THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1934.
HONGKONG BOWLERS DISAPPOINT IN INTERPORT
OMAR'S UNFORTUNATE
EXPERIENCE
LOST FORM AGAINST SHANGHAI
COATES AND BASA, PLAY WELL, BUT WINNERS TOO CONSISTENT
SMART WIN FOR HANKOW TEAM
Shanghai, Sept. 6. ing with E. G. Post ar skip won The Interport lawn bowls match by 20-11--Our Own Correspondent, was resumed to-day on the Police:
Recreation Club ground
Hongkow
Park where Shanghai beat Hongkong
by 22 shots to 16 after the scores, had WIN FOR HANKOW
been 10-10 yesterday when rain caused an interruption of the match
on the eleventh head.
Shanghai Beaten By Five Shots
Despite yesterday's heavy rain the green to-day was keen and on the Brat head of the resumption_good woods were sent down by A. E. Coates and R. Basa (Hongkong) but J. E.
Shanghal, Sept. 4. Harvey (Shanghai) shifted the jack Hankow who were led by 10-0 by and the northerners scored two shots. Shanghai in the other lawn bowls Hongkong retaliated with a single Interport match on the Police Green,
RUMIAHN WINS
ENTERS BOWLS FINAL
KEEN GAME WITH CHAPMAN
D. Rumjahn, of the Craigcngower C.C., qualified for the final of the Open Lawn Bowls Singles Champlon- ship yesterday when, on the Kowloon Bowling Green Club's green," ho eliminated A. Chapman of the Yacht Club by 21 shots to 19 after 26, heads had been played..
One of the most outstanding fentures of what was a match of championship standard was the en forcement of the much discussed foot-fault rule against D. Rumjahn in the eighth head when the. Cragen- gower player was being led by soven shots to three and his opponent was laying another three.
The match produced bowls of a high standard with both players revealing some good form
Spencer Tracy and Loretta Young as they appear together in "A Man's Castle", now showing at the Queen's Theatra
on the thirteenth head and a three at won the conicat to-day by 21 shots stendy throughout the match without WIGHTMAN CUP
The fourteenth, Bora, H. Beer and to 16-Router.
U. M. Omar laying the shots,
Shang-
hal again went ahead by scoring one
on the fifteenth and two on the six- teenth but Hongkong tied the scores at fifteen all at the seventeenth.
SHANGHAI SUPERIOR.
Shanghai's superiority was definito on the next four heads, scoring three, ane, one and two to win by 22 ahots to 15. The eighteenth head was a brilliant one at a criticni stage of the Kma.
"Dick" Bosa drew two beastien bat E. B. Heaten-Smith upset the head and lay the shot; Harvey drew an- other. A heavy wood from Beer dis- turbed the hend hut Shanghai still Jay two, Porter adding a third. Omar failed to save the count.
The Shanghai four were consistent- ly good. Basa na Contes were Hongkong's best players, thuar anu Beer were definitely off their game.
The teams und scores were: Shanghai
How Hongkong Lost To
South Africa
IN
Hy J. E. Linney,
London, Aug. 14.
being really brilliant except on nomo occasions when he sent down a couple of beautiful shots to claim the count. Rumjahn opened indifferent, although in the trial head he threatened to ro produce for which would have easily carried him into the final.
a
PAIR WIN
ENGLISH PLAYERS IN GERMANY
DOUBLES TITLE SECURED
TRADE REVIVAL
AMERICAN EXPORTS AD- VANCE SHARPLY
covery.
1
ex-
THE EMPIRE GAMES
HOW ORGANISERS WENT WRONG.
The British Empire Games and the Women's World Games point a moral to those responsible for their organisation.
There were good crowds over the holidays at the Empire Games, but in general, the attendances, particularly at the Women's Games, wore for smaller than they ought to have been.
The fault is not altogether with the public. Indifference may be traced in some custa to insuf ficient publicity and in others to xorbitant prices of admission. A Derby correspondent has writ- ten rather emphatically
on this subject. He has just spent holiday in London with his wife and daughter and all three, being keen enthusiasts, fixed their holiday so na to take in the Em- Tire and the Womon's Games,
TAN YEN-HENG.
PEARK BOXING CHAMPION
NOW RESIDENT IN HONGKONG
Ila experience on the opening day of the Women's Games js rather luminating. There were Washington, Sept. 5.
certain events staged at ten The Improvement of United o'clock in the morning and, being PLAYER FOOT-FAULTED.
