8

WATER POLO

V.R.C. "A". SCORES EASY

VICTORY.

KOWLOON "B" SWAMPED.

[Be."WATERMAN."I Y.R.C.." A " proved too, good for Kowloon "B" last night at the V.R.C. bath and inished up winners by five goals to nil in a game which was one-sided from beginning to

end.

The Kowloon Battered far

the first few moment of the game but all hopes of victory were brought to an end when Stewart and Laing scored in quick succession during the first half. Laing was ordered out of the bath during this half. but the V.R.C. were never dismayed and pressed all the time.

After the interval, Gitters scored three times for the V.R.C. and the premier team then indulged in some practise work at the expense of the Kowloon juniors.

The Teams,

V.R.C. "A":-Knight, Saares, Weill, Stewart, Laing, and Gittens, Kowloon "B"-Angus, E. Mur phy, J. Murphy, Henry, Frost. Harvey, Lawson.

Referee:-Mr. Weyman."

The League Table, The following is the position of the various teams at the close of last night's play.

Goals.

P. W. D. L. F. A. F. V.R.C. A... 8 8 0 0 33 16 Kowloon "A", 970197 4 14 Chinese "B"... 7 5 1 1 20 # 11 V.R.C. "B" 430-2 15 20 Somersets 8 3 0 5 17 24.6 E.O.S.B. "A. 8 3 1 4 12 15 7 Navy

28 3 1 4 2 20 Kowloon. "B", 8 11 5 6 32-3 Chinese "A" 7 1 0 6 21 2 K.O.S.B. "B","8 02 0 3 25

Provided nothing unforeseen hap- rens, the season will be brought to

a close next week.

LAWN, BOWLS.

INTERPORT PRACTICE

GAME.

SELECTED FOUR BEATEN,

The wide selected to represent Hong Kong in the rowing Interport match

with Shanghai received a shock at the Civil Service Cricket Club ground last evening when they were beaten 22-14 hy "The Nest.' There was one change in the win ning side, Taylor replacing Mair as No. 2.

"The Rest broke away from the start and never dropped their the lead though at

#tage one Interporters" reduced it to 12-10. However, they took things in band again, and eventually won easily. The teams and scores were:

The Rest." Interpart Tram.

Cullen

Laing

Busa

Grimmitt

Taylor

Ümar

(Skip) .......

14

Gray

(Skip)

Ferguson

LAWN TENNIS.

C.A.A. TOURNAMENT.-

I

A KEEN STRUGGLE.

To decide who should qualify for the final to meet Lim Bong So, M. W. Lo and T. Honda met in the semi-final yesterday, but could not come to a decision owing to failing light, playing being stopped at 3 all in the final set. It was a splendid struggle.

AT THE CRICKET

NETS.

WHAT IS COING ON AT.. RECREIO.

THE

The boys at the Club de Recreio. like many others eleewhere, have been affected by ericko: lever, and every evening finds some of theur Sractising at the nets. They are doing their work in quite businees like fashion, too, as their chances of carrying of the Second Division shield are exceptionally bright. They first entered the competition about two years ago, and have at

Kine

HONG KONG "DAILY PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1929.

AT THE EX-PRISONERS' CLUBS.

VIGOROUS FOXTROTS AND DREAMY WALTZES.

FALLEN MEN WHO MEAN TO GO STRAIGHT,

I have been to a delightful dance. who have served terms of imprison- at which my partners were men ment. Unlike guests at more con- ventional parties, none of them was writes S.G" in the Evening bored; nobody criticised the food, Standard.

any

inore than one

The Tea-Maker. And I don't believe anything will.

"I makes the ten for a hundred I puts the tea in a boiler, and men, miss," said Sandy proudly then I pours the water on it, when Shyness is not a quality which it's just on the boil. You have to. one expects to find in exprisoners, be very careful, not to spoil it And I fetches cakes and sandwi expects to find charining manners. Butcher for the men. Sorry, miss. I found both at the Pioneer Club, This tune's got a lot of funny bits

in it; we got out of step then."

