New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 28, 1930, Page 14

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- NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1930. —— STATE TRACK MEE:[' OF COUNTY Y.M. C. A. TO BE HELD AT WILLOW BROOK PARK NEXT SPRING—ED KLOIBER'S INJURY. MAY KEEP HIM OUT OF GAME WITH BULKELEY HIGH—NEW BRITAIN RAMS AND THOMASTON PONIES MAY MEET SUNDAYJ e THOMASTON PONIES MAY PLAY HERE NEXT SUNDAY If Arrangements Can Be Made, New Britain Rams Will Battle Only Team to Defeat Them This Season — Players All Agree to Take Chance On Split in the Game—Contest Here Hinges On Whether Clock Town Eleven Will Be Able to Cancel Other Game Scheduled—No Injuries Here. GAMERESULTSIN One homc in whica the Rams, New Britain's profession- | al football cleven, may take part, is | present time al- | though definite closing of the gam: | will have to await word from the | contemplated opposition today. Al e o e | Yale Claims Pictures Show ations to nave | Apy Touchdown Was Lllegal Ponies, the only team ed New Britain this | here next Sunday aft- | more ne in the works at the Politis, 1Nag ted ne homaston that cason, ernoon Thom mm‘.! c New Yorl 2 (P—T ootbait tudents had the problem “when s touchdown not a touchdown' be- them today as well as the grow speculation that all is not it might be of Yale and us at Yale announc- ifter viewing motion aturday's Army-Yale Kilday, Cadet half- had scored an illegal touch in putting Army in a position tie. They claimed viewed in private Oet anxious to play a re-|a a nd confident thui | fore it can win again over New Britain, |ing has had another game scheduled for | vwell next Sunday. The manager of the|rcla team is making efforts to cancel this | engagement and if he is successful, |« he will let Manager Politis know to- | picture day. In th comes here New Britain fans are out to sce on the west 1cs on the calendar The local team is still stinging from | by Head Co Mal Stevens, Line > defeat in first start of the|Coach Adam Walsh, Tad Jones, The ¥ of the Rams has|Dean Clarence Mendell and Harotl so far improved that v trick in|1° Woodcock, general manager of the bag of the team will be opened |the Yale Athletic Association, show- up against the invade ed that Kilday was knocked over Thomaston, at the present time, is|the goal line from behind by Steck making a claim for the state title. [er, a halfback mate, after he had New Britain, if it can meet the|been stopped short of the goal in a Ponies again this year, stands as the | charge from the Yale one vard linc only obstacle in the path of the| At the time, the Yale offi- | team. ials said they would accept Both teams eager to play and . official decision giving Army the | if the deal is consummated, the con- |tcuchdown. It was pointed out, test will take place at Memoriul [ however, that Rule 10, Section one, 1ield in Willow Brook park Sund .vs that “no plaver of the tcam in afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. | possession of the ball may help th= | he players on the local eleven except by interfering for reached an agreement last Sunday » shall be no interlock whereby they will go into the gan A supplementary | on a split hasis and take a chance [ncte a t “pushing the runner on whatever money may be taken [op lifting runner from the ground in at th The crowd of fans|py a teammate is an infraction of is sure to much bigger than it rule.” The penalty is loss of 15 was last Sunday when the New Ha- | & ven Triangles came here only to be defeated 19 to (. Arrangement a game in ) ton me here Army vesterday of me that Tom hat Thomastor for the eve nday gan a 7-7 - picture: il it eve same | runner him and the Army officially maintained refusing quotations, support- e Cadets expressed wonde existence of motion picture, the game and took little pains to the fact ‘hat there was feeling the Army side concerning the manship of the Eli rooters. ale mentions that the pictures \1so show the play on which Albie | Beoth, quarterback ace, was smoth- B | ered by Cadets and bruised so that S R |he was forced to retire from the ew Haven—It seems that you | L Eom e never can tell what Albie Booth is|Sume on the first play in which he rticipated. I'he KEli version is going to do, on the footbull field or | P . off. Despite his injuries in the Army | t! the pictures show 1{90«h ],'.M game he reported early for practice | been stopped after )v\\r\lnr‘p.n‘lu 3 and ran the Yale