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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1927, 2L S L5, NATIONAL GUARDS BATTLING ATLAS A. C. TONIGHT—STANLEY RULE AND AMERICAN HOSIERY WIN IN GIRLS lNDUSTRlAL 968 LEAGUE—ST. MATTS MEET BLUE ARMY IN CHURCH LEAGUE—DELANEY IS MORE RUGGED FOR BATTLE WITH MALONEY § TWO IRISH COPS ARE ATHLETIC MARVELS STANLEY RULE GIRLS WIN FROM CORBIN SCREW TEAM Ruth Paul Tosses in Winning Basket With Seconds to| (hnpch Leagne to Have Two y Defeats P. & F. Corbin! Go — American Hosier Quintet — Packed House Watches Two Thrilling Battles in Industrial Lea gue—Good Pass Work and Excellent Shooting Shm\n By Both Clubs. Teague Standing s S | " Pet. | Stanley Rule ...... 2 0 1.000 Landers ....... TRl 01000 American Hosiery 1 0 1.000 P, & F. Corbin .... 0 1 000 N. B. Machine .... 0 3 000 Corbin Screw ..... 0 2 .000 ] Battling flercely with the score 10 to 10 and with less than three min- utes to go, two teams, representa- tive of the Stanley Rule & h‘\'hl and the Corbin Screw in the Y. M A. Girls' Industrial league put every ounce of strength in their last of minute play, but th> Rulers were & 1ore rugged, bit stronger and for the second con- f secutive Friday, the Screw Shop zirls took the short end of a close decision. The battle was decided by a fleld JACK DELANEY 1S MUCH MORE RUGGED 'Light Heavy Champ to Face' Jimmy Maloney Friday Night New York, Feb. 12 (P—A bigger, and flashier Jack De- ever before aney than ic of the fistic seuson at ’ b paul from the right ' Madison Square Garden next Friday goal by Ruth F night. The light heavyweight cham- side of the court as the remaining minutes were diminishing into sec- onds. | 1t was a great battle and the pack- | od gallery was thrilled through and through by the neat exhibition of‘ basketball displayed by the two| teams. Anna Marley dashed ahout the ecourt llke a veteran and tossed in five counters. In fact, she did all the scoring for her team until the declding basket which was made . by her running mate, Ruth Panl. The score was 8 to 3, Rule Shop at the end of the first quarter, 6 iol 5 Rule Shop at half time and 10 to o, Rulers, at the end of the third| quarter, It was in the beginning of | the third quarter that the Screw | Shop team began to stage a come- back. Mascolo put her team ahead by one polnt in a 7 to 6 score on a clever toss after 2 minutes and seconds had passed. Marley made it | 8 to 7 in favor of thP Stanley team Snetro made it 9 to 8. “Pat” Dash | ner had a chance to tie the score, but she missed. Marley made it 10 | to 9 just as the third quarter came | to a close. Referee John Tobin detected Mas- colo fouling Paul but the Rule Shop | right forward missed a chance to| break the tle. Four minutes were left, three minutes, two minutes, and still the teams remained deadlocked. ¥ans on both sides pleaded with | their idols to shoot but they wrestled | with the ball and took nose dives into the sideliners’ laps. Marley got | one but it did not count. Finally Paul took a quick pass from Mar- ley and dropped the winning polnm“ through the netting. Captain Mascolo on the offense and Valeria Slysz on the defense, were the losers’ stars. The latter did not | go past the middle of the floor and . broke up several passes. The score: what T can do with my two Stamey Rialo & Tevel Go. - [ sala. “Tm gotng to win. i e S ‘2“ The conquerer of three foreign T 4 H .3 heavyweights—De Kuh, Persson and b 4 o Diener—within the past few months Jarnot, ¢ .. 1 ) 2 \eighed in at 206 pounds, but ex- Kelly, rg 0 D O pects to shave down to an even 200 Dashner, Ig [ 0 O by fight time. After surprising the —6 ‘0 x— visitors with his speed and whaling 2 power, Jimmy sang for his guests in Corbin Serew Co. _| the evening and then walked a mile | Mascalo, 1f 4 1 5 toa movie in Long Branch after Snetro, rf 1 2 4! gotting “special pemission” from Peterson, ¢ 4 0 0 Jimmy De Forrest his trainer, to Slysz, rg . 