THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK
THE JEFFERSON
THE MOST MAGNIFICENT HOTEL IN THE SOUTH
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
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Eighteen Hole Golf Course of Country Club of Virginia Nearby
f The many points of historic interest in, and around the City, and its central
location make Richmond a very desirable stop-over point for tourists.
Rooms single and en suite, with and without baths. Turkish and Romen
Baths. Every comfort for the tourist, every convenience for the traveling man
5" For handsomely illustrated booklet or reservations, address
THE JEFFERSON, Richmond, Virginia
O. F. WEISIGER, Manager
PINEHURST DEPARTMENT STORE
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were halved in 5's, and a brace of 4's;
Carter clinching the match on the seven
teenth with a 3 where Kerr's iron from
the tee to the trap made a 5 necessary.
If The cards :
CARTER
Out 5 5 4 5
In . 4 4 4 5
KERR
Out 5 4 5 4
In 5 5 6 6
If II. M. Weaver of the Bramshot, Eng
land, Club, was seven down and five to
play in the second round, and P. S. Mac
laughlin of Scarsdale was a three and
two victim.
HUNTER KEEPS WHITE GUESSING
White 's keenest match was his semi-final
with Robert Hunter of Wee Burn, the pair
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25 MILES NORTH OF PALM BEACH
Sni?2S'.5S:- T. B. Hamby,
u.8,iu.uU,8U,i.i.Ki,iuiucr. Hobe Sound, Fla , Box 25
ALMOST BUT NOT QUITE!
(Continued from page one)
443
x
340
x
PARISH, KERR AND ROBESON
J. C. Parrish, Jr., of the National Club
found I. S. Robeson of Oak Hill still in
the game in the first round. Going out
Parrish had much the best of it, winning
four and losing one hole, but coming in
Robeson rallied and won the tenth, thir
tenth and sixteenth, losing the eleventh
and halving the remainder, a 3 for Par
rish on the seventeenth where Robeson
was in trouble, giving him a match by
two and one. If Next in line the National
golfer met defeat by the same score at
the hands of Kerr; the score all even at
the turn and the cards forty-two each.
Kerr took the tenth in 4, but lost the
eleventh to a 5, and clinched the match
with wins in 4, 5 and 6 on the next three
holes, where Parrish was in more or less
trouble. The fifteenth was a halve in a
par 3, and Parrish won the sixteenth in a
bogey 5, but lost the match with a halve
on the seventeenth.
.Pe4-A - .-I r4 -y,-i -n
V...fc - -1 .
MISS BARNETT AND MISS COHEN, RUNNER-UP AND WINNER IN TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIP
making the turn in thirty-eight and thirty
nine, with White one w. If Honors were
divided with 5's and 6's and 5's on the
next three holes, and a one under par 3
won the three hundred and thirty-five
yard thirteenth for Hunter; White re
quiring 5. White, hpwever, was in the
lead again for a minute with a 5 on the
fourteenth, but he lost the fifteenth to a
3, and clinched the match with wins in
5 and 4 on the sixteenth and seventeenth
for a two and one win. The cards :
WHITE
Out 44446454 338
In 56555454x
HUNTER
Out 54545463 339
In 56536365x
fin the second round White recorded
seven and five in play with C. L. Becker
of Woodland, and in the first, five and
four over T. B. Boyd of St. Louis.
CLAPP STICKS TO HUNTER
John H. Clapp of Chevy Chase carried
Hunter seventeen holes in the first round.
The score was all even at the turn, and
Hunter won the tenth, but he lost the
next two holes, gained the lead again
with wins on the next two, halved the
fifteenth and sixteenth and won the
match with a par 3 on the seventeenth
by two and one.
FOOT IN OLD-TIME FORM
James D. Foot, the Apawamis veteran,
showed some of the old-time form which
won for him most of the tournaments
here several seasons ago, with a three and
one consolation victory over Clapp.
If Extra hole matches characterized play in
the lower divisions, providing daily diver
sion for the "Club House gallery," two
matches requiring twenty-one holes, with
F. P. Lee of Framingham up against
twenty, nineteen and twenty-one-hole
A