Newspapers / The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, … / Dec. 29, 1906, edition 1 / Page 4
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THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK PAGE THE BALMY BREEZES OF THE SUNNY SOUTH Are laden with Health and Happiness for the Worn-out Wrestler with the Strenuous Life. But you cannot repair wasted tissue or restore strength to jangled ' nerves with air and sunshine alone. The stomach calls for a food that supplies body-building material in its most digestible form. Such a food is Shredded Whole Wheat. It is made of the whole wheat, cleaned, cooked and drawn into fine porous shreds and baked. These delicate shreds contain all the nutri tive elements of the whole wheat grain and are taken up and assimilated when the stomach rejects all other foods. Shredded Wheat In made In two forins-IIISCUITand THICl'IT. ThellKSCITIT In delicious for breakfast with hot or cold milk or cream, or for any meal in combination with fruit or vegetables. TI1ISCU1T is the shredded w hole wheat cracker, crisp, nourishing and appetizing. Delicious as a toast with beverages or with cheese or preserves; also covered with Hurler Chocolate make a delicious confection. IT'S ALL, IIS THE SHREDS." The Natural Food Company, NIAGARA FALLS. N. Y. ITS ALL IN THE 3HRED.S Want a Trunk? 'HOLDS-ALL" Our uniqueP&S Wardrobe TRUNKS offer trunk perfection ; care for clothing when traveling just like one's home clothespress and bureau; need never be unpacked ; have hangers for all garments, special drawers for neckties, bosom shirts, underwear, shoes, etc., and hat holder ; iusure safe transpor tation for few or many articles ; save tailors' bills ; keep garments free from wrinkles and always in ready-to-wear condition. Capacity one-third greater than of ordinary trunks of same size. Occupy half the space of ordinary trunks ; en tire contents readily accessible. No trays to lift ; no stooping to pack. Handsome in appearance ; extra strong; written guarantee of durability goes with each trunk. Made in steamer, three-quarters and regular sizes; $25 to $40. Also special indestructible the atrical type. Write us TODAY for illnat.rat.Pd descriptive booklet. The.J. F. ParMmrst & Son Co., 289 Main St., Bangor, Maine. Factories: Bangor and Augusta, Maine. Boston office, 67 Essex St. f i FT t TOURISTS. Always Drink POLAND if L minTrn WHICH IT ASSURES HEALTH IN ALL CLIMATES. IT IS VITALLY IMPORTANT FOR ALL TRAVELERS. Because of its unequalled purity and unchanging diuretic qualities, Poland "Water is the most import ant of all dietetic factors in over coming the attacks on health which always menace tourists. To drink Poland Water always is to be free from all dangers of lo cality always. If you have any difficulty obtain ing Poland Water in your travels, we would esteem the information. HIRAM RICKER & SONS POLAND SPRING, SOUTH POLAND, MAINE II. W. PRIEST, Proprietor Beach Bluff, Massachusetts. An Ideal Summer Resort on the North Shore. THE "SWATFEST" TESTED Western Golf Novelty Delights Partici pants and Onlookers. Any Number May Start, but Procen of .Elimination is Jlapid-The Game In Detail. 3WATFEST o-nlf. a nov elty introduced in the West last summer, enter tained Saturday after noon, a good field of contestants with a big gallery enjoying the fun. Ball sweep stake prizes of eight, five and threo were offered, O. B. Prescott of Newton, F. G. Godd of Zanesville. O., and II. W. Orms bee of Brooklyn winning. Other con testants and the order in which they fin ished, were: Becker, Lippy, Wright, Robinson, Hall, Bunzl, ltoe, Johnson, Newbold, White, Lyon, Schindler and Dr. Hill. The word "swatfest" is somewhat of a misnomer, selected because the game per mits any number of starters who tee off together. The plan is to eliminate the high men, hole by hole, so that there will be but one survival at the finish, and the game is by no means as much of a joke as the name implies. To be sure a good player, through hard luck, may be put out at any period of play, but a steady player is pretty sure to hang until the last and, taken all in all, the game is an excellent test of