TOWMEMU eon VOL. XVIII, NO. 7 SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 16, 1915 FIVE CENTS JOURNEY OF VICISSITUDES Match Play in Midwinter Tourney Provides Thrills and Surprises Whittemore and Hunter Survive Keen Preliminaries unci Win Eatlly in Final Hound PRELIMINARY match play decided the posses sion of the President's trophies in the twelfth Annual Midwinter Golf Tourney and it was a battle royal with num erous surprises. In the final test Whittemore and Barber ' played round ' ' for the chief trophy, the Brookline golfer winning, five and four, and in the consolation Hunter had an equally easy victory over Hudson by five and three. Whittemore had work cut out for him in his first round, Hunter right after vic tory from first drive to final putt. If The pair divided honors with a win and a lose on the first two holes, the Brookline golf er winning the third and fourth, halving the next two and losing and winning on the seventh and eighth. Hunter took the 140-yard ninth in par 3, to make the turn one down, holding his own with halves in bogey figures on the tenth and eleventh. Rallying, he won the twelfth and thir teenth in perfect 4's for the lead which he promptly lost on the 432-yard four teenth to a one under bogey 4, only to regain it again with a par 3 on the fifteenth. The sixteenth was even honors in a perfect 4, Whittemore winning the seventeenth to tie, 4 5, and the eigh teenth for the match by one up, 4 6. UThe cards: wiiittemoke Out 4 5 4 4 5 3 7 3 439 Ix 4555 4444 43978 HUNTER Out 5 4 5 5 5 3 6 4 340 In 4 5 4 4 G 3 4 5 6 41 81 "Whittemore 's ball holed by Hunter. Next in line Whittemore met Clark who was game to a three and one defeat, as was also Dr. Gardner by the same score. Barber recorded four and two in his first matches with both Slater and Trues dell advancing to a clean-cut two and one win over Travis. If The Princeton senior was two down at the turn and the medal cards 40 42, but Travis required 6 and Barber only 4 and Travis 5 's and Barber 4's on the eleventh and twelfth, a putt from the corner of the green winning the latter hole. The thirteenth was an indifferent halve in 5, and the score was the same on the fourteenth, but a 4 won the fifteenth and the match, for the two remaining holes were halved; Travis missing a six-foot putt for a win on the seventeenth and both in the bunker on the sixteenth. If The cards : BARBER Out 55555463 442 In 44455454x T. -!ltr,(1Sl!BEST-BALL FOURSOMES halved the next two holes for the match by two and one. If C. B. Hudson ad vanced on a six and four win from Balfe to meet Slater, who lasted nineteen holes. All even at the turn, alternating wins and loses resulted on the first four holes coming in, Slater gaining the lead on the fifteenth, halving the sixteenth and losing v . ;, .) I s n - - I is PRESIDENT WALTER W. MANNI NO OF THE ADVERTISING GOLFERS TRAVIS Out 55445464 340 In 65555554x Hunter advanced to meet Becker on the default of Shannon. 1f The Woodland golfer was one hole to the good at the turn, but he held his own on the tenth and eleventh; the match squared on the twelfth. The Wee Burn golfe? gained the seventeenth. The eighteenth was a halve in 6, and a 5 won the extra hole for the North Fork man. Becker and B. T. Hudson won first division attention with their twenty-hole "marathon," a 4 to a 6 deciding it in Hudson's favor. Hudson took six holes the 220-yard eighth in 2 going out (Continued on page four) Monday's Event Makes Formal Opening Of Advertising Golf Tourney Fifty Pair Participate and Close Handicapping- Hunch Field In Numerous Ties MONDAY'S foursomes marked the formal open ing of the advertising golf tourney an even fifty pairs participating and playing in congenial quartets of their own selection. The prizes were one gross and two net, the closeness with which the scores were bunched an occasion for satisfaction to the tournament committee of which William C. Freeman is chairman. Eighty six found L. S. Gimbel of Sunindale and Harold Slater of Fox Hill and Josiah J. Hazen of Fox Hills and Don M. Parker of Garden City, tied. Seventy-six won the best net for C. W. Harmon of Wykagyl and H. B. O'Brien of Sag Harbor, whose allowance was sixteen. For second net prize, seventy-seven marked a tie between E. T. Manson of Framing ham and Clarence Cone of Inwood who deducted ten strokes, and J. M. Thorsen of Scarsdale and A. C. G. Hammersfahr of Siwanoy, whose handicap was sixteen. There was another tie at seventy-eight in which Gimbel and Slater (8) and George S. Oliver of Allegheny and C. C. Vernam of Nassau (14) figured. 1f The scores: C. W. Harmon, Wykagyl, and H. B. O'Brien, Sag Harbor, 911576; A. C. G. Hammersfahr, Siwanoy and J. M. Thorsen, Scarsdale, 931677; E. T. Manson, Framingham and Clarence Cone, Inwood, 871077; L. S. Gimbel, Sun ingdale and Harold Slater, Fox Hills, 86878; G. S. Oliver, Allegheny and C. C. Vernam, Nassau, 921478; A. S. Brownell, St. Andrews and W. E. Roberts, Bala, 931479; John Shepard, Jr., Belmont and T. B. Boyd, St. Louis, 89 9 80; L. A. Hamilton, National and B. D. Butler, Exmoor, 87681 ; Walter Smedley and S. L. Allen, Atlantic City, 941381; G. W. Watts, Hillandale and II. W. Ormsbee, South Shore, 93 1281 ; J. J. Hazen, Oakland and D. M. Parker, Garden City, 86581; F. A. Hodgman, Scarsdale and H. J. Frost, Glen Eidge, 961581; Edward Rode, Dunwoodie and J. H. Clapp, Chevy Chase, 931182; Herbert Barber, Engle wood and William McCord, Knollwood, (Concluded on page twelve)