18

10

SHOCK DAY FOR CLUBS

Forecast of Week-end Matches

SHOCK-DAY FOR BIG" CLUBS.

SCOTTISH LEAGUE

Fumous clubs and Cup "babes' shared in dramas that thrilled a Aberdeen million unlookers in the Third Round F. A. Cup battles yesterday. Cheltenham Town, Chesterfield

and Workington,

Luton

Town!,

were among the so-called min

nows" for whom it was a day of glory.

True. Cheltenham loat, but the plucky Birmingham Combination side gave Blackpool the fright of

their lives by scoring the ast goal,

But the

"Babes' ́hadn't the

necessary stamina to keep up the

V.

Clyde

1. St. Mirren Falkirk

v. Celtic Hamilton Hearts v. Airdrie Kil'nock v. Third Lanark Queen's P. v. Dunder Queen of S. v. Cow'beath Rangers St. Johnstone. Partick

4 Ayr U.

pace against the experienced sea- Aston Villa aldera, who put on three goals in the second half,

Borrowed a Ground.

. Cheltenham have. been called the £18 a week team, for that is all their wage bill amounts to.

Six of the eleven are amateurs. and others are employed in varied jobs during the week.

And as their own ground was not big enough for the occasion they borrowed the local Rugby ground for yesterday's game!

Blackburn

Derby Co. Everton Leeds U. Leicester Middlesbro'

Newcastle Shefeld U. Tottenham

Wolves'

Among the other shock teams. Chesterfield, a Northern Third Division side, fought a draw with the redoubtable Aston Villa; Work- | Blackpool ington, from the North-Eastern Bolton League, defeated Gateshead; and Luton Town, andther. Third Divi- sion 1-0 after a gruelling struggle. Derby County, another famous team. also got a shock-they could only draw with Bristol City.

All-night Trek.

Huge crowds watched the Man- chester games in which the City, last year's finalists, passed on and the United drew.

HONG KONG DAILY PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1934.

YESTERDAY'S

TENNIS

Surprise Defeat Of A. L. Sullivan

Arst

HOME GOLF

Tolley In Thrilling Golf Duel.

BOXING

Rosenblooni Held To A Draw

In

Miami, February 8, a. Afteen round World's Light-heavy Weight Champion- ship, Rosembloom was held to a

SPORTSMANSHIP

OF JARDINE

Quick Thinking Saves Possible Trouble

draw by Joe Knight. The Georgia The story of how D. R. Jardine,

London, January 31," champions vindmili style be-

(Special Air-Mail Service).

W. A. H Duff, by his excellent

London, January 17. ls

In one of the most magnificent Liisplay in

appearance yesterday in the H.K.C.C. Tennis golf matches that has been witness Tournament when he met and ed for some time Cyril Tolley beat fuddled and slowed down Knight the M.C.C. captain, narrowly avert defeated Tsui Yun Pul by 6-0 and John Beck by a hole in the second who in the earlier rounds with ed what might have been a real . Motherwell 2-4 0-1 1-1 8-2, immediately established him- round of the Oxford and Cambridge hard lefts. There were no knock sensation in, the recent Test Match self as one of the most serious ( Societies tournament for the Pre- downs although each were brought When, Amar "Nath reached his..cen- has just been made, known here. V. Hiba

3-2- 1-3 1-4 9-3 contenders for the Championshipsident's Putter at Rye yesterday. to their knees bace. Rosembloom 00 1-0 1-1 title. He quickly impressed as an The nature of the struggle can be was superior and faster than bury, an admirer rushed out to gar- 8-30-2 4-0 all-round player, but WES par gauged by the fact that Tolley had Knight and had a heavier punch and him with fowers. His part- 9-16-ticularly strong up the net, and a score of 10-four strokes below the particularly with his left-Reuter. ner, Naidu, thinking this might mech an invasion of the pitch by 2-2-0-1 2-0 | with his height and long reach standard scratch figure of the cour

the wildly excited crowd, teft his imanaged to cover a remarkable se--and yet could only mange to

ground in order to help the umpire 5.1 6-1 4-1 portion of the court.

win on the last green. "Beck fought

(Hitch) to repel the an uphill battle with the greatest Duft met, with practically no oppossible courage against a man who position from Tsul The young happened to be at the peak of his Chinese player appeared nervous form, in the opening stage of the game, and only managed to show a bit of his usual forceful game towards the end, when he brightened things up by some of his drives to the side line. Judging by the high standard of his play yester

Forecast

FIRST DIVISION.

