1934-12-31 — Page 5

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LANE CRAWFORD'S

SALE

COMMENCES 2nd JANUARY

Our

LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENTS

offer a

25%

Reduction off all Goods

All Seasonal

but

Goods will be

marked ridiculously low in order

TO CLEAR

PIANOS

FOR SALE OR HIRE.

ANDERSON PIANOS

TUNING,

REGULATING,

REPAIRING.

The Anderson Music Co., Ltd.

Ice House St.

Tel. 21322.

MAN LOONG PRESERVED GINGER MANUFACTURERS. NEW SEASON PRESERVED GINGER Best Quality Prompt attention to Exporters.. Office:-14, Possession Street. Tel. No. 28255. Factory:---KLL. 1928 Bedford St, Tai Kok Tanl; Kowloon

Tel. No. 57088.

GOLE

SPALDING'S

COMPLETE RANGE

OF

GOLF CLUBS

KRO-FLITE GOLF BALLS

IN ATTRACTIVE XMAS BOXES OF 8, 8 and 12 DOZEN BALLS.

AN IDEAL GOLFING GIFT

LANE, CRAWFORD, LTD.

THE CHINA MAIL, MONDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1934

FOOTBALL

(Continued From Pagi.4)

DOCKYARD WIN

SHOOTING

H.M.S. Kent Lose Keen Competition

CONDITIONS NOT GOOD

Although conditions for firing were not conductive to good scores, there being a mist drifting across Ridley initiated a good move-the range, a very keen match was ment, and Higgins final pass to fired on the Stonecutter's Range on Malpas saw the latter's shot hit the Baturday between the Dockyard bar with Wong well beaten.

Riße Club, and H.M.S. Kent, result-{

Continuing the pressure, the in a win for former by the narrow Lincolns took the lead, when from margin of 9 points,

a centre by Baldry, Malpas rushed | Practices were' 200, 500 and 600 between the backs to score

with a yards. grand cross-shot.

Scores:--

Two Penalties Missed W. Austin South China kept pegging away W Quinnell

Naval Yard

27 31 27 8b R3 27

7538333

85

26 20 82

28 29,-26 82

and went near when Ash miskick-E. Lownham 30 28 28 84 ed to let Li Shek-yau through, but . Murgatroyed

A. Cox bis centre was rather dangerously H. Blake........ 25. kicked over the bar by Robson Ridley nearly increased the Lincolns • 'Total lead when his shot went the wrong side of the upright

pos-

During a scramble for session in South China's goal- mouth Higgins was fouted by Lee Kam, but Ridley shot wide from the spot-kick.

South China ahould have equalis.

H.M.S. Kent

20 $1

409

Cpl. Wilson

20

30 28:

Sergt. Fessey

30

28

21 28

20 32 23

L. S. Ramsey JA. B. Thomas

A. B. Hapgood S. P. O. Marsh

Total

888688

AIR FORCE

490

ed shortly after the interval when LINCOLNS DEFEAT Yeung Shui-yick passed in to Cheuk Shek-kam, who shot straight at Meakin from six yards.

Apparent

Ford Frick, the new president of the National Baseball League, won national note an a sports writer and broadcaster for the Hearst newspapers,

ALL-STAR BASEBALL ENCOUNTER

Frick Favours Annual

Match

The new administration of the

National League is strongly in favour of continuing the all-star game with the American League ́as

CENTURY STAND

'IN JUNIOR LEAGUE

CRICKET MATCH

Kimm And Walch Defy Club Attack

SERVICE CORPS WIN

LEAGUE TABLES

FIRST DIVISION

P. W. L. D. F. A.Piş

South China 'A' 10 10 0 0 35 7.20

.12 5 2 5 29 20 15

.13' 75 1 27 21 15

11 4 2.6 23 21 18 .30 4 3 4 25 25 12 10 4 2.4 30 18-12

9 3 8 19 18 10 3 4 3 19 17: 13.4 8.1 19 48 D .12 2 6 4 17 25 8 11 17 3'11 81 5 .10 8 1 13 27 3 SECOND DIVISION

A second wicket stand between South China 'B' 12 7 3.2 28 21 14 Capt. Kimm and Capt. Walch Polic which yielded 115 runs, was res Club

