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THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK
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BUCKWOOD INN
SHAWNEE-ON-DELAWARE, PA.
HARRINGTON MILLS, Manager
JUodtrD fire Proo! Construction,
To be open In Jane 1911.
CLOSE BY
THE NEW
Tuio boat's feon flecu York City, Three hours from Philadelphia.
Fifteen Minutes from the Delaware Water Gap.Station'.
I8-H0LE GOLF COURSE
OF THE
SHAWNEE COUNTRY CLUB
Tennis Courts Garage Boating Magnificent Scenery
In this Beautiful Valley of the Upper Delaware and along the sides of
the Surrounding Hills, Bungalows and Summer Dwellings are being built.
For Information regarding sites and a beautiful Illustrated, descriptive book, write to
ROSSITER REALTY CO.
SHAUNBB-ON DELAWARE.
PINEHURST DEPARTMENT STORE
Complete and Modern Equipment in Every
Department, with Prices on Par
with Northern Markets
Plain and Fancy Groceries
Dry Goods, Boots and Shoes, Notions, Jen's Furnishings, Drugs,
Complete Equipment for Men and Women for All Out Door Sports.
Field, Trap and Pistol Ammunition.
i
-AJN i
PURPOSE
we rMAURiGE Joyce Engraving (b.
H.C.C. STILES, Mgr.'
Evening Star B'ld'g. Washington, D.C.
'
- ST. JAMES -
European Plan Centrally Located
WASHINGTON. D. C.
is bottled under the most
sanitary conditions in the
most elaborate and ex
pensive plant of its kind
in the world.
Drunk the World Oyer
Hiram flicker & Sons
South Poland, Maine.
The Tea Cup a1 The Laurel
PINEHURST, N. C.
Tea served afternoons from three to six o'clock
Orders taken for Sandwiches, Cake and Candy
Arrangements made for
Lanches, Chafing-Dish and Bridge Parties Etc.
TEAM MATCH DEAD HEAT
Forty and One-half Each Is Score For
Twenty-seven Couples
Contest Proves Its Popularity
Special and Permanent Feature
Of Annual Prog-ram
As
THE ANNUAL team
match of the Tin Whis
tles which preceded the
dinner, was a "dead
heat," teams A and B
numbering twenty-seven
couples, both scoring
forty and. one-half
Doints on the three
point system ; one going out, one coming
in and one for the match. The "gentle
rain," of the afternoon made it necessary
to approximate a few of the matches ;
but the contest, nflvertheless,proved very
conclusively its popularity as a special
and permanent feature of the annual
program. The scores :
TEAM A
Donald Ross
G. II . Crocker
C. N. Phillips
C. L. Becker
Col. J.E.Smith
J. P. Gardner
T. S. Lippy
S. D. Wyat.t
W. H. Thayer
N. S. Hurd
W. E. Truesdell
J, G. Nicholson
J. B. Sboaff
H. W. Ormsbee
H. II. Brown
J. E. Kellogg
C.B.Price
J. E.'Pushee
Franklin Berwin
Dr. M. W. Marr ,
J. B. Bow6u
T. Lu Redfield
II. W. Priest
R. C. Shannon, 2d
E. (J, Chandlee
J. v;'iiurt
Jobn Smitbers
POINTS . TEAM B
2 1 Alex Ross
1 2 W. C, Fownes, Jr.