Round and round we went, fol- in Old Street, EC., which is an organization for the reform of young ex-prisoners, resident in lowed by shy glances from the wall-

flowers. Shoreditch, and where weekly dan ces are held for members and their wives and sweethearts.

Dancers All

time and another occupied. third or fourth place in the League table. This year, however, they niean to go one better, and with plenty of material to choose from, one does not see why they should

I was introduced to my hostess, not have a jolly good try for it. Miss Marjorie Evan-Themas (who row of shy, A P, Guterres, the University runs the club), to a

smiling" men sitting stifly against fast bowler (right) of a couple of the wall. They stood up to greet 2 welcome me, nearly wrung my hand of, and seasons ago, will he addition to the side. On his day said, Pleased to meet you.

But after the introduction con- Guterres in a very good bowler,versation languished. but it is feared he will not have I sat on the opposite side of the room, listening to tunes on the ach time to devote to the game,

exchanging smiles with some of the fer he is now Doctor Guterres, and club gramophone and occasionally has to put in a lot of work at the ex-convicts who were dancing with

"1

1

́REMINISCENCES OF the transference of his allegiance, it has certainly been a great gain A POLO PLAYER. for sport.

ין

SOME FINE EXPONENTS.

[By Capt. r. Victor Hughes- Hallett.]

Even the most modest of polo emoties and achievements in that splendid game nearly a quarter of a century ago should rightly be rounded off with a few words of

encomium of those stars" in the Harlinghara and Ranelagh Arma ment who did so much to foster the love of stick, and ball in England. Walter S. Buckmaster was prob- ably the best pole-player living twenty years ago and assuredly

Height of Ponies,”

"THE FOREIGN MENACE."

CAMPOLO, THE HEAVY- WEIGHT “CHAMP.”

MORE · FORMIDABLE THAN FIRPO.

ID.P." Special Service.]

New York.-Victoris, Campalo, gigantic Argentine heavyweight. emerged as a fulledged foreign menn" to the present erop of heavyweights by virtue of his con- vincing victory over Tom Heeney.

There is to-day, of course, no hard and fast limit as regards the height of playing ponies, and so long as a player does not come careering on to the ground astride a charger, all is well. But twenty years ago the "1.2" standard was very strictly enforced. The rules of Hur lingham said in relation to this law that no pony" shall be played, either in practice games ar matches" (the italics are mine) unless it has been registered in accordance with the rules of measurement." The penalty of riding a pony that had not been as measured was not

Yankee heavyweight supremacy only disqualification of that pony's rider, hut of the entire team play is challenged by three formidible ing in that game! An offcial men. foreiga fighting men; Max Schmel- one of the finest hersemen and sarer attended annually at no fewer ing. Otto Van Porat and Vic- best judges of a riding-pony that than sixteen authorized centres, due torio Campolo, the newest heavy- we had at that era, Buckmaster application having been made to weight to dive into the win. opined that there was no pony like the secretary for a fee of £b 58. per Campolo seems not easy to stampede an English-bred one for the best diem, half-a-crown per pony mea-as repeatedly he has naked Hum- I learned that Sandy, who looks games, really first-class pola, biensured, and his first-class return berto Fugazy to match him against eighteen, is twenty-six, marriedentendu, though he admitted that fare. Hurlingham allowed shoes to caly top rank hearyweights."

foreign ponies were quite useful be removed before measurement, and has two children. They marry young in Shoreditch, as they do in for second-class games; they stood which made a difference of the better up on the hard grounds better, and part of an inch, for a full-sized Mayinir!

did not crock up in the fort so pong stood at least 14.2 with his But as this peduncufar

and he'll be a dreadnought in n easily as the English pony.

operation was inconvenient in the show-yard, the difficulty was got over few months" 1t is unanimously by the Executive of Shows allowing ngreed that Campolo's feat of competitors one half-inch for their gaining a technical knockout over shoes and sanctioning the measure-Tom Heeney puts the swarthy ment of ponies with their shoes on. giant on the inside track for louts

with the leading contenders.

