o1 | Since Baer, Following Tunney’s Lead, Maroon and White Eleven Mix-|— panne es Hard Running Attack Braves, Hi-Liners Levels Aots as Supercharg- With Tricky Passes ar P lay tf Deadlock; er, Physicians Say LAURINGER IS BIG THREAT Jays Down Spa ds| omares-ox acn-lFight Next Week Captain Lips, Beall, Branden- | Theres plenty Ke teal eas B0- jing on about it, but Max Baer w: i ——— burg Play Outstanding Games |pass, Ferderer to Paul, Enables | determined Saturday to take another|Pittsburgh Thrown in Midst of in Forward Wall Mandan to Knot Count |%<#f from the book of Gene *untey:| Torrid Battle, Play Both the man who never overlooked a bet, After Touchdown Run Cubs and Cards and fly down to fight Joe Louis in the Yankee stadium Tuesday night. Tunney, who first made this Adrion- Getting off to an auspicious start in their 1935 football campaign, the pee eas A ae Demon gridiron stalwarts romped to (By the Associated Press) dack town a fight camp, flew from (By the Associated Press) fa convineing 26-0 victory over an out-| Four crushing victories and two|here in a seaplane to the last cham-| The Pittsburgh Pirates. who aren’t classed but fighting Linton eleven|deadlocks represented the latest] pionship defense of his career, against likely to finish higher than fourth under the floodlights here Friday{moves Saturday on the high school|}Tom Heeney, in New York in 1928. in the National League this season, night. football front in North Dakota, while | He also flew from Stroudsburg, in the Saturday found themselves in the ‘Alternating straight powerhouse/a sixth duel ended in a two-point! Pocono Mountains, to Philadelphia|midst of the torrid pennant battle be- plays with a good passing attack and | verdict. for his title triumph over Jack Demp-| tween Chicago's flying Cubs and the tricky forward-laterals, the Demons} Heavy offensives enabled Bismarck | sey in the rain of the sesqui-centen- rough and tumble Cardinals with a scored a touchdown in every period|to outclass Linton, 26 to 0; Devils/ nial stadium in 1926. and added two points after touch-|Lake to smother Fessenden, 38 to 0;| Gene said then that flying was a|cide the scrap. oe Williston to humble Culbertson, gesture to upset Dempsey, who was so| The Bucs play a pair of games at ‘The Lions put up a stubborn resist-|Mont., 39 to 0, and Jamestown to|harrassed by that time that he didn't|Chicago Saturday and Sunday while ance to the relentless Bismarck at-|humble Moorhead, 26 to 0. \eare if Tunney came afoot or on|the Cards play three contests with the tack, especially during the first half, but for the most part the game was|Models, 14 to 12, on two converted |retired, was the reason for the flights, |St. Louis for pair while the Cubs played in Linton territory with the|points after touchdowns. Mandan/quring which Tunney was violently | are idle and after that the pennant backfield quartet of Dawson, Elofson,|came from behind to tie Valley City, |airsick revealed. si Schultz and Welch reeling off con-|7-7, on the latter's gridiron, and at; Sound Medical Advice sistent gains behind the Demon for-|Wahpeton the home team fought al t seems that Gene had sound ‘All Teams Idle ward wall. 6-6 tie with Lidgerwood. medical advice to back his air jaunt.| After a day of complete idleness for ‘Asa Dawson crashed over from the] Running 65 yards, Jim Allensworth |The altitude at Speculator is about|all major league clubs Friday the eight-yard line for the first touch-|scored Valley City’s touchdown on|2000 feet above sea level. The air|standing of the Cubs and Cards and down early in the initial quarter after |the game's first play. Mandan’s re-| naturally is more rarified than at sea/the New York Giants, who haven't hand conflict. Grand Forks, N. Minot which beat the Minot/horseback. Not until after Gene had|Reds. Then Pittsburgh moves on tothe aoe canipine The Sioux line smothered Yatchek’s ‘ivals e attempted. punt on the Dragons’ 