The evening world. Newspaper, June 13, 1916, Page 12

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$ se ——— Coe ssocr AP RE seco ntti 2 Dundee Fights Uphill Battle and Beats Leonard, Whose Excess Weight Slowed Him Up. Cnprrich: 1916. br The Pree Punishing Co. Fie New York Evening Work.) PROARIOUS shouting, tooting U horns, jangling bells drowned the last clang of the ringside gong at Madison Square Garden last night. The thousands of rival Dun- dee and Leonard rooters were claim- ing victory for their respective cham- pions. Leonart, pale and battered, turned to his corner with a weak tm- {tation of his usual jaunty step. Johnny Dundes, his dark features in a red flush of excitement, glared after him as if reluctant to obey the bell. Dundee won the fight. Leonard came into the ring carrying five or six pounds of fat. It was a fatal mis- ee BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YOR ON THE FIRING LINE WITH DUNDEE AND LEONARD Copyright, 1916, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World), take, His speed wasn't up to the etandani eet in former bouts, and he ‘was swept off his feet by the little Sootch-Wop'’s furiously unrelenting attack. Leonard didn’t hold anything back because of his Friday night match with Freddy Welsh, for early in the evening he had been unofficially noti- fed that the Welsh fight had been “called off’ by Weish's manager. Welsh sat near the ring smoking a big fat cjgar. And if he had wanted to hold back it would have been im- possible, for Dundee wouldn't let him. According to the announcement Leonard weighed 186 pounds and Dundee 127. It was rumored around the ring that Leonard's real weigtit was a pound more than this, and Dundec’s a pound less. Dunde manager, Scotty Montieth, said that Dundee “didn't move the beam” at 127 pounds. Billy Gibson said he did move the beam, and the weights were as announced. In any case Dundee ~as about ten pounds lighter than Leonard. He was fighting an uphill fight. UNDEF Isn't “sctentific,” accord- ing to the style of boxing taught in schools. He is en- | trely original tn his fighting method! Apparently he has made a close study of the wildcat In action. He crouches low and moves within leaping distance of his victim, then suddenly springs upon him, ripping and slashing away furiously. He has a trick of coming in slowly, holding hie head out as if inviting a blow, but moving in such an eccentric manner that his opponent is completely puzzled. He worked this on Leonard in every round. Now and then Leonard met him with an upper- cut, but as a rule Dundee made him miss. When he was hit the little) Italian seemed stung into redoubied | fury. Driven away by a sharp blow, he always bounced back like a rubber ball. Leonard's hardest blows had no apparent effect on him. He was neither dazed nor weakened. In their former fight Leonard had Mttle trouble In avoiding Dundee's blows. He couldn't stay away from them last night. The little fellow, tearing in with amazing leaps and spurts of speed, flailed away with both hands and smash after smash through, under or over he ard’s guard. In the sixth round he cut Leonard's left eye with a slashing hook. The sight of the damage aroused Dundee to more furious efforts. He plastered Leonard against the ropes and walloped away until Benny slipped aside and escaped. Dundee went right after him again, and was jarred but not held off by a hard crack on the jaw. Leona: . was settling down to hard hitting, placing his blows with great care, Every punch was effec tively timed. But Dundee swung blo’ for blow and frequently tilted Benny head back with left hooks or drove rib-cracking rights or lefts into his body. The body punishment seemed to worry Henny most. He looked pale and he protested to R sl Brown several times. Some of Dun- dee's punches were rather low. One landed aquarely on Leonard's belt and Brown cautioned Dundee sharply. UNDEE began holding his jaw out for Benny to hit. Several in deliberately. At last Benny took | a chance with a right uppercut, Dun- | dee pulled his head back like a flash | and let the blow sizzle safely past. | and suddenly let go a storm of swings that drove Leonard across the ring, The fighting was very fast. The crowds in the various seat sections kept up a tremendous roar of ap- was so anxious to fin jumped up and do’ h it that he nd leaped It is the liberal minded man of moderate habit to whom this country owes its greatest debt. And s0 it is the moderate man whom we are proudest to have as a customer for a remarkably mild and mellow Whiskey —Wilson—Real Wilson— That’s All! The Whiskey for which we invented the Non-Refillable Rottle FREE CLUB RECIPES—Free booklet of famous club recipes for tmlsad. drinks, Addrese Wilson. 