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Freeport Journal-Standard from Freeport, Illinois • Page 11

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Freeport, Illinois
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FRIDAY, JANUARY THE FREEPORT JOURNAL-STANDARD PHONE 3100 PAGE ELEVEN Lena At Again High Tonight; F. U.S. Squads At Elgin -111111- ltMit tMuu BILL PARKINSON MAJORS I1AVK WON FOUR, LOST FOUR TO DATE SCHREMPFMENTfAY AT Sf, EDWARD'S SUNDAY Meet Diocesan Rival In Single Game At Watch City; Prelim Tonight at 7:30 PROBABLE LINEUPS (Varsity Game, Ss.10 p. Lena. Aquln Bonavla Scott Ttmmerman Corrlgan Schramm Leamon Luecke Buss Dcethart 7 game, Aquln seconds vs.

Lena seconds. Invading Lena quintets holding ix 2 to 1 edge In game experience call at Aquin gym tonight for a doublohoader with Blue and Gold squads. The prelim, matching Aquin reserves and Red and White seconds, begins at 7:30 o'clock and the varsity contest about an hour later. Blfl Hawkins and Brook Gill will handle the officiating. Coach Faya Parkinson's Red and White varsity, current S.

0. A. A. leader with threo straight victories, holds a .500 record over the season, having won 4 and lost 4. Aquin regulars are also even-Stephen after four games, having stopped Warren and St.

Edward's ol Elgin while losing to Pecatonlca and Alumni, Jack Bonavia, a hot shooting sophomore, Is rated the moat dangerous of the Lena contingent although Captain Ward Howard (61) and Dale Buss (6-OJ may cause the Aquin defense some anxious moments because of their height. A probable opening lineup for Lena will list Bonavla (5-8) and Jack Timmerman (5-7), forwards; Eugene Burton (5-9) or Howard, center; Jack Leamon (5-10) and Buss, guards. Francis Stabenow (5-9), a senior, Is also slated for duty at forward or guard. Coach Phil Schrempf will attempt to bring his local varsity out of the cage doldrums with a lineup of Don Scott and Bob Corrlgan, forwards; Captain Paul Schramm, center; Donald Deethart and Bobby Luecke, guards. Speedy Mark Christine Js certain to see early service at either guard or forward.

Aquini, who play again Sunday at Edward's high, Elgin, have been led at the hoop in their first lour games by Schramm, 8-2 senior center. The "Moose" has caged MAROONS HOST TO PRETZELS TONIGHT plenty of height In the forecourt, Elgin Maroons will oppose Freeport's bid for a temporary flrit place tie In the Big Seven conference tonight on the Watch Cily courl. Although only one letterman holds down a regular berth, Coach John Kraffl's majors have won 4 and lost 2 to date and possess a .500 league rating. The Maroon and Cream squad as pictured Elgin Courier-News Byford Cavllt, Mick Carlier, Jack Freyer, Edward Weldner and Richard Price. Middle Joseph C.

Cronenberg, George Carapanos, David Kilburn, Eugene, Nelson, Capt. Waldemar Luepke, Robert Menke, Sidney II. Fisher and Bill BurmeLster. Back Coach Chuck Morrill, Walter R. Shales, Leg Dralle, Kenneth Ban, Bob Sund, Dick Apple, above.

First row (from left to W. Slrohm, Dick Bob Morton, Ralph Voss, Bob Cartier and Head Coach John Albert Krafft! BRUINS BUILD UP EARLY LEAD; ME HOCKEY TIT and 7 free throws for average of 10.8 per forward, scoring 18 baskets 13 points, an lame. Scott, elongated follows Schramm in the column with 22 points. Christian is third with 14 points and Deethart fourth with 13. Other Aquln scorers to date include: Corrigan 10, Luecke.

6, Reno Guldi 3 and Bud Clarke 2. SCHEDULED DRAFTED FOR GRADE CAGE CIRCUIT Play Will Open M. C. A. Wednesday: Seven Enter Competition Rules have been formulated and the schedule drawn for the M.

A. Grade School basketball league Which will open its 1942 race with three games next Wednesday, Jan 7. Competition is confined to boys under 14 years of age and proper ages of all contestants must be tested by the various school principals. All games will be played on the Y. M.