25- rivals meet in a five-game hand to}. jine in the third period, Gainor|¢own and Perkins on a line smash recovering the ball for a touchdown. | counted again, both in the third quar- Charbonneau, who had made the con- Hae te bins version point on the first touchdown, |*he fourth period. missed his second try. ‘Taking the ball on the North Da- Saint attack, outpunting the Beulah 'ALERT TACKLE GETS Will Fly to New York From -Camp TWO TOUCHDOWNS IN increased oxygen at tower/Bucs May Decide| UNIVERSITY VICTORY \National Pennant N. D. A. C. Eleven Shows Con- sistent Strength in Turn- ing Back Cobbers Leroy Reff Races 60 Yards, Goes Over for Lone Touch- down on Next Play surprisingly strong Beulah high school eleven snowed St. Mary’s un- der @ 37-7 score y at Beulah. The Beulah team got off to a. fast start in the first quarter whep Seiler Sept. 21.—(#)—|skipped around end for a touchdown The University of North Dakota ac-|early in the. period. cepted a football victory Saturday traced to charity, fast defense work,|exchanges of punts Mounds crashed and Tackler Martin Gainor’s ten-|through dency to grab a loose pigskin. Outplayed most of the way, In the, second period after several the. center of the line for the second score and Foster took a the Lend from pes for the extra point. Sioux nonetheless defeated Moorhead | Thompson, same period, dash- Teachers college, 13 to 6, Friday night/ed 40 yards for the third Beulah in which Gainor's blg right tackle, got touchdown, and Murray pounded over both touchdowns by capitalizing on|the line for another making the misplays and his own fast charging. In the first quarter, a blocked pass i . |dropped into Gainor’s hands, and he Possibility that thelr actions may de-|*rophre UN? ON tte for a touchdwn,|lone Saint counter with a nice 60- Moorhead sought to pass from its 43jyard jaunt through the entire Beulah yard line, but Smart, right end, andjteam and took the ball over from the Gainor broke in, the former blocking |two-yard line on the next. play. Pete score: Beulah 25, St. Mary's 0. Reff Scores Leroy Reff paved the way. for the Fischer skirted the end for the extra point. Foster caught @ long pass from Per- kins to count the fifth. Beulah touch- teams went scoreless in Fischer .carried the brunt of the quarterback and showing great fight Bob Brandenburg had recovered Dob- |plying attack, which counted 13 first |tevel, where the fight will take place./been completely eliminated trom the| <M 35 yard line in the fourth quit Ion defense, . Several St. Mary's fum- ler’s fumble on Linton’s 35, # lateral,|downs against eight, proved itself in |p, in ir in the i Jer's fumble on \Glayton Welch, had |the next period when Ferderer passed |7rertaine se aaa Peretti Soe gained nine yards and the Lions hadjto Paul for a touchdown. = So, doctors told him that during his L Pct. hind play been penalized 15 for unnecessary Forward - laterals and spinners! training his body would accustom it- 52 (646. roughness, marked Bismarck’s encouraging open |seit to the rarefied atmosphere; that 53 632 2% 10 Elofson Scores er, and Devils Lake exhibited speed| When he went down to sea level the 56600 71414 ‘Welch tossed a pass over the line|against a heavier foe. McKee col-| increased percentage of oxygen in| If the Cards sis : to Elfred Elofson who sidestepped eae four touchdowns for the Sa-|the air would act like a supercharger |through their five games against three tacklers in a 20-yard jaunt over |'am on an automobile. Cincinnati and Pittsburgh and the the goal for the second touchdown.) The Models got thelr second touch | ‘For 12 hours the increased oxygen|Bucs should knock off the Cubs a = A pass, Schultz to Buddy Beall, was|down against Minot on a charge of! woud act as a stimulant. After that|couple of times to end Chicago's 16) Mevers good for the extra point. four straight first downs as the game ‘a mild reaction sets in. Captain Evan Lips broke through ;Neared its end. Two forward passes should go straight W. Stephens . game winning streak, the final series| Mikulich Baer knows that, and is determined | would open with the standing this Serbin . ter, the Dragons scored when Gotta ran 20 yards, a penalty against the Sioux got five more, and Yatchek Co ae circled right end on a lateral. His drop kick for the point went wrong.