31) FitthAve.N.Y. That's All Nore - Dundee wast Saentiec! THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 1916.7 K RAGING EXPERTS —=—_—=_=_ ~~ LECNARD Li A FEW Litt THIS DUNDEE Rusia Leonmnen \NTo A Corner « Southpaw Offerings of Anderson and Tes-| reau Walloped by Chicago: Team for Eighteen Hits, and| Still Some Fans Say They: By Bozeman Bulger. HE spitball got a terrible lam- Polo | Grounds on the second ap- pearance of the Cubs, and, coinct- dental with that carnage, the Giants flopped out of second place, quietly | nursing thelr wounds and wonder- ing how it all happened. Evidently the Cubs had waxed fat on the slippery delivery during their outlaw days, and when Anderson, for- merly one of their clan, opened with| gt his 4 spray of saliva and slippery elm| heavy artillery was turned into a par they warmed up and turned the af-|lor rifle, In other words, it was a ternoon into ap old home week. Very| STand old day for the Federal 1 quickly Mr, Anderson and his follow- ers determined that it was no place for him, but McGraw, not knowing the Cub-Whale predeiiction for the spitbali, ushered in Tesreau to @ive, ag ie our duty to relate, occurred them a litUe more of the same and| simultaneously with the defeat of the Tinker yang reciprocated. In ad-| the Pirates by Grover Cleveland dition to the #ix wallops off Ander-| Alexander, and all ideas of stop- son our bear hunting behemoth was| Ping Brooklyn have been aban d to another dozen of the same} doned for the present. The Phil- en hits altogether! And stil there are still Lving those| Dodgers. having been victorious, trouble ial are further ahead than ever, Chicago's club is that it can't hit! verything seemed to be upset. The Gi Leonard with no attempt to guard hig | | Jaw or avoid 4 punch, Benny peppered ‘curious that we e o ” }him hard, and Dundee fanned the alr. Joe Tinker’ es AKO! r times he het] it out and walked nd of the fight Leon: i Mulligan on noel reason {08K was! Doolan pottered around that inf at stops but no nourishing back On his | wallops, This young fellow, Mulligan, maced our gallant spithallers for just four sound hits and might have got another but for an effort on his part|backstops to quell Au out of a base on balls id too , thereby checking wise would have been a blows cleanly, and hard makin b Every time he was hit Dun- ldee only fought harder, Ten pounds Next time he walked in untouched | jighter, infer rin skill and in hitting power, he upset all obstacles by sheer He swarmed all over his by superior ssiveness planted two Neither was or in the — of a knockout, fighting fury. speed and ass plause. In the ninth round Dundee | blows for Benny at's Cubs Lambaste Giants’ Spitball Pitchers; Packard Is Puzzle to Locals Braves {s lack of consistent pitching, | w: have sald, I believe the|is anything else. T'9 pitching until Tyler and Rudolph began to go and pitehed the club to « pennant. James has been a net loss to Stallings be-|to dispose of the tea cause he insisted on pitching winter| Wnt all the money ball out on the Coast and hurt him- MAJOR LEAGUE RESULTS AND STANDING American League 0 a 2 ork.24 24 .533 5 a 2 5 429| Detroit..25 23.52 Results of Games Yesterday. Dewroit 8: New York 6. Chicago, 3; Washington, 0. St. Loule 4; Boston, 3. Cleveland, 2; Philadelphia, 1. | James is a big one. If the Bi club could get any twirling such ag it caught during its bi {come pretty near repeating, because, loutside of the pitching staff, it 1s a Games To-Day. New York at Detroit strength now. has had a lot of good men out of the game this season with injuries and ale ‘inelanat at Boston in Pittaburgh at Philadelphia hia at Cle ele made them come right up and nib the contrary notwithstanding. The fall of the Giants before the claws of the Oubs, sorrowful lies are in second place and the Still, the season is long—and } weary. ¢ beneh while M to beat 1 t inning, He w ueck ou! complete afternoon, And then there was McCarthy, the | other youngster recently allowed to | play