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The Daily Telegraph from London, Greater London, England • 18

Location:
London, Greater London, England
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH FRIDAY JULY 31 1930 is OFFICERS IN THE MAKING BRIGHT OLYMPIC POLO HOPES KIPLING IN HIS LATER YEARS NEW HELP FOR EMPIRE TRADE Rugby Football RECORD SCORE BY BRITISH XV SOUTH BIG LOSS OF HIS SON AND ARGENTINIANS CHIEF RIVALS 5000 BOYS FROM 63 PUBLIC SCHOOLS IN CAMP AT TIDWORTH FROM OLR SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE THE WAR ADVANTAGE OF POMES EXHIBITION 3000000 VISITORS EXPECTED OVERRUN ARGENTINE SIDE NIL THE STORY OF MARY POSTGATE FROM A SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT After nearly two preparation the Empire Exhibition at Johannesburg the first to be held outside the British Isles is reaching its last stages It wall be opened on Sept 15 by the Governor-General the Earl of Clarendon and it is expected to attract approximately 3000000 visitors in the four months during which it will be open BUENOS AIRES Thursday By HPHE British Rugby Union team which is countries entered touring the Argentine gained another polo tournament are Eng The letters below are selected from smashing victory yesterday defeating the tina Germany Hungary those sent by readers of The Daily Argentine Pacific Athletic team by 62 points Unless Mexico newcomer- 7 i i nntirtnnl vxlx rxnoH imo n-wx- Telegraph discussing Mr Oliver Bald- i I ins is trie highest score ever made by a wins address at the Summer our a vjsjjng team here the previous best being the London Academy of Music on 58 0 by a touring team against Belgrano in Ike Argentinians are certain to iqjn and their London compatriots are v-" j- of success Their team will be a 2fi-t esterday display by the visitors was rated at eight goaU far the most convincing since the begin- star player and the rest of the side ung of their tour They combined better selected from Roberto and Diego and the handling tackling and kicking were Andrea Gazotti Juan Alberti more certain This was probably the result Duggan each of whom is rated at six goals of the lower temperature and the use of the England will also have a 26-goal side com- heavier ball from England as compared posed pt Capt Fowler (6) Capt mle 16) with the lighter ball used the opening 1 Capt Dawnay (7) and Capt Guinness (7) games of the tour Army players The home side played up strongly at the! 1 hey have never played together am As a Canadian I had the honour for the six years of Mr close friendship and confidence and if space would allow I could refute every statement made the Mr Oliver Baldwin out know each To the Editor of The Daily Telegraph Sir Mr Oliver address on The exhibition is to be the peak point of Rudyard Kipling is unfair and unkind LORD JUSTICE GREER after opening a Nursery Shelter in Battersea Park yesterday 2nd Bn The Royal Brigade Commander The contingents are quartered Park: Imperi County Kelly King Oakham Portsmouth Peter Symonds Repton St Albans St Sedbergh Sherborne Stonvhurst Sutton Valence i Weymouth Pennings: i -St Leatherhead Manwood's Worksop i Worcester Elizabeth Wellington West Buckiand Ipswich Rutlish Winchester Westminster Bradfield Guildford Nottingham Taunton Victoria 1 to the unsettled state of equipment of each camp tents with braziers where be dried at once began with march discipline drill and demonstration of a defensive position will up to inter-company and exercises on Monday and Wednesday the camps will meanwhile there are tactical some boys courses for other specialists and night TIDWORTH Thursday About 5000 boys from 0-i public schools members of the -Junior OTC are assembled near this mportant military centre for training There are two camps the forces at each being divided into our battalions of four companies There is no make-belief about this soldiering: The boys were in earnest and when after advancing in extended order they flung themselves down in the prone position taking advantage of the least scrap of cover it was done as if some deadly sniper was lurking two or three hundred yards away They were practising on a wide plateau and under the eyes of battalion commanders of the Regular Army the exercises they had learned on their school grounds Most of the boys wore shorts which left their knees bare but this did not deter them from flinging themselves down and out of gnt even where the thistles were thickest As they doubled forward by platoons and came into action with rifles and Lewis cuns or retired good formation one felt that here indeed was the disciplined material from which the future officers of the Regular and Territorial Armies would be drawn WHERE THE SCHOOLS ARE Later I watched the platoons form into