0 0 0 stay out until 9:15 p. m. fifteen 0 1 1/ minutes later than the usual “lights 0 [ of m,l " 3 4 Tobin; timer, Butler. Referee, Mullen; scorer, American Hoslery Wins The speedy forward cnmbmation[ of Skarzynski and Tyborski was too much for the P. & F. Corbin team and after a hard fought game, the| American Hosiery quintet triumphed over the Corbin gang by a 15 to 11 score. The game started off with a fleld goal by Skarzynska before a minute | had elapsed. Matz evened the| count a few minutes later but Saun-| ders put her team ahead at the first quarter mark. | Tyborski made the score 4 to 2 but | lenger, a few minutes later Ruth Johnson who had just gone into the game tossed in a foul shot to make the score 4 to 3. For the rest of the quarter it was the two forwards al- piled up encounter Thursday. ternating until the score was 12 to pion, | Conn., battles of his brilliant career, offers ! his own perfect physique as authori. | my victor Passes Welker Cochran in training at Bridgeport, for one of the most important ty for the statement. The hint of frailty that marked the appearance of the once s pier of the north” in matches with | huskier opponents, has been lost in a definite edness, added to De- laney’s graceful figure by months of outdoor life and intensive training. “I have gatned several pounds in | the past | through the few months tramping woods and heavy snow when I might have heen gathering In a small fortune through stage and motion picture work following over Berlenbach,” De- laney said yesterday. “I passed up the rewards for just one purpose, i to improve myse! the heavyweight title | In severe training I will never as my goal. €0 | over 175 pounds, but that's enough.” | into his training ring with Jack Warren, a Ncgro arring partner, and turned loose his' uncanny mitmarkmanship for the benefit of the newspapermen. “I'm going to put one of my hardest | uppercuts one inch from his chin in the next round,” he confided to an onlooker. Jack worked the Negro into posi- tlon. Whiz went the right uppercut, a terrific smash, just about one inch from Warren's chin, the Negro alone failed to appreciate the sharp-shoot- Jack jumped ing d At Lol Branch, N. J.,, Maloney likewise rtled the onlookers with an exhibition of punching prowess. Short left and right hooks battered four sparring partners as the Boston heavy for Delaney about tha ring “What do I care what Delaney can do with his right hand—I know HflPPE LEADS IN BILLIARD MATCH Second Round of Title Playm Boston, Feb.12 (A—Willie Hoppe, champlion of the world at 18.2 balk was leading his chal- n of Los An- ine billiards, Welker Coc les. today 1,000 to in their| iree day, 1,500 point title match. Hoppe came from bchind last night to overcome a lead of 1 by Cochran at their first 5, the two additional Corbin points| After a poor start he swept into | being made by Johnson. The only the lead In the ecventh inning of | time Corbin showed good offense ! 's play with a run of 154, ‘was in the latter minutes lead gathered by the Hosier was too great to Frances Winfrey went in the day but Trahan whose sive play was the feature of th night held her in c! ind W nis” had to retire sring her quota of two bask scor American Ho Tl Tyborski, rf 7 nska, 1t i Mavis, ¢ 0 Truban, g ... 1 Saunders, Ig .. 0 ] [ 3 15 P. & F. Corbin Johnson, rf ..... 3 1 i Grossman, rf .... ) 0 Molchan, 1 ) ) Matz, ¢ e ) 4 Blalus, rg ......,. 0 [ Seman, lg 0 0 0 1 11 Referce, scorer, But Tobin; timer, Mullen SIGNE] IP . Pittsburg Robert Tartleton, one Hnn £ baseball player and manager and lat- terly Dbusine: manager of the Shreveport club of the Tex league has been acquired by the Pittshu Pirates for big time duty as a scon Barney Dreyfu: president of the Plrates, announces. est of the match. He 1 this with others of 112 and C an seemed l‘\lh‘.a to get nder way. He did succ how- ver, in staging weback in the f him contin more 1 ously onship crown cher early this @®ING MATCH All-Stars will ve tonight at the street in a will New oliows: La Arnoys, Root and will have Foote, y n urch ch. The 0 o'clock. m will be as game: READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR YOUR WANTS ST. MATTS BATTLE BLUE ARMY TEAM Good Games at “Y” Tonight | Blue Army St. Matthew’s \'elson s ey Reckert Walther +.o0... If ... G. Preisser JOBNBON 4eveevs O ves Klopp Arburr . T8 .... Litke D. Swanson .. g .... W. Preisser