While it is understood that Max chmeling, Germany's representa." tive in the foreign legion of heavy-

I

Life of Difficulties.

I never learned his name, either.

shoes on,

Eutes of Measurement.

A copy of the Rules of Mensure ment taken straight from the Hur-

A Coming Dreadnought. "Campolo proved more formid- ible than Firpo," says Harry Grayson, New York sports writer,

Hospital. Still, it is felt that his their girls. There were six women, But I heard the tragedy bis life subjects. Dryborough was solid in lingham book. is before me a8" I weights, welcomes a bont with Cam--

inclusion will greatly strengthen the team, and as. he is also a very hard hitter, he ought to get quite a lot of runs during the season.

*

*

As was the case last year. F. M. Carvalho will be leading the side, and in L. J. Guterres he will have a reliable deputy, who is also a quite useful stumper. Both these fellows are very keen, and it is believed that between them they will bring out a very hardy eleven. Carvalho knows the game quite well, and though he is neither a very brilliant bat nor a very good bowler, his experience in local cricket ought to stand him in good stead.

there last night, besides myself and Miss Evan Thomas, I had brought a partner with me, but he at once, on our arrival, had decid- ed that he wanted to play billiards with the club champion, Canadian Dick, and they had disappeared together.

Dancing With Sandy.

minutes of After nearly ten silener, shy smiles, nudging, and whispers of encouragement on the rose, crossed over to me, and said, opposite side of the room, one man Miss, will you have this dance. with me please do away we

went.

Sandy (I never learned his Bame, but Sandy suits him, for he was aninil and fair) had invented step of his own, a kind of seri ous sideways walk, not unlike the progress of a crab set to music.

It must be danced with one's

gets out of step., Sandy held me II. A. Älvés opens the innings for on the ground, or else one the side, with H. M. Xavier as his firmly, but, well away from him,

It was hard to believe, looking partner. Of the two the general

at his freckled, irresponsible face, opinion is that Xavier in the better that Sandy had been a thief. He was the nicest person to talk to, hat, but somehow Alves "gets more enthusiastic, interested in his job, rune. He is also a slow bowler and very cheerful. He had heen ways, described as "an incorrigible little (right) and breaks both while in the held he is perhaps the thief" but....he has been working for a firm of builders for fourteen safest of the eide.

months, and nothing has gone wrong yet.

Most of lust season's players will also be available, and they are also putting in eóme strenuous felding practice-one man hitting the bal all over the ground with the others chasing it!

CORRESPONDENCE.

SCHOOL CRICKET.

(TO THE EDITOR OF THE "HONG KONG DAILY PRESS."']

Sis-With the approach of the cricket season, it may not be out

to

A reformatory. He had has been. He was sent, as a boy, drunken mother, and so he was afraid to go home after his release. He had been in prison, too, but anly because he ran away from the- ship to which he was sent by the He ran reformatory authorities. away because the crew discovered he had been to reformatory, and never let him forget it.

After another dance with Sandy asked the dark, quiet man who

Then there was T. B. Dryborough, has looked after the gramophone if he would let me change the re- another well known and follow cords while he danced. But heed player, also a big authority declined, with a smile. He has on the game. His book on "Polo belonged to the club for eight and. Polo Ponies came out about years, but does not like dancing. the same time as the late Sir Hum- Hunting" tome, and was accepted others danced.

as a “standard” work on the two So we sat and talked while the phrey de Trafford's and my "For

Nickalls's grey mare "Blue Sleere" write, and it is evident that the rolo, cynical ringsiders are of the his opinion that P. W. ("Pat") was one of the six best ponies of his committee did what they could do opinion that Herr Max will recon- prevent any undue advantage being sider trading punches with the (Nickalls played this taken. A special house was buildwilder hull" when a fight with experience. pory for more than ten years!)

