Newspapers / The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, … / April 10, 1915, edition 1 / Page 5
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THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK hig iron. H Ouimet 's last opportunity was the fifteenth where he overdrove the green, -with Guilford hole high at the left. The Champion lost a stroke in coming up, anl Guilford duplicated the performance by an over approach; the hole halved in 4' and giving the match to Guilford by four and three.' 5 The cards: GUILFORD Out 5 5 434364 337 lNr 44554 4 , OUIMET . Out 4 6445465 240 jx 5 4 5 4 5 4 ROBESON AND GUILFORD Robeson made the turn two up in the second round with Guilford, winning the first, third, sixth and ninth holes, and losing the fourth and fifth where Guil ford recorded a two under par 3, the dis tance 427 yards. Guilford squared the match with par 4's on the tenth and eleventh, but lost the twelfth to a bogey f). Bracing, he won the thirteenth, four teenth and fifteenth in par, bogey, and one over par 4's for a lead of two up. Kobeson took the sixteenth in 5, where Guilford was in trouble, and the seven teenth in 4, where both players were trapped on their irons from the tee. Guil ford was away and at the front of the green, and he put too much ginger into his stroke and overran. Still away he played a third which was short. Robeson was in a pit at the right and made a good out, pushed his ball up snug to the hole and went down in a winning 4. H Guilford had every advantage on the eighteenth, Robeson pulling off the course to the rough on his tee shot, with Guil ford straight down the alley. Robeson's second made a pit at the front of the green which Guilford overran. Robeson lost a stroke in getting the ball into play and his fourth was at the very edge of the green, by fortunate chance close to the cup which had been moved away from the center, because of water. Guilford's third, however, was short and likewise his fourth, and both missed puts which under normal green conditions would have been easy, halving in 6. Some of the Club House gallery turned out for the nineteenth hole in spite of the driving rain which was coming straight down the course with a wicked swish. Guilford had a bit the best of it at the start but Robeson recovered from a sliced tee shot and saved the hole for a halve in 6. both missing short putts H Guilford's tee shot on the twentieth was his undoing, a sliced and topped drive because the wet club handle slipped in his hands, which skidded some forty yards at risrht ancles and landed in the scrub oak. On his second he was only able to make a short pitch out into the foreground rough, his third waa short and his fourth overran. Robeson's tee shot was a beauty but his second was short, and likewise his third, but he went down in 6 at the length of about as manv inches, while Guilford was for tunate in recording a " 7 at an equally short distance. If The cards: ROBESON Out 55455454 340 Txt k k k a R f. 5 4 6 46 jl 1 xj tj ir j f Bye 6 6 nTTTT.TTORD f o k k a - 1 R 5 4 4 41 IN 4 4 6 4 4 4 6 5 6-43 ROBESON AND KERR Robeson and Kerr were all even at the turn, with three holes won, lost, and halved, making the journey in forty-one each. TI Halving the tenth, Kerr won the eleventh, lost the twelfth, and won the thirteenth maintaining the lead thus gained with halves on the next three holes. The crisis was the short seven teenth where Kerr laid his iron from the tee "dead" for a two which wouldn't die, missing and halving in 3. Robeson 's fine I 011 the eighteenth tied the score and he won the nineteenth in 5 6 for the match. If The cards : ROBESON Out 554.55 3 64 441 In 454554 5 3 439 Bye 5 KERR Out 6554635 3 i U In 44545453 539 Bye 6 hunter and travis Hunter and Travis were soins verv tji sr. in their first, round. maRinff tne turn in thirtv-eiffht and thirtv-nine. with - - 0 - , Hunter one up through a winning 4 on the third, the eight remaining holes halved. If Coming in it was more of give and take; Hunter's 3 on the seventeenth, nno nf several Ion? mitts, giving him the Ipad. The sixteenth was a halve in par 4, and. Hunter pushed down a long 2 for the match by two and one on me seven teenth. If The cards: HUNTER Out 654 44453 6 as tvt a 5 5 4 4 4 5 3 339 TRAVIS Out 4555634Z Tm - 44645443 T11 the second round Hunter turned the trick by six on five on T. W. Case. SULLIVAN, WORTHINGTON AND CARTER .T TT Sullivan. Jr., eliminated not ai , title holder, R. S. Worthington, hut. Philit) Carter, by many regaraeu t n,iimAt most dangerous rival. 11 All square on the fifteenth, which Worthington won in 3, Sullivan won tne suweuui 4, and the. match by halving tne seven teenth, and eighteenth in 3 and 5. K The cards : SULLIVAN n er O O 3C OUT - 545BDa-uo--a a AAR443 539 IN iv, WORTHINGTON 0uT 6 4 3 3 4 3 6 3 3-35 Z ,.. 5 4 5 3 5 3 5-40 o , ninth gave Sullivan a one up lead over Carter who halved the tenth and won the eleventn u v npvt. two holes for the lead, halving the fourteenth. Carter rallied for a 2 on the fifteenth but lost the sixteenth to a 5, and the match by two. and one with a halved 4 on tne BCvc flThe cards: STTT.TiTVAN K k a'r 3 6 4 340 OUT 0 0 u " c a ' lNw 5 5 4 3 6 4 5 4 BARTER k a r -3 5 5 441 Out 0 0 " R a lN 5 4 5 4 6 2 6 4 -rvfl. OWALTNEY AND I. S. ROBESON Qt. the turn in his match JIT K. H. Gwaltney Ebri tb. tenth and won the next two hoS Topping was W on the DIXVILLE NOTCH NEW HAMPSHIRE THE BALSAMS, June to October THE BALSAMS WINTER INN October to June New eighteen-hole Golf Course and Club House unequalled in the Summer Resort Field. Playing length over sixty-three hundred yards. Superb Location. Ask Donald Ross, who supervised its construction, for particulars, and write for special descriptive booklet. Tennis, Boating, Bathing, Fishing and Wilderness Life. As the northernmost point reached by New Hampshire's splendid system of highways, and famous for its rare scenic beauty, Dixville Notch is a favorite rendezvous of motor tourists. Garage, machine and supply shops. Two well appointed hotels in the center of a vast estate embracing four thousand acres and including farms, dairy, fish-hatchery, hydro electric plant and abundant spring water supply. For booklets, reservation or information address, CHARLES H. GOULD, Manager Dixville Notch, N. H. S. S. PIERCE GO'S 0 Q ill Ml n 101 (P r-i Sold at the Leading Hotels Just the thing after a round of Golf n fMkMmk The Mineral Water DeLtixe From the famous White Rock Mineral Springs at Waukesha, Wisconsin Office 100 Broadway, New York Sold at the Club House and Hotels The Kikuiood CAMDEN, SOUTH CATC OL IN A JANUARY TO APRIL THE BUCKWOOD INN, Sh2n.?o?l Pa 18 Hole Golf Courses Among: the ' T. EDMUND KRUMBHOLZ (Continued on page eigmf Bye 6 7
The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, N.C.)
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April 10, 1915, edition 1
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