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The Racket used by 2 Winners, 7 Finalists. 11 Semi-Finalists and; over 75% of the British Entry at the

WIMBLEDON

CHAMPIONSHIPS

1932.

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KING'S

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GEORGE ROBEY A GAINSBOROUGH PICTURE

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STAN LAUREL

OLIVER HARDY

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MICROSCOPIC

MYSTERIES

DESERT RECATTA

HEARST METROTONE NEWS.

THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH.

THURSDAY

JUNE

MORE SPLENDID BOWLING

6 FOR 62 AGAINST DUMPLINGS

NOMADS 56 IN AREARS

SAYER & BAKER SAVE THE DAY

KEEN CRICKET.

(Our Own Correspondent).

(D Telegraph, Comunione. Massapes Ordinance, 1286.

Can s'a

As

J

Telegraphie

Received June

Exeter, June 28.

Although A. C. Beck, the Hongkong Cricket Club bowler

1933

BY BECK THE PLACE TO DANCE

MEET IN TITLE MATCH TO-NIGHT

Primo Carners, the giant Italian heavyweight, and Jack Sharkey, heavyweight champion, most to-night in a title boat at New York. Here are the contestants, Shaking hands after signing the con tract for the scrap. In the centre is Jimmy Johnston, the promoter.

took the chief honours in SENATORS'

a two-day the opening of match between the Hongkong Nomads and Devon Dum- plings which started here to- day, the Nomads owed it to G. R. Sayer and F. Baker of the Civil Service that they

56

in finished only arrears on the first innings. The close of play scores were: Devon Dumplings 179 and

10 for 1

H. K. Nomads 123

rung

15 RUNS

YANKEES ALSO SCORE FREELY

CHICAGO WIN A DOUBLE HEADER

ROUGED KNEES Girl Twice FOR TENNIS Champion SUZANNE SETS NEW in

FASHION

Paris, June 6. Suzanne Lenglen suggests that women tennis player should rouge their knees.

New York, June 28.

She followed her own sugges- Batting first, the Dumplings had A double header defeat for

Chicago tion, and appeared with dabs of a difficult, time up to lunch coun-Philadelphia against tering the excellent Hongkong Tentured the National League rouge on her knees in a practice attack and they lost four wickets baseball programme to-day. The match against Helen' Jacobs,, the

a double American, in Paris,

for 48 runs.

After the interval, the Nomads lost their grip on the game, and the Dumplings scored with a fair amount of case, finally aggregat- ing 179 before the last wicket fell.

Glanta broke. even in

header with Pittsburgh as did Brooklyn with Cincinnati.

"I decided this spring there was Although the Yankees

won no reason why women should look the courts," ensily against Detroit, they gained like scarecrows on no advantage as Washington sho

of said. "Since most UB Senators, leaders of the American source of worry to the batsmen,gue also scored heavily against

Cleveland. and he gave away runs, very:

Scores as supplied by Reuter sparingly.

SKILFUL BECK.

Was a constant

A. C. Beck

He was responsible for taking six wickets at a cost of 62 runs. This is the second success Beck has enjoyed since the tour start-Philadelphia ed. In the first match against Chicago the Somerset Stragglers he took 8 for 53.

The Nomads found run-getting an even harder taek than wicket-

a Day

CAR DASH FROM TOWN TO TOWN

London, June 6. Miss Violet Webb, the Internn- won two. cham- tional hurdler, pionships in similar events yester- day.

She won the Southern Counties 80 metres hurdles at Brentwood, equalling the British record with then, travelling 12 seconds, and by fast car, went on to the test between the North, South and Midlands at St. Albans and came in first there.

con-

In her heat she, again, equalled lery of spectators, why shouldn't the British record and the final she frankly use make-up before a gai- we do something about our knees? won in 12 1/5 seconds. On the courts they are as

much

TWO TIES.

The high jump was almost as ex-' 3 "I don't think women players, citing. Miss Mary Milne, the, In-

consider their looks sufficiently.ternational jumper, and Miss

were:

NATIONAL LEAGUE,

In evidence as our faces.

R. H. - 11

E.

