New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 13, 1929, Page 9

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TGP EIVVLITVTHCPTCCHIOPET Speaking% of Sports { The Senecas are without a game for- tomorrow following a telephone call late last night from the manager of the St. Stanislaus baseball team of Meriden. The Silver City team is to play the Insilcos in the second game for the championship of Meri- den, Baseb@anding AMERICAN LEAGUE Games Yesterday Philadelphia 10-8, St. Louis 0-2. New York 12, Chicago 2. Detroit 13, Boston 12. Cleveland 3, Washington The Standing W 57 47 46 I Philadelphia New York St. Louis Detroit .. Cleveland Washington Chicago Boston .. This cancellation is a keen Wisap- pointment for the local crew as it was all primed for a real battle in he Silver City tomorrow. The Sokols and the Holy Cross eam will battle tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock at Willow Brook park according to a late notification today. Games Today New York at Chicago. Philadelphia at St. Louis. Boston at Detroit. Washington at Cleveland. 1t ever there were better baseball zames being played in local leagues in this city than this season, we have mever seen them. The contests, aspecially, that are being staged in he Industrial league are among the best we have ever seen anyswhere. Games Tomorrow New York at Detroit. Philadelphia at Cleveland. Boston at St. Louis. Washington at Chicago. NATIONAL LEAGUE | the West Hartford sluggers swinging LEGION TEAM IN ANOTHER VICTORY 'Bddy-Glover Post Nine Blanks West Hartford Crew Splendid pitching ‘and an airtight defense gave the Lddy-Glover post baseball team a shut-out win over | the Hayes-Velhage nine of West Hartford in the Legion circuit last night. The game, played in the fast time of one hour and twenty-five the long end of a 4 to 0 score. Sammy Capodice was given 1he pitching assignment last night and | Larry Mangan could not have en- trusted the hurling duty to bettei hands. Sam was stingy with his | Dblows. His fast-breaking curves had wildly and during the nine innings but two lone singles, widely scat- tered, Were registered off the Noew Britain ace. Last night 2 1 to 0 battle won by | Stanley Works over the Fafnir crew, was one of the most bitter battles | yet fought in the circuit. A fluke| home run by Parsons gave the Mutt- makers their lone run which was enough to win. Games Yesterday New York 4. Chicago (10 innings). Pittsburgh 6, Philadelphia 4. Brooklyn 8, St. Louis 7. Cincinnati 4, Boston 3. | (11 innings). |and only Capodice got off to a splendid start | an cven dozen batters | faced him in the first four sessions. | Roger Sperry, the second batter to face him in the fourth, was the only | man to reach first base during this | | period and he died before he resched the third sack. During the evening's entertain. | The police baseball team will start next week its bi-weekly practice ses- sions in preparation for the two games with the Meriden department tcam. Manager Tommy Dolan has planned two sessions - each week, every Tuesday and Thursday after- noon at 2 o'clock at Willow Brook park. The Standing } Pet. | 658 | 81 Pittsburgh | Chicago ... New York . St. Louis . Brooklyn . a. Philadelphia Boston . Cincinnati 1t is expected that all the old timers will be-out working for the team while Manager Dolan expects to get additional strength from the ranks of the supernumeraries who have been appointed since the last series. Games Today Chicago at New York. Pittsburgh at Philadelphia. St. Louis at Brooklyn. | Cincinnati at Boston. The first game this year will he played in Meriden, at Hanover park. on August 21, while the second will he staged .at Willow Brook park in this city on August 2. Games Tomorrow St. Louis at New York. Cincinnati at Brooklyn. Pittsburgh at Boston. (Other clubs not scheduled). For the benefit of those managers | who' might not have received nc(lfl-} cation ‘of the proposed meeting to| start’ plans for the playoff for the | e city baseball ‘championship, We Te-| pochegier 4, Jersey City 3. peat that a meeting will be held in | xocark 6 1 Toronto the Herald office Tuesday evening at| Rugralo 5. Baltimore 7. 