52.5 H.C. Fownes
3 0 I. S. Robeson
30 J. D. Foot
2 1 Robert Hunter
1.51.5 L. D. Pierce
11 R, C. Collier
1 2 J. M. Thompson
1.51.5 J.C. Head
2 5 .5 E. A. Johnston
2 1 J. D.C. Rumsey
"03 R. J.Clapp
2.5 .5 P. L. Llghtbourn
2.5 .5 : J.R. Towle
1-2 W. L. Hurd
1 2 W. T. Stall
03 II. R. Mackenzie
1 '12 . Cabot J. Moreo
2 5 ,5 Rev. T.A.Cheatham
1.51.5 J. Ii. Wyckoff
.52.5 J. V. Hall
. .62.5 . James Barber
1.51.5 M. D. Fink
03 J. R. Mitchell
3 0 . A.L. Calder
2 1 Guy Metcalf
Total
40.5 40.5
. 11. CIlOCIi:il TIIEH OKEIl
' ( Concluded from pfrge one)
the seventeenth to tie, but could daiio
better than a halve on the eighteenth
and lost the nineteenth, 56. The medal
scores were seventy-nine and eighty, and
they included twos for Col. Smith on the
third and sixth, and for Mr. Lard on the
eighth.Mr.Scammell won the right to play
Mr. Lard in the second round through a
keen match with C. L. Beckeiv of Wood
land. One down at the turn, Mr. Scam
mell lost the, tenth, halved the twelfth,
gained the lead again on the thirteenth
and maintained it with halves on the next
three holes. Mr. Becker, however, rained
on the short seventeenth and, all even,
Mr. Scammell captured the eighteenth,
5 6. His round with Mr. Lard was
equally keen, and his victory the Sur
prise of the week.
In the consolation Mr. Fownes upheld
the reputation of America's foremost
golfing family, winning easily from
George F. Brown of the Huntingdon
Valley Country club, four tip and three
to play; the match ending at noon.
In the semi-final, W. H. Thayer of Crow
Point, was the victim three and one,
while Mr. Brown and Col. Smith got to
going so fast that they overran the home
green. The Philadelphian was two holes
to the good at the turn, but at the fif
teenth, the match was all square. Col.
Smith gained the lead on the long six
teenth to lose it on the short seventeenth ;
the eighteenth was halved and the nine
teenth Mr. Brown's in 5 6. ' In the first
round Col. Smith and Mr. Becker found
plenty to keep them occupied, the last
hole deciding it.
In the remaining nine divisions eigh-teen-hole
finals prevailed, and there were
trophies for the division winners and
runners up and the consolation division
.winners, the twenty-seven who captured
trophies including; llobert Hunter of
Wee Burn, C. B. Whitney of Springfield
and Fillemore K. Pobeson of Oak Hill,in
the second ; E. A. Johnston of Baltimore,
H. W. Ormsbee of Alpine and W. II.
Doughton of Merlon, in the third; J. W.
Thompson of Springhaven, W. L. Hurd
of Oakmont and C. M. Jamison of
Gr.eensburg, in the fourth ; George Van
Kurven of Englewood, W; F. Lewis of
Kenil worth and JS. McCormick'of Oak
mont, in . the fifth ; Edward Davis of
Philadelphia, C. B, Price of Salem and
G. T. Dunlap of Forest Hill, in the sixth ;
Dr. T. Howard Knight of Philadelphia,
W. II. Nevins of Springhaven and D. C.
Ogden of Greensburg, in the seventh ;
G. O. Bassett of Overbrook, C. J. Wilson
of Dyker Meadow, and Lewis Brown of
Oakmont, in the eighth; E. M. Knowles
of Kenilworth,T. J. Palmer , of Areola,
and F. C. Johnson of Nassau, in the
ninth; L. B. Miller of Euclid, W. T. Stall
of Brockton and J,' W. Lloyd of Pitts
burg, in the tenth. In the special con
solation provided for the overflow, in it
self a tournament of considerable size,
J. P. Gardner of Midlothian, II. W.
VVistar of Lansdown and John McGoey
of Wykagyl, were the winners.
The tournament demonstrated very
conclusively that there is evidently
no limit to its entrance and that the
time is not far distant when the list
will pass the three hundred mark, mak
ing qualification on two or three distinct
courses necessary ; a condition of aflairs
which would not be possible elsewhere in
the world.
Full qualification scores and match
play summary are printed upon pages
four and five of this issue and the story
of the consolation event on page nine.
The annual Club Championship tour
nament concludes today, and the United
North and South Amateur Champion
ship starts next week with the women's
event.
Gufiti of Mr. Thompson
" One of the jolliest dinner parties of
the week at The Inn was given by Mr.J
M. Thompson in honor of his first vic
tory in the "golfing world" ; the cential
table design being his trophy, a silver
cup, surrounded by American beauty
roses. The guests were Mr. and Mrs.
W. C. Goodwin, Mrs. James L. Pedern,
Mrs. J. M. Thompson, Miss Bernadette
Herman and Mr. Franklin Pierce Lee.