for January 5, 1923 , 7 1111 111111111,1111 111111 1 1 1 Miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin'iiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu,,,,!, iiiiiiiiniiiiimi, , i iiiiiiniMi, i iiiiiiinii inn i ti 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i t milium iiiiiiiiimiiiimmiiiiiiiimiimiiii On the Fairways LAST Sunday saw a bunch of interesting matches staged on the Number Two course. Alex. Ross had an individual 71 in a match in which Ross and Willie Wilson broke all even with Joe Capello and Harold Calloway. The winners' best ball was 71 and the losers' 72. T. Russell Brown, who came down to help his father along to the best of his ability in the Father and Son tournament, paired up with Richard Tufts and got a 76 in the course of trimming Howard Phillips and F. T. Keating by 6 and 5. Brown and Tufts teamed up exceptionally well and had a best ball of 69. The big match of the day and the fastest four-ball affair of the season was one in which Donald Parson and Emmet French had a joint round of 67 and won by 2 up against William Reekie and Johnny Farrell. Reekie and Farrell had a 68 of their own and Reekie, who had just arrived in town, turned in an individual round of 36-40-76. Emmet French's round of 35-37-72 was the best game, but Johnny Farrell was close behind him with 36-37-73 and Donald Parson went around in 38-37-74 with a total of three birdies to his credit. Reekie's 76 included a birdie 3 on the twelfth hole. The par 5 figure established for the fourteenth hole was respected by Reekie alone. Parson and French both played it in 4 and Farrell registered a brilliant eagle 3 for the hole. A round that attracted a good deal of attention on account of the near approach of the annual Junior Tournament was played on the championship course, last week, by Forbes Wilson, twelve-year-old son of our own Willie Wilson of the Country Club. Young Forbes, down from the Worcester Academy for the holidays and the Junior event, took John Peacock on for a 9 hole match, on his first crack at the No. 2 course, and disposed of the nine holes in 42. He had a 2 at the sixth. Mrs. F. T. Keating won the women's clock-golf tourney, on Saturday last, with a round of 23. Others who finished near the top were Mrs. Austin Heath (24), Mrs. John D. Armstrong (25), Mrs. A. S. Higgins (26), Mrs. Herman Ellis (26), Mrs. L. E. Beall (27), and Mrs. Arthur S. Newcomb (27). Alex. Ross and Willie Wilson Turn in A 65 on No. 3 Alex. Ross and Willie Wilson, playing as partners in a sup posedly friendly match with a couple of amateurs on the Number Three course, on Monday, turned in a best ball of 65. Here's the way it happened : Out 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 4 332 In 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 5 433 65 They ran along courteously enough, merely playing par golf on each hole, until they started out for the seventh. They then chalked up three birdies in a row and kept it up, more or less inter mittently, throughout the rest of the round. E. A. D. if ' tl 7L nam Rhvtnmb fZrilf Cnurt Manchester Vt. Crass Seed supplied by Stumpp & Walter Co. for past ten years. Grass Seed of Known Quality TESTED for PURITY and GERMINATION For the Golf Course, the Tennis Court or Lawn Remember All our seed is of the highest quality, obtained direct from the most reliable sources of supply, and is carefully examined as to purity and growth, including tests made for us by leading Seed Testing Stations. We furnish on request the percentage of purity and growth. We are always glad to suggest formulas, suited to soil and climate, and tell you the exact percentage of each of the varieties in the formula, or, we furnish seed by named varieties. The benefit of a grass seed expert one who has made a life study of this subject is at your disposal 30-32 Barclay Street New York Play this ball at Pinehurst it will help your Game. "They last until lost'

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