8 o'clock, All the managers of teams | (Other clubs not sehoduled). interested, are invited to attend. | INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE The Standing w. 56 48 46 42 o 43 42 29 el Three games are scheduled this| afternoon in the City Baseball| league and it is expected that there \?0_““93!" i i ling | Toronto will be some changes in the standing | t | Montreal atter they are over. At the present |Zon(redl time, the Burritts are leading the S league. Whether they will lose today | Reading or not is a question that will be de- | 4 i Buffalo k this after- oo ;:1:: at' Walnut Hill par’ I MAUREEN ORCUTT UNABLE | | 10 OVERCOME HER JINX TUnsuccessful Once Again in Her At- | Games Today Jersey City at Rochester. Newark at Toronto. Reading at Montreal. Baitimore at Buffalo. s EASTERN LEAGUE tempt to Win the Griswold Golf Trophy. Groton; Conn., July 13.—(P—The | “jinx” that has pursued Maureen Orcutt, Metropolitan champion, in her numerous attempts to win the | Griswold cup, emblem of victory in the Shenecossett club's annual in-| vitation golf tournament has oper- | Ajpane ated again to the advantage of Edith | providence , Quier of Reading, Pa. | ringenbet Miss Quier gained a leg on the | partord in one of the most surprising upsets | pitrerielq trophy vesterday by defeating Miss | g aey Orcutt in the final round. 4 and 2. |New Haven . of the season. ‘Allnnlcv\n Miss Orcutt has been medalist of | {he Shenecossett club tournament | three times but never has been able | Games Yesterday Hartford 8, Allentown 4. Providence 7, New Haven 6. (13 innings). Bridgeport 4, Pittsfield 2. Albany §, Springfield 4. The Standing Games Today Allentown at Hartford. Springfield at Albany. New Haven at Providence. Bridgeport at Pittsfield. v favorite as a result of her | semi-final round victory over Helen | Jicks by and 5 Miss Orcutt shot | herself out of the title on the first | nine when she required 47 strokes and rounded the turn five down to the Reading star. The Metropolitan | title older rallied in fine fashion on | ~ ¢ ISHERT @/ FEAEERON the home-coming journey but she could not overcome the hea 5 R she Had permitted her opponent to FltZ FOO]S Reds roll up on the first nine. Three up at | the end of 15 holes, Miss Quier got | down in par four but Miss Orcutt, in trouble with her sccond, failed to negotiate a long putt which would have given her a half. That failure | cost Miss Orcutt hole, match and HOME RUN CLUB By the United Press. Leaders Ott, Giants, 25. Gehrig, Yankees. Bottomley, Cardinal Klein, Phillies, 23. Hafey, Cardinals, ‘Wilson, Cub: Simmons, Athletics, Ruth, Yankees, 18. O'Doul, Phillies, 18. Jackson, Giants, 17. Yesterday's Homers Simmons, Athletics, 2. Meusel, Yankees, 1. Byrd, Yankees, 1 Foxx, Athletics, Johnson, Tigers, Fullis, Giants, 1 Jackson, Giants, 1 Stephenson, Cubs, 1. Herman, Dodgers, 1. Totals National league—470. American league—331. Total—§01. Games Tomorrow Providence at Hartford Albany at New Haven. Allentown at Bridgeport. 29 29 21 i FRED FITZSIMMONS | the West Hartford nin: | a single into left, Capodice stoppink |in | were the | \ivnarsk ment, for it was all of that from a | local angle, only one West Hart- fordite reached third base, Ellsworth | gained the dizzy corner by.means of a pretty steal in the first half of the eighth inning. This did not nelp | the cause of Ihe invaders, howevor. Although the local twirler out- shone his opponent, Krebs, who was tossing them up for the J{ayes-Vel- | hage outfit, the latier was hy no | means ineffeztive. He held the locals at bay for the first five cantos and | but for a lapse in 1ne sixth, when the Manganmen bunched tive hits to push across izrewr only runs, the game might have gon: ii.to ove innings. He show:d som: sp pitching in the fifth when, with th2 bases loaded, he fann:d C'Brien for the third out, The game wot off 19 a fast start | and neither team was able to breok into the scoring columm t~r the fi | five sessions. The stoin hroke in the last half of the sixth mung after had beon re- tired. Capodics, first np, singled into center field. Schmarr followed with | at third. The local first sacker took | second on the mext play and Mly- narski was retired on a hoist to third | base, Miller, speedy center fielder, | stepoed to the plate and proved to be the hero of the game when he | singled sharply through