-

1: - -

v. Portsmouth

. Manchester C.

5. Wost Brom

Y. Liverpool

v. Birmingham

v. Sunderland

T. Árreani

. Sheffold Wed

▼. Hudderfeld

*. Choles

v. Stoke

SECOND DIVISION.

7.- Milwall *. Burnley V. Śwaonea v. Bury

Bradford C.

Fulham Full Manchester U. Notta Forest Plymouth Port Vale Houthampter West Ham

v.' Brentford T. Oldham ..*.*Grimaly

Preston, N. B.

v, Notts Co.

v. Lincoln

T. Bradford

THIRD DIVISION (NORTH)

All the car parks outside the City. ground were filled before the game began, and there was a queue of cars stretching for nearly half-a- mile to the Maine-road "ground

The police had to emergency car parks in side Caliste streets.

Crewe

"

Bransley iritrodnice Barrow

v. Chesterfield

. Chewber

v. York

v. New Brightn

Doncaster

▼. Southport

v. Rotberham

7. Gateshead

MAN WHO LOOKED ON. Just one among a dozen of Halifax yesterday's Cup-tle results, but it meant a great deal to a man who

Hartlepools sat beside me a few feat from the

Marafold Stockport pitch at White Hart Lane, Totten- ham (writes a "Sunday Chronicle" Tranmere special correspondent).

Wrexham

Tiים

Every time the ball came to an Everton forward's foot his feet itched "o crash it into the net. When it came swinging in from the wing he jerked his head un- easily.

The man was Dixie Dean, the famous Everton centre-forward.

V. Aterington

7. Walsall

v. Rochdale

7. Darlington

THIRD DIVISION (SOUTH) Bournemouth Bristol C. sediff

"I would have given anything tô | Charlton play to-day," he said, "but my Clapton Ó. knee trouble kept me out of the Newport game."

Norwich

When Hunt scored the arst goal for the 'Spurs Dixie looked des- en 6 P. R. pondent and moved restlessly In Reading his seat.

9windon

"Everton are playing grand tool-Watford ball, he said. "They don't deserve

to be behind."

But the young Tottenham team gave no quarter. Within a few minutes from half-time Everion were two goals down.

* Crystal Pal

7. Luton

v. Gillingham

v, Bristol Rovers

v. Aldershot

v. Torquay

1,

Northampton,

Av. Exeter

v. Coventry

v. Brighton

V.

Southend

Scottish League

Aberdeen Clyde

HOME FOOTBALL F

FIRST DIVISION

Aston Villa v. Prioätt

B'burn

D. MAN C

Derby

Everton Loods Leicester

M'brough

u, W. Brom

"). L'pool

v. Binham

v. Sland

v. Arsenal

Newcastle v. Wednesday

Sheffield U.. H'field Tothai Wolves

t. Chelsea น. Stoke

Results. 1930 1931 1932

2-2 0-1 4-1 0-1 2-2 1-0

Hamilton Hearte Kilmarnock

Queen's Park Queen O' Bouth

3-19-9 Rangers

v. Motherwell

ve Hiburnian

7. St. Mirrou 9. Celtic

v. Airdrie

y. Third Lanzari. v. Dundee

Y. Cowdenbeath

▼, Ayr U. Ÿ. Partick

11

As could be scen from the result,

day Du should experience little difficulty in entering the final

Sullivan Defeated..

N

This is the finest display of goli that Tülley has given since his re-

JAPAN TO KEEP

ISLANDS

e torgot there to inder, but reached the boundary, and there- fore was not dead."

turn from America; one that makes Alleged Understand on Naidu had left his ground,

his selection for the Walker. Oup team "almost a certainty.

He drove terrific distances, hit many beautiful iron shots, and putted with splendid confidence, though, it seemed to me, a little He took up quicker than usual, The most interesting match of his stance-feet together-took one the day, however, was that be-swift glance at the line and then tween A. L. Sullivan and F. B. struck the ball straight at the hole.

was kept con- There was no hesitation, and cons tinually on the run by the C.R.C.quently no time for second thoughts, player and was apparently tiring generally a fatal proceeding.

