1932-07-26 — Page 20

Hongkong Telegraph 港電新報 士蔑新聞 All

THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH.

DOUBLE ACTION

means

Listerine Tooth Paste on a Pro-phy-lac-tic Tooth Brush

Only this *DOUBLE ACTION cleansing is safe for his

[OTHERS know that neglect of children's

MOTHERS

first teeth often results in serious malfor mation of the second teeth forming beneath the gum surfaces. Beauty may be marred—health impaired!

Don't take chances. The double action cleans- ing of Listerine Tooth Paste on a Pro-phy-lac-tie Tooth Brush will safely clean and protect your children's teeth and gums as nothing else can. The amazing new deansing agents used in Listerine Tooth Paste are distributed over every tooth surface-into every tooth crevice-by means of the notched bristle surface and tufted end of the Pro-phy-lac-tic Tooth Brush. There

Pro-phy-lac-tie

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TOOTH BRUSHES

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delicate teeth

are no harsh abrasives in Listerine Tooth Paste, nothing to scratch the delicate tooth enamel. There are no loose, lifeless bristles in the Pro- phy-lac-tic Tooth Brush to irritate the guns. Don't risk gritty and unsafe dentifrices on your child's teeth! Don't use unsanitary, infe- rior tooth brushes in his mouth! Try Listerine -Prophylactic Double Action Cleansing!

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LISTERINE

TOOTH PASTE

TUESDAY, JULY 26, 1932.

MAKING JAPAN AND THE

A CHAMPION

TENNIS PINNACLE

NOT A BIRTH RIGHT

OLYMPICS

CONFIDENCE IN TRACK STARS

SUCCESS EXPECTED

SWIMMING

CANTABS BEAT OXFORD

"DARK BLUES"

WIN POLO

SPORT ADVTS.

HONGKONG FOOTBALL,

ASSOCIATION.

Clubs wishing to join or to rotain membership of the Asso. ciation and League are reminded that July 31st is the closing date for entries for both.

W. E. HOLLANDS,

Hon. Secretary. Hongkong, July 20th, 1932.

Watching

such players 13 Japan's political and military Borotra, Perry, Austin, Mrs. Affairs have not checked prepara- Moody, and Mrs. Whittingstall at tona for sending the

There was a great gathering at nation's the Bath Club when Oxford und Wimbledon, one is led to believe strongest athletic forces to that the tuent strokes they pos-Angeles for the Olympic Games. swimming and water-polo fixture. Los Cambridge met in the annual Besa and the clever tactles they Having broken through for the As expected Cambridge won all display on the courts are entirely first time to win a gold medal in the swimming events, but in the HONGKONG natural; that, to them, in fact, the track and field competition, 60 and 100 yards events the Old lawn tennis is a gift.

through the triumph of little Pauline, J. E. Durkin, put up per- Nothing is further from the Mikio Oda in the hop, step and formances much speedier than ex- truth. A lawn tennis champion jump at Amsterdam four years pected. Is not born-he has to make him-ngo, Japan now envisions a much self by hard and sound practice. and he can only maintain his akill, when once he has arrived, by still more practice.

RIDING SCHOOL. (Old Jockey Club Stables, Causeway

Bay). Tel. 28502.

Lessons, in riding, jumping and horsemanship. Schooling ponies Ponies for hire. and horses.

wider range of conquest.

In the 50 yards Durkin led at the turn, then Bowman drew level, The land of the rising sun this land ten yards from the finish both year has high hopes of sweeping were fighting hard, but Bowman's the first three places in the hop, urm came through very quickly | As a matter of fact, the only step and jump, capturing the for the touch, and this just gave natural qualities essential to abroad jump, giving the Americans the verdict to Cambridge. champion are a good head. and a real contests in the pole vault and In the 100 vards Newbold went and horses. good eye, good lungs, and fairly high Jump, besides competing on clean away from the start in an Keeping ponies good muscles. Thousands of even terms with the Finnish dis effort to beat the 'Varsity record Ponics and saddlery for sale. tensis players possess these quali-tance runners for the classic of 67 3-sec. At half-distance he! ties and could become champions marathon Iaurel wreath.

led Durkin by two yards, with if they had the leisure, willingness TRACK BIGGEST AIM.

Bowman a yard away.

