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ADMOə
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FIRST PLACE
Fatal Accident At Eiffel Auto Races
TRIUMPH FOR GERMAN RACING DRIVERS
Cologne, June 3. RIVERS of the new German DR
racing machines triumphed to-day in the annual Eiffel Auto Races on the famed Ring track. The youthful daredevil Manfred
Yon
Tel. 21322.
TEST MATCH RESULT WILL DEPEND ON TOSS
(Continued From Page 1) In view of the hard wicket it is possible that Kenneth Farnes, the young Essex player, may play in This first Test and thus help to form the nucleus of England's shock attack. Patsy Hendren has scored two centuries against the tourists, but his place is Insecure,, and Mitchell, Derbyshire'a slow bowler, is likely to be dropped.
THE CHINA MAIL, FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1934.
TALL SCORING BY TOURISTS IN ALL GAMES
OAKS CHANGES
Fox On Call Of Duty To-day.
JONES RIDING SHINING CLOUD.
London, To-day.
Two last-minute alterations in the probable starters for the Oaks, which will be run over 11⁄2 miles at Epsom to-day, have been nounced.
Jones will ride Shining Cloud, and Fred Fox will take out Call of Duty.
and
Spend-a-Penny, Solitude Moonstone are unlikely starters.
The probable starters and jockeys are:
Instantaneous (Dick) Shining Cloud (Jones) Campanula (Wragg) Filastic (Sam Wragg) Light Brocade (Carslake)
Kyloe (T. Burns)
Call of Duty (Fox) Zelina (S. Donoghue) Mistor (G. Richards),
-Reuter.
SINGLE TICKET
WINNER
Pari-Mutuel Dividend Of $7,331.
"SAMMY JUDAH" WINS
&
The Shanghai Chinese Jockey Club dropped upen first-class sensation in the middle of a some- what dull programme recently when a pony came in for the part- mutuel to pay the colossal dividend of-$7,331,
This, of course, is a long way
Ready for American Invasion
the "En-
An aerial view over the Solent, Southampton, as deavour', British challenger for the America's Cup, underwent a trial spin under a full hand of sall. Inset, Mrs. T..0. M. Sop- with, wife of the owner, at the wheel of the "Endeavour" dur. ing her trial run,
FIGHT OF CENTURY
PROMISED
CARNERA AND BAER IN CONFLICT.
WORLD TITLE AT STAKE
short of the figure paid out over A slashing, raging battle, the like Billy Tingle's outsider of a few of which has not been seen since years ago, which was a world's re-Dempsey ended the come-back trail
cord for a few weeks, until it was
running in a half mile event, had but a single ticket on him.
postponement The
granted.
"、 ་
WON FIVE OF
10 GAMES
7 CENTURIES
AGAINST THE
TOURISTS
McCabe Has Four Three Figure Knocks.
PONSFORD'S TWO DOUBLE CENTURIES
In the course of their ten mat-
1
CRICKET FEATS. IN SHANGHAI
Pat Madar And Divecha Shine With Ball,
PREPARING FOR INTERPORT
The Shanghai Recreation
Club
ches in England to date the Aus- Colts recorded a triumph in their Shanghai Cricket League match trialians have won five and drawn with the Police recently. After dis five.
missing the Police for 98 runs, A remarkable feature of the they knocked up the required runs matches has been the large scores for the loss of only four wickets. which have been made both for Pat Madar, a former Shanghai and against the visitors. At and Hong Kong Interport player Worcester the Australians scored and also a former member of the 504, and against Essex they scor-Kowloon Cricket Club, took five ed 438, while in their match with Police wickets for 33 runs, while Surrey they totalled 629 to Sur-M. J. Divecha, another Interporter rey's 476.
Seven centuries have been recorded against the visitors, one of them being a double- century by Andy Sandkam, and two of them coming from the bat of Patsy Hendren, the Middlesex and England veter-
HIGH HOPES FOR double centuries, one from Brad-
ENDEAVOUR
British Yachts Easily Out-Sailed.
The Australians have scored 16) centuries four of them being
man, two from Ponsford, and oneļ from McCabe. McCabe has scored four centuries, Bradman and Pon- sford three, and Brown two,
Clarry Grimmett has figured in the Australian bowling more than any other member of the team,
took the remaining five wickets for 23 runs, and scored 44 not out.
The next Interport match" takes place in November, when
a local team, will attempt to emulate the feats of Eric Mitchell's 1932 ele-
теп.
JAPAN'S WOMEN
ATHLETES.
In Colony To-day On Way To London.