Major Egerton Green was a fine for measuring, and an official mea Phil Scott of England is his for thu

surer (a vet, of course) appointed; asking. but in spite of all these efforts organiser and ditto, player; he was looked up to as quite big.

abuses crept in and compelled the noise" in the best polo circles.

committee to enforce even more The Maior thought a grey mare stringent penalties. A few excerpts

"Evie the property in succession of three good players, from said rules may be of interest Refreshment Time.

to-day :- Mr. John Watson, Capt. J. M He, like Sandy, was gentle and Gordon, 12th Lancers, and Mr. F. charming to talk to, broken by life.

M. Freake, was the ideal pony "in but not embittered. Miss Evan the game and the best he ever Thomas told me that he once wait-

"chukker." Capt. J. rode in a ed for two hours in the rain out-D. Gouldsmith, another

"shining side Sandy's lodging at night to

light" of the pole world was as tell Sandy about a job, and Sandy good a judge na he was a player. Wo rested, after a vigorous fox who won a pantechnicon full of has never forgotten.

prizes all over the country with trot, and listened to a dreamy his saddle-ponies, and "nursed waltz. Then we had refreshments:

Gould- lemonade, French chocolate biscuit. them well for polo, tuo, the very good cake. so I ate two, and a large slab of smith also owned a wonderful brood

partner

name

13

mare named "Silver Star" (bred Miss L. Standish), which by ultimately won the championship of the London show of 1907 for brood About half-past ten my

marco.

Padres and Polo,

The members of the club carried round the refeshments, serving the girls first, and then helping them selves. descended from the

The names of two padres rise to billiard-room, looking exhausted, i

but victorious over Canadian Dick, my memory as being very intimate- So we shook hands, and thankedly acquainted with the great game a good time, and early in the present century. The

It was the hap- eame away,

Rev. D. B. Montefiore, of Islip, our hosts for

was a very knowledgeable man on piest, saddest dance I have ever

pola, and was, as a matter of fact, known.

the tenth president of the Polo Pony Stud Back Society, as it was thea cailed. He followed Sir"

FIGHT AGAINST DRUG WAR STORY OF LONG AGO. Patton Nickalls, and preceded

CRAVING.

MAN SENT TO GAOL AFTER A HOSPITAL OFFER.

RAID OF AN ANGLO-SAXON

TRIBE.

A fascinating war story lies en- tangled with the remains of the 100 Anglo-Saxons dug up on Dunstable Downs by the Anthropological So- ciety of London University.

A man's fight against the drug habit and the offer of a hospital to eure him were disclosed in a case heard at Marlborough-street

The Roman yoke had been remov- Police Court, London, in whiched from Britnin, Saxon raiders Leslie James Stonelake, aged had driven the Cymri westward. Seven self-appointed rulers were thirty-four, who had been assist splitting the kingdom among them. ant engineer in a steamship, plead- Raids and robberies were the order of place to ask if it would be posed guilty to being ia unlawful pos of the day. It was grab-as-grau-

of twelve grains sible for the Cricket League to run session

"A Saxon tribe of the south ruminated enviously on the lands "Schools League " Matches morphine sulphate.

Mr. Mead, the magistrate, sent and live stock of the wealthy dwel could be arranged for Wednesday

lers on the heights north of old afternoous, and I am sure the dif- Stonelaké to prison. ferent Clubs would be only too

Londinium. pleased to let the schoolboys have the use of their grounds once a

2

week.

