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Plants

‘Incredible Reunion’

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I read with interest your story about the incredible journey which united a doctor and his dog (Westside, Feb. 3). I don’t propose to get into a “can you top this” scenario but let me tell you about another incredible reunion.

In 1935 I had a black Belgian police dog which was one of the most intelligent animals I had ever come across. I could talk to her like a human being and she would understand what I was saying. I could go to a movie, leave the dog outside, unleashed, and she would sit there while I attended the entire performance.

One day, I went (to) downtown L.A., parked the car on Figueroa at 5th Street, and left the dog in the car with the window open, unleashed. I was gone for about 40 minutes. When I returned, Fritzi was not in the car. I hunted the neighborhood, drove up and down the streets, through various parking lots, but no Fritzi.

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That was the latter part of April or the first part of May. At the time I was living on Sycamore Avenue and had an interest in a used-car lot nearby at 330 S. La Brea Ave. On July 5th, the mailman who delivered our mail both to the house and to the used-car lot came to the office of the lot and said, “Mr. Allen, your dog is in front of the house.” I rushed home and there was Fritzi on the front porch.

Eventually I found out what had happened. Apparently something attracted Fritzi and she jumped out of the car, but with all the cars moving about, couldn’t find her way back. A young man who saw the dog loose took Fritzi in tow. He owned a bar on Fairfax and Olympic, and kept the dog in the yard, which was fenced with an eight-foot-high fence. Fritzi hated firecrackers and, on the Fourth of July, they were shooting off firecrackers and she leaped the eight-foot fence and found her way back from Olympic and Fairfax to Sycamore, between 6th and 3rd streets.

She was a wonderful dog, had a great litter of pups, and I kept her until old age took her at the age of something like 16 or 17.

The article was a very wonderful article and I appreciate it very much.

ALBERT H. ALLEN

Beverly Hills

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