On their way to London to par ticipate in the fourth Internation-
athletes, with Dr.
justifying the Selectors' wisdom in al Athletic, Championship, the Ja- including him for the English tour. Panese women
At Worcester the Australians Klashita, their manager, arrived in the Colony by the Hakusan Maru defeated Worcestershire
this morning.
Scores:
It was intended that they should 53).
practice at the Kowloon Cricket 95 (C. V. Grimmett 5 for 27, W. Club his morning, but the heavy J. O'Reilly 4 for 25).
rain has caused a cancellation of. Australian: 504 (D. G. Bradman 208,
W. A. Oldfield 67, W. H. Woodfull these plane. A luncheon party 48, A. F. Rippax 0, Howarth 4 for was held to-day at the Hong Kong
Hotel. At Leyton the Australians de-
The Hakusan Maru leaves to- morrow: morning.
130).
“NO CONTEST" EVENT
Harwich, June 2. RT. 0. M. Sopwith's yacht Endeavour, challenger for America's Cup, made her first Worcester: 112 (C. V. Grimmett 5 for beaten on the then newly-estab-in his Chicago boat with Gene
appearance to-day in the Har-. lished totalizator in England, still, Tunney, is looked forward to by wich Regatta. Owing to only it can have been very seldom that boxing men when Max Baer fights half the 37-mile course being any runner has won at odds of Primo Carnera at Madison Square completed, due to rough weather, Japproximately 1,460 to 1.
Bowl, on Long Island, June 14 or the event ended in "no contest." The amazing outsider, Spinner, a week later if Baer's appeal for a pered by Capt. Williams and car feated Essex.
The Endeavour, which was skip-
ried a crew of 23, had notabla Seores: story went round that the backer The ponderous Primo. who opponents in the Britannia, Vel-Essex: 220 (Nichols 62 not out, W. Jis Chuhei Nambu, who was placed (a Chinese from the South and a stumbled into the, championship sheda, Shamrock V, and Candids. stranger to Shanghai), knowing and has held on to it by the sim-The Velaheda quickly went into the nothing about the ponies, had been ple process of being too large for lead but smashed her boom and betting on numbers, and a shroff any of his opponents to knock retired, as did Shamrock V, which jeatingly suggested he should try over, will meet his toughest foe made a poor start. The Endeavour led at the end of the first circuit, No. 1, as no tickets of that num-when he goes up against Baer, |ber had been sold for the
Despite his playing around
in when the race was stopped. The visitor took one-the only one New York's night clubs and the -and for a long time afterwards great fuss the women mako over
The times were:- half the people present were bor- him, Baer is a slasher, a brawler
Endeavour dering on hysterics. It was sand a very tough person in the Britanni close decision, Spinner only beat-fring. He has been training for Candida ing Quanshan by neck, and some time for the battle and wil]] Astra Wakeful Morn by another half-continue. Happily, he is able to formance by the Endeavour.
Experts highly praised to-day's per- length.
on
race.
Several jockeys well-known
the local track had
L
shelve his playboy tactics when
the serious and arduous task of training comes to hand. He trained
Er. Min Sec. 12 44 34
12 12 51
47 22
12 64 43
In charge of the party, as coach,
Grimmett 5 for 54 O'Reilly 3 for third in the long jump in the World first in the hop-step-and-jump and
O'Reilly 6 for 79).
Б4).
Australians: 438 (A. Chipperfield 175, Olympics at Los Angeles in 1982.
W. M. Wodul 55, W. Brown 68, K. Farnes 3 for 111).
At the Oval Surrey drew with the Australians:
Scores:
Surrey: 475 for 1 dec. (Sandham 219,
Gregory 116).
162 for 2 (Gregory 69 "not out, F. R. Brown 54 not out),
FOURSOMES AT VALLEY.
(Continued From Page ↓)
P. S. Grant (21), and W. Wood- Australians: 620 (S. J. McCabe 240, ward (15) v. W. H. Edmond (12)
W. H. Ponsford 125, D. G. Brad-land W. Pittendrigh (17).
man 77, Bromley 56, Gover 5 for 147).
A
At Manchester Lancashire drew with the Australians:-
Scores:
D. W. Philips (24) and R. Young (5) v. E. Thompson (24) and C. II. Burton (13).
J. B. Rosa (7) and J. L. Adams
A successful day at the hard for Max Schmeling and is CENTENARY AIR Australians: 307 15. McCabe 142). (23) Y. H. Overy (17), and A. D.
meeting. Mr. T. L. Wong, who rode at the Annual Meeting here this year, was a winner, coming in first Arab Home in the Riga Handi- cap ("A" Class) over one mile in 2:03:3,
on
doing so for Camera.