In Hong Kong, quite unlike Eng. land, the school boys have little or no encouragement to take up the Lo did very well in the early great game, with the result that stages and although he had a great some really promising cricketers are deal of difficulty in winning the forced to take up other forms of first set in which Honda carried sport-ad here is all the cry for him to 10-8, he took the second set good recruits for local clubs! "How easily at 6-1. At this stage, how can any club expect to find ready. ever, bo showed signs of Intigue made cricketers for them if the Jads manner? and strain, and Honda pressing are neglected in such a strongly brought the scores level by Cannet the H.K.C. Lengue do any winning the next two sets comfort thing for school cricket? Yours, ably at 62 and 41 respectively.

Neither could forge ahead in the" final set, and with the score at

3 all, failing light prevented further

play.

etc.,

IXOOG. Hong Kong, September 13.

The re-play will take place to-day END-OF-THE-SEASON commencing at 4 p.m. sharp.

ROCHDALE'S SUCCESS.

HEAVY DEFEAT OF DARLINGTON...

[Tиdoton REUTER'S AGENCZ]

LONDON, Sept. 17. At Rochdale to-day, in the Third Division (North) of the Football League, Rochdale defeated Darling- ton by tour goals to ene, a success which lifts them to second place in the league table.

CRICKET.

"THE REST BEAT THE CHAMPIONS:

(THROUGH REUTER'S AGENCY.]

'LONDON, Sept. 18: The Rest of England to-day beat Notts by 8 rune, in a keenly-con- tested game. Scores were:-

Rest 300 (Woolley 100) and 232 (Staples 4 for 03).

Notts 344 (Clark 4 for 83) and 209 (Robins 6 for 20).

of i can...

A Marylebone Hospital doctor said that Stonelake went there from a nursing home where he could not afford to slay. He had been treated for drugs and had

ceased to take any for

past.

& month

"We will take him back into the hospital where he should be for some months," said the doctor, "The man can be cured. He has put up a good fight."

Chaplain's Praisà,

The hospital chaplain described

a's magnificent. Stenelaka's fight against the drug

Stonelake, who is a widower with a child, told the magistrate he had altered a prescription because he had no money to pay further doc tors. He had asthma badly, and bad begged doctor not to trent him with druge.

Mr. Mead, said that the forgery prevented him from dealing with the case in the way he would otherwise have been inclined to do. He sentenced him to three months in the second division.

Stonelako said that he was not mentally sound at the time he com- mitted the offence.

Mr. Mead: Would you say he, was irresponsible!

The doctor: Possibly. A person taking morphia did not know at the time right from wrong. It is. a symptom of morphia mania.

"Let us march northward," suid their chieftain. "There is wealth for all. Gather the young men the strong men under thirty-en of stature-let thema be armed lightly. Bring no women, except well. I will arrange about the wo men,

We march to-morrow at sun.

From the Weald. Thus from the weald between the long lines of the Downs they went. Scores of young adventurous men, and a mere handful of women- there were only ten women found amid the 100 skeletons-part of

the raiding tribe.

Pretty Rowena, before leaving, pinned on a little Roman brooch she had. How she obtained it who 'can tell?

Things went well with the rai ders till they reached the heights that overlook the level stretches of the river now known as the Ouse.

the

There, on the heights, among mounds where Britons centuries be fore were buried, was encamped & greater chieftain than he of the advancing party.

I

H.S.H.

the Duke of Teck, K.C.V.O., in the presidency. Temember particularly well Tittle Montefiore turning up unexpectedly for lunch one day when I was stay- ing with Sir Humphrey de Trafford at Market Harborough. The talk veered quickly polo- naturally wards, and I soon sat up and began to take notice of the extremely in- tcreating conversation, drinking in at one and, the same time the

Rule 4-Ponies aged five years and upwards may be measured and registered for life; ponies under five years can be register- ed for current season only. The Official Measurer shall determine the age of the pony.

Granting that Campolo's left is nos the best in the ring to-day, accepting that he does not follow up advantages as quickly as some of his more experienced colleagues, yet dattening Tom Heeney is n fairly sound recommendation for a man with only twelve professional

outs behind him.