varsity through |!on& Army pass and that the refc signals, but the cay it is|had signalled the play at an end ¥ : players, picking un doctors 3 X S doubtful that he can f Dart. | When Army ; ed suddenly, Y > mass mouth Saturd: | speed suddenly, leaped into the {on the ground, among that mass, | New York—It scems they were |Booth. . : talking about another fellow when | Army spokesmen commented bit-| they blamed big Jim Tanguay for |icrly on the scemes that followe 11i5 fumbling the pass that gave Ford- [They insist Booth was downed har¢ ham a chance to beat New Yori |but legally and the Cadet corps, University. Mashall they say at N, | cheering his gallantry, was booed Y. U., fumbled an attempt to punt [bY the Eli section. Later, when an deep in his own territory and rmy man was injured, Yale cheer guay dove for the ball but missed. | €d again and this time the Cadets| Marshall's number was 1| think the Elis had something clse Ta y | in mind. ilz.f e = "1 While the game was hard fought |and at times bitter, it is felt among Wray |the wiser minds that any ill-feeling - [that might have cropped out will die with the excitement of the | Gay. Head Linesman A. Tyler | halves, Green at fullback and Gentl. | said last night in Providence, R. L, | ai quarter, where they may stay for |that there was no question trat the the battle with Kansas Saturday. |ball was over the goal : = | "I was standing on the line,” h While are being made for{ers of t Haven between New Britain and the New Haven Wil liams team. New Britain defoate the Elm City crew twice last season. PUNTS AND PASSES & hide ace Philadelphi 1 still is not satisfied with the Penn- sylvania backfield. The latest chang puts Perina and Masters at the |away BITTER FEELINGS in the football | | Garden {him | from Chicago in [of only $400,000 he |the Miami track. BRUEN GIVES UP POST OF MANAGER Pilot of Madison Square Garden (oes Back fo Florida New York, Oct. 28 (®—Covetous eyes all along caulifiower row are {vearning today at the Madison Square Garden, the driver's of boxing that Tex [Rickard vacated in death and Frank January Bruen relinquished of his lown accord to return to the man- |agement of the Hialeah race track in Miami, Fla Bruen resigned yesterday after |serving as manager and vice presi |dent of the Garden since June, 19 William F. Carey, head of boxing" | wealthiest corporation, announcedl | Bruen's retirement with reluctance managerts post in seat, |and declared that only the pressing | duties of Rickard's successor in Florida prompted the change. Rumors of changes about to take | | place in the Garden had been trav |elling the rounds for some time, {however. Reports that Col John . Hammond, and Carey himself, were about to resign have been denied of- ficially. At the same time it seem- cd that a mild tempest was brewins among the famous 600 million- aires” the late Rickard intcrested in the financing of his sports palace over the fact that profit were de- creasing, boxing attractions at the deteriorating, anc big out- door fights. once financial windfalls, {now showed discouraging losses. Rickard, who conceived the idea of the Garden, built it with the help of his millionaires, and directed it to | the point where it added wealth to| Announcement by Ken Saunders, Burritts basketball that he would reorganize his team for the on of 1930-31. The will be strictly a road aggregation this year and will play Saturdav night basketball on foreign courts. It will be the first time in a number of years that the Saunders men will not be on the same program with Clarence Lanpher's five. was made toda manager of the quintet, coming ses team all concerned, managed the concern |alone. He gambled with attractions, | |staged his extravaganzas with the | {lavish hand of the showman, but| was reported at the time of death in 1929 to be warring with | his business partners over business| and financial details that interested | little. After Rickard returned 1927 from the $2, promotion of the sccond Tunney-Dempsey fight with a profit | admitted that he | most of his stock in the| because of differences with | the hoard of directors. | So it is rumored now that Bruen, | failing to gain the sole authority in with fighters and manage d had, decided to devote hi cfforts to the management of | And in the mean- | time, those along Broadway say his successor will be chosen from amo four men. Leading the list is Damon Run-| yon, sports writer, who promoted | the Schmeling-Paulino fight in 1929 | and the Sthmeling-Sharkey maten | last summer for Mrs. William Rar- | dolph Hearst's milk fund. Among | others under consideration are Wil- | ton Jarnsworth, sports editor asso- | ciated with Runyon in thesc promo- tions; Jimmy Johnston, American | manager of Phil Scot: and George Blake of Los Angeles, pilot of Fidel | LaBarba, former flyweight cham- his | had sold Garden entire {pion, and well known developer of | amateur stars on the Pacific coast. So far Carey announced. no ac- | tion had been taken toward choos- ing Bruen's successor. The Garden president will handle the job him- | self for the time being. as he did when he stepped into the breach | |after Rickard's death and staged the | between Jack stribling first battle of palms Sharkey and Young Miami Beach, Fla at | GALLANT FOX RETIRED | > Yor.., Oct. 2§ UP--Gallant Fox, William Woodward's three year | old champion and the greatest mon- | winner ig the history of the | American turf, has been shipped to | he Paris, Ky.. breeding farm of Mr. Woodward. He has been retired from racing for the rest of his life. | Shock Absorber ey Hanover, N. H rtmonth (d. “Kilday dived at the mass of GRS o ith a halted in mid-air just short | Yale game just tt and then moved aheal| Stan Yudickey so that the ball went | for two s not in a position to tell | ment, Robert E. Lee, »\I‘w i eral who should drive | pulled tendon . corner. is dow in, wrour ot line blonde ¢ far zh 1w d. over whe e liga- received a r he went ahead by is own legs HAY HAVE RACE en- 0 whe from 1 ’ s on diet for game Saturday. The hattle eaci e day and Thu 17 be ready pointing Colun d wa Wedn the Big 1esda €0 as to be Lou L Gloucester Fishermen's Committee Tor eleven, | | His Decision on Eyent el Mass nd the or et o ster deadly ear ranar. | comt ing be I Brunswic 5 (U — hairn committee in charge rmen’s his decision can- | led race betwee Thebaud and the Halifax, N. §., next | | | | sure | 1p-| Asks Chairman to Reconsider | | | | ‘ n Cam decided win foothall offensive tricks or: the banks of and Dartmout teuchdown apiece ¢ son but Harvard's points in vias a lone Horween do som | local committee | due to the late | it had been decided to e contest for the | bolic of the in- onship | 1, Gloucester's Bluenose, Ca- two successive Eastern hebaud FICUCELLO WINS BOUT New Haven 1 Ficuceilo, | feated Al T a closely contes: last night. New r Thon Oct ( h case tha the sequen: here Willia adian coa 1 for th ext York, s The- Thursday of the ar s stated 1 to port pend a phia, Mello, Pa Waterbury Connie m six ARMY is CONFIDENT PEASIONERS PUTT yion, I FOR 2 We Old Confider prepar linols Saturday able to play for of Charley placed on the retired li of the nett, tackle who did not play in the ton quette thought today. linee the 1 on footh It will be the Burritts' seventh BURRITTS WILL REORGANIZE cason’on the chalked court and few in the state can boast of such as the locals have rolled ms a up. The Burritts have registered 99 | | | victories while only losing 17 times. [ tlhe considerations that led to the Saunders will start work up a IFrom present appearances | the same lineup as last year will be | with the Burritts, namely, Yacobo- | wicz, Jasper, Havlick, Luty. Carlson, | Gill and Rose. All but Rose are | members of Industrial League ag- ons Manage in the near future building | schedule. BE STAGED IN THIS CITY TRACK MEET FINALS WILL State Competition of County Y. M. C. A. Will Be Held at Memorial Field in Willow Breck Park Spring — Hartford C | Run Off in This City—Three Classes of Athletes to |- Take Part — Plan to Resume Triangular League|; Activities In addition to the regular Hart- ord County Y. M. C. A. track meet of next spring, the state finals of the VMGG AT meets will be held at Memorial Willow Brook park on next May ;. cording to a statement made y day by Lionel M. Depot, track coach of the New Britain Senior high school. The Hartford County meel has been held in the local park for the last few years, but it is an additional feather in the cap of Coach Depot to be able to bring the state finals here next spring. The Hartford County meet will be held on May 16, with the state meet on the fol- lowing Saturda: The state final mect to be held at Memorial field will include the Junior and the Intermediate classe: These are the two classes in which the local Senior high school enters a team. The Senior state finals will De again held on Wesleyan