Carnera's Training
The same goes for Prime. Thej
Italian mountain of flesh in work
ing hard. He has never learned to hit with force proportionate to Mr. "Sammy" Judah, who was to his strength, but last winter, de- an appearance in feating ageing Tommy Loughran Hong Kong recently, but who hurt in Florida, he looked pretty terr- his leg when he crashed through ble. Being as large as he IK.
In this match in the 1930 series England won under Percy Chup- man, but lost the Ashes by 2 mat- to have made ches to 1.
Brauchitsch, in the first No Announcement On the rails in a morning gallop on Mr. however, Carnera is a sizeable ap-
Mercedes-Benz car ever to parti- cipate here, thundered across the finishing line first in the record time of 2 hours 47 minutės and 36.4 seconds. The length of the course is 213.8 miles. He thus averaged a speed of 76.5 miles an hour.
Hans Stuck, who had bad lucki in the last minute of the Avus races in Berlin last Sunday, cross- ed the goal 80 seconds later in the new Auto Union model.
Team.
London, To-day,
Li Tae-fong's Sporting Life, which ponent and hard to get out of the aubsequently had to be destroyed, way. Not only that, but his man- proved that he has overcome his in-ner of shoving an opponent instead juriea by riding Mr.
of actually hitting him, seems, Mat- sumoto's Maiko. to a win in the in most cases, to create enough Bothnia Plate over 1 miles in
damage, 12:39:4. Incidentally, Mr. Judah
won the 1933 Shanghai Autumni Champions on Nationalist III own ed by Mr. Matsumota,
Baer is the opposite. He tears into opponents with the fury of a tiger.
After a long talk 'yester- day between the Selectors, Mr. P. A. Perrin and Sir Stanley Jackson, it was offi- cially stated that no an- nouncement regarding the
He is not essentially a boxer but England captaincy and the
Mr. J. Pote-Hunt who made such a slugger and a slasher. Baer's composition of the team
a sweep of the events at the Easter right hand does the most damage. would be made till this morn
Meeting in Hong Kong was anther it is constantly cocked and the ing, -- Reuter.
successful jockey, winning the Californian delivers quickly with England were given a severe Luzon Plate ever nine furlongs on
it and usually with results, grati-] setback when Bob Wyatt, the Jolly Westchester in 2:22:4
fying, or not,, according to the selected akipper of the cleven, was
[point of view.
hit on the hand while batting in (Worcester). C. F. Waltern' (Worces 60,000 Crowd Expected The third place was captured by the Test Trial at Lord's, He re-ter), E. Farzes (Essex), Sutcliffe the French driver Louis Chiron in tired from the field and took no Hendren (Middleasex), Leyland (York-out from the city on Long Island, (Yorkshire), Hammond (Gloucester), Madison Square Bowl, situated
a Alfa Romeo, who swept to a spec-further part in the match. It was shire), Ames (Kent), Nichols (Essex),
Inter discovered tacular finish over all Germani
that he had Verity (Yorkshire), Mitchell (Derby will seat something like 80,000 peo- shire), Bowen (Yorkshire) and Geary ple and in expected to be filled competitors on the Avia Course a lightly fractured his thumb,
when the heavyweights come to On Wednesday Wyatt said that (Leicester), week ago.
he was doubtful whether he could
ob blown. Baer, once
RACE
Applications En Route Will Be Received..
ENTRIES STILL OPEN
London. June 2.
In connection with the Vic- torian Centenary celebrations, entries for the England to Melbourne air race to be held in November, were closed of ficially yesterday, but the list is being kept open as notifi cations of a number of other entries in transit by ship and aeroplane, were made by tele- phone and cable.
*
The full list, including these entries, will be made up in a few days. Up to the present, 58 competitors re- presenting Britain, Australia, New Zealand, Irish Free State, America, France, Germany, Italy, Holland, Portugal, and Sweden have formally enter ed-Wireless Through Reu- ter.
The two countries are now
a butcher's | A shadow was cast on the bril-play for England, and in this level terms with B1 wins each in boy in his home town of Livermore, the series, and a win for England California,. is a Jew and will at- liant results of the day by a tragic eventuality C. F. Walters will have in the four-day Test, which opens tract thousands of followers from accident in the first 20 seconds of the unenviable task of leading
at Trent Bridge to-day, is essential New York's large. Jewish popula-favour for which Baer with, his the race when a Bugatti car driven England in his Test debut,
in view of the possible Improvs-tion. N
murderous sort of fighting' 'hao by Frank suddenly turned turtle Walters, however, han skippered
Carnera is an Italian and the been in a large way responsible and bounded into the track fence, Worcestar against the Australlansment in the Australian team, by the time of the play-to-a-Antsb Frankl was and has played for the MC.COval Test In August. Australia
city's Little Italy will turn out · The forthcoming fight. If it pro- a heap of ruins,
in great numbers, for the big vides the fighting the exparia. hér, thrown yards away and died as against them on their present will be holding the whip hand in fellow,
lieve it will, is expected to land result of a fractured akull before tour.