Lincolns ponsible for the Royal Army, Ser-Recreio vice Corps triumph over the Athletic Hong Kong Cricket Club Juniors Fusiliers by 101 runs in their Second Divi-Navy sion League cricket encounter on East Lance

Artillery the H.K.C.C. ground on Saturday. St. Joseph's Capt. Kimm hit eight boun- Kowloon daries in his 42, while Capt., Walch, who passed the half cen-Navy

Lincolns tury mark, found the rails an 10 East Lance foccasions.

R.A.S.C.

Capt. Kimm, b Kilbee........ Dvr. Clarke, e Potter b Millbank Capt. Walch, b Kilbee

Brig. Seth Smith, Lb.w., b Mill

bank ....

Cpl. Ballard, e Flowerdew, b

Kilbea

L/Cpl. Crayford. b Robinson S/Sgt. Flood, cRitchie b Me-

Mahon

Cpl. Rogers, not out S.Q.M.S. Digby, b Robinson Pte. Forsyth, did not bat L/Cpl. Cooper, b McMahon Extras (B9, L.B.4)

Fall of the Wickets:

Artillery Athletle

42

South China 14 University

Fusiliers

8

65 Engineers

Club Eastern Kowloon

11 11 0 0 35 11 22 11 8 1 2 36 18′18 ..12 8 3 1.42:14.37 18 6 5 2 26 25 14 8 6 2 0 24" 9.19 ...11443 26 -18,11 .11 4 4 3 21 18 11 to 4 5.1 19 22 B 11 46 1.20 2 9 .12 1 6 5 14.32 7.

.10 2 7 1 12 29 5 ..12 0.105.45 2 THIRD DIVISION

4 East Lancs 6 R.A.S.C.

Lincolna

Air Force 25 Fusiliers 16 Radio

OR.A.M.C...

0

R.A.O.C. Police

1 Engineers 13 Railway

Recreto

184

A penalty awarded for a foul by All-Round Superiority Mathews against Lt Shek-you was taken by Cheuk Shek-kam, but, Meakin effected a splendid clearance.

Fan- The Lincoln's beat the Royal Alr From this clearance, the Lincolne Force at Chatham Road yesterday swept right up the field, catching afternoon by two goals. to nil in South China well out of position, their Third Division encounter. jand Malpas centred to Ridley, who

are for it, 100 per cent.," declared (Robinson The Lincolns had the best of the the president-elect. Ford C. Frick, Millbank match throughout and were far the who has taken over the duties re- McMahon. netted from close-in.

linquished by the veteran, John A. Kilbee Heydler.

annual fixture on the mid-1

1 for 21: 2 for 115; 3 for 120; 41 summer baseball programme. stimulate national interest and we

"We think it has done much to 177; 8 for 1799 for 184.

for 124; 5 for 132; 6 for 141; 7 for

South China "B"-Wong Wah-kai; superior team. Cheung Chi-ying and Lee Kam; Yau Wah-hing, Lim Tak-no, and Henry

The Air Force had the greatest) Yeung; Yeung Shul-yiek, Lat Shiu-difficulty in keeping the Lincolns at wing, Tsang King-ki, Cheuk Shek-kam bay, and credit is due to Beecham and Lee Shek-you.

and Everson who bore the brunt of Lincolns:-Meakin; Ash, Edmunion; the Airmen's defence, Dudley, Robson, Mathews, Malpas, Hig:| gins, Ridley and Baldry.