companies the companies into battalions and the whole brigade march back to camp and dinner The boys swung along to their own vocal music and a few minutes after being dismissed were seated in the marquees which serve them as mess rooms enjoying a substantial meal of stewed steak new potatoes and cabbage with apple pie and custard to follow Dinner over the lads sought the ablution sheds where stripped to the waist they plunged about in the water Some had obtained passes for the afternoon and these gave their boots and buttons an extra operations for all Basset of the Regiment is various school as follows At Tidworth Brighton Cambridge Cheltenham Chigwell Dean Close Denstone Derby Dorchester Eastbourne Emanuel Felsted Harrow Hurstpierpoint At Tidworth Eton Lancing Beaumont Dover Herne Bay Dartford Monmouth Birkenhead Perse Grantham Framlingham St Lawrence Hertford Maidstone Bloxham All Hallows Hereford Cathedra! Whitgift Having regard the weather the includes drying wet clothes can Training which platoon how to take up advance by stages inter-battalion Tuesday On disperse In the courses for signallers and the celebrations of 50th anniversary It is being held in Milner Park the Witwatersrand Agricultural 100-acre show grounds within 10 minutes of the centre of the city Diamonds worth £250000 will be shown in a special hali So that they can be guarded easily the hall has been built without windows and with only one door Underneath is a concrete strong room where the stones will be kept when the exhibition is not open Among many other interesting features is a 160ft working model of the Victoria Falls with the spray rising realistically to a height nearly as great as the depth of the falls last by irresponsible Mr Baldwin said There is nobody Hy--ing who knew Mr Kipling in certain moods as I knew Well my notion is that though Mr Baldwin knew Mr Kipling certain moods he failed utterly to understaru 1 Kipling No doubt Mr Kipling was broken by his early death which was natural but even this tragedy failed to crush his they style nh is a try down after nine minutes Unwin customed to the place winch he will (Army and Rosslyn Park) being the scorer heJtand ther Pones 3re also The British players soon settled down how-j ever and overwhelmed their opjxments BETTER MOUNTED Combining splendidly they set up movement I after movement and crossed for six more tries before the interval but only one was! converted At half-time the score was 23 0 They will be at a disadvantage power for they are relyinv on their mental mounts whereas the Argi-n OXFORD CLASS LIST The Transvaal Chamber of Mines which Spartan courage or tender heart for in 30 have the best that their country can which means that they will be of inten class On the other hand the Argent oe short of first-class practice The been spending the summer in Paris plan of coining over to play in Lon frustrated by the weather Pr therefore seem fairly balanced with in favour of Argentina Our team will be directed bv Co Fanshawe and the Argentinians oiiuce itiona! is Will have ii heir was odds 1) I QUICK SCORING Prince Obolensky the Oxford and England three-quarter who had been neglected in the first half came into the picture three minutes after the interval with one of his brilliant individual efforts and scored a fine try A Brett (Oxford University) quickly followed with a penalty goal after which the defence went completely to pieces and the British attack ran riot adding points in 13 minutes Nelson the famous No 2 o' Mr 1 i side of his opportunities and was top scorer with i Germany have paid Hurlinsrham merit of engaging (o1 Gannon to ma tournament The excellence of the guarantees his success controls about 40 per cent of the production of gold has a large pavilion in which the whole system of gold mining will be illustrated LARGE ORDERS EXPECTED A huge lighthouse has been built in the grounds and its beams will be v-isible at night at Pretoria 38 miles away The pavilions of the various Governments which include Great Britain Canada Australia New Zealand Rhodesia Kenya Nigeria and Ceylon will of course be among the major attractions Large orders are likely to be secured by the English firms who are exhibiting South Africa has just reached the position of being Great best customer and it is expected that as a result of the enterprise of these firms and of the Government another 10 per cent of South requirements will be bought from Britain Recently South Africa placed her biggest printing order a first edition of 50000 copies of a 600-page catalogue of the exhibition WORLD CONFERENCE ON POWER REVISED HANDICAPS polish and with swagger cane in hand left camp for Tidworth Thus the day passed at Tidworth Park Camp where Col Crosbie is the Brigade Commander It