A. court on Wednesday and Saturday afternoons. Only IS boys may dress for each team anc must be accompanied by its volunteer coach. No protests of officials' judgment will be considered. The complete schedule follows: Wednesday, Jan.

7 First Ward va. Lincoln, 4 m. Harlem vs. Union, 4:30 East side vs. Henney, 5:00.

Center, bye, Saturday, Jan. 10 Henney vs. Lincoln, 4:45 p. m. First Ward vs.

Center, 5:15 m. East Side vs. Union, 5:45 p. m. Harlem, bye.

Wednesday, Jan. Lincoln vs. Union. Heneny vs. Canter.

East Side vs, Harlem. First Ward, bye. Saturday, Jan, IT Lincoln vs, Harlem. Union vs. center.

Henney vs. First Ward. East Side, bye. Wednesday, Jan. 21 Union vs.

First Ward. Center vs. Harlem. Lincoln vs. East Side.

Henney, bye. Saturday, Jan. 44 Harlem vs. First Ward. Center vs.

East side. Union vs. Henney. Lincoln, bye. Wednwday, Jan.

81 Center vs. Lincoln. vs. Henney. First Ward vs.

East Side. Union, bye. COLLEGE BASKETBALL (By the Associated Prtw) Bradley Tech 63; A. and M. 41.

Butter 35; Oregon State 39. EvansvUle 88; Washington and £ee 26. MwyvUle Teachers 46; Kansas Wesleyan 38. Baker 53; Northwestern lOkla.) 13. Ewporia state 69; Sterling 38.

Dtwy Wichita BOSTON RETAINS ADVANTAGE IN RACE: HAWKS DEFEATED By the Associated Press A 5 to 1 lead Boston built up in the early rounds of its National hockey league contest with Brooklyn withstood a torrid third canto drive and kept the Bruins at the top of the a mere two points ahead of the deadlocked New York and Toronto sixes. The twin runnersup tried to break their even-steven status last night but couldn't. Even after an extra period the score remained 3 to 3 for the first tie of the season for either aggregation. Meanwhile, the Chicago Black- hawks and the Detroit Red Wings mixed in a battle in the Windy City in which "three" was the dominant figure. The Red Wings won, 3 to 0, and in the three periods of bruising hockey Earl Selbert of the Hawk and Jimmy Orlando battled three different times.

Boston staved off a wild Brook l.vn surge In the final half of the last period for its 5 to 4 verdict. The second-period scrap of Seibert and Orlando was the hlghiigh of the Black Hawks fifth stralgh defeat. The melee burst wide open just as Referee King Clancy was sending the pair to the cooler for high sticking. While teammates held the gladiators apart, Referee Clancy gave Selbert a major penalty sentence and Orlando both a major and misconduct decree. Georgia's Sinkwich Drives Hard Roundup oi Gossip In The World ot Sports BY HUGH FULLERTON, JR.

Wide World Sports Columnist New York, Jan. World) '-Duke saved the Rose Bowl game for this year but the move to Durham may hurt the Pasadena show in the long run. Looks like a clnoh that the folks in the Caro- Unas will try to make a permanent fixture of a New Year's day game, and if they can arrange a hookup with the southern conference, that will eliminate a possible California visitor each year. All that noise you heard over the air really was the fans cheering, not the boys who gave 14 points on Duke moan- ingr about It Lon Stiner was complaining because Oregon State ran into wet weather before leaving the coast but, apparently that was just what the Beavers needed so they could handle a slippery ball. Can't decide whether the No.

3 surprise was the way Georgia wrecked o. U. or Fordham Jim Qrowley's stunt of springing a formation on Missouri. Most of Fordham's good gains came on quick opening plays that were supposed to be a Tiger specialty. Today's Guest Star Jack Troy, Atlanta Constitution: Talk that pen Hutsoa.

who has a 176,000 establishment at Green Bay, will not play mow loot, fall. Chances are, however, it will be like Bltay Qrant'i perennial re. tirement from tennis. 1 One-Minute Sports Page Mike Jacobs won't even talk about a sellout for the Baer-Louis fight because he still has a lot ol tickets left and doesn't want to off any but he figures that there won't be many va- tesU if they keep Mlllng at he current if you don't hear from your favorite baseball thtst days, it probably because he is rehearsing for the winter frolics. Chicago tips the lid next week.