golf, espe cially steadiness. When there are nineteen starters, for instance, one would (the high man) be dropped at each hole throughout the en tire eighteen. In case of ties, additional holes are played and one or more players, according to the number of holes played, are dropped to maintain the elimination process. In case of thirty-seven players two would be dropped at each hole, and in case of a larger number they would be disposed of in lots, according to the num ber of high scores. When the field is reduced to six or eight, the swatfest becomes as exciting golf as one wished to see, much after the form of the play-off of a qualification tie, and when only one pair is left it is noth ing more or less than an ordinary match which one hole decides. One should not class the swatfest with such frolics as monkey golf and the liker but rather as a test of steadiness, and the interest shown in the opening tourna ment here is indicative of its becoming genuinely popular. One of its strong features is its social side, and when this is combined with much that is novel and excellent and little that can be found fault with, it is sure to stand high among golf competitions which are ranked as novelties. The Midwinter Tourney. Interest in the annual midwinter golf tourney booked for January 17, 18, 19, and 21, and the advertising contest which precedes it continues, thus early indi cating a field of about one hundred and fifty contestants. ON TIXIIEE IBAIil, SYSTEM. Hovel Team Iff atch Entertains Christ maa Bay Golfers. A team match on what, for want of a better name, may be called the "three ball scoreing system," filled in Christmas afternoon, and its novelty was much enjoyed. Three teams of seven men each were captained by Daniel Fleming, C. L. Becker and T. S. Lippy, and the mem bers numbered from 1 to 7, the contest ants on each team whose numbers cor responded, playing a match play three some. Captain Fleming's men won with two hundred and eighty-three points, with Mr. Becker's men second with two hundred and seventy-frix and Mr. Lippy's third with one hundred and ninety seven. Six points were to be accounted for on each hole and various combinations were possible. For instance if all halved each secured two points; if 2 contestants halved with the best score they secured three each and the loser ought ; if 1 con testant won with the best score and the other 2 halved, the winner got four and the other 2 one each: if 1 contestant won from 1 and lost to the other, he got two, the winner four and the loser ought; if 1 contestant won from the other 2 he got four. the scores: Fleming 40 Becker 38 Lippy 30 White 29 Newbold 44 Spalding 35 Taft 47 Ormsbee 37 Johnson 24 Johnson (NY) 35 Creamer 40 Prescott 33 Roe 62 Dr. Hill 49 Honeyman 7 Hatch 30 Hall 32 Lightbourn 46 Turner 50 Watson 36 Wright . 22 283 276 197 U. S. S. A. Annual. The annual meeting of the United States Golf Association is announced for Friday evening, January 18, at the Audi torium Hotel, Chicago. The officers nominated by the usual committee in clude the following : President, Daniel Chauncey, Garden City Golf Club ; Vice Presidents, Fred S. James, Glen View Club, Alex. Britton, Chevy-Chase Club; Secretary, VVm. Fel lowes Morgan, Baltusrol Golf Club; Treasuer, Samuel Y. Heebner, Philadel phia Cricket Club ; Executive Committee, Leighton Calkins, Plainfield Country Club, Warren Dickinson, Des Moines Golf and Country Club, Herbert Jaques, The Country Club, Brookline, Silas II. Strawn, Midlothian Country Club. Christmas Dajr Trap Shoot. An informal trap shoot filled in Christ mas morning, David Fleming of Phila delphia leading with 14 high gun." Other contestants were I. D. II. Balph, Phila delphia ; Jay V. Hall, Pittsburg ; Thomas II. Bauchle, Jr., New York; and Leon ard Tufts, Boston. At The Cedars and Lenox. A pleasant feature of the week at The Lenox and Cedars were presentations to Manager and Mrs. J. Milton Robinson upon Christmas eve. Miss M. M. Clark of Elbridge, N. Y., is spending the Holidays here. -A.
The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 29, 1906, edition 1
4
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