Despite every effort by the Lin- colne, they failed to score in the FUSILIERS BEAT SOUTH CHINA first half. Hibbet,

at left-half, played an (Continued from Page 4)

excellent game for the Lincolns, and it was due to his good feeding Coakley led his forwards well, and passing that Turner scored and tested Lee. Ho-Chuen with twice. several good drives. In the inside

SAPPERS DRAW ·

positions Bumster" and Hughes SERVICE CORPS AND worked hard for goals, and com bined well with their speedy wing-1 men, Creaty, and Evans.

Penalty Kick Brings Equaliser

An even encounter

was seen at:

Bowling

13. 0 69

10 0 46

2

17

2

1 48

3

5.1 0 7

Baseball Writers' Association, help-

Frick, in co-operation with the H. J. Armstrong. e Crayford,

H.K.C.C.

ed to engineer the national new-J, W. Pote-Hunt, run out

b Forayth paper poll on the make-up of the all-L. D. Kilbee. c He will urge the club owners, when G. H. D. Flowerdew, b Ballard star big league teams last summer.

Ballard, b Forsyth

vote for a continuation of the game G. A. Millbank, e Clarke, b they hold their annual meetings to. E. Jupp, c Walch, b Ballard on a similar basis of country-wide participation.

UNIVERSITY BEATEN

(Continued From Page 4)

E. L. Gosano, playing in the cen- tre-half position, gaye a good dis play, holding up numerous attacka and feeding his forwards with many accurate passes, pe

Farmer Outstanding

Forsyth.

R. S. W. Paterson, b Clarke

J. F. Potter, b Forsyth

J. A, Ritchie, not out

E McMahon, b Forsyth

W. R. Robinson, L.b.w, b Clarke.

Extras (B8, L.B.1)

Total

Fall of the Wicket

.14 12 2 0.71 19 24

11 21 41. 29-28: 8 3 2 42.18.18 .12 6 3 3 23 16 16 .11 7 4 0 36 18 14 .14 6 7 1 29 23 13 .13 6 6 1 23 30 13-

.12.4 7 1.19*28 9 .12 3. 8 1 12 35 7 .14 3 10 1 18 42 7 19 3 9 2 15 61 € .12 29 1 24 37

ATHLETIC HELD

(Continued From Page 4) held Tang for the majority of the game, speaks well for his perform- 2ance, in addition to which bis help

in the attack was not inconsider able. Gough was quiet during the opening period, but it was mainly through him that, the Police con- tinued the pressure towards the chd, for he was here, there, and

everywhere without ever losing sight of the expectant

Ho Kar

17

21

keung

3

5

2

12

2

83

1 for 22; 2 for 30; 3 for 31; 4 for

Defence Ontpositioned South China's defence was fairly i sound, but Cheong Hon-Yeung and Cheung Pak-wing often lost their positions, and Lee was called on Sookunpoo yesterday, when the Entre-half was the outstanding player,

For the winners Farmer, at cen-for 63; 8 for 83; 10 for 83.

45; 5 for 49; 6 for 49; 7 for 51; more than once to effect a hurried gineers and the Royal Army Ser-While N. Whitley, on his right, gave Ballard clearance. The halves were weak, vice Corps shared two goals in the him good support. and it was seldom that they were Third Division., successful in stopping the fast- There was no score in the first moving Fusiliers attack Their half. Woods opened the score for passes were usually too hard, and the Sappers, but Hopcroft equalised inaccurate, and not once did they for the Service Corps from a keep up with their forwards when penalty. the latter launched an attack.

Forsyth It was not until late in the first Walch half that MacNider opened the scor-Clarke ing. The University, however, quick-

Bowling

15 2 36 14. 2

1 0 .9 5 0 1

2

28

5

0.

ly equalised through Goon, who LINCOLNS BEAT EAST LANCS scored from the. circle's edge the

ball, hitting King's hand and being

Tang Yat-Ming was no match for ENGINEERS BEAT ATHLETIC deflected into the net.

the burly Coakley, and, though putting in a lot of work, he accom plished little,

(Continued From Page 4)

FAST GAME

8|

The Police forwards were oute standingly energetic in their ap- proach work, but over-keenness often spoiled a nice movement.