Hew York's affair will be a Red Cross benefit and to. "player of ttw year 1 have to to get in. The Western basketball invasion Of ACftdifiOU SOUO-FA Da rrfnn ipqrpg Drivlng hard, Georgia university's Frank Sinkwich plunges through tough opposition for a good gain and a first down on this play in the Oranfcc bowl game against Texas Christian university at Miami, Fla, Sinkwich, an all-America grid star, passed and ran his team to a thrill- packed 40 to 26 victory over Texas Christian before 35,505 frenzied spectators. duced almost enough gags to make up for the easterners losing the games. When Coach Everett Shelton said Wyoming used a "col- "that doesn't mean what it sounds like any more than Harvard's 'looping defense' meant their footballers would get knocked for a loop" When someone asks Taps Gallagher of Niagara what he'd do with a team like Washington's, he said: "Go to the movies every afternoon and leave them alone.

I'd be afraid of spoiling them." Ed Kelleher of Fordham wowed 'em with his "special defense" for Rhode Island nice deep, wide trench across the middle of the floor for them to fall Into. SANDLOT LEAGUES ARE PLANNED BY BASEBALL BE ALTERED FOR TOM FERGUSON TO REPLACE INJURED CAPT. PINNOW AT GUARD ALLENMEN SEEK EXTENSION OF STREAK First Place Tie With Jollcl Twin Objective; Can Take Over Lead PROBABLE LINEUPS (Varsity Game, 8:15 p. PO Freeport Weldner Belle Price Brown Menke Dlrksen Cavltt Young Kilburn T. Ferguson (Frosh-Soph Game, 7 p.

PO Freeport Burmaster Banks Rager Best Goedert Hershberger Lindsey Sauceda D. Ferguson or Wunsch Games Tonight FREEPORT at Elgin 7 p. m. East Aurora at La Salle-Peru Games Saturday Night Morton (Cicero) at Joliet f2), non-conference. Wheaton at East Aurora (2j, non- conference.

round robin schedule on the Dakota Community high school court next a menu with" DUMONT HOPES TO ORGANIZE SEMI-PRO TEAMS THIS YEAR Wichita, Jan. Don't be surprised if the next season or two of baseball produces a National league of the sandlots. Ray Dumont, president of the nation semi-pro baseball congress, who figures on paying out nearly a quarter million dollars to 1942 district, state and national tournament winners, dropped a hint today. He and his board of commissioners get together in Chicago Jan. 18 to survey the new year's prospects, mindful of the problems which might come with a wartime blackout of night baseball.

"Plans will be launched to organize sandlot leagues into a national association," Dumont said. "All players would be placed under a nationwide contract system, unable to transfer to other clubs without release." Bent on going all out to prevent any lessening of enthusiasm for sandlot ball in America's first wartime summertime since 1918, Dumont is making other revisions in his nationwide program. The number of district three and four county affairs where electric lights aren't as important as an open pasture without too many gopher holes will be increased to 500. The three leading clubs, instead of two, will share in the prize money. There'll be the 48 state tourna- FREEPORT SPORTSMEN TO ELECT OFFICERS JAN, 9 Annual Meeting at Read Park; Public Urged To Feed Birds After Snowstorm Freeport chapter of the Stephenson County Sportsmen's club will hold, its annual meeting and election of officers Friday evening Jan.

9, at 8 o'clock at the Read park recreation pavillion. Moving pictures will be shown and refreshments served. City and county officers and members joined today in a plea to the general public to feed the birds. Feeding stations and fountains are completely covered by the heavy snow and many birds are certain to die unless feed is provided, SEVEN TEAMS ENROLLED IN COUNTY INDEPENDENT Open Double Round Robin Play On Dakota, CommiuUty Court Next Monday Night With seven teams enrolled, the Jtepheusou County Independent basketball league will open a double games will be offered, with Dakota drawing the initial bye. Miller's, of Freeport, and Freeport Ker-Wid Shoes tangle in the 7 o'clock opener, Pearl City takes on Orangeville at 8 and Shannon and German Valley tangle at 9 o'clock.