second ha: and scored Doth his team mates. | Miller tallied a moment later when | Zembroski tripled into left field. | The locals' scoring stopped when | Zembroski went home on a passed | ball. The side was retired short after Curylo had singled when Wo- jeck hit into a double play. From that point on both teams | were powerless and no further scor- | | ing resulted. | | The defense of both teams was | brilliant throughout. Russcll Sperry. | West Hartford left fielder made two | splendid running catches in the | fourth inning, the first on a foul fiv | |and the second a long liner by | Schmarr. This latter catch was one | of the most brilliant plays ever madc | on a local diamond. Sperry raced back at the sound of the ball meet- | ing the bat and snared the pellet | | with a leap as the ball was about to | drop into the crowd that was wit- | nessing a game on the second lia- | mond. Sczepanik was a stone wall | the West Hartford infield and | took park in three double killings. | Taylock, Zembroski and Curlvo | leading stickers for the | locals while the last mentionsd | played & fine game at second ba The summar HAY oh it erry Sperry rstrom, ¢f Toccaline, ¢ Flisworth, 3h Van Zandt, 1h |l smsmsssun, sloss5222223 EDDY- i 3n % 1h Tt O Brien Canodice, hmar Miller, cf | =emn Curylo, 10 a00-"0 00x—4 | ruck out: ol osssss200m Totals Hayes-Velhage Eddy-Glover Thres base hit By Capodice 10, 200 000 Zembroski by Krebs AT MICHIGAN 29 YEARS Fielding H. Yost, director of inter- collegiate athletics at the University of Michigan, has been at the school for 29 years He was active head football coach for a quarter of a | century. SALESMAN SAM NOW REMEMBER, OEAR, \F TUNSUCCESSFUL TUTORS Two of the greatest lightweights | of the last decade, Benny Leonard and Richie Mitchell, have tried their hands at developing championship timber. Neither has proved success- ful. New York, July 13—Tred Fitz- simmons, burly right hander of the New York Giants, is having only or- |dinary success against the general run of opponents. But against the | Cincinnati Reds, Fitz clicks like a champion. | The big New York hurler hlanked | | Tack Hendricks' men three fimes 1n Steeplechasing started as a sport|, row. He shut out the Reds twice among English cavalry officers about (i), one serics on the Giants' last road a century ago. trip and added his third victory later at the Polo Grounds. The score was 8§ to 0. giving Fitz the |a record of 27 scoreless innings against the Reds. Asheville, N. C., boasts of the only southeast. School for Boys crew in |Landers | minutes, took place at Walnut Hill | | park and ended with the locals on | enth | 2s men got on bases. | bases due to a ground ruling: | out | next | ball past the infield. FEEL ANY BETTER, LEAVE TH STORE IN | CHARGE OF SAM AND COME HOME — HOME RUN GIVES STANLEY WORKS WIN “Wink” Venturo Lets Drive of Parsons Roll Through His Legs, Giving Runner a Trip Around the Circuit —Final Score Is 1 to 0—Buttmakers Again Ascend to League Lead — Scott and “Lefty” Haber Give Brilliant Pitching Exhibitions. Standing W, § Pet .858 .833 583 500 Stanley Works Fafnirs Corbins Paper Goods Stanlcy Rule ... . B. Machine ... 143 As the result of “Wink" Venture letting a ground ball from the bat of Parsons go through his legs in the seventh inning which allowed the latter to circle’ the bases, ‘the Stanley Works scored a 1 to 0 vie- tory over the Fafnir Dragons in an Industrial Baseball league game at Walnut Hill park last night and put 286 I 1 1 4 5 6 |1ast year's champions in the top po- sition ot the league more, standing once The game was a tough one “Lefty” Haber, who was on mound for the Dragons, (o lose, | Waiter Scott pitched brilliantly the winners especially when IFafnir team put men on hases. The game developed into the finest pitche ers’ battle that nas been seen in this | city this year. Despite the fact that there:were three errors made by each team and one lost the game, the felding of each club was sensational. Neither pitcher needed unusual support as each of them had the opposing bat- ters well in check. In only one inning did a ‘team make two hits, this being the se when Parsons got his singie which won the game. This was fol- lowed hy a three base hit which would have been an easy out if