second in the place of the late | Steve Yerkes, M into the spitball delivery 4 several pick-ups at sec the double play variety wonder all the more But this is a ds to think of 4 rman ¢ ord in the d rurhout t In't Ket time, Onee, a decision, his but fn # minute down they came without one verbal explosion. Vie Suier, Rolie Zeider and others rushed | his way and with beseeching oLiOns | ed that he deny himself the] asure of murder And Heinte He tened on a te 810) he got } his hands breast p trop) them ain Evidently the}, | Cuns have Working on Heinie and in rehearsal he letter per | fect . mean a the Cubs lif teammates ca keep those hands of Heinie's a But, on this day turn our attention handers as a regular dict, but Gene | somewhe Packard, another outlaw, by the way, in the trenches yu: there} this season fingers. Our much vaunted Donovan's ¢ Tung of the ladder, but not by their The other Bastern clubs dropped from beneath them tustead ot climbing up. stop to spit on their hands there's go- ing to be a terrible fall, sue, “Maggie” spent most of his baseball | Bennie Kauff and Fred Anderson to life in Philadelphia up to the winter | before last, when he was traded to Boston just after the Braves had won Championship, much to surprise. Of course, Magee did not out in on any of that sugar, but he expected to share in & World's Series puree the next season because it looked like a push over for ‘Then Philadelphia turned | attracted a bie and won the pennant. DOESN'T SEEM HIMSELF THIS SEASON. $12,683.50, Of this sum Leonard got| <r Dene the most popular boxer in the City of “{t looked as if they did it to spite | $3,910.65, while Dundee me," complained Magee, "They never | $3,170.75. The State received five per| cent. of the receipts, which amounted to ¢ calling off of the Freddie Welsh $951.26, The tickets were sold for the | B27 Leoaant ten-round bout, the Washington LUBRICANTS Their whole campaign |Show as follows: 2,406 at $1, 996 at at $3, 184 at § own efforts, If the Yanki everybody's loss now, and it begins to look wi ed by Capt, consolation, though, in the fact that the weather con- tinues cool, In the gloom there appears just one| even came Glose while I was with the It may be none of the business of New York fans, but we are just that would like to know peping ing of Kocher| 1 am not worrying about the Phil- lies this year. 4 last season was built around the fine |!79 at pitching of Alexander, who had ajat $5, exchanges 48 at $1 and $12 in| Jobnny “Kid” Alberts and Frankie Callahan great year, padded out with a little luck, Alec was worked to death to baud pring that flag home. He is showing | after the content Billy Giheon declared that he taints a dealer for the it this year, for he is not himself, Wel ned offers for Benny Leonant for bouts that| Tt “Kid” Lewis, the fest Dnglish welter. hia. He | totaled close to $80,000, He declared that he| Weight. and Mike Glover, the clever Hoston boxer, but Lf think he! nay been offeyst $5,000. for energy last Season | Ritchie Mit nd that he {9 fecling it now. The] to box Jobnny Kilbane in Philadelphia, 1 n surfeited with catching Kocher has no} for @ month or fear of the cold steel, from the plate struck a solid wall and bounded back like & pop bottls trom| at him badly in Philad r of those piano legs that enable some of our wild base r he did not Pail to use tougher this year. Without Alexander in his best shap o Phillies don't carry a Chinaman’s come in handy, tho Phillies don’t carry Young Mamaux, Pittsburgh's mit. | liscovered that there] ig an end to a Winning streak, ‘ improved. their ’ standing lon the week, but I don’t think they real contenders. i a feds are playing in and out ball, and | ; hy are ouuie makers, As long as|™2 hare not fought in sony keeps going as he has been the 8 will be dangrous any time. They d club than they are home birds. There are good players | *t# & boxing show to. in the gathering and some very bad the Tigers and the White Sox Both $b Lay in the American | While in tho semi-final ue during the past week and are| Wéllovs with Frank Carbone of the west side, beginning to show some of their real Ty Cobb has begun to hit| | Matenmal old gait, and that | the Br Cleveland. 