F. Swanson, Johnstone, sub. E. Prelsser, Becker, Russell. Center Cong. Trinlty M. E. Brown .. . D. Hewett Derrick A. Hewett Clark .. P. Braddon J. Erfcson ...i. T8 «ooer.... Beers Bradley .. Helnzman Howe, R. Anderson, Hartung, sub. Fengler, Gross. The St. Matthew’s German Luther- crawled | through the ropes of a prize ring ! | will face Jimmy Maloney in the in- | door class eight chased the substitutes | ans may face opposition in their Church basketball league tonight if | the Blue Army puts its strongest | regular line-up on the floor. The | Bluebirds have been in-and-outers this year, and have seldom had & | full team on hand, but they can pm! together one of the best teams in the | league ahd may do so tonight with | the stimulus of meeting the St. Matts | Matts have goading them on. The recovered after losing to the Swedes | and showed their best passing game | of the season last wek. Tled for first ! place, they are in the thick of the fight. | night the Trinity Methodists nntl" Center Congregationalists will battle | to escape the cellar. The Center| church will climb out of last place if bright. the Blue Army after a fine fight with the South church, but it was minus several men and should be in | better condition this evening. The Methodists are erratic but always | dangerous; they may be weakened tonight by the absence of several | players. | There will also be a state cham- plonship game between the | Britaln and Middletown Y. M. | teams, . CRUCKSHANKHAS NEW GOLF CROWN { Conquers Field in South Central it wins, and the prospects of this are | The team folded up against | | gonts 1n question. | | A : - CAPT, McGRATH [ G _ =ON DUTY= In the second church game of the | (BY JIMMY POW New York, Teb. 12—There are| two red-faced Irish cops in this d Ji town who are the outstanding ath- letle marvels of the century, vet | both of them are as unassuming and | {as plain as a dish of their f.\omu chow, to wit—'red mike and revered corned beef b > Pat and Matt—pardon tne seem- | —Ten dog teams strained in the har- ing familiarity, officcr—Captain 'ness today for the final dash in the Matthew J McGrath and Lieutenant second annual poirt to point race of Patrick J. McDonald of the New (hs New England Sled Dog club, | York police department, are the tWo | Tho trail lay over 441 miles of |snow covered roads down to Wolfe- |boro from where the huskies and These aged guardians of the law, Open Championship Play Hot Springs, Ark., Feb. 12 (P—A new golf crown rested today upon the head of Bobby Cruickshanls, the | professional of the Progress Country lclub of Purchase, N. Y. Bobby's| new headgear fs the south central | open championship which he gained from a ficld of the country's, best olfers vesterday on a rain-soaked | course of the Hot Springs Golf and | Country club. | Frank Walsh of Appleton, was the runner-up and Joe Tu Elmsford, N. Y.; Al Watrous, Gr Rapids; Tom Kerrigan, Mount Ver- non, N. Y. and Cyril Walker, tied for the next four places. | Bobby plaved sterling golf under the most adverse weather conditions. | 72 in the final round. He led the fleld by a margin of four strokes, | nis card being 296 for the 72 holes. | Walsh finished with even 500 and | second money, while the four p ers in the tie had cards of 301. ‘ FIGHTS LAST NIGHT fly- defeat- Paris — “Spider’ Pladner, ‘wmzhr champion of France, ed Morrachinl, 15. Berlin — Hans Breitenstrater, of Germany, fought a draw with | | Francis Charles, France, ten. Savannah, Ga. — Pinkey May, of vannah, knocked out Hip Sing Lee, New York, one. | Erfe, Pa. — Bucky Lawless. Au- burn, N. Y., scored a technical knockout over Dave Forbes, Cleve- land, seven; Dave Jackson, Erie, beat Sammy Dunee, Detroit, ten. Charles Tarzan, Columbus, Ohio won a tech- al knockout over Johnny Duff; Buffalo, two. Frank Clor, Frie. knocked out Joe Shephard, Buffalo, on Duluth, Minn, — Billy Petrolle 3. d out William thr tussie Leroy Ia Akron, et, Ohi | Eau Claire St. Paul, knocked out Billy Minneapolis, seven. Mitehell, 8. D. arion Haines, Mitchell, defe ad T 1y McQuire, Sioux Falls, t | Toledo, Ohlo ~— Gypsy Williams Toledo, knocked out Frankie Spiegel, Iwaukee, two: Luis Carpentero, of ledo, ontpointed