was much the Parties from both camps will visit the Army Co-operation Squadron at Old Sarum and there will be anti-gas lectures and demonstrations The boys will not however be brought into contact with gas same at Tidworth Pennings Camp some six i at all either in a gas chamber or in any miles away where Lieut -Col A other wav HONOUR SCHOOL OF MODERN HISTORY The examiners have issued the following class list in the Honour School of Modern History CLASS I Barnes (Merton) de Groot (Ch Ch) Dundas (Ch Ch) Dox (Oriel) Harris (Inn) Haseall (CCC) Hooper (WorcJ Mathias (Jes) A Morgan (Magd) Prestwich (Hert) I) Price tKeble) YY Bea (Campion H) Robinson (Hert) 1 Shaw i Magd Solomon iMagd) Swanzy (New Coll) Trevor-Roper (Ch Ch) Henriuues (Somerville) Morgan (Lady Marg Hh CLASS II Anstey (Exeter) Baggaley (Keble) Bailey (Jes) Be-ale (Exeter) A Berry (Jes) Bowsher (Merton) Bill (Keble) Brett (CCC) Bruce-Mitford Utrii Button (Baliiol) Carter (Balliol) Clarke (Trim) Clarke (Oriel) Cock-burn (Line) Couper (Exeter) Cox (Pemb) A Crowe (St Edm Crowson (Exeter) A Cruse (St Edm H) Davies (Jes) A Davies (Trin) Donovan (Hert) Duval (Ch Ch) Edwards (Jes) Ellefsen (Keble) A Elliott (Wadh) Elliott (Keble) Emanuel (Trin Etherington (Keble) A Evans (Pemb) Evans (Balliol) Fink (UnivJ Fitzgerald-Moore (Hertf) Gould 'St Cath's Soci ti A Gould (Wore) Green Wilkinson (Magd) Guy (Wadh) Harrison Ch Ch) A -J Healey (St Edm H) Hill (Pemb) Holden (Balliol) YV Hooper Hotchkiss (Jes) Hughes (Balliol) Hughes (Balliol) A YV Hurst (Merton) Jakeway (Exeter) YV Kemp (Exeter) YV Langford (St John's) Langhorne (St Edm H) Latimer (Ch Ch) Ledward (Univ) Lines Lockwood (Wore) A Macintyre (Line) McIntyre (Exeter) McJannet (Oriel) Maggs (St Martin (Keble) Metcalfe (St Miller (BXC) Mott Xarasimhan 1 (St Soc) X'icolson (Balliol) 0 Connor (Merton) (Wadh) A ORorke (Tnn) Parker (Balliol) Parry (Jes) Paynter (Univ) Powers (Hertf) HPT Pride aux (Trin) Hon I Prittie (Ch Ch) A A Radice (Exeter) Randall (Ch Ch) Reed (St A Rimmer (St Benet- H) v- Robey (St Roemmele (BNC) A Ronaldson (Trin) Salkeld-Green (Herts (Herts) Saxton (Queen's) o' sl- Seaman St J5eIby Ch Ct Sen (St Soci 1 X1 I Exeter) Smith (St butdifde (BXC) Sutton (Keble) K- Tate (BXC) Lawn Tennis ROYAL NAVY AND MARINES CHAMPIONSHIPS MOCKLER REACHES FINAL Suign-Lt-Comdr Ii Mockler was the LONDON POLICE PAY MR LLOYD GEORGE ON SHILLING SHOCKERS America Now Have Four Men on Ten-Goal Mark The Hurlingham Committee at their usual end-of-the-season revision of handicaps dealt with the rating of 67 players and added 114 new names to the official list an unprecedented number which emphasises the vitality of the game Six of the eight players encaged in the I matches for the Westchester Cup have been Of the American team Win on Guest 's raised from 8 to in Iglehart from to 10 and Eric Pedley from 7 to 9 wh le Cecil Smith the brilliant No 2 of Texas side has been raised from 9 to 10 Thus America according to Hurling-Jheir ruling have with Tommy Hitch-morning cock who could not make the journey to England four players on the maximum handicap mark the only four 10-goal men in the world Of the England players ft ryrrell-R Martin the captain goes from 8 to 9 and Hughes the spear-head of th rT hom to 8 Capt Humphrey Guinness b-ng similarly Of the better known players to be advanced in the handicap are A Horsbrugh Porter of the 12th Royal Lancers from 5 to 6 Lakin from 4 to 5 laird Iaiuis Monnt-batten (4 to 5) Lord Cowdray (2 to 3) the Hon Keith Rous (2 to 3) Traill (2 to 3) the Duke of Roxburghe (1 fo 2) the Hon YV Astor (1 to 2) and Lowenstein (I to 2) INCREASE FOR THE HIGHER GRADES As the result of conferences between Scotland Yard officials and the Home Office senior Metropolitan Police officers are to receive slight increases in salary This stabilisation of salaries will affect higher grades in the force from sub-divisional inspector to Deputy-Assistant Commissioner Present rates of pay are Sub-Divisional Inspectors: £391 rising by £10 yearly to £422 Chief Inspectors: £440 rising bv £15 yearly to £503 Superintendents £550 rising by £25 yearly to £700 Chief Constables £800 rising by £25 yearly to £1000 Deputy Assistant Commissioners: £1000 rising by £25 yearly to £1200 PLOTS ALWAYS GOOD Shilling shockers were praised by Mr Lloyd George yesterday' when he spoke at the celebrations at Mold Flintshire to mark the centenary of the birth of Daniel Owen who was a tailor at Mold and one erf the greatest of elsh fiction writers Mr Lloyd George addressed a gathering of about 8000 at Park on the outskirts of the town and said If you want a perfect plot you should read shilling shockers The plot there is ai wayrs excellent They are the tinned goods of literature excellent to take on a short journey but I would not