Because of the large number of Stephenson county young men in the armed services, two Freeport teams and ope from Carroll county were, admitted "ihis MINNESOTA ONLY LEAGUE TEAM THAT IS UNBEATEN Notre Dame Beats Northwestern; Wisconsin Loses To Dartmouth Chicago, Jan. will be the only Big Ten member carrying an undefeated record onto the floor tomorrow night when the conference basketball teams begin their 1943 title chase. Indiana, Illinois and Purdue also have five triumphs, but each have met one defeat. Wisconsin, defending conference title holder, and Northwestern had given the conference a threesome of unbeaten teams until New Year's eve. Then Wisconsin bowed to Dartmouth and Northwestern lost to Notre Dame.

Here is the schedule of tomorrow night's conference openers. Illinois at Wisconsin, Minnesota at Ohio State, Indiana at western, Iowa at Michigan and Chicago at Purdue, BAciTfcTTHBi AVAR Denver, Colo, rails from some of the narrow gauge lines constructed in Colorado during the early mining boom came from England. Many of the lines now have been abandoned and the rails, after all these years, are being shipped back to England for armaments. prize money and the national meet at Wichita Aug. 14 to 28 with $25.000 for the winners.

The champs are guaranteed $7,500 in defense bonds. NAVAL RELIEF SOCIETY GETS SOME DONATIONS New York, Jan. Football fajis who attended the game between the Chicago Baers and the National League All-Stars for navy relief Sunday won't be alone their contribution to the gate. in Checks amounting to more than $300 have been received at naval Relief society headquarters in the past few days. Officials say most of the letters contain checks of $1 to $5 and are from persons in the middle and far west who could not see the game.

And HU Orch tr SATURDAY N1TE AND SUNDAY tr Wwnrmt THE WEATHER CURTAILS OPEN HOUSEJWQRAM AT Majority of Held as Scheduled, However; Cage Champions Crowned Although partially curtailed because of inclement weather, a majority of the activities scheduled were carried out on the Y. M. C. A. open house program Thursday.

Y. M. C. A. Heavyweights defeated Shell Oilers, substituting for a snowbound Sterling quintet, in an evening game, 39 to 33.

The ing champions were in holiday elimination tournament: FleaweighWAU-Stars. BantamwetehW-Dribblerc (repeaters). Droolers. Sob Welck won the men's pm pong championship, defeating Boris Popov in the final match. A tumbling exhibition was held in the evening but scheduled boxing and swimming BY GEORGE SCHUNK Freeport majors' starting lineup of five senior lettermen will be broken for the first time in nine games tonight on the Elgin court as the Pretzels resume Big Seven conference warfare.

Tom Ferguson, junior firebrand. Is slated to replace Captain Johnny Pinnow, sidelined with a sprained ankle, at guard. A first place tie with Joliet and extension of a seven-game winning streak will be twin objectives of the Allenmen as they make their first conference road trip. Orange and Black yearlings can take over the undisputed frosh-soph leadership by disposing of Maroonettes, current pacesetters, in the 7 o'clock preliminary. East Aurora travels to La Salle- Peru to tonight's conference card.

Joliet, major division leader, takes on Morton of Cicero, 1941 state champion, Saturday evening as East Aurora entertains Wheaton. The Journal-Standard sports department will furnish period scores on the Preeport-Elgin doubleheader at the Watch city. Call Main 3100 after 7:30 o'clock tonight. Weidner Scoring Star Maroon and Cream majors have won 4 And lost 2 games this season with only one letterman, Forward Ed Weidner, playing regularly. Elgin defeats were administered by Morton, 38-23, and Joliet, 37-33.

Victories were scored over Glen- bard, Hinsdale, Riverside-Brookfield and West Aurora. Weidner (5-1D, a mid-year junior who has registered 53 points in 6 games, will team at forward with Dick Price (6-1), a senior who has scored points in his first season of varsity competition. Bob Menke (6-3), up from the sophomores has scored only 17 points as compared to 30 for Captain Waidemar Luepke (6-4), captain and a senior, but will open at center. Byford Cavitt (5-10), mid-season graduate who has tallied 17 points and Davie Kilburn (5-11), junior with 29 points to his credit, will open at the guard slots for toe Maroons. Jack Freyer, one of Krafft- men who will depart at the semester, is the other letterman on the squad and currently ranks as the third guard.