48 still| Teddy Jecots to meet in the star Worrying & lot of folks, and the new | founds, Johnny Fase and Jack Sayles top yners are e coin a the semi-final, and Jimmy ‘Towhie and Patsey dwhora are taking In the coln at the) toe semifual and dkmmy, Towle ant Waly | Ming abows at Piteta Meld uring the rumier emarkable youngster Alexander and ca Phillies down to two runs and had the are a better roa Alex he would have been able to wire of wonders—come oihay Ons oF tops tase For instance, Heinte in a sawedge | n of Umpire Kiem Otto Knabe may have moved | blame, but ever since Jhim a'Job the Cubs are fairly hopping | with tabasco. Nobody has heard Ban John- son complain of the showing of the | of the club on Saturday night, The team is making a reat light of it Both races are close and the first and last teams It was hoped only to | pote to see the inte other seven. {of Bt, Louis rstand both Weeghman and ——— f the € let us! somplaining. to take the Cleveland Clifford, who is making shells for the allies pence agreement Was « tmining ovanl, will exchange were wit might 4s Well have it all over with Xia et ance The Wasterd Invaders @xe sens 4 Ticks on tale ot . tea sian "GRAW SIZES UP CHANCES OFALL BIG LEAGUE TEAMS With Good Pitching Boston Braves Might Win Again in National Race, Says Giants’ Manager, Who Doesn’t Fear Phillies— Tigers and White Sox Beginning to Show Real Strength in American. BY JOHN J. M’GRAW. (Manager of the Giants.) team because they been a losin, for it. year it would out of the lineup. a ba find « ly hn he has | jiterime Ithou, (Copyright, 191 0, 1,17 these offers, A. match was aranged last hicago has ahown Ene: Pest stuf) scuiuins, matchmaker of the Clermont A, C, of| and Frankie Brown, the promising cast side bau POU NNGnnaptanrsen cer ener the New Jamey | tam, have at last been matched, They will come weavyaeight, and Soldier Kearns, the Brooklyn | togetiier in @ twenty-round bout at an open-air Teng Cineinmaes | cRew."” ‘They will hook up in a ten-round go| sbow to be staged at the Federal League baseball Fy ‘These | park in Baltimore on tho night of July 11 time aud thelr rest | Brown has made will probably euable them to put up a band battle, | be bas fought Jub on the nig feago Cubs at the Ma wha, respectively, Hamnet's proposition. And the new owners of the Cleveland |& to 1 shot and with Eddie Dugan in ae team are “off the nut” already, so I|the saddle made eve: ost a wi! June, Then James, |#™ told—that ts they are on velvet. ome seit T understand that the Cardinals are losing money on the season and that| Something has got into George |{iple Play unassisted oF led. tevin would like |Odom lately. It may be the success |aeue in base seals. 0 But they of his recent odds on choices or some- 4 i! in the world, thing else, but yesterday he appear in the Brittons, their owner: I predict that both races will be] trac’ J ; | And the loss of a pitcher like {close this year. The Yankees look| jibes from the paddock habitues. | gjeit, Him, galee Nill brings fare mmmeh + on|like a good ball club a fighting one, for they have not slowed | trousers, too. Looks as if he is setting up even with such a player as Baker r like Speaker go. Youlrace, Flag Ds one or two like him in alof the race, got pso far! | have received a letter He is one man on the /asking me how I like the umpiring | ics i 0 this season, It has been very good | Flag Day was twenty lengths out o ball club who Is very anxious to win | {hls nenson ot Dengue a0 far, with | it in the frat slstebntin end it wes the exception of some boots pulled by| really surprising that he was along But |in time to finish second. Keough's t anything better as! recent riding won't get om a fan| where the old-ti Mal Eason against the Giants. yy John N. Wheeler,Ine.) jockey. a cash in the gallery ticket box. to meet decision at the Armory A. A. of Boston to- 14 ukee and $5,000 & ell in Milwaukee and $5,000 for bm | night, ‘This will be their second meeting, Glover further stated thet be intends to accept all of| DAvins sourad’s decision over Lewis at the same night by Paddy| Kid Williams, the Baltimore bantamweight, | Brooklyn, between Jim Savage, ‘The Broadway Sporting Club of Brooklyn will| Johnny Harvey of Harlem {e another fighter ight at which two good| who will be kept busy fighting in the near future. ten-round bouts aud several preliminaries will be| Qu June 1@ he is carded to meet Jimmy Flynn contested. Phil Bloom and Walter Mohr, the| of Long Island City in @ tem-round bout et the Brooklyn lightweights, meet