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and
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MAJESTIC
← ADGUN TURDA == JEESE &. KASSY PORN, SURG
EMIL
JANNINGS
UN AN ERNST
LUBITSCH
PRODUCTION
The Patriot
WITH
FLORENCE VIDOR LEWIS STONE
NEIL HAMILTON
a. Paramount Picture
TO-DAY to SUNDAY,
at: 2.30, 5.19, 7.20 8 9.30 pm,
Printed and Published for the Proprietors by FREDERICK PERCY FRANKLIN, at 1 and 8. Wyndham Street, in the City of Victoria Новиков.
THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH, FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1930.
JAPAN.
OLYMPIC GAMES IN BETTING ON THE
DERBY.
ARGUMENT FOLLOWS DRAW IN THREE TO ONE TAKEN ON THE
SOCCER MATCH.
CHAMPIONSHIP TIES.
Tokyo, May 20,
In the Olympic Games here Japan clinched the baseball title by defeating the Chinese in a wild and ragged contest by seventees runs to ten.
In swimming. Japan secured a further two firsts, the hundred yards back stroke and the fifty yards free style. China beat Japan by 21 points to 18 and 21 points to 19 in the men's volley- ball contest making China tie with the Philippines. The match for the title will be played to-morrow. In the women's volley-ball con- test, Japan beat the Philippines by 21 points to oil in both games.
Japan. sprang a surprise in the soccer match, drawing with China. The Chinese did most of the at- tacking, but their shooting was erratic. At half time the score was one goal each. Japan led by three goals to two within three minutes of time when Wong Shut- wa gave the Chinese the equaliser.
The Chinese wanted to play extra time to settle the champion- ship, but the Japanese refused. Subsequently, the sides failing to reach an agreement, the F.E.A.A. soccer committee declared that the championship was a tie and that there would be no further play.
Japan
the men's tennis championship without the loss of a single match. Nunoi beat Lum 6-3, 6-4, 6-4.
Won
Instead of the scheduled singles between Khoo and Sato, in which Khoo defaulted, an exhibition dou- bles match was' played, Sato and Kuwch beat Lum and Khoo 4-6, 7-5, 6-1, 0-6, 6-2.
In the women's tennis singles, Kobayashi beat Gloria Lee 6-0, 6-2 and beat Lucy Lee 6-0, 6-1. Gloria Lee heat limura (Japan) 4-6, 6-4, 6-2, giving Japan the victory by three matches to two.
In the basketball centest Japan beat the Philippines by 38 to 29. This makes the championship a tie and it will be played off to-morrow. -Renter..
HUGE HAILSTONES AT POSEH.
CURIOUS STORM VISITS WESTERN KWANGSI.
FAVOURITE.
RIDERS RESHUFFLED.
London, Mag 29. | The Beaufort Club call-over on the Derby to-day was as follows:
Diolite. Three to one taken and offered.
Rustom Pasha-Six to one offered, thirteen to two taken.
Silver Flare-Hundred to nine] offered, hundred to eight taken,
Ballyferis.-Hundred to eight
offered.
Trews. Hundred to offered.
Blenheim-Hundred to
eight
six
offered, twenty to one taken.. and offered..
Caerleon. Twenty to one taken
Illad-Twenty to one.
Noble Star-Twenty to one. Parenthesis,-- Twenty-five to Scout Second-Twenty to one.
one offered.
Revised Probablės. jockeys, revised to-day, is as fol. The list of probable starters and
lows:
Trews (R. Dick).
Sponger (R. Perryman). Silver Flare (Elliott). Sex Rover (M. Wing). Caerleon (Weston). Ballyferis, (Canty). Cartello (H. Graves). Grand Salute
(Clifford
Richards). Landsdowne (Gordon Richards), Diolite (Cecil Ray). Bargany (Carslake). Rustom Pasha (Beary). Blenheim (H. Wragg). Strongbow (—),
Parthenon (I. Leach). Noble Star (Harry Beasley). Scer (Jellis).
Tetragem (A. Wragg). Adlon (F. Winter). Scout the Second (Joe Childs). Dirk Swiveller (Pat Beasley), Parenthesis (Fox)-Reuter. Diolite, the favourite, is owned by Sir Hugo Hirst and won the
2,000 Guineas Stakes on May 7 from Paradine and Silver Flare in a field of 28. He is by Dlophon outings as a two-year-old, winning out of Needle Rock, and had five three races, and being placed in both the others.