Kwok

Sullivan

towards the end of the second set. Kwok showed good courtcraft and played specially well up the net. Two other hard fought ties were those between W. C. Hung v. D. C. Dunham, and Firdos Khạn v. P. K. Llang, the Arst named winning in each case. A. E. Guest had an easy victory over H. B. Day, and won by two love sets.

Results

Yesterday's results in full were: W. A. H. Duff beat Tsul Yun Pul 6-0, 6-2.

F. A. Kwok beat AL. Sullivan 6-3, 3-6, 6-3.

Firdos Khan beat P. K. Liang 3-6, 6-2, 6-3,

A. E. P. Guest beat H. B. Day 6-0,

6-0.

W. C. Hung beat D. C. Dunham 6-4, 6-4.4

#

ing At Paris Conference

Tokyo, February 1. Japan will hold the Japanese mandated islands in the south Paci- ne Ocean after her withdrawal from the League of Nations on April 1, 1938, Mr. K. Hirota, Minister for Foreign Affairs, formally announ- One hole and one shot in this matced to-day to the House of Peora ch will long live in my memory.

The Foreign Minister said Japan'a The hole was the sixth (400 yards) position on the matter was clear. played against a strong head wind. At the Peace Conference in Ver- Tolley cut his drive to the foot of spilles, it had been agreed that Jas a bank, and from this somewhat un-pan would be given the islands out- promising spot hit a wonderful No. right but,, later, at the Paris Con- 2 iron shot to within eight yarda ference, the islands were on mRN- of the pin, Deck went ono better, dated to her. placing his iron shot three yards

away,

BECK GETS A HALF Without any preliminary down went Tolley's putt for a This was so unexpected that there would have been a surprise had Beck missed his putt. But he holed it gallantly.

The luck was against Beck, for at the next, & hole of 500 yards, he Ng Kam Chuen beat D. S. Green put his third- full mashie shot- J-1, 6-1,

To-day's Programme

The programme for to-day is as follows:-

K. D. Tollinton v. G. M. Jacob. M. Drysdale v. H. D. Rumjahn. A. C. Mlers Y. R. B. Hambly. S. E. Green v. M. Beach-Thomas. Iu Tak Lam v. J. W. Leonard. M. C. Hung v. H Y. Ho.

S. A. Gray v. R. W. Amery. S. A. Rumjahn v. D. M. Mac-

dougall.

K. L. Ho v. Y. Hachturna..

about 8ft from the tag When there seemed every chance of a 4, Tolley laid him a complete stymie, and thus the hole was halved in 5.

Tolley got a flying start, winning

the first three holes after Buck had had the misfortune to knock in his opponent's ball for a 3 at the first. From the sixth, where he was 4 upy Tolley was unable to make any fur ther head-way; indeed, so pluckily did Beck play that he reduced the deficit to one.

Some idea of the nature of the match may be gathered from the fact that Beck accomplished the first six of the incoming holes in 21 shots, and could only win one of them. Finally Tolley was 2 up

GERMAN AUTHOR with to play, but lost the short

TO BE TRIED

First Intellectual Charged

(Special Air-Mail Barvice)

seventeenth, where his tee shot wha over the green. At the eighteenth aleck'a second shot took an unlucky pitch into a bunker and bis last chance had gone.

..

The President's Putter is one of the major events which Tolley bas never won, though he has been in the final on three occasions.

Cur- iously, each time he has lost to Sir Erdest Holderness, who is not com- peting this year.

MOSS WINS ON LAST GREEN

The chief surprise was the defeat of Leonard Crawley the old Cam bridge triple Blue, and the one member of the.. Walker Cup team who won bis match against Amer- ica in the last encounter. Crawley was beaten by E. II. Moss, captain of Oxford last year,

on the last green after, a desperate match. hung on grimly to an opponent who Moss, a much-improved player, appeared to have virtually won the match when he was 3 up with seven to play. heaven-sent chances came the way of From that point a few Moss, who seized them with both hands and burned defeat into vic-

Berlin, Jan. 15. Ludwig Rean, the distinguished author of "War" and "After the War."... will appear in court at Leipzig to-morrow morning on a charge of high treason. It is not yet known whether the trial will be open or in camera, a matter which lies within the discretion of the judge. It is expected that the proceedings will last about a week. Herr Rear, whose real name 15 Arnold Vieth von Golsenau, will be the first of the numerous leading £gures of Republican Germany who have been imprisoned by the Nazis to be brought up for trial on specific charges, with. of course, the exception of Herr Torgier, the leader of the German Communist Parliamentary party. Many Ger- tory. London, February 26, Grimsby Town took a big step brought to court on major charges, th, where CTAW BY

man workmen, however, have been His first chance came at the twelf- towards promotion to the premier such as treason. It is possible that 3-0 5-1 1-1 soccer league yesterday when they the trial of Ludwig Rein wil be green with a well-struck iron shot.