live on Mr Lloyd George advised the young people of Wales to give up for a few weeks some of the rubbish which is being turned novel after novel and devote that time to reading Daniel Owen DELEGATES CHOSEN The Prime Minister has nominated the following delegates to represent the Government at the third World Power Conference to be held in Washington in September VISCOUNT FALMOUTH Vice-President Conjoint Conference of Public Utility Associations: MR GEDYE Member of the British National Committee of the World Power Conference MR HARDIE Director of the Gas Light and Coke Co MR KENNEDY President of the Institution of Electrical Engineers Dll LEA Senior Scientific Officer Building Research Station Department of Scientific and Industrial Research MR CHARLES MERZ Member of the British National Committee of the World Power Conference SIR ARCHIBALD PAGE Chairman of the Central Electricity Board MR RODGERS Deputy Director British Electrical and Allied Association DR SINNATT Director of Fuel Research Department of Scientific and Industrial Research and MR WILLIAMS Assistant Director of Electrical Engineering at the Admiralty The second congress of the International Commission on Large Dams will be held concurrently Yvith the conference TYRO CUP SEMI-FINAL In the second semi-final of the Tyro Cup at Hurlingham yesterdav the Cyclones with a start of 3i goals defeated Manor Park by 7 goals to 7 and thus qualified to meet Oik Lawn in the final to-morrow Manor Farm were within half a point of long letters to me in the latter months of his life he reflected unbelievable kindness and compassion toward all mankind Indeed his gentleness increased as his life closed His last long letter to me (written on his 70th birthday and received three days after his death) was one of surpassing humanity perhaps the most splendid of those 30 letters Mr Baldwin states that all the lo-ely side of Mr nature all the jungle book all the playing with children all the love for people went like I say that these statements are untrue and un-British On Aug 8 1933 I had the honour of lunching at with Mr and Mrs Kipling and for three hours that day Mr Kipling poured forth from Yvells of unguessed YY-isdom comments concerning nations and affairs human which at all times were tempered with a tolerance that distinguished the great Englishman They were not those of a man sour on the world as Mr Baldwin would have us believe Indeed that day Mr Kipling was -ery much the boy who had never grown up He 'aughed and joked with much abandon he did it on soup and prune-whip for even then his stomach was acting badly Does this confirm or contradict Mr statement that Mr Kipling concentrated himself in revenge and looked to me to avenge his death No one will take Mr Baldwin seriously either in Canada or in the USA for there the grand things of the mind that Mr Kipling bequeathed to mankind are deepl-rooted in responsive appreciative soil Yvhich holds the memory of his immortal name Yours truly BARRY (of Toronto) Kenilworth Hotel WC 1 July 30 Sir One wonders how Mr Oliver Baldwin can seek publicity by belittling Rudyard Kipling Why did he not make his statements while Kipling was alive and could have denied or endorsed his assertions Surely the man who wrote If could not condescend to such narrow-mindedness and irreligioi as is suggested Certainly the sentiments expressed in Mary Postgate are not those which guided latter days or his writings Mr Oliver Baldwin should study works more thorough! yl Yours ERNEST DAVID PRESTON Captain RNVR Organiser Kipling Society 0-erseas House SW 1 July 30 Mary Postgate Sir In the first part of his address on Rudyard Kipling Mr Oliver Baldwin states that he (Kipling) preached war was coming He tried to lead people to I join the army to prevent He also declares that Kipling was tor-j tnented by his conscience because he i wanted war and urged it on by inciting people to wave flags and beat Hoyv does he explain the contradiction of these statements? The story of Mary Postgate illustrates truthfully the extreme passion of hatred which is generated in the women of I an invaded country when they see their men or their children killed before their eyes That that hatred existed in England during the last war is as much an historical fact as the discoY-ery of America Can any work of art which seeks to chronicle truth be described as wicked What ground is there for the statement that Imperialism died in Kipling after 1915? It might flash across the mind of Mr Oliver Baldwin that if England in general and the Baldwin family in particular had heeded the solemn warning against German rearmament delivered in the great last speech to the people of this country which he made at the dinner in 1935 there might be to-day fair prospect of