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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 9, 1938)
nponi qpnnns LJ By RON dJ GEMMELL At 4 o'clock Friday afternoon, four hours before his lads were to enter into one of the most spectator pleas ing prep foot ball games ever witness e-fl in Salem, Coach Harold II a u k was lamenting that there are so many hnsky you ngiters running around in the 1800 pupil Salem high school body who lack interest in foot ball. At 10 o' clock that ROM OEMUEtJu night, six hours later, his novice grid machine had Just finished a gam in which it surged up from a two-touchdown deficit to beat what has been heralded as one of the best high school football clubs in the state. Hauk Offensively mum. Hauk's lamentations also in cluded the ; evident fact there are only too few kids on his . squad this year who really tie into a block or tackle with in tent to maim. They act like they're afraid to hurt some one," Hauk dolefully analyzed. As 1 recall the little chat, not once did Hank have anything sorrowful to say concerning the offensive ability of his club. The youthful mentor whose Sa lem high school teams have won their last 11 consecutive football games, in which they have scored 267 points to 51 for their 11 adversaries, must have felt the intensive offensive plumage he'd been pinning on his young charges all .week wouldn't be deprived of any of that sheen Friday night. Powerful Running Game. If so, he had the right sort of feeling. Those defensively indif ferent squirts of his turned in as powerful an offensive running" at tack as his last year's co-claimants of the mythical state cham pionship ever did. Can you think of a ame last year when the Vi kings hammered any line to pieces, when every jab was, direct ed inside the ends and when a passing attack wasn't used at least as a threat, as did this year's club Friday night against Milwaukie? I don't think you can. 'Tis true the Milwaukians weren't as de fensively" astute as were several teams, conquered by the Vikings last year, . but if you remember, the Milwaukians had not been scored upon by McMinnville, Eu gene got but one touchdown against 'em and the Pacific fresh men could score but twice - on them. Nelson, the Navigator. Spearhead, work horse, smasher of that offensive ob juration was Stuart "Boomer" Butch Nelson, the correctly Norseman-named captain of the Vikings ' who works from the fullback position. The "Boom er' Unt A tt mlnmt .1. a. ball game, not one of which . was Idle or in vain. In every 1.6 minutes of the 48 Nelson was lugging the leather. He carted it 130 yards in 30 starts and every wham was Into the line wherethe going was tough est. Offensively when he was not ripping off the yard stripes himself he was chucking the pighide into the midsections of Halfbacks Bill Shinn and Don Waller, both of whom took re verses from hiiu for merry yard- age romps that were pretty to see. Defensively the "Boomer" was busting down the Milwau kians from his secondary de fensive position, for Nelson is one of Hauk's crew who doesn't have to be urged to hit 'em for keeps. Outside of doing all the punting, making all the kickoffs and doing all the pass ing necessary. Nelson spent a ( M V' (Turn to Page 6, Col. 7) Box Score The official "box score:" - Chicago (X.L.) AB 11 O A Hack, 3b 3 1 2 0 Herman, 2b . . . 3 0 1 l Cavarretta, rf .. 4 1 2-0 Marty, cf .... 4 3 3 0 Reynolds, If . . . 4 , o 0 0 Hartnett. c ... 4 0 3 1 Collins, lb. . ... 4 0 8 0 Jurges, ss .... 3 0 6 3 Lazzeri, xx . , . 1 o 0 0 Bryant, p ..... 2 0 0 0 Russell, p .... 0 0 0 0 Galan, x ...... 1 o 0 0 French, p .... 0 0 0 2 O'Dea, xxx ... 1 0 0 0 Totals .....34 5 24 7 a watted for Russell in 7th. XX Batted for Jurges in 9th. XXX Batted for French in 9th. NewYork (A.L.) AR II O A " Crosetti, ss . . . 3 0 10 Rolfe, 3b ..... 4 1 0 1 Henrich, rf . . 4 0 3 0 DiMaggio, cf . . 3 1 l o Gehrig, lb .... 4 1 41 Dickey, e 3 1 12 0 Selkirk. If .... 3 0 2 0 Gordon, 2b ... 4 -2 2i 3 Pearson, p ... 