Ven- fure had not fallen down just as he was to make the catch. Judging the pitching of Scott and Haber there was liftle choice as each was in rare form and complete mas- ter of the opposing batsmen as soon Scott allowed but four hits and one of these was of the freak variety. oy Gaida leaves of after a tree it had hut grazed the went for twe lak's Jouble would also have been an easy out had it not struck a tree. Iive hits were checked up againsi Haber buf the triple by Salak would under ordinary circumstances hav: been an easy out. Haber had the edge in the matter of strikeouts, fan- ning six to four for Scott. The win- ning pitcher walked taree while Ha- | ber passed but one. The Werkers threatened in the Arst inning when, after one out, Charlow sirigled and Green reached first when Krause threw wildly to tecond to start a double play. Ha- ber bore down at this (time and made Schroeder and Parsons hit easiy grounders. In the second in- ring Salak doubled with one out but the next two bafters were easy outs, In the third the Workers went out in order and the Dragons made their first threat. Walicki opened the in- ning by layirg a bunt down the third baseline and he was safe at second when Abramowicz threw wildly to first. The next three batters went out in order, however, leaving Walicki stranded on second. ed first after one was out for the losers in the fifth when Parsons fumbled his grounder and Kania moved him up a base with a singlw, The next two batters hit easy roll- ers and there was no scoring. Ierguson opened the sixth with a double down the left fleld foul line for the losers and Kania ad- vanced him to third when Abramo. wicz fumbled his grounder after one was out but the next two hitte | failed to come through. Parsons opencd the seventh with a single to right and Venturo rus ed in to pick it.up but missed the ball completely and it rolled to deep right allowing the batter to circle the hases with ea After one was in this frame Salak hit a fly <o right but Venturo fell down under it and it went for a triple. Haber hore down then and prevented - the two hitters from putting the With one out in the ninth, Cor- bin, batting for Krause hit a fly to right field which Gaida nabbed but the umpires allowed a two-base hit as the ball touched the trees. The next two batters could do nothirtg with the fast ball Scott tossed at them, however, and the game was |over, The summary: STANLEY WORKS AB R H 1 PO A 5 it Schneider, Charlow, Green, 2h Schroeder, Parsons, Gaida, rf Salak, Abramowicz, 1 .333 | the | A drive oft | Corbin’s bat in the ninth was caught | Krause reach- | OVER FAFNIRS | venturo O'Brien, Ferguson, Haber, p Kania, 3 Bucherri, | Waticki,” 2y | Krause,” 11 [ Kenure, « Belanger | Corbin, it it x xx Totals ZG x—Batted for Walicki in 0 xx~—Batted Krause. Stanley Works 0aa aon Fafnirs 000 000 Two bas Corbin son. Three -bas: hit: Salak. DBases on | Balls: Scott 3, Haher 1. Struck out: By Scott 4. Haber 6. Diouble plays: Bucheri to Walicki to Krause, Umpires: Lynch and Fitzpatrick, tsi Salak HERMAN RETAINS - LEAD IN BATTING 'Brooklyn Slugger Has a Mark of ‘ 393 for 70 Games New York, July 13 (P — Babe |Herman is making the running th | week in the race for the National |league batting championship, but with the stretch only a few weeks [ofi: other and more easily recox- | nizable faces.are pecring at the lead- |er from not far in_the rear. The | Brooklyn slugger has a mark of . for 70 games, with Frank O'Doul of | Philadelphia in second place on a | mark of .379. | The averages were. issued today. ‘mcluding games of last Wednesday. | Other leading regulars are: Terry, |New York, .369: Comorosky, Pitts- | burgh, .364: Klein. = Philadelphia. 