that peace in Europe which is not desired only by pacifists Sincerely yours ROBERTS London Wt July 29 The Post-War Stories Sir Two of Mr Oliver statements about the late Mr Kipling and his work are grotesquely untrue He says that after the death of 2nd Lt John Kipling his (Rudyard creation No author has given such true glimpses of the post-war world as those which occur in Beaut and Wish- bt IrS- 5- 'vjrilhtA Miss Et 6'1- 2 fi 6 1: Mrs Pitman Miss Thomson bt Miss 1 Cater Sirs 0 Thompson 6 3 6 2 Unwin a lively three-quarter made the most! five tries Hancock (Birkenhead Park) Prince Obolenskv Knowles (Birkenhead Park and England) and I Huskisson each scored two tries and Prescott (Harlequins) and Pratten (Blackheath) one each Brett converted seven first to reach the final of the Royal Navy and Royal Marines singles championship at the All-England Club YVimbledon yesterday after a close first set which went to 22 games against Lt G' Hoare (RM) Mockler won by 12 10 (5 2 Lt YV Muspratt the holder and Sub-Lt Vavasour won third round ties and will meet this The singles was won by Rear- Admiral Royle who beat Engnr- Rear-Admiral Nelson Results SINGLES CHAMPIONSHIP i und Lt Hoarr (EM) bt Major YY bh Ii wen Siri -It a-mdr Muckar Urndr Jeffery 6 4 6 4 Lt Ll Musoratt hoider) bt Sub-Lt sturdy 6-3: Sub-Lt YV Vavasour bt Sub-Lt Buckeridge 6 2 6 3 Semi-final Mockler bt Hoare 12 10 6 DOUBLES CHAMPIONSHIP Second und Lmdr Jeffery A Capt Wood house bt Sub Lt Sturdy Sub-Lt Arbuthnot 6-4 Sub-Lt Ward a Sub-Lt A Phillips bt Sub-Lt Spurway Sub-Lt Turner 6 2 0 6 6 3 Sgn-Lt-Cmdr Nicholson Sub-Lt Selwyn-St ringer bt Cad-t Alington Cadet Elstob Major Webb-Bowen Lt Hoare (EM) bt Cadet Kingcome Cadet 71 Wilson Sub-Lt Buckeridee Sub-Lt Potter bt Mid 0 Smith Ar Mid North 7 5 6 4: Sgn-Lt-Cmdr Mockler Sub-Lt Vavasour bt Probv Sec-Lt Barton Probv Sec-Lt A (R M) 6-0 Sub-Lt Ram Sub-Lt FabT bt Capt the Hon Russell Omdr VVIlliam-Powlett 4 6 6 3 Third Round Ward Phillips bt Nicholson Selwyn -St ringer 3 7 5: Lt Anderson Lt I) Muspratt bt Jeffery Wood house 6 4 3 6 6 1 Semi-final: Anderson Mus-pratt bt Wind Phillips 6 0 1 Fina: Rear-Adm! Rovie bt Eng-Rear-Adml Nelson 6 3 JUNIOR SINGLES Third Round: Sub Lt Turner bt Sub-Lt Hamdton 2 Sub-Lt srtwvn-st ringer bt Cudet Wilson 6: Sub-Lt YV Vavasour bt Sub-Lt sturdy 6 0 6 Sub Lt Buckeridge bt Sub-Lt I Arbuthnot RAF CHAMPIONSHIPS The semi-final iss in the RAF singles championship which was continued at Chis- wick Park yesterday are FLt Fletcher (holder) FLt Stowell FLt Shaw and FO Barnett Results SIXCLFS Third Round: FLt Fletcher (holder) bt FLt Reel) 2 FLt Stowell bt FLt YV Bateman (to! rk Buruett 'bt 'p'u O'u NORTHUMBERLAND TITLES A Stedman (holder) Ritchie A Coidham and Malfroy are the singles semi-finalists in the Northumberland championships which were continued at New-castle-on-Tyne yesterday The last four in the singles are the holder Sta A Lizana Miss Thomson Miss Heeley and Miss Davison In exhibition matches Malfroy beat Perry by 9 7 3 6 6 2 and Perry and Miss Davison beat Malfroy and Miss Heeley by 7 5 5 7 7 5 Results SINGLES Third Round A Stedman (holder) bt Deloford Ritchie tit It Muliiken 9 7 6 3 A Coidham wo II Jones scr Malfroy bt Anderson 6 3 4 6 6 4 SINGLES Third Round: Sta A Lizana (holder) bt Mrs Burr 6 2 6 1 Miss Thomson bt Miss Hardie 6 1 6 3 Miss Heeley bt Miss Grover 6 2 6 4 Miss Davison bt Miss Watson 10 8 6 4 DOUBLES Third Round Malfroy A Stedman (holders) bt Benson Sparke 6 -2 6- 2 Braithwaite Anderson Lt Muliiken A Coidham Ritchie Deloford bt I Cuthbert Cassel 6 1 6 1 Jones A Shayes bt Freeman A Swan 3 6 6 2 DOUBLES Third Round: Miss Heeley Mrs Burr (holders) bt Miss () March Miss I Wrighteon 6 2 Miss Watson Miss I) Davison bt Miss Grover Miss Panton 6 4 6 2 Sta A Lizana Miss Saunders to mention only two of The Best Informed Sunday Newspaper them earlv in the second period hut thev Faph cnWrinent npnind Wt 1 near i the Cyclones with the fraction of their start fr0nt but Manor Farm had so much the better of the play in the concluding period that they must have won had anvone on the been able to find the goal CYCLOXES Lowenstein Gautier Mayer Capt Ansdell MAXOR -J Traill Hewetson 3 Evatt Major YV Morgan MILITARY HANDICAP The semi-final ties for the Roehampton Military Handicap Cup were decided yester-6 lav with the result that the 27th Bgde RA -uol the Koval Dragoons are left to contest the final to-morrow The Gunners with 4i goals start beat the Bays by 91 goals to 9 and the Royals with half-a-goal allowance on the handicap defeated the Royal Scots Greys by 1 1 i to 4 It was a dour fight between the Gunners and the Bays The Bays had it won apparently in the fifth chukker but in the last period the Gunners were awarded a goal for a bad foul in front of their goal