| St. Mary’s Pos. Summary: Hessinger le Moorhead Pos. North Dakota | Hurning It & Ressler Ig Duvall McDonald c y Litt ; re: Garske the line to block Dobler’s punt on Lin- | @franged for two of Williston’s touch-| 4, 4, : Wohlwand . ly to the fight just as Tunney did, | way: ton’s 22 and Schultz on the first play|/owns, but the rest came from M: Sceela . took the ball around end, cut back | straight football. Bub Mike scone, Promeene | per carr 96 53 644) Fonlister looks like the first $1,000,000 prize|Cubs .. |fight in New York in eight years, is neatly and went over for the third) | ee counter dragging two tacklers with! Big Ten Coaches Call as vioientiy opposed as Tex Rickard was when Gene broached the sub- him. A . The final touchdown came when! Scrimmage Sessions} jec:, ‘but mike, apparentiy, will have oe ioptleedel tind fetes AMERae no better success than Rickard did. oat to tackle eta satleeritre Chicago, Sept. 21—(%)—Big Ten back was PO- | football coaches, with one or two ex-|TAN THUMPER GETS 4 tential pass receiver. The ball flew! ceptions, called on their candidates|LAST HARD WORKOUT s on Ee re ie aie: Saturday to display how much they| 2 | nave i y , -{and dried affair. g Guiness, who raced the remaining 12 Pee ee ently mp wrecks 00 lon: Lanseria meee affair. The Tigers have Etre eens a ara One exception was Francis Schmidt | their rough playmate before he 28 ae may possibly clinch the flag | vorson, 3 the line to count the extra point. of Ohio State, who gave his boys their| climbs through the ropes for his bat- urday. e “current The cr achat sdpeccde a the Buckeye regulars had mauled the] A goodly crowd was expected to be with nine to go for each club. t from the reserve ranks this Dearne second team, 39 to 9, Schmidt was!on hand to see the tan thumper wind ———— Schultz, veteran letterman, the pass-|STCatly depressed. lup his training and the general be-| Forward Wall Is Big ing of Welch, and the shifty broken “The blocking was terrible.” he|lief was that some of the spar mates a field ru ining and pass receiving of groaned. “We've got to do a lot bet-| would sing their training camp swan Elofson were standout features in the |‘f, than thet.” songs from a horizontal position. Demon backfield. Bo McMillan gave Indiana a sur-| Louis, like Dempsey, doesn’t like 95 54 633 Cubs Need Edge ‘That would mean Chicago would ture the flag outright while anything better than a 2-3 loss would win for} St. Louis. Compared to that situation the Am-|down, man, Gales Ferry, Conn., Sept. 21—(#)— Postovit, standing | Bjorklund; first big examination Friday. After) tle with Max Baer on Tuesday night.|Shows Detroit leading by 7% games|Stephens, Gotta, Marconeri, Telemint, Scharanz, Johnson, mick and Wilson. Officials: Smith, Bemidji, referee South Dakota, umpire Kimball, Worry of Yale Coach utcnseson, Morningside, head lines-| Votes; Gnderwood high school. Yatchek . Burke .. Score by quarter: have to win four out of five to cap-| Moorhead . 5 Dakota—Touch- downs, Gainor 2, points after touch- | jer, Charbonneau 1. i Pompton Lakes, N. J., Sept. 21.—() erican League pennant chase is a cutjtouchdown, Yatchek. Substitutes—North day prepared for a final date with|been regarded as “in” for some time| Johnson, Burich, Rorvig, Edick, Hal- pacovso’/7 Lettermen Brighten Olson, Moorhead, Pp ‘Welch tossed one 27-yard pass to prise scrimmage Friday. Chicago also|to pull his punches in training. He|If Ducky Pond can develop about | HOPES OF AGGIE FANS Beall which the rangy end snagged scrimmaged, but Coach Clark Shaugh-|has to have sparring partners, how- |four top flight linemen as he admin-| HIGHEST IN TEN YEARS Fargo, N. D., Sept. 21—(?)