3 120 Totals .....31 7 ,27 6 Cubs 010 000 010 2 Yanks . .... .000 022 Olx 5 Errors Crosetti, Gordon, Her man. Runs batted in, Marty 2, Gordon 3, Rolfe, Dickey. Two .base hits, Hack. Home runs, Gor don, Marty, Dickey. Earned runs. Chicago (N.I.) 1; New York : (A.L.) 5. Left on bases, Chicago,- 7; New York, 8. Base on balls, Pearson' 2, (Hack. Her man) ; Bryant 5. j (DiMaggio, Dickey, Crosetti 2' Selkirk): Russell 1 (Pearson. Struck out, Pearson 9 (Reynolds 2,- Hart nett, Collins, Jurges, Herman 2, Bryant, Hack; Bryant 3 (Cro setti, Selkirk, Gordon). Pitch ing summary-off Bryant 4 runs, 6 hits In a innings; Russell" 0 tuns, 0 hits In - - Innings; French. 1 run, 1 hit in 2 innings. loosing pitcher, Bryant. Umpires, 'Sears (NL) at plate; Hubbard (AL) first; Moran (NL) second; Kolls (AL) third. Time 1:51. Cubs ? Third Contest Is Yanks, 5-2 Joe Gordon Sparks Club to Thiru1 Straight Win of World Series . ' j- i . . ' By PAUL MICKELSON YANKEE STADIUM, New York, Oct. 8-(jip)-Gabby Hartnett's once glorious Chicago Cubs, cut down by Monte Pearson's five-hit pitch ing and a home run attack that lent a Roman holiday atmosphere to the whole proceedings, fell for the third straight time today as the hilarious New York Yankees neared their goal as the first ball club in history to win three suc cessive world series titles. ' Balked and held hltless for 4 innings by Clay Bryant, the big : mountaineer pitching man from Lynchburg, .Virginia, the world's champions, sparked this time by their sensational fresh man hero, Joe Gordon, wiped out a 1-0 deficit with seven timely blows, two I of them homers, to race off with victory, 5-2. Like Champions As in the first two Yankee routs at Chicago, the world's con querors played . like champions. Pearson, after a shaky start, gave them their best pitching of the, series with i nine strikeouts, four short of the record. The team dis played Buperb defense in the pinches though It did commit two errors, and the batting attack found itself just in time to turn the game from a thriller into another rather pathetic Cub rout witnessed by a disappointing crowd of 55,236. From the; very start of the con test, which j drew a cash gate of S106.721.5S, far short of the re cord that was expected, one could feel the tension. As Bryant fooled the heavy swinging enemy inning after inning and even was pre sented with a one-run lead through a j flare-up that almost incapacitated Umpire Charley Moran in the 5th inning, the sus picion always was there that the Yanks would bust loose. And they did break loose in the 5th and 6th innings. M Gordon Ties Score Bryant, steaming along with a no-hitter had two men out end two strikes on Gordon when a slow ball he had been trying to get over all afternoon finally got him in. trouble and turned on the gas, Gordon, timing himself per fectly, caught the slow pitch and leisurely, though firmly, banged it into the lower , left field box seats to tie the score. No sooner did the tumult and shouting die and you should have seen those Yankees pound bats in their dug out as Gordon sprinted around the bases than ' another -run had come home to put the champs ahead to stay.' Pearson singled, Crosetti walked and Red Rolfe lined a single to center to score the pitcher. The-Yanks weren't long in set tling the game and again It was Gordon, atoning for an error that had set up tne first. Cub run, who provided the punch. Joe DiMag gio and Lou Gerig opened with singles and Selkirk worked Bry ant for a pass to jam the sacks whereupon j Gordon smashed a hard single to left to score DiMag and Lou. That was all for Bryant. After his great stretch of hitless innings, he had allowed six hits and two bases on balls to the last 10 batsmen to face him. starting and finishing with Gor don, twin hero of the day with Pearson. 