Joe McK De troit, ten, Hollywood, Cal. — Harry “Kid Brown, Philadelphia, defeated Dick Hoppe ind, ten - Sammy Com- Nov | Di phy, Lo Angeles, heat Mickey T Newark N 3, i Fights Tonight New York — Dave Shade, € | tornta vs, Vie McLaughlin, ten caused offic n[‘ t 1l Billiard association to J The Europeans | s [ have until 6, to get their en-| tries filed. These two with the five | Amcrican entraats to be selecte will constitute the field for the $5 1i-| 000 purse, the w s champlonship Doth of whom first saw the light of [ypeir grivers sct out on an uphill | day 20 vears before the athietes of | it GrAeE : the present generation were N qinetcams lined up today, three swaddling clothes ,are listed as 1027 | £ the tCaTs Ted U felf L0000 B ecordthonks reveal was|Punched Stosefher: for’ iheileaf paralleded effcctiveness that Is one ' ITancols Dupuls, winner of the Qu of the marvels of the current ath- Dec international derl held the scant advan letie decade. I ran across the two Micks in— established on the first day race from Wolfeboro to Ashland. ij«:‘;‘i):{i:afll\fre'. "rhe “irel’:‘:f:} But although he was ahcad of & 62% mile race from Tuchuca to brating Pat's recent promotion from Leonhard hala by three minutes Mexico r‘m_- in 9 hours and 37 min. a sergeant to a lieutenant. and 50 s the hero of the utes nml_hmshm! strong. )[“Tb[}r! Pat, who put the shot over fifty Nome serum ed the sec- gf the tribe of ten reel off 175 to feot at the Stockholm Olympics ond leg with his doss in the best of 200 miles with only a few resting more than 14 years ago, can still condition of the pack while one of periods it is said. hurl the 56-pound weight as far as Dupuis’ animals had becn forced out he ever did. He grabbed hie latest by bad fel national title at the big Sesqul meet | Emil St Goddard, stripling from in Philly and will defend it again the Pas, Manitoba, whose teams | this summer. have carried him to victory more Matt, at 50 years of age, is still than once in the rizorous northwest, The course was soaked by a slow ' tossing the 16-pound hammer within came in third. Hiram Mason of rain which continued throughout the ten feet of his best form consistently. Tamworth and Arthur Walden, Won- day. Tt was an uphill fight for the | He is the best hammer thrower, olancet, were fn fourth and fifth |New York veteran handicapped as | certainly in the United s , and | places respectively, he was by an ugly 80 on his first| very probably in the d today, Dupuis has negotiated the 89 round played in severe cold Thurs- and will be a valuabl t to the miles to date in seven hours, 57 day. {1928 Olympic team if the old minutes and w scconds. Sepalla, But the little Scot was game and | gent lives that long. It wouldn't|while slightly behind for the two he fought stubbornly for the prize. goal me to sce Matt stop his own|daye finished yesterday's run 10 sec- Getting back to his par game In the | funeral and step down out of char-|onqs faster than the leader. He Thursday afternoon round, Cruick- acter long enough to pop off an- \rade the remarkable average |shank pushed cn doggedly turning er rec [slightly better than 11 miles an| in a 73 yesterday morning and a par| He has been in the sport for 25 3oy | ears and has won ecnior national Road conditions which were titles during 16 of them LA e Te: on the first day of the race improved ,mmd y and a brisk }mm evidence of the best going of | |the contest for the finish. night INDIAN MARATHON ] Antonfo to Austin by Three Red- skins Is Planned. Austin, said here. So Mexico. games, his first appearance of official in 15 year: Fle won his first title back in 1908, heating John Flanagan, an- other Turk. Then he went to the| Stockholm C npics and won the inter fonal tit In 1913 Paddy | Ryan won, but Matt came back in | WELL -WELL- A WIRE |in '23 ana’ 24 but again the resili- | GOLF PAL PLAYING | ent Matt bounced back into the IN THE SUNNY SOUTH i plonship ¢ | RIS - | won his first national title 20 | ehiE r“AYS 8l e shotput with QUALIFIED 1IN THE a loss of 47 fect 9 inches. He rose OPENING ROUND = | to memorable heights in & famed S i three-cornered duel at Stockholm, CooD WORK BitL | beat well