-2-1 3-1 St. Johnatone 3-11-1

1-18-04-2

2-5 9-3 9-3

1-2.4-1 3-1 0-2 0-2 1-2

0-1 0-1

SECOND DIVISION

Blackpool v. Millwall Bolton

. Burnley

Bradford. Swansea

Fylham

Hull..

• Bury

1. Brentford

Oldham

Man. U. *.

Notta F.. Grimsby Plymouth Preston P. Yale

.D. Notts C.

S'hampton v. Lincoln.

W. Hamv. Bradford C.

Grimsby Beat Port Vale

3-3 beat Port Vale. on their

5-12-1

".

was over the

own the first of a series in which Re-missed a short putt, and, with Moss Then at the fourteenth Crawley ground by the only goal scored.

publican leaders and intellectuals Southampton recorded two valu- will be brought from the concen-holing a long one at the next, the 3-2able points as the result of 2 1-2-2-1 6-home win

match was squared. over Swansea by a 2-0 4:0

The decisive hole was the eigh- single goal The Welsh Club are

4-0

tration camps and delivered over to the ordinary law for judgment.veenth, where Crawley pulled his

Ludwig Renn is an aristocrat by

now third from the foot of the birth and upbringing, who served drive into a hopeless place in a [table.

as a captain in the German army bunker, and Moss made doubly sure Grimsby have now established a THIRD DIVISION (NORTH)

lead of 7 points over Brentford during the war, and afterwards by putting a long second shos prac v. Cheshold

4013 and 8 over Port Vale after having became a convert to Communism,tically stone dead, 2-0 1-1 6-1 played v. N. Brighton 1-3 3-2 4-0 games-Reuter.