States foreign trade, shown in a an enthusiast, he went as early as However, after scoring a single on
undertaken by the this to the White City. He paid the first head he became erratic and
National Chamber of Commerce, 18. 3d. and was informed that he mized occasional brilliant wood
has considerably improved the could go anywhere and, as there with some which were only mediocre.
were only about a dozen of the outlook in the direction of re-general public presont, he got a Chapman quickly jumped into the
Mr. Tan Yen Heng (Battling lead o the second head with
London, Aug. 13.
very good seat. At lunch-time he Chan) who joined the Far East three
the anci
seventh The German lawn tennis chan-
"passed out," only to find on bis Flying Training School last May is According to the review, he had scored seven shots to his oppon-pionships at Hamburg, although: EMPIRE's three. On the eighth head
return that his original seat had fighter of some repute. totalled
In addition to winning a large they brought disappointments to ports for July, 1984, Chapman was laying three when Great Britain the singles de $161,000,000 compared with $144,-jumped in price to 68. BOWLS MATCH Rumjan xent down his last data of Miss ai, C. Scriven and C 1000.000 for July of last year.
If he had stayed in the Stadium number of important boxing con- The bowler was instantly foot-faulted
he would of course, have been teats in Perak, Mr. Tan is the holder and the woad, which threatened to. D. Tuckey, have nevertheless
In the import field, American able to retain his sont without the of the 1933 Amalgamated Amuse- pet the head, was stopped beforo ulded another honour to arma bought $127,000,000 worth increased fee, which I regard as a belt for North Malaya.
ment Gold Belt, the championship it could interfere with the head. those of Wimbledon and the Davis
of shameless extortion. Th score was then 10-3 in faveur Cup. Miss E. M. Dearman, and of goods during the month of piece
Bort of
Apart from boxing, Tan is also After a rainy morning, the wea of Chapman but on the next head Miss N. M. Lyle, the Wightman July just passed and $142,000,000 Something of the same
a very fine-athlete. ther was again ideal for the bowls Rumjahn with a perfect draw scored Cup doubles players, added their worth in the corresponding period imposition was carried
Mr. Tan has now concentrated Bank Holiday, when half a crown his attention on aircraft engineer- section in the British Empire his fourth point only to see his oppon- Games, and there was a good at-ent lead by 13.6 on the thirteenth names to the list of those of the other British pairs who have
was charged for places which had ing and is at presant doing the two five
Exports for the seven itendance at the Temple and Pad- hend.. Rumjahn had been playing
months been priced at half that amount on years engineering course at the Far 16 dington greens.
covery and title since the championships were 000 as compared with $813,000, Games. A light breeze across the green stayed a wonderful
astarted in 1925.
000 for the first seven months of
Hongkong. On completion of the at the Temple Club was not noticed scored a two, a three, a two and
Oddly enough, local opinion the previous year, and Importa enough by the players, who pre-one to level the scores at 13-10 on
Somebody with a wider vision course, Mr. Tan will alt for the favoured the chance of Mile. I during the same time were $990,-
Government examinations for the ferred the forehand from the the seventeenth head.
hew shots on the fourteenth Adamoff and Mile. R. Couquerque, 000,000 as against $785,000,000,-
and an enterprise that under- Pavilion,
dead
opponents in
Reuter Special
stands the public point of view aircraft engineers licences before howled. In one instance, the the fifteenth head he twice carried strange reason that they had
is sadly needed in athletics. I returning to Malaya. last end of the rink between Hong- the jack for bin count of three. On beaten Miss Scriven and Miss R. M
should like to see somebody run to interfere with his boxing acti
Tan's engineering studies are not kong and South Africa, there were the seventeenth head Rumjahn was Hardwick, but Miss Lyle and Miss plenty of them.
a big meeting at a common vitles as he is already fighting his three South African woods wide, laying three shots when Chapman Dearman must have supplied av Gains fight at the White City on
price, say, of is. 3d with per way to popularity with his fellow but jack high, and the shot was in was lucky to save two. In trying to
haps, 10 per cent, of the seating pupils in the form of boxing bouts favour of Hongkong, thanks to draw to the jack Chapman bumped strong corrective when they won Sept, 10 there will be covered
at 58. for those who desire to staged in the School. Interport, U. M. Omar playing the fine wood from the Hongkong one of his own woods in for second easily by 6-4, 6-2, Mian Dearman's seats available at the two ends of be a little exclusive and do not
volleying was particularly crisp the Stadium for half a crown each.