—North | year. he has found, is to whack them too|Chology to his eager Yale football) Dakota's Aggies football forces looked |” With a line ave 3 out of the air in the first quarter taney seer feria rent back | ever, and the way to discourage them |isters regular doses of his famed psy- and complete ‘. rill, Elofson for ees sne:to The secret practice phase of prep- | solidly. ~ One tricky forward lateral, Dawson erneiet a ve re scorned ee at; Saturday, however, he will not nae re eieary a out-play their|the Uni innesota and Iowa, and will gov-|to worry about their throwing ie Three 2 e cr ipa open ae peerpaae es ern Michigan’s workouts starting|job. They are leaving camp se aie | and put the Demons in a scoring po- Beane: The Goohers ee on = and Joe probably will see to it that rector has been drilling 61 impres- sition on occasions. ward passes lay ind locked | they earn their last day's pay. Tabs was the satknlug of the for-| Sates, and Ossle Solem scheduled the | ‘f punting. tion. Line Play Strong Tllinois, Wisconsin, Northwestern Dick Shafer, playing his first game|#nd Purdue all went through light at guard, Woodland, 210-pound tackle, | drills, while the Notre Dame varsity Curtis Wedge and Babe Welch, play-|Polished up plays for a regulation ing the same two positions on the|&ame against the outstanding Sopho- right side of the line, showed sparks|more candidates today. ‘ af sels Diay but were caught nap- f” Football Scores sevel es by the alert Linton ral t ‘ootball Scores Lauringer was the mainstay of the Linton attack. In addition to carry- ing the ball for several long gains, he — our starting team.” Fargo, N. D., Sept, 21—(?)—The Fargo-Moorhead Twins, second half|spired by Pond into upsetting the sup- champions of the Northern League, | posedly outfielder, American Association. Johnson, who will report to the/| eligible. >¢——_______———-# Millers in the spring, was sold to| But three of the crack backfield St. John’s University 12; Bemidji |Cleveland of the American League by Teachers a ES Goren in es and played with ae Rankin and Captain Jim oncor: > Nor! akota State ; New Orleans of the Southern Associ- itehead. ee mort ot be PUDUDS ond tossed 13. Jation and Zansville of the Middle| The Yale schedule: Oct, 5, New Gaia of rece! ™ J tie the| st. Mary's 0; Superior Teachers 13. | Atlantic League. Hampshi vers. In the line Frison| Moorhead Teachers 6; North Da- at right guard, Volk at left and Blore| kota Universtiy 13. at left tackle were the standout per-| Mankato Teachers 0; St. Thomas 6. formers. 4 1 Probably because it was the first nee Junior 6; Gustavus Adol- game of the season for both teams, plates of he tules were fre- quent, Bismarck losing 100 yards on Penalities and Linton being put back 45 yards. The linups: Bismarck Brandenburg le Woodland + season, Army; Nov, 2, Dartmouth; Nov. 9, Brown; Nov. 16, open; Nov. 23, Har- ite National park waters in 1683. ton, OUR BOARDING HOUSE ZY YF omer THE MORE 1 THINK OF WHAT A CHUMP T WAS TO Shater SELL THAT RACE HORSE TO Lips SAKE, AND HE MAKING $1850 B. welch WITH THE STEED ON THE TRACKS : THIS SUMMER WHY, 1 COULD~UFF-FUFF~SPUT-T SPUTT=< OF DRAT HIM— HE WAS SUST BRAGGING TO ME IN THAT OBVIOUS AND STUPID LETTER | yey HEY Je OTHER END OF TH Cue |—.NOUVE BEEN ON TH” HALF-SHELL ALL DAY AT THINKING ! WHATS WRONG > TOO MUCH “DRAGON OIL. LAST NIGHT Beall Schultz Fiskum. (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago 8t. Lot New Ye Moorhead, | ny, Dakota, _K. Torreano, For- bles were’ instrumental in the one- ‘The lineups: for McDonald, Schmidt for Hessinger. Scoring touchdowns: Beulah—Sei- Mounds,; Thompson, Perkins, urray, Foster; St. Mary's—Reff. Points after -touchdowns: Beulah— Foster; Mary’s—Fischer. Outlook at Underwood Underwood, Sept. 21. — Twenty- three football candidates have been