CON
VOL. XIV, NO. 11
SATURDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 11, 1911
FIVE CENTS
ROUND ROBIN GOLF PLAY
Tin Whistle Novelty Most Interesting
Tournament of Season's Program
One Grom and Four Handicap IMvi.
Hi on (fcuallfy for notation
Jtlafcli .Play Hounds
"ROUND ROBIN" golf
provided the most in
teresting tournament
in the Tin Whistle pro
gram, one gross and
four handicap divisions
qualifying with a medal
round and those who
made the divisions play
ing match rounds with each of the
three others in the division. The story
of play is told in the following sum
maries :
QUALIFICATION GROSS FOUR
Sis
George II. Crocker 4139 80
I. S. Robeson 4142 83
R. Hunter 3846 84
T. B. Boyd 4544 89
FIRST NET FOUR
J. R. Towle 44 46 90 12 78
W.L. Hurd 44 4 9 93 13 80
II. II. Brown 47 50 97 16 81
L.D.Pierce 45 45 90 9 81
SECOND NET FOUR
R.C.Collier 45 46 91 10 81
N. S. Hurd 47 44 91 9 82
J. E. Kellogg 42 53 95 12 83
II. R. Mackenzie 46 55 101 18 83
THIRD NET FOUR
T. D. C. Rumsey 48 49 97 12 ' 85
W.R.Simons 41 50 91 6 85
J. G. Nicholson 51 49 100 14 86
P. L. Lightboiirn 46 53 99 13 . 86
FOURTH NET FOUR
C.Z.Eddy 50 64 104 18 86
W. A. Johnston 52 54 106 18 86
I'. I). Hamlin 46 47 93 7 86
E.A.Tracy 49 58 107 20 87
FAILED TO QUALIFY
C. L. Becker 44 48 92 5 87
H.W. Ormsbee 48 53 101 13 88
A. I. Creamer 48 48 96 8 88
J. B. Bowen 53 62 105 16 89
J. W. Lloyd 56 63 109 20 89
C. N. Phillips 43 52 95 5 90
JL D. Fink 69 53 112 22 90
C T. Dunlap 55 50 105 14 91
Rev. T. A. Cheatham 47 62 109 18 91
T. L. Redfleld 64 65 119 28 91
C. B. Hudson 50 55 105 12 93
W. II. Davis 68 63 121 28 93
li. C.Shannon 58 64 122 28 94
T. J. Check 57 55 112 14 98
J.E. Pushee 49 65 114 16 98
Dr.M. W. Marr 57 59 116 16 100
Cabot J. Morse 57 67 114 14 100
MATCH PLAY GROSS FOUR
gjycker 1 I I I 1 I 1 I 1
ltobe8on 1 1 0
""Dter 0 I I 0 0 I I
I!J I 0 I I 1 I 0 I
Towle
FIRST NET FOUR
I 10 10
B winner.
Hurd, W. L. I 0 I I I 0 1 I
Brown, II. U. 1 1 1
Pierce 1 1 ()
SECOND NET FOUR
Collier I 1 I I 1 I I 0 I
Hurd N. S I I 0 I I 0 I I
Kellogg 0 0
Mackenzie 1 1 1
THIRD NET FOUR
Rumsey 1 0 1
Simons 0 j 0
Nicholson 1 1
Lightbourn I Ml I I T
deducted nine strokes, third. Others
"saved"' were II. O. Smith 15 handicap,
P. D. Hamlin 7, R. C. Shannon 28, J. G.
Nicholson 12, L. D. Iieree 0, and natur
ally, Rev. T. A. Cheatham 18.
Almost but not quite, were fourteen
who made the eighteenth : C. L. Beclier 5,
, G. II. Crocker 3, John Smithers 30, G.T.
Dunlnp 15, R. C. Collier 10, J. D. C.
Rumsey 12, C. B. Hudson 12, H. II.
Brown 14, II. C. Fownes 5, I?. Hunter
7, W. L. Hurd 13, F. A. Sedgwick 13, A.
C. Aborn 9 and VV. R. Simon 6. On the
; , . - V. .
- " - ."v - ' K'- ' ' - .1
Eddy
FOURTH NET FOUR
111 I JO
WALTER
I 0
Johnston 1 0 1
Hamlin 0 1 1
Tracy . 0 0 1 j
K B Tied for first; Hamlin won play-off.
Eddy, Kellog-gr and llurd
You couldn't kill 'em in Monday's Tin
Whistle Cemetery contest, nine passing
the eighteenth green, C. Z. Eddy, whose
handicap was eighteen, winning first;
J. E. Kellogg whose allowance was
twelve, second ; and N. S. Hurd, who
J. TRAVIS
seventeenth the race ended for T. B.
Boyd 9, E. A. Johnston 10, Guy Met
calf 24, T. J. Check 14, E. A. Tracy 20,
II. VV. Ormsbee 13, E. B. Sherman 18, J.
B. Bowen 16. On the sixteenth the grim
destroyer overtook F. C. Abbe 24, Pi L.
Lightbourn 13, G.E. Robinson 9, J. E.
Pushee 16, C. N. Phillips 6, J. D. Foot 6,
J. V. Hall 16 and G. F. Brown 8. "Last
rites" were paid Cabot J. Morse 16, on
the fifteenth, and VV. II. Davis 28, on the
fourteenth.
Four ball matches will be played
Monday.
HUNTERS ON DOUBLE TRAIL
Chinese Puzzle Unravelled, Leads to
Secret Coyer and Chase Is On
Pack Divide and lerry Hun End
In IBoth Victory and 1 feat
Iflany Miles Apart
GRAY SKIES and a
brisk northwest wind,
made the start of the
week's best fox hunt
gloomy and unpromis
ing, but nothing damp
ens the ardor of those
who truly love the chase
and merrily with clank
of steel, creak of leather and gay laugh
ter the cavalcade swung out into the dim
Beyond. Not long after a scent as cold
as the day itself was struck, which after
much twistiDg and circling promised
success for which hounds and hunters
were both keen. A Chinese puzzle it
proved, for two foxes had roamed along,
side by side or apart, as fancy dic
tated, dividing from time to time,
pack and hunt.
Two hours of this novel trailing, its
difficulties increased by the wind which
soon effaced the scent, led to a dense
swamp in which the pair were jumped,
dashing away at right angles with M. F.
II. Twitty and half the pack in pursuit
of one and Huntsman Nat and the re
mainder of the dogs.after the other, with
the music good to hear. Across and
around the "burnt" land the knowing
fox swung in attempt to end the pursuit
at the very start, but still the hounds
followed, gaining, and swinging round a
swamp reynard planned a new cam
paign. Rs preliminary was a dash over
rough land, its climax climbing a tree,
backing down and doubling quickly off,
doubtless chuckling at the cleverness of
the trick. Pell mell. came the pack, the
lust of conquest in their voices as they
surrounded the tree and waited for the
hunters all but little Silas. Not quite
satisfied that the chase should end so
abruptly he swung wide and presently
his strike cry sent the hounds flying
after him.
Not just as reynard anticipated had
the theory woiked out, but it had
given him a lead which made clever
maneuvering possible, and a merry trail
he laid in a three mile dash over field
and hillside to golf links and off to Fish
ing creek. Here another clever double
gave on additional Dreaming spen,
(Concluded on page three)