In the Making. Campolo is not a finished product, yet but his position in the heavy title scramble is assured, barring a Rule 5-pony shall not be complete reversal of form. Against mensured if he appears to have De Kuh, whom he defeated on been subjected to any improper foul in the third round, the South treatment with a view to reduce | American skyscraper looked to be his height, or if he is in ac unfit only another practising foreign heavyweight hus against Heency he bad all of the characteristics of *** comer."

.state.to be measured.

Rule 7-Neither the owner of the pony nor his servant shall on any account enter-the box during the measurement, nor shall any person be admitted unless special.

surer.

After fighting here as an amateur in 1925 with no particular access, Campolo came back and accomplish-

ly authorised by the Official mea-ed a greater feat than Tunney furnished in his battle with Heeley. Rule 9.-The pong shall be held It took Tunney eleven rounds to by a person deputed by the Official dispose of Heeney, yet Campolo Measurer.

mande a finished job of his work in stopping the ragged Australian in nine rounds.

Bulo 12-The wither may be shaved, but the mane must not be pulled down, or the skin of the neck of wither in any way interfered with.

More Cautious Schmeling. Dua Parker, in the New York' Daily Mirror wrote that, "it was not washed up Heerey that Campelo Parker maintains knocked out." that Heeney never fought with inore ferocity than against Campolo.

Rule 14-Any person who is dis- satished with the determination arrived ut, may by written ap plication presented to the Man- nger within seven days from the time of the measurement, apply for a re-measurement, Such reing would chop the Argentine down wrote Parker, "but Į Beasurement shall take place into his size,

"Some of the boys think Schmel-

the presence of one member of am not inclined to think so.

and think you would see more cautious the Polo Committee

his decision shall be final.

Mounting Costa.

"The tween £30 and £100 was paid. The

Schmeling against Campolo than against Paulino Urcudun."

From a study of statistics of the The price of the modern polo-Feeney fight, it appears that the 1900 £700 for a really made," 14.2 heart is sufficient to keep most of equine wisdom that fell from ex- pony is reounting annually. In skyscraper's vircious right to the pert lips, plus the contents of a bamper of my host's matchless pony was considered a high place; the heavyweights in a respectful The towering Argentine hervy- was Montefiore's abode port By the way, the name of for the raw material anything he-mood. World's End" why so-called I real value of the pony is naturally weight upheld Humberto Fugazy's know not, put it was certainly a made by the man who trains it. faith in him by woring the comfortable nomenclature for a par Many a would-be clever pony is technical knockout over Heeney. on, though not necessarily so for spoiled to-day as he or she was Before the fight Fugazy earnestly twenty years ago, by the handling declared, "I'll stake my reputation a layman!

Another gentleman of the cloth of a groom who has only the fog as a judge of fighters on Campolo, who was well verard in polo lore giest notion of what the animal is and if he does not make good was. TF. Dale, who at one time required to do at pole, and more against Heeney, I'll never try to had been a clerk in Holy Orders, than likely teaches it the exact op-pick another winner."

As the heavyweight pot begins to but elected to "gallop away" from posite of what it should do when Mother Church at an early stage of playing. The limits of this article boil, Campolo finds himself in the his ecclesiastical career. Dale also will not, unfortunately, admit of my centre of the steam, mainly due to wrote passing well upon other expanding na I should love to do his work in slaughtering a plodding

come. United Press. horary subjects than polo, and what- on my pet theme, the right training fighter who is as courageous as they ever the pulpit may have lost hy of the polo-pony.

A

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He saw them coming a long way off, waited, and fell on

unawares.

Scores of prisoners were taken, There was little ceremony. Gal- lows were crected. Soon the hilltop was strung with hanging bodies, their hands tied behind them.

The bodies were stripped at flung into shallow, commian graves, Mr. Mend said, after a discus abore the buried Britons who had sion with Stonelake, that the sea-lived and died there 1,500 years

before. tence must stand.

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