working out daily for the past two ‘With seven lettermen back from last year’s squad and several new prospects showing up well, Under- wood should have a strong team this raging well over 160 squad, the Bulldogs will again out-|forward Saturday to the game with| pounds and a backfield, averaging ity of Minnesota national| over 150 pounds local fans can ex- another durable tackle, two strong Johnson From F-M guards and a 60-minute center for piniolenead» first downs to three | Kranz, 190 Makes Long Five of the 11 dependables, in-|May, third of the Aberdeen broth-|170 pounds, back; Mac Miller, 130 ers to star for the Aggies, chased 37 unbeatable Princeton Tigers Concordia’s 4- back. Friday sold Julian (Babs) Johnson, | before ending in a blaze of glory the|{ee nse poche ie Beiskson: aul (pane, back. to Minneapolis of the| following week against Harvard, have] pack, departed and another has become in- Pie ce Gees LAO ws and second score in the last quarter. Bi quartet are available, Jerry Roscoe, Jan eee ie ngceny hecks, dia, the Bison might have made the i i score laser, Frequent, sbsiutons Cooney, Tribe Fielder, fai luce perceptibly the Bison . t. 12, Pennsylvania at indi tand Johnson hit 216 for the Twins ttiis| Philadelphia; Oct. io, Navy; Oct. 26,| Smengin indicating, ® good stand of NDAC Trout were first planted in Yosem-|Vvard at Cambridge; Nov. 30, Prince- Westgate champs with hopes of acquitting This enthusiastic young football di-| themselves favorably. perks On the basis of Friday night’s high- . well Ivar sive candidates at this rowing camp | ly promising 13 to 0 victory over Con- ative rasta unde ae Engler, a ‘All members of the brown bomber’s |f0F the past week and Saturday, just|cordia college of Moorhead, Minn..| 165 pound fullback, is captain of the Much of the team’s success, how- a ward wall and consistentl | Towa squad for a light session. Both) staff expressed confidence that he before they headed back to New/the Bison figure as perhaps the best| team. the sparkplug of the team 3 Through to break up the Lions’ ran-|Squads were down for full length|would stop Baer before the fight has| Haven, he described his squad as “the Aggie eleven in ten years because of jon B60 ike, Ure ee ae © ning plays. The pass receiving and|srimmages Saturday. progressed very far. nese id iets eteriseen ae vale surprisingly steady play. as out most of last season with a defensive play of the two flankmen,| Harry Kipke worked on the punt-|" Louis was expected to fight at 199| ,, croshects are much brighter thar) ‘The Bison, who open the Gophers'|inee injury, but in practices this Beall and Bob Brandenburg, stamped |!ng element of Michigan's famous | pounds. Ms ae e first took hold last year,”| schedule at Minneapolis next Satur-|seasori he seems to be recovered and ¥ them as two of the outstanding ends| “Punt, prayer and pass” offense, with save day, scored first through Emil May’s | showing his old time drive. 6 in prep football this season. Beali|Captain Bill Renner and Fullback | 1qq lis B ‘At this time the backfield looks/jong run and put across the second) Returning lettermen are: Lynn a also did @ major share of the Demons’ | Cedric Sweet getting special atten- Inneapolis buys much better than the line. We need|touchdown on a long march. The|gtewart, 110 pounds, center; Emil pounds, tackle; Martin Kranz, 175 pounds, end; Irvin Engler, 180 pounds, end; Norman Hunsaid, pounds, back; Ivar Engler, 165 New ‘men sure to see action are: Leonard 5 Arthur Busch and James Eskes, Annexes Batting Title » N. D, A, C.