field Middletown on June 6. The competition in the Y. M. C. A. meets is expected, to be stiffer next year than in the meets of last spring. The fact that several of the high caliber teams, such as the Suffield Prep school team, withdrew tholiy. ALEC. A lessened the grade of competition and as a result public interest in the meets dropped to a low level. Coach Depot also revealed the fact hat the track coaches of the New Haven Hillhouse and the Hartford Public high schdol are working him to resume Triangular 1 < activities either in the eason or in 19 ngular meet last spring of a disagreement at previous y meet as to who wctual winner was. Coach Depot o part in this ar; county field, gue next cause had iment, so he has seen able to act o between for New Haven and Hartford. He has been aided by the fact that there is new track coach at New Haven Hillhouse high Coach Depot explained that the three coaches will have to draw up a of rules for Triangular track competition and regulations will be submitted threc high school princi will either pass upon reject them Coach Depot been conferring with the Hartford and New Haven mentors and they seem to be fav- orable towards of Tri- angular meets. sot the to th who them or he resumption TACKLE IS INJURED Cambridge, M . Oct. 28 (UP)— ed Richards, a tackie, will not b: Harvard against William and Mary Saturday because uries suffe in last with Dartmouth. Dr Devens, who broken ankle in game n week's ame vious!y, had been for the rest season. NTO GAME (UP)—Bill Ben Boston Colle Day- W Max MAY G Boston, Oct outstanding 28 university game, probably in condition to work in the game here Saturday, it was Bennett received a in the Villanova time was o injury and at the vould be out Joe McKenney “ouhig. a sophomore other tackle posi ared Coach Phil i season wnnounced vould ion orida to state 1i year 158 residents las and 568 permits to non-residents, | from | meets last spring | Y lets away Next ounty Events Will Also Be EAST 10 BATTLE (Ten Football Games for Week- ! End Had Tntersectional Flavor New 2§ (A — For | those who like their football with a dash of intersecticnal flavor the pro- | gram for the coming Saturday is one | to tickle the pigskin fancy Ten clashes on home and foreign | fields pit the cast against the west | from points as far away as Kansas |and North Dakota, Oklahoma Cit University in the southwest and Mississippi College in the south. And the in-bhetween. Princeton York, Oct. nd Pittsburgh wande {into far ficlds, the Tigers to tackl |/ ATnos A, Stage'siwazriors in & bat. | tle of the faltering at Chicago while | the Panthers of Pitt, chastened by Notre Dame. travel to Lincoln {a duel with Nebraska's Cornhuskers. North Dakota visits Army at West | Point, Kansas invades Pennsylvania |at Philadelphia, William and Mary comes to Harvard at Cambridge, Mass., Mississippi College is the vis- itor at Colgate in upper New York state, Marquettc romps into Boston Colleg Boston, Wake Forest quits the south for a go at Temple |in Philadelphia, and Davis Elkins ertains Oklahom City in the | hills of West Virginia. Duke is the | gucst within the walls of Villanova. The remainder of the gridiron | fare is scant but choice among the major clevens. Dartmouth, with one crack end, Stan Yudicky. on the sidelines because of injuries, tackle Yale at New Haven where the Elis| a at all sure that Albie Booth | fit and ready for the pow- {erful onslaught from the Hanover hills. Syracuse greets an old rival in { Brown and Cornell York with every prospect of a| smashing victory over Columbia | New York University visits Pitts- burgh for the annual tussle with Carnegic Tech. holds the | Metropolitan spotlight with the Vio- from town and West Vir- { ginia furnishing the oppesition. | Other interesting battles along the line are the engagements of Rutgers and Holy Cross, and Bucknell and Penn State. Navy has a breather in | West Virginia Wesleyan. M n't will be comes to New | m YUDICKY IS OUT Hanover, N. H., Oct. 28 (UP)— Stan Yudicky, star Dartmouth right end who suffered a knee injury in | saturday’ 1 with Harvard, is definitely out of th ck's clash | with Yale, medical reports revealed | vesterday. HAS LIGH WORKOUT | Providence, R. 1. Oct. 28 (UP) {Brown's football squad was let off | with a light workout yesterday. Be- of the team’s fine showing {against Holy Cross last Saturday it lis generally cxpected here that | Brown will defeat Syracuse this | for the first