Newspapers / The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, … / Feb. 9, 1922, edition 1 / Page 16
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THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK PAGE 16 Pfachttsrst Bepairftmciiift Store High-Grade Line of Men's and Women's Golf Suits, Shoes and Hosiery Haberdashery - - Hats and Caps Staple and Fancy Groceries Patrons of Pinehurst are cordially invited to visit this store Phone 127 PINEHURST JEWELRY STORE (at the Carolina) Diamond Jewelry Gold Jewelry Pearl Beads Leather Goods Sterling Silver Japanese Wares The Kirkvjood on CAMDEN HEIGHTS OA1CDSN. S. 0. December to Way The Pinehurst Market earriei SNYDER-CURE HAMS and BACON, AND SNYDER-HADE Pare Pork SADSA6E. Batchelder & Snyder Co. BOSTON, MASS. Makers PINEHURST GARAGE CARS FOR RENT, with or without a driver REPAIRS of every sort, by skilled mechanics PARTS of all standard makes. Parts not actually in stock can be secured from Raleigh or Charlotte in a few hours. TIRES of all sizes always in stock S Cafe des Invalides Com-pounded This compound is not all coffee, but con tains about seven-eighths coffee, of the finest grades,-blended with vegetable substances, J which have been found to render it more healthful than pure coffee, in that it does not produce nervousness or wakefulness. "CAFE DES INVALIDES" does not produce the usual effects. Yet "CAFE DES INVALIDES" pleases the most ciitical coffee connoisseurs. S. S. PIERCE CO. :cXry1q"i?"-B -u- Boston, Mass. cooiidt, comer. Brookline, Mass. A. L. WALKER, JR., WINS (Continued from Page Five) They continued to wage the same sort of a battle coming in. Walker obtained a two-hole lead by winning the tenth in 4 and the twelfth in 3. At the tenth he put his second in a trap, recovered well and dropped a six-foot putt for his par 4, while Parson, after being on the edge in 2, took three putts. The elev enth was halved and Walker's 3 at the twelfth resulted from a holed putt from the edge of the green. After the players had halved the thirteenth in 4's, many imagined that Walker had established a safe lead, but he proceeded to hook his tee shot into the woods at the fourteenth and lost the hole to Parson's par 4. Walker then took 3 from off the edge at the fifteenth, whereas Parson took but two more and won with a 3. This squared the match. Parson drove into the big trap at the sixteenth and Walker was down in the middle. Parson was short in three and Walker's second was in a trap near the green. At this point an unusual and unfortunate incident erupted the calm of the match. Walker, wrhile standing over his ball trying to decide the better shot for the occasion, dropped his club into the trap. The club hit the ball. No one seemed to possess definite in formation as to the penalty. Some were of the opinion that Walker should lose the hole, while others considered that he should be penalized one stroke. As Par son took six, and Walker five actual strokes, the hole would have been halved, provided Walker was penalized one shot. The matter had not been decided when the players drove to the seventeenth, which Walker won in three, Parson hook ing to a trap and taking two to get free. With the gallery and players still in doubt as to the standing of the contest ants, many believing them even and others maintaining that Parson was one up, the eighteenth was played. Walker's second shot was in a trap at the left of the green and Parson's was in the rough at the right. Both were short in three, but Walker ran down a putt from off the edge and won the hole in four. This ended matters, for Walker was still one up, even with loss of the sixteenth hole . The incident at the sixteenth was another example of the fact that few golfers, no matter how interested they are in the game, can state important rulings when such information would be of great assistance in settling a prob lem. The rule in this case, of course, is that Walker lost the hole. The- eards were : Walker, Out 454 443 64337 In 453 454 X34 Parson Out 545 352 544 37 In 555 443 655 4279 X-Walker lost hole by soleing club in bunker . In his first match round with Harlow, Walker' won at the twenty-first green when Harlow took three putts from the edge. Harlow was two up going to the thirteenth but lost this hole when Walker put his second close to the pin for a. three and also the fifteenth when Walker holed out from off the edge for a two. Walker took the lead at the scv enteenth with a three, but Harlow squared at the home green by putting his second shot two feet from the cup and obtained a three. The nineteenth and twentieth were halved in par figures. In the second round, Walker defeated E. L. Scofield, winner of the Mid-winter tournament, and in the semi-finals lie defeated John D. Chapman. One of the feature matches was sched uled to be played in the first round when Parson met Arthur Yates of Rochester. Yates tied with John D. Chapman for the medal with a fine round of 71, and in a practice match with Parson the afternoon before he scored a 69. Every body expected that Parson and Yates would have a close game, but Yates failed to maintain this fast pace and lost to Parson, 4 and 2. One of the most remarkable matches in the tournament was played in the final of the consolation of the third di vision, in which Stuart Patterson of Plainfield defeated L. T. Barr, Dering Harbor, at the twentieth hole. Patter son was three down with four to go. He managed to win back two holes by the time the eighteenth was reached, then squared the match at the home green by holing for a four from off the green. The nineteenth was halved in 5's and Patterson won the twentieth in 5. The scores made in the qualifying round (published in full in the last issue of The Outlook) were the best ever made by amateurs in a qualifying round on the championship course. Eight players broke 80 and twenty-two were from 80 to 89. The summary follows: First Division First round. E. L. Scofield, Pinehurst, defeated A. T. Roberts, Scotland, 4 and 3; A. L. Walker, Jr., Richmond County, defeated Robert E. Harlow, Scarboro, (21 holes) ; J. D. Chapman, Greenwich, defeated F.. S. Danforth, North Fork, 7 and 5; W. E. Truesdell, Garden City, de feated Malcolm McGregor, Detroit, 5 and 3; E. C. Beall, Sherbrooke, defeated F. II. Mahan, St. David's, 2 and 1; A. E. Ranney, Greenwich, defeated Tom Kelley, Southern Pines, 7 and 6 ; Donald Parson, Youngstown, defeated Arthur Yates, Rochester, 4 and 2; H. G. Phil lips, Pinehurst, defeated Joe Bydolek, Buffalo, 2 and 1. Second round. Walker defeated Sco field, 3 and 2; Chapman defeated Trues dell, 3 and 2; Beall defeated Ranney, 4 and 3; Parson defeated Phillips, 1 up. Consolation. Harlow defeated Rob erts, 6 and 5; Danforth defeated Mc Greggor, by default; Mahan defeated Kelley, (20 holes); Yates defeated By dolek, 5 and 3. Semi-finals. Walker defeated Chap man, 3 and 2; Parson defeated Beall, 6 and 4. Consolation. Danforth defeated Har low, (19 holes) ; Yates defeated Mahan, 6 and 4. Final. Walker defeated Parson, 1 up.
The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 9, 1922, edition 1
16
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