R. Ferguion Second Choice Tom Ferguson will get first call to replace injured Captain Pinnow for Freeport with Roger Ferguson, rangy center or forward, as second choice. Don Garns and Qlenn Malnes, senior letterman are also slated to see action. Aside from Pinnow who sprained his ankle in scrimmage Tuesday, the Pretzel front will be intact with Bob Brown and Merlin (Ding Dong) Belle at the forwards, Gerry Dirksen at center and Bill Young at the other guard. Brown will shift to guard if Ferguson is used.

Maroonettes, beaten only by Hinsdale underclassmen, are paced by Sammy 'Sauceda, Mexican guard and captain who has tallied 49 points to date. Other Farroh start, ers will include Jack Bunnaster, and Jim Rager, forwards, BUI Goedert. center; and Carl Plath, guard, coach Dave Dupee, of Freeport. will present his strongest lineup with Donnie Best and Roosevelt Banks at forward, Don Hershberger at center, BUI Lindsey and Dan Ferguson or Oal Wunsch atjtuard. exhibitions and members' volleyball games were cancelled.

Bill Leeman won the boys' division ping pong title with Charles Morits copping honors in pocket Tht lollowinf were chosen as member? ol the rifle team, posting high scores in final elimininaUons: Don Grlswold 181x350; Kenneth Henk, 179; Bob Francis, 170: Robert B-orneman, 168; Donald Mullarkey, 163. Exhibits of campcraft were on display Ui the main lobby throughout the day. Prep Basketball (By the Associated Press) Pontlac Tournament Centralla, 45; Peoria Woodruff, 41 (championship) Urbana, 37; Rushvlllc, 32 (consolation; Rock Island, 25; Eureka, 23 (third place) Gcneseo Tournament (Second Round) Oeneseo, 40; Atkinson, 21 New Boston, 33; Cambridge, 28 Mineral, 32; Oalva, 30 Yorkvllle Tournament (Second Round) Piano, 39; Hampshire, 27 Earlvllle, 37; Yorkville, 18 Newark, 23; Sugar Grove, 20 Somonauk, 45; Lcmont, 27 Mt. Vernon Tournament (First Round) Salem, 41; Carml, 39 Granite City, 45; Cairo, 25 Flora, 33; McLeansboro, 21 Mt. Vernon, 53; Albion, 27 University of Chicago Tourtnanrent (Quarterfinals) Marshal, 42; Tilden, 40 Von Steuben, 46; Lane, 44 Austin, 22; stelnmetz 18 Dusable, 37; Englewood 19 Other Scores Decatur, 49; Thornton (Harvey) 46 (overtime) Paris, 38; Clinton (Ind.i, 25.

EDOLlilOS CENIRALIA FIVE 10 TEAM AGAIN TAKES TITLE; FAVORITES WIN AT MT. VERNON By the Associated Press Centralia and Dwight Eddleman again are going to have a lot to say about the state high school basketball championship. They gave a convincing demonstration of this last night in winning their third straight Pontiac holiday tournament. Peoria Woodruff pushed the defending champions all the way, but the team from the southern half of the state was ahead at the finish, 45 to 41. Eddleman bagged 19 points in the title game and wound up the tournament with a total of 68 points for the four contests.

His total in 12 games this season reads 236. In the big tournament in the southern half of the state, at Mt. Vernon, favorites continued to advance. Granite City, Mt. Vernon, Salem and Flora all won last night.

Today Granite City and Mt. Vernon will clash In one headliner while Champaign and Wood Rive.r battle in another. Four Teams Win Four Earlville, Newark and second round hurdles in the Yorkville meet. Geneseo, New Boston and Mineral were second round winners in the tournament at Oeneseo, having defeated Atkinson, Cambridge and Gaiva respectively. The quarterfinals at the University of Chicago tourney ended with Marshall, Von Steuben, Austin and Dusabie surviving to see another round of play tonight.

Outside tournament play, Decatur, which on Wednesday night won the Pana meet, came back last night to defeat Thornton of Harvey, 49 to 48, in an overtime. ALSO BOWL VICTOR GEORGIA WALLOPS T. C. IN GAME OF MANY DOWNS ALABAMA WiiTOT TILT FROM TEXAS A. TEAM Raro-TIgcr Context Only Fray In Which Score Was Low; Final Count 2 to 0 MASCOT PROCLAIMS EAST BATTLE All-Star Football Clubs Will Meet Tomorrow In Charity Game New Orleans, Jan.

