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UZON BRILLIANTINE

Adds beautiful finishing polish to the coiffure. Both men and women delight in this super-refined Brilliantine which ia ideally suitable for all with over-dry scalp. In liquid and solidified form.

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The Trus Tonic Food

HONG KONG DAILY PRESS. FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1937.

THE SURREY LADIES'

CHAMPIONSHIP

Miss Pamela Barton Beaten

BILLIARDS

The Amateur

Championship

J. Thompson (Cumberland), the holder, gained an easy victory in his heat in the second round of "There were some surprising re- and she became dermy when Miss the Amateur Championship at the sults in the Surrey Ladies' Cham- Gourlay took three putts at the Burroughes Hall in Soho Square, pionship at St. George's Mill in 18th. At the next hole Miss Hamil-when he beat H. J. Bennett (Bur- the first round Miss Molly Gour- ton put ner tee shot on to the rey) by 785 points, writes a Home

·lay, six times winner of the event, horse track," but fine recovery correspondent. Thompson was beaten by Miss Joan Hamil-enabled her to have the hole and will play H. F. Smith (Essex) in the second of the semi-final matches. ton, leader of the 16 qualifiers, so win the match.

the first ot which will be and in the second round Miss Pum

between K. Kennerley (War- Barton, the British American lady champion, and her sister. Miss

RESULTS First Round

now

Miss "P. Falkner (Worplesdon) wickshire and Worcestershire) and E Bell (Durham and North- Mervyn Barton, were also eliminat-beat Mrs. Dinn (Purley Down) by

matches last umberland). The" ed from the championship.

2 and 1.

Miss Pam Barton was beaten by Miss Peggy Falkner by two and one. Miss Heather Palmes won an exciting game at the 19th hole against Miss Mervyn Barton. Miss Hamilton and Mrs. M. Heppel also survived to the semi-final, round,

|

Miss P. Barton (Royal Mia- Surrey) beat Mrs. R. T. Feel (West Byfleet) by 4 and 3,

Mra M. Heppel (Addington) beat Mrs. G. Joannides (Walton Heath) by 6 and 5.

Miss S, Swayne (Farnham) beat Mrs. A.-G. Barry (Camberley Health) .by 3 and 2.

Miss J. Hamilton (Tandridge beat Miss M. Gourlay (Camberley Heath) by 2 and 1.

Miss M. Raworth (St. George's Hill) beat Mr. J. D. Grosthwaite (Walton Heath) by 4 and 2.

for two days and are played by time, representing eight hours' play. The anal will extend over

three days.

seriousness

ΟΣ

As Thompson began the second half of the match with a lead of 519 there was little question con- cerning the ultimate result, but the play all through the day was con- ducted with 1 endeavour which was worthy of a keen competition." The standard of amateur play in general gives an impression of greater efficiency since the conditions of the cham- ̈ pionship were changed, restricting the number of consecutive hazards. to 15, instead of 25, which is per- missible in any other form of com- petitive play. It has induced & greater spirit of adventure, and this match, as others have done, Second Round

showed that the desire always was Misa Falkner beat Miss P. Bar- there to make a break," not merely ton by 2 and 1.

by a scoring process, but with a Mr Heppel beat Miss Swayne by keen intent to play the game on 3 and 2.

sound lines.

MUCH BELOW FROM Miss Pam Barton, who has had influenza. was much below her usual form, and she was never allowed to secure the lead. Three down at the sixth Mias Barton won the next three holes to square the match, but she was behind again at the 10th, where she pull- Miss M Barton (Royal, Mid- 'ed into some bushes. Miss Barton Surrey) beat Miss B. Ellot (Royal

was still one down with two to | Mid-Surrey) by 6 and 5. play, but Miss Falkner played the Miss

Palmes (Camberley wiinning shot on the 17th green. Heath) beat Miss N. Halsted where she holed a four-yard putt | (Walton Heath) by 1, hole. for a four, Miss Barton took three putts and was beaten.

11

Miss Hamilton Miss Raworth by

Miss Hamilton generally had the better of her game against Miss Gourlay, who had to fight hard to square the match at the 10th after losing two of the first three 2 and 1. holes. A 3 at the 13th, however, put Miss Hamilton ahead again. ' the 10th hole.

More Opportunities

For Youngsters-

Thinking caps have been on åt Stoke, writes a Home correspon-

Miss Palmes beat M. Barton at

RUGBY FOOTBALL

FOR LIONS

Few persons will be aware that the Admiralty maintains & awall collec- tion of wild animala at Portsmouth as dent. The result is that develop-examples of deportment for the Royal ment schemes have been formu- Nayy lated by the Potters which show

that football 19 still growing. From these Stoke City plans, in fact, we can get a glimpse of the way that big football is taking.

