YICTORY FOR MR. CROCKER
(Concluded from poge one)
Frank Nay 53 51 104
S. B. Bowen 50 54 104
E. N. Jewett 53 53 106
F. VV. Keller 56 51 107
Donald Mc Bride 55 52 107
Robert Batcheller 50 58 108
Edward Henderson 60 49 109
president's trophy
First round D. N. Jewett, Aberdeen
beat A. II. Sha', Brookline, 2 up; J. E.
Kellogg, Alpine beat G. Glenn Worden,
Crescent, 2 up ; E. J llidgway, Montclair
beat Rev. T. A. Cheatham, Salisbury, 5
and 4; E. A. Johnston, Merion Cricket
beat C. II. Wheeler, Philadelphia, 4 and
3; John R. Goodall, Bellrieve beat P. B.
O'Brien, Detroit, 2 up; George II.
Crocker, Brpokline beat W. S. Rathbone,
Englewood, 4 and 2 ; J. D. Foot, Apawa
mis beat J. D. Foot, Jr., Apawamis, 1
up (19 holes) ; R. C. Shannon, 2nd, Oak
Hill beat George D. Morse, Brockton,
8 and 7.
Second round J. E. Kellogg, Alpine
beat D. N. Jewett, Aberdeen, 2 up ; E. J.
Ridgway, Montclair beat E. A. Johnston,
Merion Cricket, 7 and 6; George II.
Crocker, Brookline beat J. R. Goodall,
Bellrieve, 6 and 5 ; J. D. Foot, Apawamis
beat R. C. Shannon, 2ud, Oak Hill, 8 and 7.
Semi-final Kellogg beat Ridgway, 3
and 2 ; Crocker beat Foot 3 and 2.
Final Crocker beat Kellogg, 7 and 6.
consolation
First round A. II. Shaw, Brookline
beat G. Glen Worden, Crescent, 6 and 4;
Rev. T. A. Cheatham, Salisbury beat C.
II. Wheeler, Philadelphia, by default;
W. S. Rathbone, Englewood beat P. B.
O'Brien, Detroit, 4 and 3 ; J. D. Foot, Jr.,
Apawamis beat George D. Morse, Brock
ton, 3 and 2.
Semi-final Shaw beat Cheatham, 3
and 1 ; Rathbone beat Foot, Jr., 3 and 2.
Final Shaw beat Rathbone, 1 up.
governors' cup
First round Donald Mc Bride, Cleve
land beat J. B. Bowen, Philedelphia
Cricket, 2 and 1 ; F. W. Keller, Lawrence
ville beat Edward Henderson, Detroit, 7
and 5; J. D. C. Rumsey, Brooklyn beat
Frank Nay, Cnicago, 2 and 1 ; A. II. Sis
son, Chicago beat W.V.Kellen, Cohasset,
5 and 4; C. T. Bloomer, Newark beat S.
B. Bowen, Philadelphia, 2 and 1 ; R. G.
Shaw, Brookline beat O. B. Hudson, New
Suffolk, 4 and 2 ; R. N. Jewett, Aberdeen
beat W. C. Micou, 6 and 4; T. J. Check,
New York beat Robert Batcheller, Wash
ington, 6 and 5.
Second round Keller beat McBride,
2 and 1 ; Rumsey beat Sisson, 4 and 3 ;
Shaw beat Bloomer, 3 and 2 ; Check beat
Jewett, 4 and 3.
Semi-final Rumsey beat Keller, 5
and 4; Shaw beat Check, 5 and 4.
Final Shaw beat Rumsey, 6 and 5.
consolation
First round J. B. Bowen beat Hen
derson, 8 and 6; Nay beat Kellen, 7 and
6; Hudson beat S. B. Bowen, 4 and 3;
Micou beat Battheller, 1 up.
Semi-fiiTal Bowen beat Nay, 2 and
1 ; Hudson beat Micou, 4 and 3.
Final Bowen beat Hudson, 6 and 5.
THE DEIER1ERS' CIlItlSTM AA
Concluded from page five)
tones that no real soldier has any respect
for men who shirked duty and that they
must move on, warning them that if this
news got abroad here in Raleigh the men
might expect any consequences. Then
he turned on his heels and walked away
with the ex-Confederate. These two
were united on one subject at least.
Meanwhile the deserters and the poor
wife and children made their way to the
country and sought to set themselves
down in 1 heir own neighborhood; but
there fate, as hard as iron and as bitter
as the cold of that Christmas night,
pointed her finger at them and bade them
begone. And so they drifted, further
and further away; passed beyond the
confines of the State and bejond all
memory and reckoning, and the only thing
which remains to mark the fact that they
ever existed is that dreadful word,
"Deserted," set against the name of each
man. Neverforthem the tender thoughts
and the glorious ones, too, of Memorial
Day ; never that touch of elbows and of
comradeship which in all the passing
years, to this good hour marks the meet
ings of true soldiers; and for the poor
little wife and mother and those other
wives, too, nothing of the pride in' the
cause, the joy in their home-coming
braves, or any of those tender offices
which have ever marked the women of
the South.
It is a wild place yet, that place of the
cave; strangely wild and remote, far
from the madding crowd, seeming as
if some true bit of mountain ruggedness
had been set down here; but surely of
all its memories none could possibly be
stranger than that of the Christmas din
ner in the lair of the deserters.
Fred A. Olds
Prominent Entries for Holiday Golf
The next event on the golf schedule is
the Holiday week tournament, December
27, 2S, 30, 31 . Paul and Robert Hunter of
Chicago are among the probable entries.
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A NATIVE HUNTER
THE CAROLINA
Season: November 30 to April 10
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Minnie
The Carolina is a magnificent four-story building completed in 1900. The in
terior is a model of elegance, with appointments calculated to suit the most luxu
rious tastes. The hotel accommodates five hundred guests and is provided with
seventy-four suites with bath. The cuisine and table service are unsurpassed.
The house contains every modern comfort and convenience, including elevator,
telephone in every room, sun rooms, steam heat night and day, electric lights, and
water from the celebrated Pinehurst Springs, and a perfect sanitary system of sew
age and plumbing.
H. IA7. PRIESTi Manager, Pinehurst) IN. C
The
Berkshire,
PINEHURST, N. C.
The Berkshire is a modern hotel, delightfully located with all conveniences for
health and comfort ; running water from the celebrated Pinehurst Springs, bath
rooms, steam heat, open fires, electric lights and sanitary plumbing. The guests'
apartments are comfortable and home-like and the public rooms large and attractive.
The cuisine and service is of a high standard. A billiard room and barber shop
have been recently added for the convenience of the guests.
J. M. ROBINSON, Manager.
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HOTEL WENTWORTH
The Leading New England Coast Summer Resort.
NEW CASTLE, PORTSMOUTH N. H.
Every facility for sport and recreation : Golf, tennis, riding, drivlne, yachting, fishing, still and
-urf bathing and well equipped garage under compeient supervision. Fine livery. Music by
symphony orchestra. Accommodates 500. Local and long distance telephone connection in every
room. Send today for a beautifully illustrated book.
Wentworth Hotel Co., H. W. Priest, Manager
Address Until May 1. The Carolina Pinehurst, N. C.