Mathis game if the first four Tents The foarteon, selected England
Boxing in recent months' has the sport back In the popular spot the end of the afternoon, ...
players are:. R. E. 8. Wyatt (War. Ere left drawn.
been- climbing' back Into, popularlit formerly oocupied. wick) (Captain), Nawab of Pataudi
|
338 for 3 (Woodfull 172 not out, Humphreys (10). Brown 110),
Lancashire: 286 (Tyldesley
Fleetwood Smith 5 for 107).
A. C. Sinton and J. E. Dovey 107),(14) v. C. Mottram (22) and. G.
Castle (17).
At Lords the Australians de fented. Middlesex.
Scores:
Middlesex: 288 (Hendren 115, R.
V. Robins 65, C. V, Grimmett for 80).
3)
114 (C. V. Grimmett 5 for 27). Australians; 345 (W. M. Woodfull 0, W. H. Ponsford 0, D. G, Bradman
A. V. Baker (18) and A. C. Ellis (17) v.. A. MacIndoe (18) and J. L. Mcpherson (17), bye.
H. G. Wallington (17) and T. E, Rowell (17) v. A. J. MacFadyen (17) and A. O. Brawn (15).
P. Morrison (X) and A. MacFar-
160, A. F. Kippax 60, 3. Jana (17) v. W. R. Hillyer (18) and Enthoven 4 for 36, Smith 4 for W. J. E. Mackenzie (17). 99).
29 for no wicket.
T. J. Price (16) and R. F. Clark (14) v. J. Ward (18) and A. W. Muir (17).
J. S. Howell (24) and A. Sommer- At Southampton Hampshire drew. de Rome (7),
felt (12) v. C. Austin (10) and F. with the Australians.
Scores: Hampshire: 420 (Mead 139," Lowndes |
150, Lord Tennyson 66, S. J. McCabe 4 for 70, Fleetwood Smith C. W. Jeffries (23) and A. C. 1 for 111, W. 3. O'Reilly 3 far Wilkinson (24) v, J. A. R. Selby 123). 189 for 7 dec. (Arnold 100 not
(10) and H. T. Buxton (17).
aut).
N. Drummond (13) and、 D, S,
Australians: 455 (8. J. McCabe 78. Edward (6) v. D. J. Valentine (16)
Darling 96, A, Chipperfield 110 and A. T. Braley (7), not out, "W. M. Woodfull 2, W.
C. Mycock (15) and C. Thwaites Brown 0, D. G. Bradman 0, A. E. (16) v. W. S. Hillier (8) and T. C.
G. Baring 5 for 121),
10 for 1 wicket,
At Oxford the Australians de-Į feated Oxford University:
Scores:
Australia: 319 (L Darling 100, W. H.
Ponsford 75), Tindeli for (4). (Oxford: 70 (Fleetwood Smith & for 80,
Ebeling 4 for 34).
216 (Deanram 128, C. V. Grim- mett 7 for 109),
At Lords the M.C.C. drew, with [the Australians
Scores:
M.C.C.: "802 | · (fíendren. 195, 'R. E. 8.
Wyatt 72, Wall: 6 for 74). 182 for B. (1, E. 8. Wyatt 102, C. Australians: 550 for
Grimmett 4 for 90).
s dec. (D. G. Bradman 5, W. R. Ponsford 281 not out, S., McCabe 102, F. R. Brown 4 for 184, J. C. White 1 for 77, J. A. R.. Paehler 1 for 141, R. E. 8. Wyatt 0 for 88, 0. 9.{ Marriott 0 for 120),
Fairburn (22).
At Leicester Leicestershire drew with the Australians.
Scores:
Leicester: 162 (W. J. O'Reilly 7, for
20).
208 for 9, (E. W. Dawson 91, W. J. O'Reilly for 40), C. Fleet, wood-Smith for 83). Austraila: 363 for 5 doc. (D. G. Brad
man 06, A. F. Kippax 89, 8, 1, McCabe 108 not out).
At Cambridge, the Australians' beat Cambridge University.
Bcores:
Australiana: 481 for 5 dec. (W. H. Ponsford 220 not out, L. Darling 98, W. Brown 198; D. G. Bradman
· 0). Cambridge; 158, (C, V. Grimmett før
74), 160 (Cox 61 not out; Fleetwoods Bmith 8 for 31).
14
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