Mr. Tan hopes to interest the the South shot.
and decisive, and the pair imple-My advice to the athletic peeple
mind paying for it.
Colony in Bantamweight contents Jeff Dickson, too, has sensed as soon as a suitable monted their claim to be consider-
the value of cheap seats and
appears.
3. M. Sequeira
Hongkong
A. E. Contra
E. B. Heaton-Smith R. BasaA
J. E. Harvey
C. W. Porter
11. Boer
22 U. M. Omar
Reuter.
"DEFEAT OF A SKIP"
U. M. Omar Plays Weakest Game
Shanghal Sept, 5. "The defeat of a skip sums up Hongkong's defeat in the lawn bowls
of 1933.
out OD
josing game up to this polne but he won the German women's doubles ending July 31 were $1,197,000,- the opening day of the Empire East Fiving Training School in
RUMJAHN TAKES LEAD.
For the Peterson
third, who removed weakest game since his arrival. African shot from the jack. Hong- W. Porter, Shanghal's skip, played Aft splendidly, as instanced by the first kong wanted four shots, and their
For the first time during the matched one of the best Great Britain 18: Go thou and do likewise. head to-day. 11ongkong, were lying skin played firmly with his first five when Porter sent down a well wood, but was wide, and he rubbed Rumjahn took the lead on the twen
Tuckey and Miss Scriven were
has had.
fudged heavy wood to give Shanghai the back of Holhausen's wood send. tioth head when he secured a single beaten in the final of the mixed by
The
high with the ones, two and threes
A. E.
ink
it to the Jack for shot. Thoms to make the score 15-14. However, played his second wood wide, and on the next band gave hand a two G. von Cramm and Frau Sperling gave Chapman-his by 6-2, 6-4. The winners, besidea- the Hongkong akip, played sixteenth shot Rumjam had trailed gaining this title for the third armly on the jack, but instead of the jack but, using the wrong hand, year running, had also won the hitting it squarely on the face, he had carried it among Chapman's singles, von Cramm from C. caught it at the back and sent it woods.
Burwell by 6-2, 6-1, 6-4, and Frau A three on the 22nd head gave Sperling from Fri. Aussem by 6-2. sideways to the South Africans two wide woods. There was aRumjahn the lead again by 18-10. Hongkong wood between them and Chapman was laying three shots when 63. Both were singles winnera
terel two of Chapman's words and Qulet won the men's doubles.
and A. K. Rumjahn, with his third bowl neat last. year. knocked the jack to one of his own. Rentor Special.
a count of twe.
From thence onwards Shanghal were in a moral ascendancy. standard of the play in general was
of each team well matched. Contes was very sound while Bean was better than yesterday but Beer was mediocre. Omar was unable to do anything right
In the subsequent friendly match this scored, but the South Africans against the Police, Hongkong, play-won by two shots.
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With his last wood Chapman bump- ed one of Runjahn's into the jack and then the Craigengower player drew a third.
When Rumjahn scored a two on the next head the match seemed to be all over but Chapman made a gallant effort to retrieve the situation. Ho prolonged the game until the 26th head when he was beaten by 21.10. TO-DAY'S SEMI-FINAL.
The second semi-final match be- tween A. W. Grimmitt and V. Pethe- rick will be played on the Cralgon- gewer C. C. green this afternoon. commencing at 6.10 p.m. The final will be decided on Wednesday next on the Club de Recrelo green at G zm.
Always Good Dancing
·at the
YELLOW DRAGON
DANCING ACADEMY
6th
Floor King's Theatre Building.
(Chinese Mucia at Intervals) COME TO-NIGHT TEL 27879,
LEET THEM AT THE
DOUBLE CROSS ROADS OF THE WORLD!
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as "Sorrowful Jones" Ho'd gamble a million... on anything except a dome!
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SHIRLEY
DOROTHY DELL
as "Bangles Carson" Give this little girl a big hand... but be sure there's a diamond in t
IN
SHIRLEY TEMPLE
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DAMON RUNYON
author of "Lady Ford Day"writes avolker great human heart story
Little
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Paramount Picture
from the Collier's Weekly Serial.
a B. P. Schulberg Production
SATURDAY
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