time since 1505 weelk TWO STARS INJURE Worcester, Mass., Oct. Donald Kelly of Baltimore | Cross fullback, and Donald ald, tackle, will not for the Purple in games, Both Brown game, Holy Fitzger- were injured in |Big Ten Won't Change Site of | Notre Dame-Northwestern Tilt | Western | down an opportunity to aid charity. | three great Chicago charity organi- | pacity of 110,000, can accommodate | from the additional seats at $3 per "~ WEST SATURDAY is a sprinkling of battles from ! for | 28 (UP)— CONFERENGE KILS CHARITY GONTEST — The turned Oct. Conference 28 (UP) has Chicago, By vetoing Northwestern's request to have its football game with Notre Dame November 22 transferred from the Northwestern stadium to Sol- dier Ield, the faculty representa- | tives of the Big Ten have deprived | zations of between $200,000. Soldier Itield, with its seating ca- $150,000 and | 000 more stadlum at B than The receipts persons anston. ticket were to be Catholic, Jewish and United Chari- ties to he applied to the relief of needy families. Approval of the shift in the site {had been given by both Northwest- {ern and Notre Dame officials, and |the South Park hoard had agreed to | donate Soldier Iield without | rental charge. | In announcing the decision | w. Moenkhaus, of Indiana uni- | versity, committec chairman, said: | “I am not in a position to express donated to the I negative vote, but I am sure that | there was no lack of appreciation of [the merit of the cause proceeds were to go." | here is no secret of the Big Ten's | faculty committee's reason for veto- {ing the proposal. Other charity {games to be played after the regu- | lar season already had been suggest- {ed, and the faculty committee fear- |ed it would sect a dangerous pre- {cedent which would lead to a num- | | ber of post-seuson games. Knute Rockne, Notre Dame coach, | expressed surprise when he learned of the Big Ten's action. “Here was an opportunity for two universities to do something for | charity,” he said. ““Chicago has heen ikind to Notre Dame. We would have welcomed the chance to something for Chicago. I was sur- {prised the faculty men vetoed it.” Another athletic director, who ked that his name be id the faculty members were jeal- ous of the gate receipts. They did not want the people to {might be staged to help the unem- ployed,” he commented. “Another reason is that professors love to en- force ru FIGHTS LAST NIGHT the Asso Newark, R |Cuba, knocked out | Pottsville, Pa. (1). Toronto, Ont.— |dclphia, outpointed Frenchy Belang- cr. Montreal, (S). Des Moines, la.—Sammy Mandell. ford, 1lL, outpointed Tony gouri, Des Moines (10) | Wheeling, W. Va.—Freddy Miller, |Cincinnati, outpointed Babe Ruth, Louisville, Ky., (10); Jackie Her- man, Wheeling, knocked out Pal Reed, Springficld, Mo., (2). Orlando, Fla.—Tony Dominguez, Tampa, Fla., and Elmer Bezenah, “incinnati, O drew, (10). Sioux City, Ila.—Johnny Larchwood, Ia., outpointed Austin, Alliance, Neb. (10). st. Louis, Mo.—Babe | Blackwell, Okla.,, stopped Tommy { Murphy, Youngstown, O. (i0); I Dave Barry, Chicago, stopped Jim- Bean, Oklahoma (6). | salt Lake City—Jack ‘l)m:lhn, and Treddy Angeles, no contest, ted Press. {id Chocolaty Mickey Doy Martin, Kenny | my Payne, Lenhart, Los (5). | USE. HERALD CLASSI 1D ADS Dyche | any | rrof. | to which the | do | withheld, | get the idea that big football games | rty Gold, Phila- | Li- | McGorgary. | KLOIBER'S INJURY MAY KEEP HIM OUT OF GAME High School'Left Halfback May Not Recover Sufficier‘\t- ly to Play Against Bulkeley High of Hartford—Is Suffering From Water On the Knee—Gerry Flood May Get the Call to Punt and Hurl Forward Passes —Injury Is Being Steadily Treated hy Dr. Josep) Potts. 3 Unless improvement is shown in his injured right knee by Saturduy, there is a strong likelthood that Left Half Back Ed Kloiber may not be started against the Bulkeley high school team of Hartford. The game will be played at Willow Brook park in this city. Kloiber has been suffering from water on the knee for several weeks. The injuries became worse durfhg | the past week and it was necessary for him to leave the Bridgeport | Central high school game. in the 5. - B last quarter. Dr. Joseph Potts, e i team's physician, has been baking | the knee with ~electric treatments and he reported today that the knee was much better than yesterday. In case he does not start, Gefty Flood will undoubtedly be given the call and will take Kloiber's place as punter and