in the main event, | Military A. ©. of Brooklyn, while on June 26 he ‘ulu Kid’ will exchange | goes against Jimmy Duffy, the west side light McArdle of the Fairmont A, C, of day signed up Willie Jackson and} John Welsmantel, the fight promoter of Brook- t of ten | 1yH, announced to-day that he has completed ar- to box in| rangements with the officials of the Brooklyn Dutch Brandt, the game little Brooklyn ban- in the | tamwetaht, ts matebed for two fights, On Satur. | standings of each league are near! day night he will take cn Al Shubert of New ghoush together to make the going ins | Bedfonl, Mass, for ten rounds at the Broadway) pioom and Joe Welling fought a good . if T could push | Sporting Clu of Brooklyn, and oa June yo vo Will 0 against Benny MeNeu, the St. Louis baa. BAY GUE An Bene would prose gry eae " is FM AP Nar HIN harder punch, but Bloom offset thi o he 4 Rockasas,| recovered and won the next four rounds heh | on pointe. eof tie stage, Eddie A ES Bad Pole Gro! PUTTING "EM OVER With ‘‘Bugs”’ Baer INTHE DARK AS 10 | as srzresaressr= (Tee New York Evening World.) FUTURE CHAMPIONS Pa, Puree Star Two-Year-Olds and! , ¢TQOSTON Three-Year-Olds Too Slow Doesn't in Showing Real Ability. | Miss Tris speaker By Vincent Treanor. Any More Than a HE racing season is almost a! Whale Would month old and yet experts are) Miss the Ocean,” the champions and near-champlons among the two-year-olds. The three- j year-old division is almost as mysti- oO Z| fying too. From the looks of condi- wing to all the rain and postpone- / tions at the present time the Sara- | Ments last week no doubt Bat Le- —/ toga meeting will have come and Yinsky will start fignting double- gone before we will know just what's headers this week. what regarding these two very im- portant divisions of the thoroughbred jy The, cee, o, more, the cock bend one world. Out West the turf enthusiasts | the vaserail'e ey wot fave their Harry Kelly, who doubt-| © “/*el! eatce orer fost that slush scones, less is a crackerjack, but here in the East, which ordinarily 1s the centre ing, nothing in the juvenile tands out.” In other years Chicago fans are puzzled by Russell's sudden stump in battia Reb has slumped from .102 to 05% class experts have had a good line on the youngsters befure this, but this sea- |) Being in fifth place don those which have been seen under |like being Vice P. colors, with very few exceptions, are | United Stat an ordinary lot enough to Harty Payne Whitney's Hwfa (pronounced Hoofa), which won at|_ Batting averages indicate that Slim Piping Rock, is perhaps the best seen Sallee got his 1916 Kit rather early. so far, but he has worthy opponents —-— in Omar Kayyam, which ran second| THAT BUENOS AYRES TRIP. to him in the same sweepstakes,| Prof. Langford will take three ~ | Campfire, Richard T. Wilson's coit,! students with him, Jeanette, McVey which won the last race Saturday at|and Wills. Belmont, also looks like a good one, eee and Priscilla, which won in Madden's | It will be a progressive tournament. colors on Friday last, beating Alvord, | First Prof, Langford will chat twenty 7” looks above the ordinary, judging |rounds with Senor McVey. purely on their strong finishes. The eee Koh-1-Noors, Yellow Stones, Basils,| Then Don Jeanette will collaborate Yankee Witches. Columbines, Pleas-| with Herr Wills on a new serial in » ant Dreams and Radiant Flowers are twenty reels. either selling platers or one notch re- * moved from the stake division. Prof, Langford Among the three-year-olds Friar| winner of the other ¢ Rock, of course, must be regarded as | delivers the buccala the best in view of his easy victory A in the Belmont, but he has yet to| There may be some upsets in the meet good ones of his own age, Of|league as Senor McVey and Don course he may meet and beat the best | Jeanette have never thrown the bon: in this division, but he hasn't done so| before on an ocean liner in rough “‘ yet. He has, however, to his credit | weather, v the Suburban Handicap, in which he heat the best of older horses, and no|, Impossible to figure ordinary horse has ever accomplished | Practice s much f that. The coming Aqueduct meeting 4 Tony) Ga (noise Way before showing up ATHLETIC AILMENTS. i e real class of the racing world, To + date much two:yearcolda ag Novelty, | WRESTLER'S EAR—Caused by the something it of the ; a then meet the % bate to see who Fd eate address. = whe the Penn crew has finiaty last and three-year-olds like Roamer in|, ear maturing too u STALLINGS has had fixed up, and this chance was offered | their respective years are yet to be|trusive at first, ily be: @ in Boston this|@t a very reasonable price. Neither | seen, comes annoying wh: to #1 has hurt the{8? Wanted anything to do with this — enter revolving doors or go through ficured it had al-| Tim Donohue, trainer of Pebeto, the tunnels. When bursting into full Ball |favorite in. the jumps, disappointed | bleom horticulturists, pronounce it to ot finding the financial going so| himself and friends by the failure of |b@ the most, beautiful specimen of tough climate has had as much to do good in St. Louis. Of course, Weegh. man will make money on the Cub: 5 because the team has a big followin twirlers are not in shape. When thé! in Chicago, but it cost Ainbig orate Braves won the World's Champion- ship Stallings did not have any good Pebeto to score in the steeplech: cauliflower in existence.. Is also |but he more than made geeae with caused by opponent wales the ears Fad “a Martian in the highweight handicap, | ® boulevard or for handles, or ty 1 Ci victim endeavoring to catch too many ast on the card. This trick was an ate whispers. while wrestling, Although ‘he is not among the ten: \f post and galloped home by himself. |i,aaing sluggers, has never made a = 1 hold on to Walter Johnson tn hopes the boy wilt come through. et putties and shoes that a the attention and not few George had the whipcord riding |"™ ‘™" ** The boomerang ball is very puzal- ng, the outfielders never knowing e pace on fashions for Tom Healy, | Wille Midgely, Johnny Whalen and | T don't look to see the Boston Red|the reat of them. “We trainers of | wremen to Biay it on the first bounce Gox repeat in that Teague because Trace horses, must show some class,” sre hitting |think Lannin killed the goose that |was George's only explanation of the Ce OP course, “Stallings |!&l4 the golden egg when he parted | classy attire. Although the National Commission» ae, with Speaker. Believe me, they miss panne has awarded Sisler to Fielder Jones, that boy up at the Hub, and I don't] ‘Dynamite Jack” Thornby put one| Barney Dreyfuss will take the case understand why Carrigan ever con-|over on the boys when Lyke brought » Sherwood Magee's absence |sented to the deal. T would never let {home his Virginia W. in the third from the outfield was sadly felt, for he is a wicked hitter, not been going at his best c! or off the fence. higher and again appeal to Barney ' Dreyfuss. 4 4 , y, the “form horse” an awful ride from Mister Keough. He lost the race riding “mechan- est—at the post * deemed it bim any medals, Ordinarily he's a good practically every racing-driver in Benny Leonard and Johnny Dundee | Pelmer of Consectiout, who best Johany Lore so America depends crowd of fans to their bandily, Johnny Welsh, of Jeme City, and y earring partner of Frankie Burma and Joe on ten-round bout in Madison Square Gar-|Shugrue, will cross gloves with Mel Coogan, the don last night. The gross receipts were | ™#4 Breokiynite, who recently won an auto IXON Churches, A semifinal of aix rounds 4 GRapHiTe drew down | round sffaire will precede the double erent Automobile Park Sports Club of Brooklyn wil! only hold one how this wi This will be on Thursday night, The same kind of lubrication 5 745 | when Aldert Badoud of France will go against will make your car run better, last longer and give you more meets Young Driscoll iu ten-round boute, This care-free pleasure. will be Badoud’s last appearance here, will have it out in another twelre.round bout to club on Aug. 3, 1916, Lewis expects to wipe out that defeat this time, _____ SPORTING. ‘RAC AT BEAUTIFUL BELMONT PARK : TOMORROW |: THE $5,009 KEENE MEMORIAL THE SPRINT HANDICAP and 4 other Good Races BEGINNING AT 2.) ‘e +) RONG AE 88,5 ie great impression in the fights t olty, weight, in the main go of ten rounds at the Olympic A, C, of Harlem, National League Baseball Club to stage open-alr months, He intends to put on his first show in about two weeks, draw here last night. Welling displayed advantage by his leading. Bloom was sent spinning in the sixth round, but Giants To-Day with Chicage, 4.40 BP, My uods, Admisaon 50q—AdvE,

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