and very near the end Major Young with a 40 yds penalty hit won the game for them There was nothing between the Royals and the Scots Greys for two chukkers Hid then the Royals went right away with eight consecutive goals six of them hit by Calvert That settled matters for the Greys who were outplayed and never looked like recovering from their very bad patch 27th BRIGADE Gillett Tusun Major A Young I Marshall THE QUEEN'S de Tatham YY YY' Hibbert Major Fanshawe Capt I) 11 Asquith THE ROYAL Capt A Calvert the Hon Hamilton-Russeli Head eote-Amory ROYAL SCOTS Trotter ico Findlay A Calthorpe Wtebley (BNC) A Whit- TPembfT' YV ill mot (St Peter H) Wright (Exeter) £rMu guths' Alpin (Somerville) Kinney (Oxf Home Students) I Bird (St 'St- Hilda's) Chapman (St Hilda s) Clarke (St Cliffe (St Hughs) Collin (Oxf Home Students) 1 Crook (St Hilda s) Fletcher (Lady Marg G'bborn (St I Hinchliffe (St gldas Hirst Cat Hobbs (St Hildas) Levesley (Lady Mary H) Lons Hughs) Iovett (St Hugh's) Ylorgri (Somerville) Muir (Somerville) Nicholson (St HJda s) Oliver lst Proseer (St Hugh st Rae (Lady Marg Barnstlen (Ox! Students) Spelling (Oxl Home Students) v- Ihbrntou (Somerville) Wallen (St YY harhirst (St Hilda's) Williams (Somerville) CLASS III Ades (Oi Ch) Ashton (Ch Ch) (Balliol) A Aspin Biles KraJford (Ch Ch) Bullock tYYadh) Carlisle (Magd) Clement lUnc) YY Cox (BXC) Chrichtonyituaj-t 9 Gauhney A A Duncan (BaUiol) Hon Eden (BallioO Eugster (CM Ch) Foxton (St Edm H) A Goodliffe (Keble) Haigh (Merton) A Hall Exeter) Hankin-Turvin (St Peter's H) Helleur (Pembr) A Henderson (Univ) A Hope (Wore) Jackson (St Ed James (St H) YV James (Wore Kynaston (Ch Ch) YV A Langdale (New Coll) Leach (Ch Ch) Little (New Coll) Lovatt (Wadh) Luxmoore-Ball i Keble) Macoun (Univ) Maitland-Makgill- Ytehton (YYore) Martin (St Edm ID A Merritt Merton) Metcalfe (Pemb) Metherell (St H) A Nichols (New Coll) Lord Montgomerie (New Coll) Moore (Univ Moore-Gwyn (Trin) Murray (New Coll) A Ogilvie (Unix-) A Parkinson (YY'adh) A 1 Parr (New Coll) Plant (Balliol) I Podmore (St Edm H) Prebble (St Edm A Ray (Oriel) Richarde (New Coll) Sayyid (St Cath's Soc) Shaplard (St Edm H) Shield (St Edm H) Talbot Smith (B Thompson (Trin) Thomson (Line) A Whately (St H) VVhitaJcer (Ch Ch) YVhite (St H) Widdioombe (Univ) Willis (Trin) A Browning (St Hilda's) Eamshaw (Somerville) Finn (St Germain (Somerville) I Hall (Oxf Home Students) A Hughes (Oxf Home Students) Lawford (Oxf Home Students) Lewes (Lady Marg H) Oliver (Oxf Home i Students) Richards (Oxf Home Students) Theobald (St Hugh's) Wilkin (Oxf Home Students) CLASS IV Adams (BXC) A Bell (Wore) Frankcom (St Edm H) Had i Lomas (Line) Mitchell (Keble) A i Robertson (Balliol) Rowley (New Coll) Sharpies (Line) A Sturrock (Exeter) A I 1 YVatt (New Coll) Carter (Oxf Home Students) Aegrotat Hayman (Wore) The electors to the George Webb Medley Senior Scholarships have reported to the Vice-Chancellor that they have awarded a scholarship of £300 a year for two years to A Brown scholar of The College and senior scholarships of £150 for one year to Ramsay BA Worcester College and A Radice A Magdalen College LON DON NEW POSTAL REGIONS WAYS OUT OF LONDON No motorist enjoys sitting in a traffic block enveloped in a blue haze of petrol exhaust and being able to move only a few jerky yards at a time yet thousands of private cars sw'ell the jam of vehicles at every big crossing in London Much of this is quite unnecessary Time tempers and trouble can easily be saved by choosing the less coi gested routes which are all plainly set out in a handy little booklet published byTiiE Daily Telegraph and entitled Ways Out of Boldly drawn maps show 24 trafficavoiding routes from the centre of London to north east south and west and an index provides a key to all districts The guide is obtainable price 6d post free from the Publisher (Map) The Daily Telegraph 135 Fleet-street EC 4 Civil War by Scrutator Sarah and Abigail by inston Churchill In this instalment of hi? life of Marlborough volume III Mr Churchill describe? how Abigail Hill displaced the Duchess of Marlborough in the affection and confidence of Queen Anne and how this palace crisis helped to undermine the Duke's position OTHER INTERESTING FEATURES INCLUDE: CLERICAL APPOINTM ENTS The following movements and appointments of clergy of the Church of England are announced: Arden Rev Edward LThf Curate of St John the in charge of Holy Kidderminster: Rector of Feckenham Worcs Patron the Bishop of Worcester Bahtin Rev BSo Curate of Nuneaton: Vicar of Keresley with Cound'm Worcs Patron tile Bishop Buchanan Rev MA Hon Canon of Leicester and Canon Missioner Rector of Blaby Leics Patron the Bishop of Leicester Caiger Rev Hugh BA Rector Helmdon also Rector of Stuchbury Northants Patrons the