BATTLE CENTRE
SHIFTED.
(Continued from Page 1.)
in arms and ammunition, are lacking reserves.
TO RAISE SCHOOL. LEAVING AGE.
EDUCATION BILL PASSES ITS SECOND READING.
BENEFITS OUTLINED.
London, May 29. The House of Commons to-day passed the second reading of the Government's Education Bill by 280 votes to 223. The Bill provides for the raising of the school leaving age from fourteen to fifteen years.
The President of the Board of Education, Sir Charles Trevelyan, moved the second reading, and ex- plained that half a million children were involved each year. The Gov. ernment desired to keep them out of the labour market. By giving them another year in school, com-. petition of children in labour would obviously be reduced.
Work would thus be provided for 100,000 to 150,000 people to teachers would be required. Under replace them, while 8,000 additional the new proposals there would be a saving in unemployment benefit of about three million pounds.
He added that the Bill would pro- vido maintenance and allowances for the children of poorer families when they went to school for the l extra year. The total cost of rais- ing the school age would be five and a half million pounds, and to ac- commodate the children in view of the proposed leaving age change a hundred new schools were being built. In addition enlargements to. 350 schools were going on at the present time.
Lord Eustace Percy voiced objec- tion to the Bill and moved its re-
You've Been Waiting for This
with
Metro Goldwyn Mayer ALL TALKING
PICTURE
The IDLE RICH
jection. He said he was opposed CONRAD NAGEL
to the compulsory element contain- ed in it.Reuter and British Wire- less..
UNITED STATES OF
EUROPE.
REPLIES BY NATIONS NOT VERY ENCOURAGING.
plan for the organisation of the
Paris, May 29. Commenting on M. Briand's United States of
Europe, M. Poincare thinks that the welcome accorded the plan by the nations to which it has been addressed is polite but genérally not encourag- ing.
It has been made apparent that Europe (if such an entity exists) still has many stages to pass before attaining the goal aimed at.
M. Poincare raises the question of whether the Soviet and Great Britain would join, and challenges the suggestion that Britain should keep out of the United States of Europe because of her position in a world Empire.
Nanning, May 17. Western Kwangsi was the scene
All the available troops in of a most unusual hailstorm Nanking have been sent to the recently. Information has been Lung-Hai Railway, including the received here to the effect that five thousand men belonging to buge hail stones fell at Poseh an the Second Nationalist Training May 4 for an hour, some of the Division, which left Pukow this stones weighing two pounds. morning for Lung-Hai Line. Tremendous damage was caused Over Д thousand wounded Fránce is in a more embarassing Nationalist soldiers arrived at position because Parliament has Pukow this, morning. Messages Colonial representatives entitled have been received from IIsuchow-to interpellate the Government fu H. Q. booking accommodation at in regard to what is happening in the Pukow hospitals for more the European association.-Reuter. wounded soldiers returning from the war-fronts.
to property.
The a-sion houses suffered particularly, half the tiles being boken and many panes of glass in the windows being smashul
Up to the present, there is no record of any lives being lost Our Oven Correspondent.
PHILIPPINE REBELS
ESCAPE.
UNDERGROUND PASSAGE USED IN SEIGE.
Chiang Reported Wounded.. Peking, May 29, All the Vernacular papers Publish many details of the Nan- king reverse on the Lunghai rail- way, agreeing that the allies attacked the Nationalist troops on the front, flank and at the rear. It is persistently reported that Chiang Kai-shek was wounded in Manila, May 30.
the arm, and has retired to rest Following a night-long bom-at Hauchow. Hitherto there is no bardment of the Moro fortress, confirmation or denial of this using Stoke's mortars, tear gas from Nanking. and machine gun and rifle fire, the Two thousand Shangi Constabulary Forces entered there reported to have crossed the Sultan of Ganassi's stronghold. Yellow River at Tsingcheng, and They found it empty, the Moro others at other points cast and defenders having fled to the hilla west of the railway. Han Fu-chu through cunningly
Chowtsun devised has hastened to underground passage..
meet the invaders-Reuter. Patrols were hurriedly organis- ed and they are starting, immedi- ately to round up the outlaws, who are believed to be making for other fortified cottas.--Reuter.