1 L Dickey Gets Homer Bill Dickey cracked his first homer of the series in the 8th inning after Joe Marty, who drove in all the Cub runs for the second game in a row, had hit one into the left field seats, but it didn't make much ; difference except to the wild Yankees who hooted, howled and whistled as they smashed bats, on the board run way of their dugout, Pearson; victim of a sinus ail ment that caused him far more trouble today than the Cub bats, finished with a fine world series record. He now has won three of the classics, ; two of them against the New York Giants, al lowing but 17 hits in 26 in nings he worked. ; (Turn to Page 6, Col. 6) PePAKfM&rf COr 15 So CAA OOtSJCSS ) Siau - UCLA: Hum Yankee Hero ivy; - ' v r J JOE GORDON Beavers Pilots 19 to 0 Portland Holds Staters at Bay in First Half; Passes Fail BELL FIELD, Corvallis, Ore., Oct. 8-(P)0regon. State, beaten by Idaho and USC, got a tip of vic tory today by beating Portland university, 19-0. ' The Beavers, held at bay through the first half, scored twice in the third period and once In the fourth. The brothers Kohler, Vic and Morris, a pair of , transplanted half backs from Nebraska, spark ed the Staters , on the winning drives. : fc . Passing No Dice ! Portland's touted passing game was an open book to the Beavers, who intercepted six throws, bat ted down six others and permit ted but three completions, which accounted for three of Portland's four first downs. OSC completed 10 out of 20 passes for 96 yards and got 313 yards on rushing, totaling 18 first downs. Pilots Make Stand Oregon State got the first one just after Portland, with a heroic stand, stopped their rivals on the 2-yard line. Vic Kohler returned the Portland punt to the Portland 30 and the Beavers scored on five plays with Vic making the touch down. The kick for point was wide. Three minutes later Higglns added six more points after a drive that started on Portland's 36 where M. Kohler Intercepted a pass. Hjutchens' kick for point was blocked. The third touchdown resulted from a Portland "prayer" pass in the fourth quarter which Tsout souvas, sub OSC center, intercept ed and carried to the 10-yard line from where Olson, half, scored on the third play. Kansas City Blues Win Miniature World Series KANSAS CITY, Oct I 8.. () Kansas City, runner-up in the American Association pennant race, concluded a brilliant series of back-to-the-wall comebacks to night by defeating Newark, Interj national league champion, 8 to 4, to wrest the little world-serlei from the 1937 winner. -f ' I HAUTACK ' . TlPXOHofaxe. OF AU.-AR0U5JD VAWB. i 1iFtbA K A &CU&if J ' Drop Indians Best Cougars 8-0 Both1 Ex-Titans Look bad in Woebegone Contest I at Palo Alto STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Calif., let. 8-(ff)-Two once-might-ty " nimords ot the golden west battled on the Stanford turf to day as; 15,000 customers watched to see' which had fallen farthest from the glory of long-gone days. They were the Washington State Cougars (and the Stanford - In dians. -The Indians won, 8-0, but left tjie field looking woe-be-gone. I The Cougars had the Indians in the1 hole through most of the first half, after recovering a Stanford fumble- deep in Stan ford territory. Their attack was impotent, however, except for occasional snappy passes. Kicks Missed Three times in that first haft the Cougars got within field goal range, but Rowswell, An gelo and Brown missed their tries 4t placement kicks. Stanford got only one scoring opportunity in the first half, when Challow chased a bad pass back to. his own 14. The Cou gars kicked out to, their 35, and a few; plays later Stanford tried a fieldj kick from the 31. It fell short. ' The Indians were fired up to start the second halt. Fay ran the kickoff from his 3 to exact ly mldfield. Ledeboer passed to Stojkoyich, Stanford end, on the Cougar 35. Fay raced around right end to the 18, but the Tun ning attack bogged down. Callow bobbed up to snag Le deboer 's pass, giving the Cou gars the ball on their 15. Graff, Stanford substitute end, fell on Callow's fumble on the 10, and after a couple of short line Jabs, Ledeboer left his interference, and circled the Cougar right end to. score. Paulman's kick was short. Ring at Armory filing Bolstered Extra Support Need Seen When Piluso, Moran iTangle Tuesday s . i