known Nike oLD BOY- weeEP 1T | 1ander of Finland and Ralph Rose P on his last put. He has ope dozen senjor titles in his big and is still with their present ve clinched more any palr in ch certainly or another round on and you-can make mine t to call f the house \s:--mchr STARS Iy TOJRNEY | ropeans To Play. = TAKING LESSoNS! | entry | " | DON'T UNDERSTAND List For 18.2 Billiard Cham- | T A~ TALL-=- why 5 BiLL oNLY Took UP | pionship Extended To Allow GOLF LAST YEAR — WONDER IF HE'S BEEN MWE Chicago, Feb. 12 (A—The WAS THE ONEY CHAP | list for the 18.2 billiard champion- | CouLD BEAT - BUT Now ship tournament, to be ed at | SUPPOSE HE'LL BE Too Washington, March 1- s been GooD To PLAY ME - T extended for another week, to per- JUST_ A KID = mit two European stars now en route to get in thelr application, The al closing date was but cable reports of the sail- Felix Grange, French cham- Edouard Horems lel- champion | and diamond. trop Tex., Feb. violets.” Y A gastronomie guldo “ls some- Three Veterans Are Bched signts-two stie mun From san times necessar decipher | tabhle tal ltf the b -[I o thar i °':n1” Together in Sled Race | violets” in their interpre ion s/ PR R e i Mexican far as he knows, Honolulu Interested In Football Contests Knute X. Rockne, head football coach at Notre Dame, places Hono- lulu at the head of the class for in- terest in the game. When everything is considered, the Bes caid Rockne. I believe football city in he was amazed by the size of the crowds he saw attending gam®s. He acted as referee In one of the READ I!FR\ID CLASSIFTED ADS FOR YOUR WANTS There Are Golf Medals—AndA Then There Are Just Medals. (NEXT DAY "WHAT DO YJU Know' BOUT THAT! 21T HE woN HIS MATCH AND 1s IN THE SEML- FINALS ! gave | 12 (M—An 82 mile run from San Antonio to Aus- tin by three planned as a feature of the annual s university relays this year. yde Littlefield, Texas track coach last night arrangements being made to bring 1t is planned to have them finis¥ the run at the university stad- um March 25 during the relay pro- m. Indians is were the Indians the Indians will have no contestants, Li'.fl(:fl(’]di said. It will be necessary to call the run- ners in from the wilds of interior Two members of the Tara- humare tribe several months ago ran Honolulu is| America,” The famous exponent of the shift, just returncd from a| visit to the Hawallan Islands, | 1 18 hole said ‘as an "Ww NATIONAL GUARDS TO HAVE TOUGH GAME WITH ATLAS Bitter Rivals to Clash Tonight on State Armory Floor —Visitors Anxious to Mar Record of Guards on Home Court—New Haven Has One Victory to Its Credit Over Locals—Burritts and Rangers to Clash in Curtain Raiser—Dillon to Referee. BRODHLYN SIGNg = wmmwmxfiglfi Former New York Giant Gome,spm“ to Terms With Robinson Gubersky, in for thall ts this scason fonight when New York, Feb, 12 (P) — Emil meet the Atl A. C. of New “Irish” Meusel, slugging outflelder Haven in tho wecily tion at wio purchased his release from the | ‘(' ;‘“lffl, L ary i et I‘;‘Z New York Glants last summer, Will |pest in the State and a strong con. park his glove in the Brooklyn out- tender for the statd championsl ‘'p er gardens this y |1aurels, nas ly takén ons The controversy arising out of [ g ® A G conflicting claims of the Dodgers and | {710 TOH % GRARaS Tt Playe Cinclunatl Reds was settled today | gonyns was 28 1o 0, 8 when Manager Jack Hendricks said | ““pyst wes 8260 200 he had learned that his bid for Meu- sel followed that of Wilbert Robin- | son, president of the Brooklyn club. | Both managements '\nnfn\ncr'd‘ simultaneously Thursday night that | Sonser voteran brother - of - Tob, | it has become the slogan of outside Yankee star, had accepted terms for | (€4S to beat the National Guards 1927. Robinson said Meusel had sign- | 7 thelr home floor, the New Haven ed the Dodger contract calling for a | (&8 clally keen to bp 410,000 salary and had forwarded it | the first one to turn tho tridk to- from Hollywood, where he is en- i‘”“x‘“ A ; gaged in moving pictures An imposing lineup will face the e e R e e “We were too late and T am sor- | forward; Pite at center and Chadys v,” Hendricks said today. “We had | and Gubersky at