University of Oxford Cockin Rev 0 MA LLD Rector of Rockland St Mary with HeHington Norfolk: Rector of Post-wick Norwich and Chaplain of St Hospital Thorpe Patron Sir A King Harman Cutter Rev BA Curate of Rothbury in charge of Hepple Northumberland: Vicar of Shil-botel Morpeth Patrons the Newcastle Diocesan Society Dawson Rev LTh Vicar of Holy Trinity Formby: Canon Diocesan of Liverpool Dean Rev BA i urate of Tewkesbury Abbey: Rector of Marlingford (Patron Mr Evans Lombe) and Vicar of Easton Norwich (Patron Mr Feilowes) Ellam Rev Curate-in-charge of St Fazakerley: Curate-in-charge of the New District of St George's Huyton-Knowsley Liverpool Kelland Rev A MA Vicar of Wealdstone Harrow: Vicar of All Hill NW Patron the Bishop of London Law Rev Percival Knight lately of Hudson Falls New York Rector of Marston Tnussel! Market Har-borough Patron the Rev Law Lord Rev A Secretary to the Rochester Diocesan Society and Board of Finance and Hon Chaplain to the Bishop: Vicar of St Underriver Sevenoaks Patron the Bishop of Rochester Maekreth Rev Vincent Perpetual Curate of Pitstone Leighton Buzzard: Vicar of Kemsing Kent Patrons the Rochester Diocesan Board of Patronage Mayne Rev A MC Hon CF BA Assist- (Continued from preceding column) 6 2: II Michelrnore and Wilde Depree and Taylor 6 -0 6 0 Second Round Acton and Miss Hamilton bt Miss Mrs Michelrnore 6 2 6 3 Hobson and Miss Whitmarsh bt Mrs i Miss A Curtis 6 1 6 1 Frl KraU' and Frl I Rost bt Miss Dicketts and MCs 1 M-Haffan 1 Miss Cox and Miss bt Mrs Carter and Mrs Nichols 4 6 Semi-final Miss Hobson and Miss Whitmarsh bt Acton and Miss Hamilton 6 0 6 2 BEDFORD Fourth Rd Sharpe bt Page 6 2 6 2 Kipping bt Lloyd Bocquet bt Walton Williams bt Prvse-Rice 6 0 7 5 Fourth Rd Miss A Yorke bt Miss Worrall 6 1 2 Miss Daw bt Mrs Hawkins 0 8 6: Miss Scott bt MacTier Mrs Peters bt Miss Bull DOUBLES Third Rd Sharpe and 7 an Pa DIRECTORS APPOINTED The appointments were announced last night of the men who will direct the new London postal regions These are to be set up in London in the autumn as recommended by Viscount Committee on Post Office organisation There will be two regions a London Postal Region and a London Communications Region the latter to absorb the present London Telephone Service and later the Central Telegraph Office The new directors are to be London Tele-Communications Region Mr Gomersall Superintending Engineer London Engineering District London Postal Region Lt-Col Kempe Controller London Postal Service More About de Quincey -On Stave Street New Novels Doreen IT Symphome Fantastiqle Gkacie Fields The Malvern Festival Plays and Players The Cinema Motoring Notes The Garden To-dat City Chatter by Desmond MacCarthy by Eduard Shanks by Ralph Straus allace and Milliard Kennedy by Ernest Neu man by James Agate by George fV Bishop by Eiluned Lewis by Sydney IF Carroll by Symons by A Johnson by Barrett fi 4 fi I DOUBLF- TJiird Rd Mrs PeteS nd MiTorLeM Mi- EM' Bo' -V' Alteen Hells MMte ana Williams bt Cmdr Dawson and Strong 6 2 Pryse-Rice and Baker bt A Pryor Kipping Bocquet and Daniel bt Previte and Martin-Davies 6 2: Derville and Crossley bt 4 6 2: Miss Scott and LOANS FOR SPECIAL AREAS post-wa-r stories The of and also stories of the post-war epoch are as perfect and as perfectly I as any of his pre-war work There are also his splendid speeches at the Sorbonne and in Strasburg which with others are collected in A Book of Mary Postgate is a wonderfully vivid and accurate picture of a quite possible state of mind How any man could so look out through a eyes and put down ant Master at School Canterbury: Vicar what he Saw is a mystery AAiDSopW of KeDt' I is not a pleasant story nor was At Mayson Rev Edward MA Vicar of Christ Church the Und ol the Passage nor Bertram Bootle Liverpool and Honorary Canon of Liverpool fsm T5n(- i Cathedral: Rural Dean of Bootle anu 11 ls not YVICked it IS Mitchell Rev YY ThL Organizing Secretary merely true to life of the Colonial and Continental Church Society for the Mr" Rolilwin nnnear North-Western Area: Vicar of Constable Lee Lanes! lUr7 rvaiuwin appears to have torgotten Patrons the Church Pastoral-Aid Board of tour introductory lines to La Nuit MOTgansaeRevrUTrevor BA Curate of St Blanche in Departmental with Whittington Worcester Vicar of Stoulton with ours truly Drakes Broughton Worcester Patron the Bishop London July 30 Newman Rev A MA reoently Curate of Buck- land-in-Dover Kent Vicar of Hollingbourne Maid- 1 stone Patron the Archbishop of Canterbury 1 Newman Rev MA car of Thorpe Hamlet ptt 4 U' vom Norfolk: Vicar of St George's Tombiand with St AKuh VYtAXST BOAER Simon and St Jude Norwich Patron the Bishop Newton Rev Harry BA Viear of Rye Harbour with Cam ter and Broomhill Sussex: Vicar of WaJpoie Suffolk Patrons the Church