7Ke
IPINErHURST
OUTLOOK
VOL. XXV.
DECEMBEK 22, 1921
NO. 3
TIN WHISTLES ANNUAL
SWATFEST
Won by C. L. Becker and
H. G. White
C. L. Becker, Captain of the club,
outlived the rest of the eighteen players
who formed the Class A. division of the
Tin Whistles' annual Swatfest played
over the championship course on Mon
day of this week, and wound up victori
ously on the nineteenth green for first
prize. ' His most persistent rival was
Richard S. Tufts who clung to Becker
until disaster overtook him at the eigh
teenth green. F. T. Keating kept his head
above water for seventeen holes, and R.
C. Shannon held on until the sixteenth
was reached.
This particular kind of a swatfest is
an elimination affair one or more play
ers are retired at each successive hole,
and the first poor hole usually spells dis
aster. This fact was well illustrated
when J. D. Chapman and I. S. Robeson,
both top-notch golfers, were put out of
the running at the fourth and eleventh
holes respectively. Chapman's gross
round of 77, however, gave him the low
gross honors of the day.
In the higher handicap division H. G.
White was the sole survivor at the end
of the round. John R. Goodall fought
desperately to repeat his last year's vic
tory of this event, but was put out of
the running at the eighteenth. J. D. C.
Rumsey was the low net player of the
day and his 94-22 72 carried off the
prize for the best net round.
The field finished as follows:-
Class'A
Dropped Out
C. L. Becker 85- 8-77 Winner
R. S. Tufts 80- 8-73 18th
F. T. Keating 86- 6-80 17th
R. C. Shannon 2nd. 80- 6-74 16th
J. M. Thompson 88- 9-79 15th
H. J. Blue 84- 6-78 14th
Donald Parson 80- 2-78 13th
II. G. Phillips 80- 1-79 12th
I. S. Robeson 86- 1-85 11th
W. T. Barr 92-10-82 10th
G. W. Mead 84- 6-78 9th
H. W. Croft 83- 9-74 8th
H. B. Swoope 96-11-85 7th
L. D. Pierce 84- 6-78 6th
R. H. Hunt 89-11-78 5th
J. D. Chapman 77- 2-75 4th
W. E. Truesdell 85- 6-79 3rd
D. R. Meigs 88- 8-80 2nd
Class B
Dropped Out
H. G. White 91-13-78 Winner
J. R. Goodall 97-22-75 18th
C. B. Hudson 95-17-78 17th
iv r -
" CX . v V;: j. j"
FORMAL OPENING OF
MID-PINES CLUB
January 18
When the effort of her drive shook off her tam-o-shanter this fair golfer stood
revealed as Wm. E. Donahue of the Shachamaxon Club, medallist in last season's
Midwinter Golf tournament.
FIRST ACE OF SEASON
J. D. C. Rumsey 94-22-72 16th
C. S. Waterhouse 97-18-79 15th
W. A. Kinter 93-18-75 14th
T. A. Cheatham 97-14-83 13th
H. G. Waring 93-13-80 12th
James Barber 100-20-80 11th
H. W. Ormsbee 107-23-84 10th
G. T. Dunlap 93-13-80 9th
W. B. Merrill 96-15-81 8th
J. L. Toppin 108-20-88 7th
W. W. Windle 103-16-85 6th
Lawrence Barr 36 5th
J. T. Newton 27 4th
A. S. Higgins 89-12-77 3rd
H. H. Rackham 99-17-82 2nd
C. P. Wilson 116-24-92 1st
In the course of the Tin Whistles Swat
fest played on Monday of this week,
Richard Tufts registered the first "hole
in one" this season when he sank his
tee shot to the 160-yard seventeenth hole
on Number 2 course. This hole has been
made in one on only two previous occa
sions. Walter J. Travis secured an ace
there in 1913 and C. L. Becker won a
semi-final match with a 1 at that hole,
two years ago. Richard also has to his
credit a 2 for the par 4 eighteenth, which
he made with a full brassie shot during
the past summer.
CHRISTMAS TREES
will be provided this year as usual for
about five hundred white and colored
native children. Those who desire to
share in this worthy undertaking may
leave their contributions at the desk of
either of . the,., hotels or send direct to
Rev. T. A. Cheatham.
THE PINEHURST CHAPEL
SUNDAY SERVICES
Holy Communion, 9:15 A. M.
Children's Service 10:00 A. M.
Morning Services
and Sermon, 11:00 A. M.
ROMAN CATHOLIC
SERVICES
Early Mass 6:15 A. M.
Second Mass 8:00 A. M.
When visiting Priest is at Pinehurst.
The Pinehurst Outlook is published weekly from November to May by The
Outlook Publishing Co., Pinehurst, N. C.
O. H. PEACOCK
Editor
Subscription Price, $2.00. Ten cents a copy.
Subscriptions will be continued on expiration unless the editor receives notice
to the contrary.
Entered as second class matter at the post office at Pinehurst, N. C.
The formal opening of the Mid-Pines
Country Club will take place on Monday,
January 16, and on the following Wed
nesday a 36 -hole medal play tournament
will be held, and will be open to all ama
teurs. While the course at Mid-Pines
j
lias been! finished some time and a large
number of golfers have been playing it
during the past few weeks, the above
date will mark the formal opening of
the Club.
The conditions of the tournament pro
vide for 36 holes, medal play under
handicap, and prizes will be given for
best net and best gross scores for the
morning and afternoon rounds and a
prize for best net for the 36 holes. Golfers
expecting to enter this tournament must
enter before 5 o'clock Saturday, Jan.
14, with Donald Ross or William Wilson
at the Pinehurst Country Club, and are
requested to give their home or Tin
Whistle handicap.
Jesse Guilford, national amateur cham
pion, who came to Pinehurst to play in
the amateur-professional event, had the
honor of driving the first ball over thi
new and picturesque course, which wns
opened for play on December I. Since
that time a number of the country's lead
ing amateurs and professionals have
tried their hands and all pronounce it to
be in superb playing condition and even
a harder test of golf than that of any
of the courses at Pinehurst.
Recent additions to the club's mem
bership include a number of nationally
prominent men: Wm. H. Childs, presi
dent of the Barrett Manufacturing Com
pany, manufacturers of roofing material,
Tarvia, and a hundred different tar prod
ucts as well as being owner of Bon
Ami; Thomas G. Plant, the man who
started Queen Quality Shoes, and who
is the leading spirit in the Bald Peak
Country Club at Melvin Village, N. H;
George T. Dunlap, an old friend to Pine
hurst, and one of two owners of the
largest publishing house in the world
Grosset and Dunlap; Charles T. Crocker,
who manufactures, among other things,
the paper that is used in the Saturday
Evening Post and Ladies' Home Jour
nal; S. B. Chapin, head of the firm of
S. B. Chapin and Co., New York brokers;
Thomas E. Wilson, the big meat packer
and head of the sporting goods houses
bearing his name; J. W. Oakford, an
extensive lumber operator of Scranton,
Pa., and Judge W. A. Way who has
the honor of being the first one to com
plete and occupy hi8 own house adja
cent to the Club.