Extra supports are being pre pared for the armory ring in an ticipation ot what may occur when tErnie Piluso and Sailor Moran; are loosed at each other therein next Tuesday night.. It's Moran the mangier against Piluso,- dark-visaged idol of local fans, who is an ardent believer In doing unto others as he is done by. j Both aspire to the coast mid' dlewelht crown, one a villain of the first, second and third water. and the other for the most part a cleanie, but not above sinking a molar jinto en ear if the occasion demands. Morftn. the gob, moves in vl clous circles to make his kill, while Piluso Is of the highly ex plosive nature of TNT. , "Snkze" 3Ieeta 4DIsh-Face, Supporting this bizarre battle, which should be the. best in many months according to Promoter Herb Owen, will be Walt "Sneere" Achiu Spitted against "Dish-Face' Power, the stumpy Calgary can non-ball, in the 45-minute pre-. 11m, and Pat O'Dowdy against El ton Owen in the opener. Powers, architecturally resem bling the stump of a giant red wood, gave Piluso some perilous momeqts before the Portland Italian! subdued him last week, and Achiu is expected to have his jiu-jitsu hands full with the mighty mite Tuesday night. Pacific Whips Linfield McMINNVILLE, Ore., Oct. 8- (Jti acnic university, scoring in the f irst quarter, defeated Lin- neld J-Q today In a Nortnwest conference game. Bearcats 0 Marines 14 J (Story on page 1) Starting lineups: Willamette (0) San Diego (14) Balrd . i ....... LE .... C. Frlffin Cline .C., LT Patch Baker .LG. . .Van Orman B. Williams.... C... Robertshaw Holland RQ . . . . . Morrell Sirnlo.!. ...... RT. ... ... Walt Abbott U ...... RE .... . . . '- Cook Contl........QB Berger Weakley. LH... Trometter Stewart RH . , . . R. Griffin Drury .... . FB . . . . , . . Hays Scorp by quarters: Willamette .... 0 0 0 0 0 Marines .......0.14 0 0 14 Scorfng - Marine touchdowns, Honsowiti, Gormley; Marine con versions, Gormley 2. Officials: Referee, Jack Mashin (Montana State); Morris Gross (San Diego State);- head lines man,, Joe Beerkle (Nebraska); field judge, Lawrwce Carr (Sao Diego State). !. , or Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning, October He's a Home Run Hitter, too -4 .. v .. . "V' f K it Bill Dickey, Yankee catcher, yesterday followed Joe Gordon's example by pasting one of Bryant's pitches into the left field stands, where m lot of baseballs have been disappearing lately. Grid (By the Associated Press) Far West San Diego Marines 14, Will amette 0. U. of California at Los Angeles 13. Washington (Seattle) 0. Stanford 8, Washington State 0. Santa Clara 7, Texas A. A M. 0. Idaho 27, North Dakota State 0. Oregon State 19, Portland 0. California 29. College Ot Pa cific 0 (second game). Nevada 22, Chico State 0. California 48, California Ag gies 0 (first game). Montana 7, DePaul f. Pacific 7, Linfield 0. East Brown 20 Lafayette 0. Duke 7, Colgate 0. Connecticut State 19, Massa chusetts State 0. Rnrrtnwn 33. Roanoke . Cornell 20, Harvard 0. Holy Cross 19, Manhattan C. Villanova 25, Muhlenberg 7. Pennsylvania 21, Yale Q. Bueknell 14. Pennsylvania State 0. Pittsburgh 27, Duquesne 0. Dartmouth 22, Princeton 0. New York U. 25, Rutgers 6. Columbia 20, Army 18. Navy 38, Virginia 0. Western Maryland 13, Wash ington (Md.) College 0. Washington & Lee 8, West Virginia 6 (tie). South Alabama 14, North Carolina State 0. " Tennessee 7, Auburn 0. Vanderbilt 14, Kentucky . 7. Tulane 17, North Carolina 14. Virginia Military 7, Clemson 7 (tie). , Notre Dame 14, Georgia Tech 8. Wake Forest 20, South Caro lina 19. Centenary 6, South western (Tenn.) 0. Midwest Minnesota 7, Purdue 0. Southern California 14, Ohio State 7. Northwestern 33, Drake 0. Illinois 12, Indiana 2. Michigan 45, Chicago 7. j Carnegie Tech - 32, Wittenberg 13.. i Michigan State 18, Illinois Wes leyan 0. Kansas State 21, Missouri 13. Western Reserve 26. Ohio D. 14. Wisconsin 31, Iowa 13. Iowa State 8. Nebraska 7. Kansas. 58, Washburn 14. ; Protect TToup HcalttEi! j 50 ALSO 387 STATE Start Your Foot Comfort ZfiS? J) Yank, Holiday . - V . , . . I ra-r-rn J Pot Cadets 11 ijRUlllCT ; a 9, 1938 j-MigMy Husky 1 3-0 r ;- ,,-'-:':-,cJ1":" : rt--.'