Perkins Shines

Chrle Pile opened rather un- steadily, but his later work-was- without fault, and, with Blackburn giving of his best, nothing was lost. Perkins made some memor- able saves in the opening, stages of the game, but due to the good work of the forward-defence had very little to do Inter.

The Athletic 'forwards suffered to a lesser extent the same fault as their forward opponents 'but the shots which Perkins had to deal with were good ones and atoned in part for others more erratic.

Ho Kar-keung, with Yeung and

2 Au Ping-ming, staged some very clever short passing movementa IN which took them right through the Police defence on several occasions but Tang Kwong-sum was the real Late in the second half the win- (Continued From Page 5)

live-wire of nearly every attack. ning goal was scored by MacNider cent. record in the Second Division Tang was well served by the ac- after Whitley had brought the ball by beating the East Lancs by an curate passing of Ho Chor-yin, and into the centre.

only goal.

ho in turn plied his inside for Clayton, the Lincolns rightwards with many openings during Owinger, was dangerous and sent in the first period.

t.

The forwards combined well to

Au Kim-fung provided the Ex- gether, but were slow in their gineers defence with an abundance, movements, and did not avail them-of exercise and with the support UNIMPRESSIVE DEBUT BY RADIO selves of the splendid passes by of his inside forwards with some

some very fine drives which were The halves, under Lal Kwok- Chan Tak-On, who was the only contrasting close-movement play

skilfully handled by Harmsworth in chiu, were consistent in their, ef- (Continued From Page 4)

forts for the duration of the game. dangerous forward South China which was as effective as the En-

the East Lancs' goal. had on view. Ip Yun-Po and, Li gineers' open style.

The best incidents in the game

although in the latter part their The Radio managed to hold the Wing-On did good work at times. Wong Wing-niu cleverly held his Signals to a goalless draw in the

were witnessed after Rush had work was entirely defensive. and gave Saunders some awkward end and placed his forwarde in first half, and then at the

scored for the Lincolns. In the Neither Mak Sui-hon or his part- ahota to deal with.

second half of the match,

ner, Wong Sik-ping, appeared at good openings as the result of mencement of the second half broke Harmsworth ran out of goal to at all comfortable, even during the Fusiliers Score First hard-working efforts. Lo. Wal-man away to score through their centre-

clear, and gave Rush the chance to period when play was even. Under The Fusillers started with a was the stumbling block of quite half, J. Singh, after Marsh had

continued, pressure they fell away rush, and following a run and cena number of Engineer attacks and made an attempt to clear and had score into an open goal... tre by Cresty, Hughes opened the he showed up notably well in the fallen in the attempt. scoring after Lee had partially tackling phases. cleared.

Athletic Take Lend

Raids were frequent at both ends, lead was short-lived when Callard

and both goalkeepers were kept went through and netted well out busy dealing with shots. Saunders of Li's reach.

did well to turn a splendid effort A freekick for the Engineers from Ip Yun-Pe round the pust, and gave Darby: an opening,, and, got- a little later, made a wonderful ting his head to the ball, he netted save from a shot by the same well past Li to give the Engineers player.

the lead

KOWLOON INDIANS TAKE THE LEAD

(Continued From Page 4)

com-

work.

The keen activity displayed by altogether and their clearances the East Lancs after this unfor- were both weak and erratic. Sul The Signals then kept attacking.tunate hap, lent spice to the Tin-lim, however, was alert in the but could not get past the Radio! At the other end Ip Yun-Po went Within the first few minutes of

defenders who were continually game and thrilling tussles goal-keeping capacity and showed

all! ley when in the act of shooting.through Au Kim-fung, but the minute to go the soldiers made Colclough in the defence saved the through, but was robbed by Gair play the Athletle took the lead pulled up for "kicks." With only were seen the Lincolns" goal, meritable decision in all his

but clever work by Dobbs and

The Athletic should have taken final attempt and in a goalmouth. aituation.

the lead from a penalty, but Tang scramble Dilly, centre-half, netted Lincolns: Taylor; Dobbs, Colclough; Kwong-sum sent the ball incon the equaliser with a scoop shot Maughan, Wildy, Potter; Clayton, Har cevably wide with a very weak ef from three yards range.

per, Rush, McGuinness and Toyne, fort.