CAPT. N. A. ROJDESTVIN, and intelligence to learn correct

in third strokes, to plan good tactics, and preparing to defend

Oda has surpassed himself in place. There was no change until

Manager. the triple the Inst length, when Bowman to develop good strategy.

jump title. He beat the world sprinted, but he failed to There are

catch very

few junior record of A. W. Winter of Aus- Durkin, while Newbold failed tounaments in France and very tralia with a distance of 1 feet, equal record by the nurrow mar- few bandicap events. Young 14 Inches in the national Japan-jin of 1-5aue. players are rightly kept to friendly ese championships last October. The burly Stortford Coleman games and to practice: if they enter open tournaments they are Nambu brond-jumped 26 feet, 2 yards, drawing away

meet Chuhei had an easy journey in the from quickly beaten.

Inches, two inches beyond the Cambridge second string, R. L. world record held by Sylvio Cator Armstrong, afler passing the 100 of Haiti. Nombu and another yards mark. P. G. Bostock, who jumper, Oshima, are both capable Swam firal string for Oxford, of 50 feet in the hop, step and struck a particularly bad patch, jump, so that Japan will be amply as he was 20see, below form and fortified in this field event.

actually finished fourth.

Oxford won the water polo by

"LIKE FATHER....”

In the Fame

STRONG IN OTHER JUMPS.

to

440 the

Kimura, the high jumper with goals to 1. Britton scored four a mark of more than G feet

goals and Durkin one for Oxford. Newbold scared for ineltes and Nishida, who has pole Results:

Cambridge. vaulted feet 7 inches, are lonk-

6

ed upon as contenders in special-dom College. U.S.A., and Clare), 50 yards.-W. P. Bowman (Bow- ties usually dominated by the 1; J. E. Durkin (St. Paul's and Americans.

Japan took two of the first sixton and Balliol), 3; G. II. Baines

Queen's). 2; L. T. Stevenson (Clif-) places in the 1928 marathon, with (Charterhouse and St. John's), 4. Yamadi fourth and Tsuda sixth. Time. 25 3-5sec. Won by 6 inches. They might have done better had ( they rated their pace a little bet-hop's Stortford and Triniiv), 1; J.

100 yards.-J. C. Newbold (Bis-) ter through the early stages but E. Durkin, 2: W. P. Bowman, 3: Foth dropped back after alternat-M. L. Underhill (Shrewsbury and ing in the lead much of the way. Queen's). 4. Times, Out of the pack the Algerian, El Won by 2 yards.

67 4-5sec. Quafi, galloped to victory.

440 yards.-F. Coleman

(Bi-

The recent performances of two shop's Stortford and Emmanuel). new marathoners, Takahashi and 1; R. L. Armstrong (Brighton and Yahagi, have rekindled Japanese Emmanuel), 2; W. Koren (Prince- hopes. Both, in the official try town and Queen's), 3; P. G. Bos- ont, bettered the Olympie record tock (Charterhouse and Queen's). of 2:32:35 4/5, set by Hannes 4. Won by 12 yards. Kolehmainen of Finland in 1920.

Relay, 300 yards.--Cambridge 1. Yahagi was timed in 2:31:31 and Oxford 2. Cambridge led through- Takahashi in 2:32:26.

out to win by 2 yards.

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HAGEN?

The name's fami- Walter Hagen, Jr., pulting at Fresh Meadows, dis- plays golfing form not unlike that of his famous father.

I think this policy of the French Federation is wise writes Reue

Lacost. Too much tournament play is not good for a youngster: it spoils his style and tires him physically, and anyone who be- comes "junior champion" soon thinks that he has nothing to learn that he will naturally-be-: come a real champion. And that. of course, is a complete fallacy: it takes from five to ten years of hard work to learn correct strokes, and even real champions have to work hard to make their strokes better and better.

FRIENDLY PRACTICE. A young player must always practise more than he plays: that is to say, he must spend many more hours in. improving his strokes than in using them to win games and sels. I believe that I owe most of my skill to the hund- rods of hours that I have spent in playing against various walls.. And I must thank the wall against which I played this spring for my decent play in the French cham- pionship.

The Frenchi "Musketeers” always owed much of their good form to their friendly. practice games: we always play without knowing too much about the score, with the iden of practising our weakest strokes rather than using our best ones. Practising with Borotra, I play from the net while he stays at the back of the court, and Cochet and Brugnon deli- berately exchange backhands whenever they practise together.

The same friendly spirit tainly helps the English and American playora to improve their atrokes whenever they practise be- tween themselves, but I suspect that that is not very often: there are too many tournaments in Eng- Jand.

cer-

Of course, a young player does need

lournament experience—I would say even the experience of foreign tournaments. And I am certain that Perry, Austin, and Hughes owe most of the improve- ment in their «hy to the various tours which were arranged for them by the English Association. But a sound balanen must always be maintained between practice and tournament plny If ond wishen Ito go on improving and to avòld

staloness.

10 TO 1 IT'S A

CAPSTAN

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