So much that is beautiful and rodantic awaits you in Austria Vienna-the world's music' centre; Salzburg--the festival city; the Styrian woodlanda; the beautiful Danube valley; the lakes of Salzkam- merger and Carinthia; the Tyrol and Vorarlberg- lands of icturesque poumors and know capped excunisins; and the lovely landscapes of Lower and Upper Austria. Both for Summer Holidays (Gulf, Tennis, Swimming, Climbing, etc) and for Winter Sports, Austria has become more popular than ever. Come to Austrix at any time of the yes you may be ware of a kindly welcome.
Come to Beautiful Romantic Austria
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1:
HONG KONG DAILY
AMERICA TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIP NEARS CLOSE
Perry Meets Grant In Semi-Final
KAY STAMMERS AGAINST HELEN JACOBS
Forest Hills, Sept. 10.
The American Lawn Tennis 'championship is nearing its final
stages.
In the quarter-finals played to- day. Helen Jacobs Wimbledon title holder, easily defeated Gussie Raegener losing but one game in two sets. The scores were 61, 6--0
PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1936.
Japanese Olympic Swimmers
RECENT VISIT TO LONDON
Into a reception-room at a Lon- con club recently marched the 40 Japanese
swimmer who have made history,
These Japanese, whom I last saw in Berlin, have come from Cologne. Next week they go on to
Paris: then from Marseilles home. In 28 days they will have appeared at 14 swimming meetings.
There were short speeches by Mr. H E. Fern, the English president of the International Swimming Federation, by Sir Noel Miss Jacobs will now meet Kay
Curtis Bennett: president of the Stammers. the British hope. In Empire Swimming Club, who are the semi-dinal. Yesterday Miss
hosts to the Japanese, and in re- Stammers defeated Carolin ply by Mr. Abe, of the Japanese Babcock (America) in the quar-Olymple Countll.
ter-finals.
H
Helen Pedersen beat Dorothy Bundy 8-3, 4-6, 6-4, and thus qualified to meet Alice Marble. cunqueror of Grace Wheeler, in the semi-Anal.,
Fred Perry, the only foreigner! left in the tournament, will meet Bryan Grant in the semi-Ünal.
their swim? –
have
The club ofered ming bath. One would thought a swim the last thing the visitors wanted, Quite the re- verse. They were Immediately
happy.
In the water was Hamuro, win- ner of the Olympic breast stroke championship last mouth. An- other was Reizo Kolke who was
In the quarter-finals of the men's singles, Frankie Parker over-second in this race in 1932 and came Gregory Mangin. also of America, by the scores of 10-12, 8-0, 4-8, 61, 6-3, after a terri- tic battle.
Parker now meets Donald Budge in the semi-Anal. Budge defeated McDiarmid in three straight sets.
6–4, 6–3, 6–2 —–—– Titular.
GERMAN WOMEN LABOUR CAMPS COMPULSORY
Organisation Like Men's
- NAME ALTERED TO
FEMALE YOUTH"
11
third in 1938. There was Terada, who won the 1500 metres race and is now going for the 800, and the four who made up the record-
COUNTY
CRICKETER
KILLED
Former England Batsman Seriously Injured
CAR LEAVES ROAD
Mr. Reginald Philip Northway. the Northamptonshire County cricketer. was killed, and A. E, Bakewell, the well-known Nor thamptonshire batsman, who has played for England, was seriously injured when the car in which they were travelling left the road near Kibworth, Leicestershire. re- cently.
Bakewell, who the previous afternoon had scored 241 runs. not out-only 16 runs short of the highest score of his career-was taken
to Leicester Royal Infirmary, where he re- covered consciousness at 11 a.m. and was able to recognise every- one, He underwent a serious operation in the afternoon.
Both Northway and Bakewell suffered head injuries. They were flung out of the car when it struck the hedge. The accident occurred at a sharp bend, the car
plunging through the hedge into
a field.
M
RETURNING FROM. CHESTERFIELD
Northway and Bakewell breaking relay team. Arai. Yusa, were returning from Chesterfield. Tagoichi and Suguira. There was where against Derbyshire, they the dives. Shibahara-fourth in were the opening batsmen for Berlin and the back-stroke swim-
their county.. mer. Kiyokawa,
What makes these small men so successful. The intriguing fact about the rowing men from Tokyo was the care and thought shown in their boat design. These swim- mers have the same powers of pluperfect concentration." They take pains.