East Lance- Harmsworth; Steel,. Police-Perkins;: Blackburn, C. Pile; Harwood; Harley, Walkden, Eckelsey: Parker, Gough, Brooks; Green, Ste Griffin, Riddings, Botting, Thorpe and phens, Johnston, Channings and Moss. Swaine,

Athletic Suf Tin-Hm; Mak Sal-hen; Wong Sik-ping; Ho Chor-yin, Lai South China, pressed hard after Howlett tested the Athletic

JUNIOR SHIELD HOLDERS WIN Kwok-chiu, Ng Tak-wing: Tang Kwong- the interval, and during a melee, custodian, but the Athletic for

apm, Yeung, Kan-po, Ho Kar-keang, Wheeler accidentally handled, wards got away from Li's clearance G. Singh, the Indians centres

As Ping-ming and Li Hung-ching From the apot kick, Li Wing-On and Slack was forced to pass be- forward, who scored four of the put South China on level terme, hind to Sellet to clear. Cheong goals, now heads the Tournament

enough to suppress the heavy Navy. attacks Both sides attacked. determinedly, Moon-wing, however, intercepted goal-scoring list with 17 goals to bla The Eastern as testa were very but it was not until the last min- and scored a good equalisar,

Da Silva in goal was not reliable, ute that the winning goal came

credit, Senior, of the R.A.S.C., with weak and few fast minute and was in trouble on every occa

sion the ball came near the goal give Lee no chance with a well- shot entered the goal with Li Kwo Throughout the game the Indians chances given them, and twice first half, and Dodds (2) and Cook directed drive.

Dodds opened the scoring in the Pekee unsighted.

were faced with very little oppoal- should have secured a goal. South China: Lee Ho-chuen, Chennig han, Wong Wing-niu, and Chani Sirui tion, but their forwards were unable Kwok Ying Wal was very smart added goals after the interval. Hon young Cheong Fak-wing, Wan man; Chow Yiq-chung, Lo Chai-wen, to shoot in the first half, only one on the right wing but was not ably dilbert, Cooki Paat; Doddy Males Teo-lok, Tang Yat-ming, Mok Vim Au Kim fing, To Walkkuen and Cheong

Navy HeSweeney; Soloman, Dixon; sang Chan Tak-On, Ip Yun-po, Hul Moon-wing,

Supported by Law Kim Fal and the Hague, O'Donnell And Adams Tu-wong, Li Wing-on and Chan Shed- thletic

half, however remainder of the forward line. Basteia. F. de Silva; Pal Tinge Improve In the defence Lai Ting Chot and chot, Fant Lee Bing-tong Ng

scored Fung Ya Wai played excellent

kiptan Kim-tály Kyok Ying val, football but were not strong-yeang and Wang Shin-tingly

Fung wol-po: Bang Ning-hing, Ho Chi-

(Continued From Page 4)

Eastern Weak

Cresty passing in, for Bumster to again, took the lead when. Darby's reign of supremaoy teen hanseery lovin teltely the many After the Intergal the Engineers 15, being displaced after a long changes were made. The forwards

Pasillers Saunders

Wheeler, Gaff

ley; Edge McHugh, Bumater, Coakley, Hughes and Evans

Kwong wing, and Lo Regineerss--Bellet

Darby, Howlett

apps goal being scored. Teng During the secon man; To Ho the whe texm Slack, Tucker, ment

Budden, by Pinto, the inside righ

area,

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