-"-';yv.-C 4T V -J -o.-' yf Scores Boathwet Baylor. 9, Arkansas 6. Oklahoma 13, Texas 0. j Tulsa 14, Washington U. (St. Louis) 0. - Rocky Mountains Utah State 20. Colorado 0. Brigham Young 24, Wyoming 13. High School Jefferson (Portland) 21, Ben son (Portland) 7. Sandy 13, Hill Military (Port land) 0 Park rose 29, Canby 0. Walt8burg, Wash. 39, Hermis ton 0. j Bend 21, Oregon City 0. j Roosevelt (Portland) 19, Lin coln (Portland) 0. Reedsport 13, Toledo 0. Dallas 32, Amity 0. Lebanon 24, Molalla 0. Halfway 13, Joseph 0. Prineville 0, Redmond 14. Junction City 0, .Springfield 6. Emmett 6, Ontario 0. i Newberg 19, St. Mary's (Wash, county) 6. . Woodburri Eleven Whips Silyerton First Period Scores JAre Winners for Bulldogs by 20 to 19 i. WOODBURN T h r e e touch downs in the opening minutes were enough to enable the Wood burn Bulldogs ' to edge out the Silverton Foxes 19 to 20 i In a Willamette valley league tilt here Friday. ! A partially blocked kick, giv ing Wood burn the ball on the Silverton 16-yard line, resulted In the first score. Halter's pass to Stetter with a lateral to W. Lee resulted in the second and the third came when Halter inter cepted a Silverton pass and raced 35 yards to score. Silverton scored twice in the second period, a blocked kick and an intercepted pass figuring In the touchdowns. Silverton's final score came in the fourth quarter when Christenson drove1 over from the five-yard mark. A com plicated lateral pass play failed to work for the extra point - that would have tied the score. : The Bulldogs will meet the Redmond high Panthers at Red mond next Friday. Sixes 3 to 12 A to EE. Size 13 f 1 Extra, j 4 EXTRA FEATURES 1st Scientific Last : 2nd Long Support Counter Srd-Specia Rubber Heel 4th Strong Arch Shank Pains in feet and legs are greatly relieved in this famous work shoe. Thousands have found there is nothing like them. With this shoe you can work without tiring and will fit the narrow or wide toot. STOCKED IN 16-IN. BOOT ft? rv ST, SALEM i 1 I. -ii PAGE FIVE Fumble Brings Initial' Score Touchdowns First Bruins Have Scored on UW Since 1932 LOS ANGELES, Oct: 8-6P-The University of California at Los Angeles rose to one of its greatest gridiron triumphs today when its gold-suited Bruins defeated the highly favored Huskies of Wash ington, 13 to 0, in a Pacific coast conference battle. " The win marked the first time the Uclans had been able to score on the stocky lads from the north-. west in the four games played since 1932, much less the first time the UCLA colors had. waived in victory. " " Fumble Disastrous Battling the Huskies to a stand still in the first quarter, the Bru ins turned a Washington fumble into a spectacular touchdown play with ambling Kenny Washington, the Uclans big negro back, on the receiving end of a lateral pass that was good for 45 yards and the first score. Proving the touchdown .was no mere accident, the Bruins came back in the third period and turn ed on a power drive that rolled up 45 yards and the second touch down, "General" Washington hammering over from his own right end. Huskies Threaten Once Washington, a pre-seasen pick as one of. the top conference cham pionship contenders, threatened the Bruin goal but once Joe Dubin- eky, reserve back, broke loose for a 54-yard run deep Into scoring territory, and later from the seven-yard line crossed the goal, but the play was called back. Wash ington was penalized 15 yards for holding. - The Bruins Intercepted a pass on the next play and Washington was through for the day. Dean Mc Adams," Washington sophomore back, was the "goat" of the Bruins' first score. The ball squirted out of his hands as he hit the line in midfiMd, and Jack Montgomery; a Bruin re serve, caught it. Montgomery ran a few paces and as Husky players closed in, lateraled the ball to Kenny Washington. He took off like a galloping shadow and crossed the goal standing up. Frawley converted. Thanks to