—Touchdowns, Officials, referee, Bob Thompson, Drake; umpire, Bob Brown, Carleton; *| headlinesman, Don Gates, Grinnell. THE Ww 95 a saegssae*48 sgeasse Cowles, essuzegees Seesasesr Scoring, Erickson, 2, points after touchdown, May, 1, (placement.) Substitutions—N. D. A. C., Newman, Phillips, Dietz, Isensee, Hill, Olson, Pollock, Sorkness, Welch, Saunders, Kelly. Concordia —Myrum, E. An- derson, Kroll, M. Syvrud, Tang, Gustafson, Rostadt, Thornby, f Fights Last Night > 162%, Rumson, N. J., outpointed oo Weise, 165%, New York - Chicago—Lorenzo Pack, 205, Detroit, stopped Art Sykes, 183, Elmira, N. Y. (8). Boston—Al McCoy, 170, Boston, Lou Bruillard, 162, outpoint El Paso, Tex. (10); (nontitle). Sioux City, lowa—Frankie Wol- TiL, drew (10); Billie Porter, 145, Indianapolis, outpointed Kid Obe, 145, Sioux City, (6); Jackie John- son, 135, 8} TIL, out- ited Buddy McCrem, 132, Wichita (6). Football Launches J) "rw 0 Schools Engage First Opponents, Temple Smothers St. Joseph’s New York, Sept. 21.—(7}—King foot- ball crowded into the national sports scene for a two months reign Satur- day with teams going into action in most sections of the country. Most of the opening games were ex- pected to be one-sided affairs with stiffer tests ahead. In the east, the juggernaut of Holy Cross entertains Rhode Island State at Worcester, Mass. while Chick Meehan will send his Manhattan team against little Niagara in New York. S. W. Loop Teams Play . In the southwest conference, Rice, Baylor, Southern Methodist, Texas A, é& M. and Texas Christian answer the starting whistle, the first two playing at night under the lights. Rice meets St. Marys of Texas; Southern Methodist faces Denton Teachers; the American Association .for 1935,! Baylor plays Southwestern; the Aggies while all around slugging honors go| meet Stephen F. Austin Teachers and to Johnny Gill of the champion Min-| Texas Christian meets Howard Payne. neapolis Millers. In the far west the conference Cooney, now with the Brooklyn|campaign opens with Washington Dodgers, finished the campaign with| State locking horns with Whitman an average of .371, according to final|@nd Oregon playing Linfield. semi-official figures. Gill, who joined the Chicago Cubs at the close of the ‘Association season, was second with| seasons Friday night. Temple Trims St. Josephs A number of teams opened their Pop Warner 361, a single point ahead of his vet-/saw his Temple team, paced by eran teammate, Buzz Arlett. Gill closed out the season in posses-| back he ever coached, Smukler who Warner says is the best Toll over St. sion of four specialty leaderships. He| Joseph's college, 51-0 in a night game, topped the field in home runs with A scrappy band from Illinois Wes- 43. He slugged in 152 runs, scored 148| leyan University put up a dogged runs, 15 more than Brack of Louis-| fight before being subdued by Du- ville, who finished second to Ted Gul-| quesne 20-6. lic ‘of Milwaukee in two base hits, 41 In the midwest Xavier defeated to 44, and was third in base hits. In| Georgetown (Ky.) 34-0; Grinnell took HORIZONTAL Answer to 1 Wife of an 1 oriental ruler. 12 Melody. THIEIN Oriental Ruler ae latter division; Cooney led with | Central 13-3; and St. Thomas QMinn,), defeated Mankato 6-0. SEIARIO MEPL TY] 24 Assessment OISMEDIPIAIN LE IL) SIRI SIL AV ee LA! ey amell. PRO AME TL ILI aa ibd On SNEERMDIEM [| Poe WIADMMDIEISIEIRIT SBMAIEIS| 29 Cavity. ees. IF TSICIRI | [SMMAIS} 22 Butter lump. pele: HALO! LITTLE (ILIA 32 Wrath. ae STAN] EVA ITI [A] 23 Scarlet. 24 Railroad. \ 25 Preposition. 27She is a ruler 4 4 ne, 49 Chum, lice nD a een 30 Animal. 52 Frosted. VERTICAL : 34 To prepare for 54 Small twig, 1 Ireland. SSistete gs ibleation. 56 antitary eee 46 Monkey. sere assistant. 4 Pitcher, 47 Unless. 57 Greater in ~ amount. 58 To rent. 59 To twirl. 60 Her son is Crown —— Akihito, 36 Sum. 38 Coupled. 39 Musical tote. 40 Dye. 41To drink dog-fashion. 44 Inlet. 47 To doze. rit ITN 61 Her husband 12 Devoured. ORCA aa 5 Male ancestor. 48 Dyeing 6 Mineral spring ,. #pperatus. 7Bird's home. 49 Tanning pod, 8 Region. 50 Entrance. 9 Onager. 51 Cotton tabrie, 10 Flying toy. 58 Lion’s home. 11 Aroma. 55 Hurrah! 56 Tree, BE\seee LT Ne] \\al (T WILL, SOMEDAY. THATS WHAT Over Linton Lions . Q

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