Barneley

Barrow Carlisle

น. Chester

7. York

v. S'port

Rham

3-1

00 3-0-9-1

Crewe D'caster Halifax บ

0.0 1-1 9-1 Har pool Gatesbaid 2-3 1-2 3-2 Mansfield

v. Accr'ton' Stockport. Walsall

⚫. R'dale

Tranmere Wrexham

13

~~~ 0 ઇં

7-3 9-1-1

v. Darton

2-0 3-0·3-1

the same number

POND TO COACH YALE FOOTBALL TEAM

of

He has described the mtellectual Moss failed to survive the next process by which this came about round, in which he met Roger Wet in his autobiography which was hered, who holed several devastat published in Literature of the ing putts at moet inconvenient mü- World Revolution," a magazine ments. Driving with greater c published in Moscow to which curacy than usual; Wethered," who such authors of international dis wae two under 4's when the match tinction as Henri Barbusse, and finished, won by 4 and 3.62 Ernst Toller

T.A. Bourn went down to an av- have contributed. He was also a member of the alanche of 3's and 4's Hurled at New Haven, Jan. 31. executive committee of the Prole-him by D. H. R. Martin, a sturdy Raymond ("Ducky") Pond, thetarian Writers' Society.

player with a plessing style. Start- In Berlin Ludwig Renn lived ing

Martin 34 304, star half-back of the Yale football squad teri and eleven years, ago, modestly in a suburb in the cast. never caught, though Bours, fight. has been appointed head coach of After he had joined the Coming tenaciously, was only down 3-3 the Yale team. He has been munist party few of his fellows with 3 to play, 1.1 assistants coach at New Haven members knew Renn's real name 1-2 0-0 2-0 since he graduated. During 1923 or Ets antecedents. Renn, lectured -7-2 1-0 1-3 and 1944, he was one of the best at the Marxist workers' school, an Coventry 2-1 3-3 forward passers and around-end-institution for party officials and doa. . Brighton 14 1-2 6-1 runners of the Yale squad.-United those who it was hoped would be

v. Southend 1-3 1-1.ES Fress:

come leaders of the party.

6.2

1-0 1-0

THIRD DIVISION (SOUTH) Bour mouth v. Crystal P. 0-0 4-1 3-2 Bristol 0. v. Luton Cardiff 7. Gil'hain.. Sarlton . Bristol R

pton

v. Aldershot. Newport

v. Torquay Forwich

N'han Queen P... Exeter Reading

Watford

Wise

At the fifteenth, however, Martin delivered a cruel blow, holing à

chip shot for a 3, while at the beven- teenth he put his tee shot close to the hole, to win by and 1. He Had a score of 72 to Bouri'à 13.

He said that Japan had agreed right but, later, at the Paris Con- ference only on the understanding that there was to be no change, in the basic fact that Japan owned the Islands, which were formerly German possessions. Even when Ja- pan's withdrawal from the League becomes effective, "he said, Japan's right of possession will not be lost, -United Press,

KEIO GETS BETTER OF

AUSTRALIANS

;

University Rugby Tourists Are

Beaten by 16 to 8

Tokyo, Feb. 1. The Australian University Rugby team met their first setback in Japan to-day. when they went down to Kelo University by 16 points to eight.

In the opening match of their tour, last Sunday, the Anzacs trounced Western Japan, by 33-15.

:

The ball was thily thrown in by a folder, and the wicketkeeper (Elliott), not seeing for what rea- broke the wicket. Luckily, he did not appeal in a loud voice, bus only turned to Jardine, saying:-" He's out; skipper Jardine, took in the situation at once, and decided that if was a case of "na appeal."

Has the umpire was saved from giving Naidu out, which, according to the rules, he would have had to awkward situation do, and thereby precipitated an

AUSTRALIAN CYCLIST'S WORLD RECORD

Covers 43,996 Miles

London. Jan. 31.

ADVERTISEMENTS.

THE “STAR” FERRY COMPANY, LIMITED. -NOTICE TO SHARËHOLDERS.

N

TOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE THIRTY-SIXTH ORDINARY YEARLY MEETING OF THIS COMPANY will be held at the Oce of Messrs. Jardine, Matheson & Co. Ltd., on THURS. DAT, the 8th February, 1944, at NOON, for the purpose of receiving the Report of the Directors together with a Statement of Accounts for the year ended 31st December, 1938. The Register of Shares of the Jompany will be CLOSED from Wednesday, the 81st January, 1984 to Thursday, the 8th February, 1934, both days inclusive.

By order of the Board of Directors.

F. H. CRAPNELL,

Secretary.

Hong Kong, 24th January, 1934.

(2195

HUMPHREYS ESTATE AND FINANCE CO., LIMITED.

OTICE is hereby given that the

ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING of Share

ORDINARY holders will be held at the Hong Kong Hotel, Hong Kong, on MON. DAY, the 12th February, 1989, af 11.30am for the purpose of recalving the Report of the Directors together with a Statement of Accounts for the year ended 31st December, 1983.

The TRANSFEE BOOKS of the Company will be CLOSED· from TUESDAY, 30th January to MON. DAY, 12th February, both days inclusive.

JOHN D. HUMPHREYS & SON, General Managers. ✨

NOTICE.

[2196

Ossle Nicholson, a 24-year-old Hong Kong, 23rd January, 1984. Victorian cyclist, has just con- cluded a year of cycling in the course of which he broke three world records. He covered 43,9963 miles, thus breaking the record set up by an Englishman, A. A Hum- bies, last year. Humbles covered 38.007 miles Nicholson "broke an- other record by riding 250 miles in a day, beating the 186 miles rid- den by Humbles last year.

A third record to go was that set up by A. Peebles in.1912, when be rode 100 miles daily. for 208 days. Nicholson covered over 100 miles dally every day of the year.

Nicholson finished a picture of health, but his doctor has ordered him to ride thirty miles a day for a month in order to train off.

THE HONG KONG ELECTRIC CO., LTD.

LOST

the Company to isano a duplicate PPLICATION has been made to

Share Certificate in respect of Certi ficate No 16159 for 10 shares Nos. 178403/176418. registered in the name of IP BEING FONG, the original of which has heen declared lost,

Notice is hereby given that if within 14 days hereof na alaim or representa tion is made to the L'o, the original certificate for the said shares shall be deemed CANCELLED and of NO HFFECT and that the Co. will

Aata Rubber Shoes then proceed to des! with Auch

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BURLEIGH

IGARETTES

ENTERPRISE TOBACCO CO,Era

SETTING A

application.

GIBE, LIVINGSTON & CO., LTD. Agents,

Hong Kong, 28th January, 1934. - (2209)

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