Dubinsky's 54-yard run, the Huskies held an advan tage In yardage, but the old Wash ington punch seemed gone. - A brilliant punt run back by Merle Harris of UCLA set the stage for the locals second scor ing drive. Showing a variety of running plays, with Fullback Bill Overlin, Washington and Harris lugging the ball, the Bruins drove to. the 14-yard line in eight plays. The Huskies were called on an un necessary roughness penalty, and, the ball went to the one yard stripe. Kenny hit center for one foot, and then crashed the wing for the touchdown. ' The try for the extra point went awry after a bad pass from center. Broncos Defeat Texas A&M 7-0 SAN. FRANCISCO, Calif., Oct. 8-(P)-Santa Clara football toast of the Pacific coast turned one yard gaining thrust of 52 yards into a touchdown today to de feat the formidable Texas A. and M. eleven 7 to 0 and re main in the race for mythical national championship recogni tion. The Santa Clarans, after their smashing 22 to 0 win over Stan ford, a week ago, lined up as overwhelming favorites to v turn back: the big team from the southwest but the final decision came only after the hardest kind of fighting. Statistically, the Californians doubled their rivals' first downs wth 10 and. chalked up 175 yards against 73. Texas, scor ing 28 yards on passes, out- gained Santa Clara by six feet in this department. PAT O'DOWDY vs. ELTON OWEN - SO Minutes n p" TUESDAY n8!n yuluIiJ L...i,iJ . per. 11 Lower Floor BOe, Balcony 4Uc. Keaerved ScaU 75c (No Tax) , l " Students 25c, Ladies 25e i Tickets, Olff Parker's and Lytle's Auspices American Legion Derb Owen. Matchmaker Last Period Touchdown Is "Winner for Portland Freshmen 7 to 6 - - i When the fisticuffs, fiery tem pers and fluke plays had subsided on Sweetland field last night the University of Portland frosh had a 7 to 6 win over Willamette's Bearkittens. " j The 'Kittens grid debut at times resembled a free-for-all slugging bee, with yearling , tempers at white heat on both sides,) and it was flukey, flub-dubby plays that made the touchdowns, but what was lacking In finesse was more than made up for in i whole hearted ambition. - j A whing-ding lateral on, a play that was good for 4 6 yards gavs the "'Kittens first scoring bloofl, bat there had been some real "red" spilled afore that, j George McGlyn, starting from the frosh 46 ran insiae ms own leit ena ior 12 "yards, was half-tackled, but succeeded In tossing a wobbly lat-, eral to big Joe Dispenziere. The New Jersey tackle took off on a' gallop that ended In the pay plot for six points. His attempted con version from placement as blocked by Mills.- . j Portland tallied -n yet a flukier play, with but three minutes left in the ball game. Harrirton, with the ball on the "Kitten "13, aimed a pass intended for Left End Baker. It bounced off (Baker's arm, hit a 'Kitten on the shoulder and flopped into Right End' Blont's arms on the four-yard line. He merely stepped over for the touchdown. Saroka, halfback, booted the winning -poLnt from placement. But the Portland first-year gridders really earned the win, having marched from the Will amette 47 on the drive that car ried them to their touchdown, and having amassed 13 first downs to five for the Bearkittens. I 'Kittens Frohh Dispenziere LT. Ekerson King, : . LG. Gates W. Olson ; C. . . Grosses Swenson ., .RG Kenney Moore -RT,,.....-..., Stewart Versteeg RE i Bloat Stidinger Reynolds . Wickert Kleiner ' Saroka Harrington .LH. RH. MeKown . F-.-:-...,-L. Kore V Substitutions, for Willamette: Olson for Moore, Stocks for Ol son, McGlyn for Reynolds. Bar stad for SwenSon, Christopher for Versteeg,- Goe for Wickert,-Mul-ford fot Versteeg, Burgess for McGlyn, Olivierio for MeKown. For Portland: Hall for, Kore, Hill for Kleiner, Cutler for i Gates, Mills for Stewart, DeFreitas for Hamnnnn Knnmin rnr .sarnx Gawlista for Koffman. Officials: Hunt Clark; referee; Tom Drynan, umpire; Fod Mai- son, head linesman. 3 lJ Ernie Pilnso TS. Sailor Moraii 1 Hour . ' WALT "Sneeze" ACHIU vs. 'DISH FACE POWERS 5 45 Minutes I X