Newspapers / The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, … / March 22, 1913, edition 1 / Page 11
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THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK Mr. and Mrs. s. jtf. White and Miss Alice L. White of New York and Mr. and Mrs. O. G. White of Philadelphia will remain until April. Mr. and Mrs. J. Louis Taylor of Bos ton are recent arrivals. Mrs. C. F. Uebelaeker of Hackensack comes for a fortnight. Messrs. J. D. Hunter of North Adams and Sanford Stoddard of Bridgeport join the golfers. Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Wrenn of Chicago are spending a fortnight here. Mr. T. C. Trask of Brooklyn will re main until April. Mr. and Mrs. W. II. Britigan of New York will remain some time. Mr. Kobert L. James of Pittsburgh is making a short visit. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Bullen of Chicago and Mrs. G. 11. Pulsifer of Newtonville come for a fortnight. Mr. Harold Cross of Fitchburg joins the golfers. Mrs. N. P. Tyler of Mamaroneck joins Mrs. C. S. Waterhouse of New York. Mr. II. C. Philbrick of Boston is again here for golf. At Tli Ilerkaliire, and Harvard Messrs. I. W. Champion and K. A. Burnett of Brantford, Can., join the golfers for the month. Mrs. C. M. Leonard of Kenwood, N. Y., returns for her usual visit. Mr. and Mrs. II. J. Mulligan of Indian apolis are here for a short visit. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Gay of Boston and Miss Gay will remain several weeks. Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Wells of New York come for a long sojourn. Mr. and Mrs. Mark W. Selby of Ports mouth, Ohio, are spending March here. Messrs. B. L. Dunn and S. It. Leonard of Oneida join the golfers. Messrs. W. J. White and C. A. Bur gen of New York come for a fortnight. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Blannell of Provi dence will make a long sojourn. Mr. Charles Farnum of Philadelphia joins the family. Miss L. Buckman of Ely, N. J., is a late arrival. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Ives of Cheshire return for a fortnight. At Tlie Mag-nolia Admiral A. Dunlap of the U. S. N., and Mrs. Dunlap will remain several weeks. Mrs. E. L. Barckley and Miss G. T. Barckley of Altamont are here for the month to come. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Carman of Bay shore are spending a fortnight here. Mrs. H. F. Thayer of Manchester re turns. Mr. and Mrs. George E. Tracy of Waterbury are here for March. The Misses E. M. and Josephine Kenny of Brooklyn are making a short visit. IMfty.four Years Old The fifty-fourth birthday of Mr. H. A. Foss of Chicago was pleasantly remem bered by his friends at a Berkshire dinner Monday evening. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. II. Noyes of Onieda and Messrs. A. A. Stagg of Chicago and Robert Stumpf of Baltimore. Send The Outlook saves letter writing! to Friends. It PlNEllUnST OOilEUS MECCA Concluded from page nine) Pinehurst or, in fact, at many of the southern courses. Everywhere is to be found the tough, wiry Panama grass, the only grass that will stand the hot rays of the sun. The turf is excellent. It is almost impossible to get a bad lie. The subsoil is of sand, and the club head bites through as a sharp knife through well-ripened cheese. For those who pre fer the running-up shots to the pitched affairs, Pinehurst is the place. There it is possible to approach to almost every hole with a putter from a distance of nearly 50 yards. Every variety of shot in the world is at Pinehurst, and the holes are as varied and diversified as will be found on any course in this country. Of the old type of cross bunkers there are few, but the traps and pits are there by the score. None of them punishes a good shot and all the greens are wonderfully well guarded. The result of this is that the golfer is obliged to play a careful game or invite trouble from the start. ..It; is a curious sight to watch some of the golf ers who come from courses whose fair ways are a half mile wide, so that neither a hook nor a slice is penalized. They learn their lessons quickly, and after two days' play are golfing with a care that they had hitherto unknown. The fairways at Pinehurst are not narrow, neither are they wide, and the rough is something to be avoided. It is almost entirely scrub oak. None of it is tall, but the ball is just as likely to be found back of a tough sapling as any where. Here is where the darky cad dies prove to be so useful. They can, after a 150-yard slice that has landed in thii scrub oak and without hesitation walk right up to the ball. The loss of a ball is, in consequence, unusual. TIIIIIIY-THO OF ALSO II A 8 (Concluded from page six) SECOND EIGHT First round C. A. Ross beat C. L. Snod- grass, by default; W. A. O'Brien beat J. B. Price, 5 and 3; A. E. Lane beat H. W. Sherrill, 1 up; W. S. L. Hawkins beat C. L. Raymond, 5 and 4. Semi-final O'Brien beat Ross, 6 and 4; Haw kins beat Lane, 4 and 2. Final Hawkins beat O'Brien, 2 and 1. third eight First round Otto Sasse beat F. T. Ellison, 6 and 5; R. J. Miner beat E. E. Kattell, 2 up; T. F. Woodman beat F. S. Madison, 2 and 1 ; A. L. Perrotte, beat J. B. Pierce, 3 and 1. Semi final Sasse beat Miner, 6 and 5; Per- rotte beat Woodman, 7 and 6. Final Sasse beat Perrotte, 5 and 3. fourth eight First round H. C. Bachman beat H. R. Smith, 4 and 2; A. A. Wells beat C. F. McDonald, 1 up, E. D. McCabe beat R. O. Blancke, 4 and 3; J. McLeod beat II. II. Barber, 4 and 3. Semi-final Bachman beat Wells, 4 and 2; McLeod beat McCabe, 2 and 1. Final Bachman beat McLeod, 3 and 1. Col. Smith, winner of the tournament, has been an annual visitor tor many years. In the 1912 Veteran's tourna ment at Apiwamis, he won the prize ior the best eighteen hole gross score with a card of seventy-nine in the two days7 play, fin the Middle Florida Cham pionship, February 18 20, he was runner-up in the first division. THE CAROLINA Season: November 30 to April 10 It fH? I SIIIi'.!3i!! " .i A il i U .... riLr .... mhi 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, A7. PRIEST 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. HOTEL WENT WORTH The Leading New England Coast Summer Resort. NEW CASTLE, PORTSMOUTH N. H, . . Every facility lor sport and recreation : Goll, tennis, riding, armns:, yacnun. nsmng. bbh ana sun Datning ana wen equippeu garage uuuci wiiipeicui ouFcitiou. j 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.
The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, N.C.)
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March 22, 1913, edition 1
11
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