MAY 30 ANNIVERSARY IN SHANGHAI,
SPECIAL PRECAUTIONS BEING TAKEN.
Shanghai, May 29. The police and Volunteers have taken precautionary measures for to-morrow, which is the anniver sary of the clash between police and strikers in 1926,
No serious trouble is anticipated. -Our Dron Correspondent.
OIL EXPLOITATION.
NEW CONCESSIONS IN THE EAST INDIES.
Amsterdam, May 29,
A Bill has been introduced, to au- thorise the exploitation of oil by the Dutch Colonial Oil Company in six grounds and by the Batanfiche Company in ten grounds in the Dutch East Indies-Reuter,
troops
AMERICA AND THE FAR EAST.
ADMIRAL CRITICISES THE NAVAL TREATY.
to
SUBMARINE TO BORE THROUGH ICE.
an
ORSELETE VESSEL FOR SIR HUBERT WILKINS,
Washington, May 29. Sir Hubert Wilkins, together with several members of the pro- recently applied for permission to posed expedition to the Arctic
take the American Navy's obsolete | submarine, P12, and convert it to boring through the ice of the Polar under-gea eraft capable of
regions.
Sir Hubert Wilkins has been
now authoritatively informed that the request will be granted if an application is made through the Shipping Board.-Reuter's Ameri- ran Service.
THE SETTLE RANGOON TROUBLES.
GOVERNOR APPOINTS A CONCILIATION BOARD.
Washington, May, 20. The Senate Naval Committee to- day concluded hearing evidence in regard to the London Naval Treaty. The final witnesses in-
Rangoon, May 29. cluded. Admiral, Robinson, who testified
The Governor has appointed a that the United States Conciliation Board to work out the would get an insufficient number details of a settlement of the of ships with eight inch guns and present troubles by allocating a too many with six inch guns. He proportion of ships to Burmese argued that the concessions to labour. The stevedores, shipping Japan under the Treaty amounted agents, the Burma Chamber of
to partial surrender of American sovereignty of the Philippines.
"We are worse off in every com- batant vessel", he declared. "We shall find ourselves in insurmount able difficulties in the Far East. I don't mean that we should lose a war but we should Have a hard time winning it",
Two Senators expressed the opinion that reservations to the Treaty were necessary,
The Senate passed the Bill pro- viding $80,000,000 for the Navy. Reuter's American Service.
Commerce and the British India Steam Navigation Co., together with some influential Burmese, have agreed in principle to a settlement on these lines.-Renter,
HENLI REGATTA.
Shanghai, May 29. The Kiangsu. Government, hus. granted permission for the holding of the Henli Regatta. The event. will accordingly take place on June | 8th-Our Own Correspondent.
BESSIE LOVE LEILA HYAMS
NEWS
"directed by William de Mille
A
MILLION-
AIRE marries his secretary -- # front-page
romance.
But what really happens back of the headlines? Here's the answer in a talking picture as gens." inely human and moving as any the living screen has offered.
ST MUST BE SEEN!.
COMEDY.
STAN LAUREL
AND
OLIVER HARDY In THE NIGHT OWLS":
REEL
FORMOSA VISITED By METROTONE.
AT THE
SEE Weird Hindu rite, WILKINS back from ANTARTIC.
QUEEN'S
PETER B. KYNE'S EPIC
TO-DAY & TO-MORROW
At 2,30, 5.10, 7.15 & 9.20
66 TIDE OF EMPIRE 99
with RENEE ADOREE
AT!
THE
WORLD
At 2,30 & 7.15
Chinese Picture
GEORGE FAWCETT
TO-DAY & TO-MORROW
At 5,15 & 9.20
“The GREAT SUCCESS"
The Girl on the Barge with a Cargo of Hate-but loving the Pilot of the Tug. CARL LAEMMLE ̃présenta
THE
GIRL
ON THE
BARGE
with JEAN HERSHOLT and SALLY O'NEIL THE SWEETEST ROMANCE SCREENED
AT THE
STAR
TO-DAY & TO-MORROW At 5.80 & 9,20