9 14

1

N.

3

8

Chicago ..........

8

12

0

2 Even a poet won't rhapsodise over. Carrington, for the South-

a feminino knee. But we don't twice at 6ft. 0 inch while Miss Okell the Northern Champion and

tied

Philadelphia

taking and half the side wero out urges homered for Chiengo)./ need to look like freaks. Certain-Miss Halfall tied for third place.

for less than 50 runs.

SAVE A COLLAPSE.

Brooklyn Cincinnati

ly judicious rouge on the knees The South won 'with 67 points, 2 would make us less bizarre in apNorth having 47 and the Midlands

pearance."

1

'G

8

11.- 0

After thin Sayer and Baker. (High homered for Cincinnati scored freely and did much to re-and Outen for Brooklyn).. trieve a bad position...

Sayer scored 36 before dis-Brooklyn missal and Baker had the satis Cincinnati faction of carrying his bat for a similar score.

Both Richardson and Anderson falled and only Macfarlane with 16 to his credit did anything to help the score along..

6

14

0

G

. 11

0

(Wilson homered for Brooklyn). New York...... ... ... ... ... ... .... Pittsburgh

?

2

7

0

5

12 1 (Suhr homered for Pittsburgh and Odoul and Whitney for New

The Inst wicket fell at 123 and the Dumplings started on their York). second Innings, when they lost a wicket for 10 runs before close of play, leaving them 66 runs ahead with nine wickets in hand.

The scores wore:

DEVON DUMPLINGS. 1st innings 179

2nd innings 10 for 1 H. K. NOMADS.

J. E. Richardson

Service)

D. J. N. Anderson (Univer«

sity)

New York Pittsburgh

7

4

10

G 2

17

(Critz and Mancuso homered for New York. There were ten innings);

s 10 3

1

9 1

(Whitney homered for Boston).

Boston

(Civil

St. Louis

11

2Boston

S

7

2

36 St. Louis

D

8

2

10

G

(Frankhouso pitched and blank-

7ed out St. Louis).

AMERICAN LEAGUE.

36

R. H. E.

Detroit

7

1

9

8

New York

10

13 2

G. R. Sayer (Civil Service) E. J. R. Mitchell (1.K.C.C.) Lt. J. K. Macfarlane (RA)

F. S. W. Smith (K.C.C.)..

F. Baker (Civil Service)

not out....

A. C, Beck (II.K.C.C.)

B. D. Evans (Civil Service)

A. Reil (H.K.C.C.)

E. B. Reed (Civil Service) Extras

123

9

+

1

(Ruth homered for Now York), Chicago

13 0 Philadelphia ..... 8 12

(Foxx homored for Philadel- phis).

FAST BOWLING Cleveland

STORM

Lancashire Batsman Injured

BOWES BARRACKED

0 2

.

2 Washington...... 16 16 0 (Manush homered for Washing- ton).

The St. Louis v Boston match was called off at the fourth Innings owing to rain.

towards the heads of the batsmen.

BARRACKED.

London, June 6. Hopwood was struck on the Watson, the Lancashire bata-thigh and then a rising delivery man, lay dazed for an hour yes-hit Watson on the head, forcing terday after his cheek. had been him to retire.

cut open by a ball from Bowes, Bowes was barracked by tho tha Yorkshire faat bowler, in the crowd, but this died down when Yorkshire-Lancashire match nt Ernest Tyldesley refused to be Magnificent bowling by Verity in batting until the uproar stop. and Macaulay, who performed the pod,

Old Trafford.

"hat-trick" (three wickets with Yorkshire's victory was the first successive balls enabled Yorkshiro registered by either sido against to win by an innings-one of the each other in two days of a threo- most sensational resulta in the days match since 2013. Thon long series of grim encounters be- Lancashire won. In 1910 the Red tween those famous rivals.

Rose also triumphed at a time Bowes, who toured Australia when championship matches ware with Jardine's team, raised the ire restricted to two days. of the crowd, by sending down sov-

oral short deliveries, which, land- Macaulay's "hat-trick" was his ing well down the pitch, flaw up second this season.

17.

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