Patronage Society Rodwell Rev Hunter Rector-designate of Wigan and Honorary Canon erf Liverpool Cathedral-Rural Dean of Wigan Simmons Rev Frank A Vicar of Mosley Common Manchester: Rector of St Levenshulme Manchester Patron the Bishop Spafford Rev MA Rector-designate of Walton-on-the-Hill Liverpool Rural Dean of Walton Sykes Rev Sir Frederic Bart Rector of Butter-leigh Cullompton Devon Vicar of Stoke Canon Exeter Patrons the Dean and Chapter Tayier Rev Curate of St in charge of St Swindon: Vicar of St Tue Brook Liverpool Patrons the Trustees Thomas Rev A Assistant Curate of St cult of warden nartv at 10 Drummer- tired' Frl I Rost bt Miss Kingsbury 4 6 6 0 Edge Hill Liverpool: Curate-in-charge of St Natte OI Vj PT y0 Vt 2 Miss Whitmarsh bt Miss Hamilton Fazakerley Liverpool street on JuiV 14 for the Safer Alotnerhood MEN'S Third Round: Butler and ord Rev A J- Vicar of Sandbach Heath and appeal the sum of £1110 clear of all ex- Hare bt A Chorley and A Condon 6-4) Honorary Canon of Chester Cathedral Rural Dean 1 AAllmn oi uongieum penses was raised (Continued on next column) SINGLES Third Round: Frank bt Daniels 6 4 6 2: Oliver bt Bean SINGLES Third Round: Mss Southwell bt Miss Lacy 1 6 6 2 6 1 Miss Morison bt Miss King 2 6 6 4 Miss Weekes bt Rady Pleydell-Bouverie 3 MiMFX'Si88JiSi 6yv ifl'WktS: 6-1 teisri Bean Hon Ritchie bt Daniels Austin 7 5 6 2 DOUBLES Round: Mrs Coveil Miss Slaney bt Miss Harvey Miss Feilowes Miss Southwell Miss Jarvis bt Lady Pleydell-Bouverie Miss Lacy 6 4 Miss King Miss King bt Miss A Steele Mrs Ritherdon 6 4: ss Harvey Miss Weekes bt Mrs Houston Miss I Edwards 6 4 6 3 MIXED First Round: Frank Lady I) Pleydell-Bouverie bt Webb A- Miss Feilowes Oliver Miss Jarvis bt Howarth Miss Edgson Wright 6 1 7 5 Second Round A A Lacy Miss Lacy bt Podmore Mrs Podmore 6 1 6 2 Hon Ritchie Miss Weekes bi Sir McMahon Miss Lawrence 6 0 6 1 Barrelet de Rieou Miss King bt Grubb Miss Huddart 6 0 6 0: Bean Miss Slaney bt Daniels Miss A Steele 6 0 Tinling Miss Southwell bt Savill Mis Berens 6 1 Benjamin Lynch fly-weight boxing cham- Third Round Tinling Miss Southwell bt A Dunning pion of the world made a further appear- B' ance at Glasgow Central police court yes- 1 OKQU A I terdav and was remitted in custody to the singles Second Round Hare bt Cl te TT Kilmer Bennett 6 2 6 0 Fauchier-Magnar bt bherm ot Lanarkshire He was charged ip' Ramusen 6 4 Third Round: Filby with having in a house at Crown-street JtG- 6 Hare bt Dy Jk (xlasgow on otinuay last attempted an 3 7 5 Fauchier-Magnan wo Arming scr offence against a woman His wife was in Fourth Bound: Filby bt A Chorley Hare bt Comery bt Fauchier-Maynan tj 1 i 0: YV Butler bt 7 5 7 5 YV Second Round mil- ton bt Miss Devereux 6 4 6 1 Third Mrs Baldwin announces that as a re- Round: Mrs Lucas bt Miss A Curtis (re MacTier 4 6 6 Mr 4 Tebbs bt Mrs YYilkinson and Miss Goodliff CRAWFORD GOES HOME Crawford and McGrath memb of the Australian Davis Cup team were git a hearty send-off when they left Victoria terday on their homeward journey to Sydt Among those on the platform were A Hickson (vice-president of the LTY Mr A T) Prebble (chairman of the LT Mr McNair and Mr A Sabeili presented a bouquet to Mrs Crawford YYallis Myers repr-esented the Internatu Club Crawford said that he hoped to return England if not next year in 1938 A Australian who has been to Wimbledon often as I he said it diili to keep Remaining in England another three A Quist and Sproule will compete week in the Hampshire championships Bournemouth Si Bride Church by iSLW FLETCHER The demolition of adjoining property has opened to view long-hidden aspects of the famous St Bride's Church Fleet Street and 'lr Fletcher has done a beautiful drawing of it with St Paul's and the Old Bailey in the background AST AG EEM The text of an agreement between the Treasury and the Special Areas Reconstruction Company is issued as a White Paper entitled It contains details of a plan for assisting persons setting up businesses in selected districts as outlined in the Government bill of May The company is to have a capital of £1000000 and will make loans up to £10000 to deserving cases Its expenses are to be paid by the Treasury and its capital will consist of 000000 three and a half per cent Cumulative Preference shares and 100000 Ordinary £1 shares Any sums remaining after the company 1 has been wound up with arrears of dividend are to be refunded to the Treasury AMERICAN BASEBALL RESULTS NATIONAL Boston 4 Pittehurv 1: 4 Pittsburg 10: Brooklyn 22 St Louis 7 -St Louis 5: New York 7 Chicag 2 Phj Cincinnati postponed owing to rain AMERICAN Oncago 7 IT 7 Cleveland II Washington 6 Cleveland 6 War Detroit 3 New York 13: St Louis 9 Boston 3 Beutcr.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1855-2013