Little Jerry Qlynn says the East will and that ought to tell most people where to put the blue chips in tomorrow's 17th annual Shrine East- West charity all-star football game. Jerry, a 14-year-old kid who looks no bigger than a minute, is the East's self-appointed mascot. If his luck is as good as it has been in the past, the easterners have the decision wrapped up and packed away before they ever go onto the turf of Sugar Bowl stadium. For Jerry never has been with a losing team. His latest job was helping his high school football teara win a scholastic championship, and he can reel off other achievements if you give him half a chance.

He adopted the East team at Biloxi, when it opened training ten days ago. That first afternoon he learned all the names, weights, positions and schools of the all-star squadmen, and now is a walking encyclopedia of who's who and what's what with the team. New York. Jan. and figures on the 1942 football bowl games: Rose Bowl, Durham, S.

Oregon state 20, Duke 18; attendance 56,000, Sugar Bowl, at New Orleans: Forflham 2, Missouri attendance 72,000 Cotton Bowl, at Dallas: Alabama 29, Texas M. 21; attendance 38,000. Orange Bowl, at Miami: Georgia 40, Texas Christian 26; attendance 35,505, Sun Bowl, at El Paso, Tulsa 6, Texas Tech attendance 11,500. Vulcan Bowl, at Birmingham, Langston, 13, Morris Brown attendance 7,000, BY HAROLlTcLAASEN New York, Jan. (fp) but at New Orleans, where Fordham slogged to a 2 to 0 triumph over Missouri, touchdowns In the annual football bowl games yesterday were as numerous as New Year's day headaches.

At Miami Georgia and Texas Christian players popped over the goal line with all the regularity of habit ruining the best of resolutions as the Bulldogs of the southeast conference triumphed, 30 to 26. Oregon State got three and Duke two as the west coast champions fooled everyone but their coach In upsetting the Blue Devils, 20 to 16, in the Rose Bowl game at Durham, N. C. And Alabama crossed the double stripe four times and Texas M. three times in the Crimson Tide's 29 to 21 Cotton Bowl victory.

The Fordham-Missourl score wasn't a surprise. It was a compliment to the two teams who were forced to play on field that re- sembled Lousiana Bayou. Fordham's two points came early in the first period when Don Greenwood, Missouri end, dropped back to punt and the water-logged boot was blocked by Tackle Alex Santllli of the Rams. The ball squirted through the end zone before Stan Ritinski. Fordham flanker, got trol of it.

In manufacturing their upset, tha lowly rated Oregon Staters scored first and never permitted the vaunted Duke squad to get ahead. Durdam Leads Don Durdan. the slim halfback who passes with his left hand, was the payoff player although tha Beavers' winning touchdown was manufactured on a 70-yard pass and run play from Bob Dethman to Gene Gray in the third period. Alabama used the minimum of effort in turning bade the cadets of Texas A. and collecting its four touchdowns while gaining only 75 yards by rushing and passing while registering but a lone first down.

The Texans, who could get only three touchdowns, gained 309 yards and 13 first downs. Frank Sinkwich, the broken- jawed all-America halfback, waa the difference between Georgia and the Texas Christian, the latter eleven dropping its first bowl decision in four outings. Three times Sinkwich flipped scoring aerials and once he broke loose on a 43-yard touchdown jaunt of his own. He and his mates combined for a 40 to 7 lead before the Texans realized the game was under way. On the other bowl fronts, Tulsa's Missouri Valley champions lasted for a fourth period touchdown and a 6 to 0 verdict Texas Tech in the Sun Bowl; Langston, blanked Morris Brown, 13 to 0, in the Vulcan Bowl for the negro championship and Louisiana college bested the University of Mexico, 10 to 0, in Mexico City for the Orchid Bowl crown.

Hockey Results (By the Associated Press) National League Boston Brooklyn 4. Detroit Chicago 0. Toronto New York 3 (tie). START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT BY TREATING YOURSELF TO OUR FISH FRY TONITE MIUEI'i OAKEN NCIET W. Avt.

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About Freeport Journal-Standard Archive

Pages Available:
300,109
Years Available:
1885-1977