360; Traynor, Pittsburgh, and | Hornsby, Chicago, .358 and Frisch and Hafey, St. Louis, .355. | Unable to find a place among the |topmost batters, young Melvin Ott |of New York nevertheless leads in |three highly valuable endeavors— in runs scored with $0; in runs bat- |ted in with 88 and in home runs with |24 The youthful Giant has been |unable, however, to lift his mark above .327. While advancing, through the | |melancholy at the fag end of a pen- nant-wrecking Cardinal slump, to a | personal triumph in home run hit- ting, Jim Bottomley of St. Louis tied a record of no less a person than |Babe Ruth. In five successive games |against the Phillies from July 5 |through July 9, the Cardinal first |baseman punched seven home runs |over the handy right field wall at Baker Bowl. The Babe hit seven in five games at the Polo Grounds in 1921. Had he been playing at Baker | Bowl, he might have hit 17. Bottomley’s spree sent him into a | tie with his team mate, Chick Hafey, |and Chuck Klein of Philadelphia for |second place in the National leagne home run derby. ch has 22. FHafey also leads in doubles with 26. Bill Terry shows the way in total |hits with 121, while Lloyd Waner of | Pittsburgh is out front with 12| |triples. Kiki Cuyler of Chicago leads in steals with 26. The -portly-and familiar figure of | Burleigh Grimes overshadows the, rest of the pitchers, but Guy Bush {of Chicago is making a brave effort to watch the Pittsburgh spit-baller, |stride for stride. Grimes has won 14 and lost one for a percentage of 933, and has pitched 156 innings and 14 complete games. Lucas of | Cincinnati ‘also has started and fin- ished 14 engagements. Bush has won 11 and lost one for .017 in 24 games, nine complete. | Three clubs are above | ting, with |lead with | | | | .300 in bat- | the Phillies back in the 311, The Pirates are next with .308 and the Giants third | With .307. The Giants lead in field- | | pionship of the United | was erected for | tront of DY JIGGER Probably no sport is so factory manner fo the golf. Single matches are ‘cover” and the play of a stars, as in a big tournan the U. S. open, is impo tail without recourse to the 1eporting. il polo. ling, be report the press Baseball, track meets, wres even rowing can uccurately from foot is no one vantage the unfolding of cun be viewed spot the sport’ Considerable human and ical machinery was requ Winged Ioot, recently, du four days of play for the go a der to give the public im printed accounts of the the play. A barracks-like the sole press and the telegraph co The Western Union and T cupied one end of the rough board tables down and in the center of the building accommodated the long, Ta. one corner an wha received the scores telephones located cvery on the course. An assistar cach contestant’s tcore on for the information of the r Scores were checked aga o | players' cards as soon as th were completed. Another the club hos spectators informed. In some cascs runy by the newspapermen, supp the information received headquarters. Men stationc the court sent in detailed |of the play of the leading The running accounts rounds published in the cdition of the New York written in the press men and women who did n stroke of play. pa They pounded out their s Associated stories Press, dressing h touches ot ima, Their necessity was o w news while it was “hot.” counts written in this way o the information the wants. cluns were used, how sho played and from what kind ave With “star” writers far such detail. And even a following, as closely as he lowed, the play of Jones or could not always say just v was used for the long app CHIP SHOTS t y |the lengih of putts were estimated | ible hoxir golf ramnles zo far afield that there from use room one three afternoon buildin portahle typewriters provided by the age golfer He would like to read what scene of action, it was of course out of the question for them to include | gorioy could onl drives on one of ] with difficult urday looked difficul | 12 feet 16 me {o report accurately, and in a sati re ader, as hard to core 0° nent like to d tricks of Special stor usual verc of more who himself hurriedly writ rouncs. nnis and ed quite box but which s drama (Continued f mechan- nired ring the If cham- | s in or- imediate Marany Clark, of m Sisler Bell Maguire, | Harper prozress of structure of the mps 0sta Y| Twe ville Walker, ey 3, Bel R 1 oc- and | sides story writera. Ha operator ver field holes it posted a hoard eporters. | inst the 1ounds hoard in kept the employed lemente 1t press d out on accounts players. Herman, Bissonette, Breesie Moare Henc Rhiel, Flowers, Deberry, Wright Vance, Picinicl of the DPers was i not see a T x—Batted y—One out “Batted 2—Ran for 277—Batted “217—Patted rite golt | 5 But ac-| ften lack | tories on for up thei G gination. | Frisch k out: By Losing pitcher (s were 1 of lies. | Adams, L. Wa P. Waner, Comor: from the i reporter | Sheely, was al- | Clarke, Espinosa, | Harsreaves Grimes, p what iron roaches. | Totals features of Hagen, Espinosa when no distance mark guess at the the long holes. ¥ Ever y by ine utt to tie K er to reporter pinosa Sat nine than fes that thy st deal v un tournamen inter to the plays, than ten accounts of were Jone PIRATES GAIN BY BEATING PHILLIES rom precedfng page Gelbert winn Moore in Henc n v in it ath, in 9t 000 60 run: Herma e e tength, man | the and Hortor Smith's DELPHIA AB R H 5 0 b Southen, | orbeul Miller, 1€ Hurst, 10 Whitney, Phomy.son. hevenow Lerian weetland, I 2 0 1 csszas® N » t n 0 ‘ in in in 200 000 Vollings, Susce, xax 13 th 9th. 9th 000 000 2. Bartell, Struck out: by Grimes “ ot evenow Denge 300—5 013—4 L. By Ad O'Doul. Renge Sweetland WATCHING THE SCOREBOARD Press, hero — Melvin Ott. with two out in the ninth inning at New York, enabled C to tie Chicago at three 20 on to victory in the 10th. rke. by esterday whese triple at the ts o run in fourth and winning the 10th when Travis Jackson, first man up, hit the first ball pitched for a home run. Larry Benton was the winning pitcher. came Pittshurgh won victory by heatin its sixth straight Philadelphia, 6 to 4. at that city. Burleigh Grimes was hit hard but manager to_ keep the blows well enough divided. Brooklyn staged a thrilling six run rally in the ninth fo defeat St. Louis, § to 7. at Brooklyn. The score was tied at two runs at the end of the eighth but Dazzy Vance folded up in the ninth and allowed Cardinals to score. Brooklyn. undaunted. countered with six runs and won the game. is, five Ilppa Rixey held the Braves to 10 hits and Cincinnati won an 11 inning game at Boston, 4 to 3. Cincinnati scored two runs in the ninth to get its chance as victory The Philadelphia o games at St. Louis. by scores of to 0 and S to to increase their lead in the American league by half a game, Lefty Grove blanked the Browns with five hits in the first game. Athletics took Yankees pounded Ted ns and Dan Dugan for 15 hits and beat the White Sox, at Chicago. 12 to 2. Herb Pennock al- lowed nine hits. The New Yor Cleveland nosed out Washington, 4 to 2, in a closely played game at Cleveland. The Senators got 12 hits | off Shaute hut were unahle to bunch | them only in the second when they ! scored both their runs. Detroit scored four runs fn the last of the ninth to win ‘a weird game from Boston, at Detroit, 13 to 12. Boston held a five run lead go- ing into the last of the sixth-but the | Tigers tied the score with a hitting Ispree. The Red Sox again pulled away but the ninth inning rally beat them. aN CA /OUR BOARDING HOUSE ~~EGAD,~ [F THE LADS AT HOME couLD SEE ME HNow, we A REGULAR PARISIAN OF THE BOULEVARDS, ~« SEATED AT A SIDE- WALK TABLE AT THE CAFE DE LA PAIX ! wenr AND MY PALS AT “THE oWL'S CLUB,« BLESS'M,~~ [ CAd FANCY “THEM TONIGHT, <« PLAYING PINOCHLE AND PoKER AT THE CLUB BKTiL DAYBREAK, ~~THEN GOING HOME o THEIR INFURIATED CROCKERY-THRoWING WIVES !+ {ing with .974, one point more than |the Cubs possess | Hoosick Falls, home town of Rill Carey, successor to the late Tex | | Rickard, is finding a place on the | map. Paulino trained at the little | {northern New York town. Timmy | | Loughran is training there now and | if the proposed Sharkey fight in New | | York September 26 goes through on | of the principals will pitch camp at | Hoosick. | Johnny Dundee, former world's | featherweight. champion. won an. | | other fight the other night and then | returned to his corner to find a robe, he had worn into’the ring for 19 | years, missing. | | READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS | FOR BEST RE You DON'T The N HE " BOULEVARDIER —° " Reausen N s 7. orF. ©1929, /N HM-M-p- i i PLAY,« BRING By AHERN GAR-SAWN! SEE Voo OKAY! « How ARE ALL W ME A~ AH=-~ Ul DEMMY 3, Boo-TAY oF | VEN BLAWNK ' BY NEA SERVICE, INC. Uncle Sam’s Are Better! WHEW! . GeLLY, | FEEL PUNK' 'Ll Look OVER TH' MORNING'S MAIL AND FoLlow WIEE'S AOVICE - WeLL, DIOTA HAVE &y NICE RIDE. LAST NIGHT, GU22L?2 7 N NO -~ DION'T E€EL WELL ENOUGH To ENJOY (T—1 Was IN & STUPOR - 7 / / GULLEM N 7 2 AR Fere \ NEVER LIKED “THOSE FOREI(GN s, B\THER !

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