guard. This is accepted terms but waited too long | the team that has bowled over some |'to close the deal, and Robbie came |Of the lcading contenders in the along and took the player before |State and the club banks on it to we knew what It was all about.” |set the Guards back for the first Hendricks sought Meusel during | time on the state armory floor. consideration of the trade that sent| The game itself, with the Atlas Fddie Roush to the Giants in ex- | furnishing the opposition for the change for George Kelly. Although |local quintet, will bring out a record Kelly is a first baseman, Hendricks : crowd of fans, it is thought. Always said he might switch the lengthy hit- | bitter rivals, the two teams are ex- ter to centerfield, leaving Wally Pipp | ccedingly so this year. The season on the first sack, in an effort to fill | had progressed quite™ ways before the gap left in the Red outer works | the Atlas reassembled the squad by the trading of Roush and failure | which today represents it on the to secure Meusel. court. For this veason, several of WALTH_—OU_R_IN__R_AGE the early season games resulted in victories for the team which met the Atlas. Since Pite, Botwinick and Blond Haired Southern Bicycle Star Six-Day Grind At fans at the gamo Haven battle gives the an idea of just w! will be tonight. Each team is anxious to topple the other and as | N ew “(‘-ub\-rsky returned to the fold, how- ever, the Atlas five has lost only a few games, It is likely that New Britain will start tonight with Sloman and Ru- benstein at forward, Restelli at cen- Enters Next Madison Square Garden. ter and Kilduff and Sheehan at New York, eb. 12 (A—Bobby | guard, though Mert Taylor, “Red” Walthour, blond haired southern|Reynolds and “Butsy” Sturm will get into the fray beforo it is fin- ished. \ Among New Britain fans, the Guards are decldedly the favorite. | There are many in New Britain, however, who figure that the Atlas | will mar the record of the locals on | their home floor. Because of this speculation, it is figured that the seating capacity of the state armory will be taxed to the Iimit tonight. Preliminary Game A double feature will be present- ed in the preliminary game which will be between the Burritt and tha |Ranger ~ teams. Both are local | quintets which have been burning {up the state in junfor circles and a rich battle 1s anticipated tonight. The first game will start promptly at 8 o'clock and the second will go on at approximately 9 o'clock. Dick Dillon will referea hoth con« bike star, has signed to compete In | the six day race at Madison Square| Garden March 5 to 12. Walthour failed to enter the winter grind December when Reggie McN: and Pietro Linari raced to a tional victory. Walthour, in one of the leading youthful riders, has won three six- day races in Chicago with Freddic Spencer. Reggie McNamara and Harry Horan, as his partners, he has been victorious in one Garden grind. Women Golfers Play Match of 76 Holes The final round of the Women's Challenge Cup golf competition over was fought out at Royston, England, in a contest of 76 holes be- fore Miss Boyce could defeat Mrs \ Goodale After three rounds of 18! , tests and dancing will follow. holes had been squared, it was de- | clded to play six more holes but | SHOULD HELP MACK after that the position was still all | even. The secretary of the club infield of the Athletics while Zach granted an extension and another heat should stabilize the out- round was started which” ended in | field, Lack of poise beat the Athe Miss Boyce's favor, three up and two | lotics last year. The two veterans to play., 'Should supply that asset. By BRIGGS AND THE NEXT "\WHOW ! HE SAYS HE WON THE FINALS BY, Two And ONE!! Eddie Collins should steady the The "THERE MUST BE SOME MISTAKE - HE S&\‘S HE WON HIS NEXT DAY MATCH IN THE SEMmI- . FINALS . HE MUST TS I'S' SURELY A JoSH .. BE TRYING To 1D ME OR SOMETHING'" HFLLO Blu_- HAVE A NICE TIME T (G5 FEW DAYS LATER) - ! 1 LET'S SEE ThAT :”‘;} il e 16Tu DiVISIoN: MEDAL 1! @uick /) [ A0 A NICE LI How RoTTEN \ 1 ThevanT HERE'S ThE THE REST MusST You'D BE BIG MEDAL- on CHAMPIONSHIP OF HAVE BEEN ' BIG LOAD OFF MY MIND A JeALous ! Boy !