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HARRIER CLUB NOTES

All Clubs will have teams competing in to-day's Championship race from Caroline Bay. Last Saturday the Clubs had easy runs, after the strenuous race of the week previous. At the Harriers Clubs’ Management Committee meeting last Tuesday night, the secretary stated that Mr C. R. OrrWalker had donated a handsome cup, to be known as the Orr-Walker Challenge Cup for the winning team in the terms Championship race. There will be a keen struggle for the honour of being the first holders of this beautiful eup. To-day's race will be a teams’ race, the first five in each team to count, and the team with the least number of points will be tlie holders of the Cup. The Selection Committee will watch the runners so as to pick a team to represent the Combined Harriers in the Canterbury Championship to be r.cld at Cashmere on August 16th. J. Eaton should have no trouble in leading the field home in to-day’s race, as he has been showing his best form Li the last few weeks. A keen struggle will be witnessed today for places in the representative .earn. Quite a number of runners will be trying to fill the places. The folowing should run well: —G. Broadhead, R. Taylor, A. Craig, A Harper, W. Lane, Ward, R. Holmes. A. Ander--,on, Keiley, W. Taylor, Marshall, W. McCormack, R. Lund. H. Cullimore. E. Wilson, J. Chivas. The above runners represent Timaru. Anglican, Baptist, Methodist, Presbyterian and Y.M.C.A. Harriers.

The evil men do is soon forgotten—by themselves.

her guilty, but the long persecution at last told its tale. Her health was broken, and death brought release. The King added further insult to her dead body by refusing permission to the funeral to pass through London, but the people stepped in and, by barricading streets, insisted on it taking its proper coarse. Her body was sent to Brunswick and buried beside her father. So ended the life of one of the bravest, most unhappy Queens of England. Sir Edward Parry tells his story with sympathy, but judical fairness, and brings truth to modify the overromantic atmosphere which has grown j around the selfish profligate King, | who was called by sycophants “the I first gentleman of Europe.” I “Queen Caroline,” by Sir Edward I Parry (Benn).

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THD19300726.2.71

Bibliographic details

Timaru Herald, Volume CXXV, Issue 18629, 26 July 1930, Page 14

Word Count
383

HARRIER CLUB NOTES Timaru Herald, Volume CXXV, Issue 18629, 26 July 1930, Page 14

HARRIER CLUB NOTES Timaru Herald, Volume CXXV, Issue 18629, 26 July 1930, Page 14