forward pass tosser. Some of the team’s followers are 4n favor of giving Kloiber the benefit of a rest this Saturday so that he will be in good condition for the i important Triangular League gamgs | that will follow on the two suc- | ceeding Saturdays. WRESTLING WILL, - START THURSDAY Polish Lion Meets Canadiap Lumberjack in Hartford Bout Hartford, October 2§ — Wrestling males its bow here for the fall and winter season Thursday night when Stan Staslak, the Polish lion, meets Jack Rushell, the Canadian lumberg Jack, in the feature bout. Stasiak, who stands 6 ft. 5 and weighs 260, and Rushell, who is a giant in his own right, are two of the most powerful men in the ma® game; their combined weight is | more than 500 pounds so the ring at Foot Guard will be put to a real test. Under the new rule announced by State Athletic Commissioner Dono- hue, no more draw verdicts will be permitted in wrestling matches in this state so there must be a decisiont in each of the bouts on this card. Paul Adams of Boston, who made a big hit at the Velodrome last sum- mer in a bout with Fred Bruno, will take on Farmer Bailey in a thirt minute match and Jack Ganson, the former collegian, will wrestle Joa Drafke of Nek York in a bout which is on the card for forty-five min-9 utes. The star bout will be on the basis of best twc out of three falls. | LD KLOIBER CHURCH LEAGUE MEETING Plans for Junior Basketball League | ] to Be Completed Tonight—Senior | | Circuit Needs More Members, |\ Plans for the Junior Church bas- | 1zetball league will be completed and { those for a senior Inter-Church cir- | cuit formulated at a meeting of {team managers at 7:30 o cvening at the Y. M. C. A, {ior loop will open at the week from tonight, so that every- | thing must be closed up at this | cvening's meeting and the pairings { for the first night's games made. IFive junior teams were represent- ed at a gathering held two weeks ‘ago, these being the championship South Congregational outfit and those from the Trinity Methodist, St. | Mark's piscopal, Center Congrega- tional, and First Baptist churches. Since then the First Lutherans have given notice that they will again ve a boys' feam, and it is barely ble that there will be a seventh y from the Stanley Memorial | church, Only the South Congregational |and St. Mark's Episcopal church gave notice of senior teams at the last managers’ meeting, but the First | Lutherans, two-time city and state champions, have announced that they will be in the field again. Ef- forts are being made to secure other | teams for this loop. SIGNS WITH CHICAGO Chicago, Oct. 28 (A—Ralph Mil- ler, a veteran defense man, has left the National Hockey league to play with the newly organized American league. Miller yesterday signed with the Chicago Shamrocks, after pur- chasing his outright release from the New York Rangers, and became {the first major league player to shift to the new circuit. PANTHERS START WORK Pittsburgh, Oct. 28 (UP)—With every man on the squad in good con- dition, the Pittsburgh Panthers to- day began work for the Nebraska game in Lincoln next Saturday. The team will practice today and tomor- row here, Thursday in Chicago, Fri- day in Omaha, and move into Lin- coln early Saturday morning. TO HAVE STIFF SCRIMMA T TR Annapolis, Md., Oct. (UP)— Navy's first string players came {through the Princeton game with | nothing more serious than bruises. made his first” appearance since his The varsity was given a complete [loss to Jack Berg of England, here st yvesterday, but today Coach In-|last night, and knocked out Jack gram planned to send them through Doyle in the first round of a sched- stiff scrimmage, uled ten round bout. CHOCOLATE SCORES KAYO Newark, N. J,, Oct. 28 (UP)—Kid Chocolate, Cuban featherweight, 'OUR BOARDING CENTRAL ! wee HAVE | | I HoWDY ! v WERE TROM ZANEH THERES A | A ROOMER HERE BY —THT™ NAME oF GERFLUG Quc MAYBE HE AINYT Golla BY THAT TAG, BUT HES GOT OME oF THoSE ScooP NOSE AN CHIM MUGS wo w MAKES Nod THINK oF A “TRoPICAL BIRD! HOUSE By AHERN 2 HAR-RRUME NesT AFelLA HERE NAMED H.T A FoRMER' CHAPMAN WHO & ScaTLAND YARD ANSWERS -THAT fi INSPECTOR + DESCRIPTION «w) pEM woee AUD, AN WEVE BEEN'| (i s tiket - AHs SUSPiciols oF S A HiK Sice de 4 '1‘3};“—12{:1?%? For | ARRIVED { e | e iy PRIT, “ HE WEKT OUT § poAP( FORGET | THIS MORK(MN G, ) My SHARE e I AL HASWT : WORKED | _BEEM (1 4 HARD | s SINCE ! &} NS iy casel ) Gl =~

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