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THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK
Page & Shaw Candies
The Standard of Excellence
Packed in Boxes at One Dollar per Pound
Sold in All
Principal Cities
and at Our
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FACTORY, IS & 20 AMES ST CAMBRIDGE, MASS.
ON SALE at The Carolina
arid
Country CluJb
PINEHURST PHARMACY
A COMPLETE LINE OF
Drugs, Sundries, Toilet Articles, Confections,
Stationery, Etc.
IDot anb (Mb Soba - Cigars J
'.
Prescriptions Compounded by a Registered Pharmacist
the Pinehurst Outlook, Newspapers and Magazines
Department Store Building
Choisa" Ceylon Tea
i lb. Canisters
60c
1-2 lb. Canisters
35c
Tremont and Beacon St
Copley Square.
185 Milk St. (Wholesale)
Packed in Parchment-Lined One
Pound and Half-Pound Canisters
We invite, compari
son with other Teas
of the same or higher
price.
S. S. PIERCE CO.,
icon Sti. . S7!T y
BOSTON.
Coolidge Corner,
BROOKL.TNK
T,,
BIjOOIDEID dogs
FOR SALE
Pinehurst Kennels. Pinehurst, N. C.
SLATER, HUNTER, ROBESON
They Fignie as Stars in toe Annual
Midwinter Golf Tournament
IVineteen-IIole Battle in Consolation
Overshadow the Final llound
for President's Trophy
FROM qualification
round to match play
final, the tenth annual
Midwinter Golf Tourna
ment was a contest of
many thrills, Harold
Slater of Fox Hills,
Robert Hunter of Wee
Burn, and young Fill
more K. Robeson of Oak Hill the stars in
sensational play. ISlater's achievement
was the winning of the President's
trophy, four up and two to play, in the
final with Mr. Hunter. Two down at
the seventh, Mr. Slater won the next
four holes, halved the twelfth and thir
teenth, won the fourteenth, halved the
fifteenth, and took the sixteenth for the
match. In the semi-final with I. S.
Robeson of Oak Hill, Mr. Slater turned
home three up, but he lost the tenth,
halved the eleventh, lost the twelfth,
won the thirteenth, halved the four
teenth, lost the fifteenth and sixteenth,
and all even, halved the seventeenth in 3
and won the eighteenth, 5 6. The
crisis of Mr. Slater's play was the second
round with T. B. Boyd of Algonquin
which was carried to the twenty-second
hole. In the lead at the turn, Mr. Slater
was all square on the tenth. Alternat
ing wins resulted on the next four holes
and the fifteenth was halved, Slater win
ning the sixteenth, losing the seven
teenth, halving the next four holes in 5
each, and winning the twenty-second,
45, with brilliant recovery from a hook
drive which landed in the rough. In the
first round, Mr. Slater won five and three
from C. B: Hudson of North Folk.
HUNTER VS. BECKER
Mr. Hunter advanced to the final as
the result of a keen win from C. L.
Becker of Woodland. Turning home in
forty-two to forty-three for his opponent,
Mr. Hunter was one up. The match,
however, was all square on the tenth
green, Mr. Hunter gaining the lead again
on the thirteenth, halving the fourteenth
and maintaining the lead with alternate
wins on the fifteenth and sixteenth, by
halving the two remaining holes. Mr.
Hunter's second round was the climax
of his golf career, the defeat of Walter
J. Travis of Garden City. With cards of
forty-two, the pair turned home all even,
Mr. Hunter having won the third and
fourth and lost the fifth and sixth, with
the remaining holes halved. Mr. Hunter
gained the lead on the tenth, 45, and
halved the eleventh in 5. On the
twelfth, Mr. Travis had all kinds of
trouble and picked up, and on the thir
teenth a lost ball made the score three
up in Mr. Hunter's favor. Mr. Travis
won the fourteenth in an indifferent
67, and took the fifteenth in a fast
3 4. The sixteenth was halved in 6 and
Mr. Hunter won the match, 3 4, on the
short seventeenth. Mr. Hunter's first
round was a two and one win over
Spencer Waters of Apawamis.
ROBESON VS. FREEMAN
From the standpoint of the spectacular,
the consolation final in the President's
trophy division, and the match of the
week was young Robeson s defeat of
Edwin A. Freeman of New York on the
nineteenth green ; the cards eighty-four
and eighty-five. Mr. Robeson made the
turn in thirty-nine, two up, winning the
first, second, fourth, fifth and eighth
holes and losing the third, sixth and
seventh; the ninth being halved. The
tenth was halved in five and Mr. Robe
son gained the lead of three up on the
eleventh with 4; the twelfth went to
Mr.. Freeman, 4 5, but Mr. Robeson won
the thirteenth, with the score reversed,
and halved the fourteenth in 5. A bril
liant trio of 3's captured the next three
holes for Freeman, and the pair lined up
on the eighteenth tee all even. The re
sult was a halve in five, and evidence of
the strain was indicated by the poor tee
shots on the extra hole ; Robeson hook
ing into the rough and Freeman pulling
into the railway track. Mr. Robeson,
however, made the green in 3 to 4 for
Mr. Freeman, and two putts each settled
it in favor of the Oak Hill player. The
cards:
Robeson Out 45544463 4 3
Freeman Out 56455354 441
Robeson In 54545444 540
Freeman In 55455333 538
Robeson Bye 5 84
Freeman Bye 6 85
Mr. Robeson's semi-final was a five
and four win from Spencer Waters of
Apawamis, and his first four and three
from W. J. Macdonald of Calumet. Mr.
Freeman advanced on a first round vic
tory over R. G. Storm of Brookline, four
up and three to play, and a two up win
from C. B. Hudson of North Folk.
THE SUMMARY
The full story of play is concisely told
in the following qualification scores and
match play summary :
president's trophy
F. K.Robeson 34 38 72
Walter J. Travis 38 40 78
B. W. Corkran 43 36 79
C. L.Becker 43 38 81
C. P. Herbert 42 43 85
E. A. Freeman 48 38 86
C. B. Hudson 42 45 87
Spencer Waters 46 42 88
Harold Slater 45 43 88
Robert G.Shaw 43 46 89
Irving S. Robeson 45 44 89
W. E. Truesdell 44 46 90
T.B.Boyd 48 42 90
W. J. Macdonald 46 45 91
Robert Hunter 44 47 91
V. A. Seggerman 44 47 91
governors' trophy
G. W. Statzell 46 46 92
T. A. Ashley 49 43 92
A. 11. Shaw 46 46 92
R. J. Clapp 47 45 92
Dr. Theodore Senseman 52 41 93
N. S. Hurd 44 50 94
H. C. Fownes 48 47 95
S. A. Hennessee 51 44 95
Walter Clark 48 47 95
S.H.Patterson 47 48 95
II. G.White 44 51 95
F. F. Storm 45 51 96
N. S. Walker, Jr. 48 48 96
Daniel Anthony 51 46 97
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