At a
certain hour. each day. they perform complex physical exercises. No matter where they are at that hour, together, or al- one, indoors or out, each man goes through his programme. The more one thinks over this fact the less hard it is to answer why they swim so fast.
At water polo they are not strik- g but busy they always are. worriers. And thinkers. I
Decrees which make imminent And
nave to be. We are so small." Hylton Cleaver in the "Evening Standard."
the Introduction of compulsory | commented that when I saw them service in labour camps for Ger- in Berlin, I was struck by the inan women on the same basis as setupulous sportsmen that they is now in force for men are an-
proved to be, nounced recently by the Reich The answer was significant: "We Minister of the Interior, Dr. Frick. The decrees state that the trans- ference of the control of the Voluntary Women's Labour Ser vice from the' Relch Labour Ex- change to the Reich Labour Ser- vice Headquarters has now been completed.
It is further provided that Herr Hess, Herr Hitler's deputy. Is to be consulted o all appointments of officers, male and female. to the Women's Labour Service.
U.S. BASEBALL
Several Home Runs" Recorded
New York, Sept. 10. The following were the results of
The name "Women's Labour Service" has been changed to "Labour Service for Female T'outh." which after the introduc- Major League baseball matches tion of compulsory service. it is played to-day-
stated, will correspond to the pre-
sent "Labour Service for Maie Youth."
Boston
NATIONAL LEAGUE
R. H. E.
J
.3 13 0
2
5 5
Berger homered for the Braves.
Those entering. must undertake St. Louis to serve for the regulation period, of six months. This period will remain the same when the service becomes compulsory.
The women live in camps, each
ot 40, with four leaders and rour
social comrades.
- HELP FOR SETTLERS
Cincinnati New York
7 16 2 2
7 2
Lombard! and Goodman homered. for the Reds.
Chicago
Some of the camps are in dis-Philadelphia
8
7
3
tricts where new settlements are Hack homered for the Cubs and being constructed. Here It is the
Camilli for the Philles,
duty of the inmates to make them- selves generally useful to the wives
Pittsburgh
11 14 2
of the new settlers and to help Brooklyn" .5 11 2 them overcome their initial dim- culties. When this has been ac- hieved the camp passes on to an- other settlement.
Other camps are in agricultural districts. where the girls help the farmers and their wives. A third
Swift homered for the Pirates and Bordagaray for the Dodgers.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Philadelphia St. Louis
12 16 3
7
2 Higgins homered for the Ath-
kind of camp is in the "distressed" Ïctics and Clift for the Browns.
industrial areas, where the girls
do the housework and care for Washington
the children of working-class Detroit
women.
As the small number of particl-
2 5 0
5 9 0
Hogan homered for the Senators.
4 13 1
"E -14. 0
pants in the scheme indicates. New York
the Women's Labour Service is Cleveland.....
nol very popular. Girls who lose
Gehring homered for the Yankees
Indians.
their jobs are often in terror of and Campbell and Trosky for the reporting to the labour exchanges for fear of being sent to the labour camps.
The expansion of the present system into a compulsory system will be a considerable Item in the budget. The cost of maintaining
Philadelphia aşte 4 10 1 St, Louis.............
4" 3 0 Peters homered for the Athletics and Clift and West for the Browns. The game was called at the end.
the 200,000 men in the compulsory of the ninth innings on account of labour service is given as about darkne85,----- £17,000 annually.
Reular,
Mr. J. Timms, another mem- ber of the Northampton team. was driving a car in front of that in which were Mr. Northway and Mr. Bakewell. Missing the lights of the car behind, he turned back and discovered what had hap- pened.
Mr. Northway, who was 27, was representative of a Bath engineer- ing firm. His home was in Cey- lon, and he had been staying at Grafton Regis Rectory with the Rev. R. N. Beasley, who was -for- merly a well-known Rugby foot- ball player.
No sleep last night?
TRY
"BLACK & WHITE"
THOSE WHO KNOW, SAY IT'S THE SCOTCH.
11
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