MUD MEANS MISSES

Stoke City are planning to run a third team next season, playing on Saturdays, and also mean to have a second playing pitch on their own premises. This pitch will adjoin the Victoria Ground and will be used for practice games' and ball practice. There will thus be far less use made of the match pitch,

One playing plece isn't enough tor a big club nowadays. Pitches look well at the start of the sea- son but under the strain of usage they soon become little more than mud patches, Mud means misses. and often pulled muscles.

KOWLOON GOLF CLUB

Coronation Trophy

The Kowloon Golf Club intends donating a Souvenir. Cup to the winner of the above competition and a suitable souvenir to the run- ner up...

The competition will commence

with a qualifying medal round over

18 holes. the sixteen best net scores to qualify for match play.

Entries will close on May 2, next.

Young sailors under instruction are encouraged to visit the zoo on Whals Taland, and their study of the wore Partners will be drawn for quality- ferocious-looking inmates of the enge is understood to have had an excellent ing round, which must be complet- effect on Service demeanour. The ed by May 18, 1937. young men have left the island nut only fired anew with ambition to live

up to the injunction first addressed to the British tar 60 years ago, but furnished with object-lessons how to do no:-

His foot should stamp and his throat

should grow!,

His hair should twirl and his face

should scowl;

His eyes should flash and his breast

protrude, And this should be hia customary attitude 1

Now comes a disquieting report about the Hons on Whale Island. Elitherto the fiercest examples, and so the most useful, in the collection, of late have behaved disappointingly,

So far from continuing to serve as models for the Royal Navy, they have began to reverse the parts and, unfortunate. ly, to imitate the Navy in its most unguarded hours when its customary attitude is apt to be playful rather than terrifying.

31 A ČADET'S LETTER

Evidence of this is contained in a letter from a cadet in B.M.S. Erebus to his father. The letter says:-

Similarly two teams with re- gular programmes of matches are not enough for a big club now, Players have to be caught young these days if transfer costs are to be kept down. But the big clubs. having signed players of fifteen, sixteen and seventeen, find, that they can't give the youngsters the playing practice they need, in ault- PLAT MEANS 'FROGRESS The

and Birmingham Wolves found the need of a regular third team some years ago, Aston Villa followed suit. For three or four years both Manchester clubs have had third elevers playing on Saturdays. Also, in Lancashire Burnley. Bolton Wanderers and Preston North End put. out three teams. Sunderland do it as well.

Promising young players do not Football, as you can see, is still develop unless they play football, growing.

"Yesterday we bad a rugger match. against a team of 'Saba' from the Submarine School. Before we started we were practising kicking, and the ball landed on the lion's cage. They had been watching the ball carefully for some time. When just outside the cage placed his paw thereon and the ball immediately collapsed.

He dragged in inside, and he and Mother Lion had a game with it in which their cub soos joined. They were still at it when our match was finished."

Meet The Unluckiest Player

The time is coming when foot-mises undergoing treatment to his ball distinctions will be handed knee. out, writes a Home correspondent. Alf didn't mind. He wanted to. There will be a "best team of the get really ft. But the treatment season." There will be a "luckiest wasn't enough. Recently, exami- team of the season." There will nation by a specialist was ordered. also be a "best player of the sea- The upshot is likely to be, another 802"* What about the funluckiest | knee operation, player of the season?"

If that happens it will mean

If I had to. run a canidiate for ❘ that for the third close season in this distinction I would have no succession Alf Lythgoe will be a hesitation about putting forward regular átténder at the Huddera- Alf Lythgoe, the Huddersfield | field dressing-room for massage. Town centre-forward. Alf, in fact, That'a real bad luck; has just about qualified as the Last close acason when the other unluckiest player in football in players were on holiday or on the past three seasons.

tour in Sweden and Denmark, Alf was tied up in Huddersfield. During the close season before last the same thing applied.

NO HALF-DAYS FOR HIM Earlier this season he was in and out of the Huddersfield side owing to his injury. His last game The player reckons that injury Was in mid-December against has coat him somewhere near Grimsby Town. Before that A £100 in bonus money he has never seemed to be away from the missed. And, besides, lying on Leeds Road ground. Other players that massage table is making the got half-days of. The centre-dressing-room-ceiling forward was always on the pre- familiar.

horribly

A Great Name

and a

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SUMMER CLOTHING-ALL SORTS AND SIZES

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CHINA, JAPAN, MALAYA, PHILIPPINE ISLANDS, INDO-CHINA, NETHERLANDS INDIA ETC.

(Published by The Hong Kong Daily Press, Ltd.)

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1937

EDITION

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