Pablo (Escobar/Picasso) Tunnel Discovered
FairCityNews.com | Dec 10, 2012 | Comments 0
Springfield, MO – A curious tunnel has been discovered at National and Sunset street, with a simple message painted on it “Pablo” leading skeptics to believe that Pablo Escobar once used the tunnel for trafficking narcotics or more over that Pablo Picasso hid revolutionary paintings along the route for safekeeping. “We know one thing, the word Pablo is clearly legible and it looks really old. We assume the person who painted it was familiar with a person named ‘Pablo’ and that there was some great secret that was hidden,” said private investigator Kenny Ulanty. Most SPD officers claim the graffiti is illegal but decline to speculate on the artistic origins. I can’t change them into something I am not. viagra without Clinical Trials Indicate Acupuncture Provides Relief The American Cancer Society has reported that half of all men who suffer from diabetes also suffer from opacc.cv cheap viagra reduced sex drive due to low levels of testosterone. Also, Vardenafil causes no or minimal visual disturbance, http://opacc.cv/opacc/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/.._documentos_auditores_Modelo%2007.pdf ordine cialis on line which is a PDE5 class enzyme inhibitor. Medical science also has a great capability of producing viagra delivery the new kind of medicines, and the result we are getting continuously the new kind of medicines that can invite more romantic flavors in your life. A large collection of tunnels is rumored to lie beneath the Springfield Square in downtown but no known infrastructure has been discovered this far south in the city. “Criminals and artists all have secrets, just like the rest of us, So it is possible that one of these more famous ‘Pablos’ could have used the tunnel system to further their personal causes,” said Dr. Larry Pendertight a scholar of local history, “I’m more interested in discovering whose skeletons are hidden in the Springfield Underground.” As of press time, no cocaine or painting remnants have been discovered yet Burton Kagelatch, a local historical investigator claims that “this tunnel contains significant historical value to one of these two men (Escobar or Picasso) or it is merely the youthful expression of a yet-to-be famous Pablo.”
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