PINEHURST OUTLOOK
C. C. 5HAYNE & CO.
IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF
STRICT LY
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Annual Discount Sale
We are offering our entire stock of
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lO to 25 per cent,
126 West 42nd Street
New York City
IIollng--Out-ln.One
That rarest and most impressive of
all golfing feats has been achieved a sur
prising number of times in the last year
or two- Golfers, both tyros and veterans,
dream of performing it some time. But
to drive several hundred feet with the
accuracy of a sharpshooter, land on the
green with precisely the momentum to
push the ball to the cup and not overrun
it, would be such a prodigy of skill that
it is attributed usually to luck, and the
happy golfer is right glad to obey the
time-honored rule which requires him to
play the hose at the club house to every
person on the links.
One player this season has twice holed
out in one. In a match at Pocono he
drove 675 feet and pocketed the ball in
the tiny cup; a few weeks before in an
open tournament he holed his tee shot in
a drive of 444 feet. Moreover, three years
before he for the first time put the feat
to his credit at a distance of 585 fete.
That record is unsurpassed.
But probably the most remarkable shot
of the kind ever achieved is a part of the
golfing history of the famous veteran,
Walter J. Travis. He was preparing for
the Pinehurst winter tournament, and
drove the ball out of sight over a low
hill; when it disappeared it was traveling
fast and straight for the hole, and on
the green he found it snugly lodged there
in. However, a short time ago the secre
tary of the United States Golf Associa
tion, Howard F. "Whitney, playing with
borrowed clubs on the St.' Eegis links in
the Adrondacks, and playing from a
bunker at that, made his first hole-in
one in a score of years at a distance of
525 feet. In July, J. C. Lord at the
Sleepy Hollow Country Club, although he
was far in the rear in the tournament,
achieved all the fame of the meeting by
scoring the great shot at 453 feet. Others
who have made the shot lately are T. C.
Watkins and R. C. Kerr, both of whom
scored it at Baltusrol at the same dis
tance, 546 feet, and Fred McLeod at Chi
cago, whose distance was 351 feet. It is
a spectacular feat, but it is never likely
to become common.
Jupiter Island Golf Course
Good Nine Hole Golf
Course, of about 3,000
HOBE SUUJNU, JUjUJ&IUA yards, on the ocean front.
Joe Mitchell, of the Cleveland Country Club, professional in charge
Comfortable quarters at Pine Ridge Inn, Hobe Sound.
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Classic Translations
The Wisest Customs of the Persians
(Herodotus Book 1)
Now the customs of the Persians
We have seen in our excursions,
Or, -when swarming into Hellas,
They have sought to make incursions.
Much they do seems rather crazy,
But one custom is a daisy,
Their idea of matrimony
Is by no means dull or hazy.
If a maid is blessed with beauty
She will fetch her weight in booty
At the auction all are anxious
To assume the husband's duty.
Then they take this pretty penny
Which they get for handsome Jenny
Give it to some freckled sister,
Then she's popular as any.
Therefore every maid can marry
And the pussy and canary
Never occupy apartments
Where the human male should tarry.
Clyde Davis.
Pinehurst N. C .
Oolfera Who Carried Off Titles on
the JLtnka In 1915
NATIONAL CHAMPIONS
United States amateur Robert A. Gardner
United States open Jerome D. Travers
United States women
Mrs. C. H. Vanderbeck
SECTIONAL CHAMPIONS
Metropolitan amateur Walter J. Travis
Metropolitan open Gilbert Nicholls
Metropolitan women Mrs. Lillian B .Hyde
Metropolitan Junior Philip V. G. Carter
Western amateur Charles E. Evans, Jr.
Western open Thomas L. McNamara
Western Women 's Miss Elaine Eosenthal
Western Junior De Witt C. Balch
Western Intercollegiate John Simpson
Western Interscholastic Robert Shealy
Trans-Mississippi Alden B. Swift
North and South amateur
Filmore K. Robeson
North and South women's
Mrs. R. II. Barlow
North and South open Alexander Ross
Middle Atlantic J. C. Davidson
Southern amateur Charles L. Dexter, Jr.
Southern Women Miss Alexa Sterling
Southwest open Robert Peebles
Pacific Northwest amateur
II. Chandler Egan
Pacific Northwest women
Mrs. T. B. Curran
Panama-Pacific amateur
Harry K. B. Davis
Panama-Pacific open Walter C. Hagan
Central Willam II. Diddel
Northern California Robin Y. Hayne
Southern California amateur
Ervin S. Armstrong
Southern California women
Mrs. Henry Van Dyke
Southern California open Hutton Martin
Philadelphia amateur
Hugh L. Willoughby
Philadelphia women
Mrs. Ronald II. Barlow
Philadelphia open Thomas L. McNamara
Philadelphia junior Mortimer M. Jack
Chicago amateur Donald Edwards
Chicago women Miss Laura M. Kaiser
James Donaldson
A. M. Loeb
Miss Vera Ramsey
District of Columbia W. S. Reyburn
Hudson River Stuart D. Connolly
Central Illinois John Simpson
Western Pennsylvania amateur
Eben M. Byers
Western Pennsylvania open
Jack Hutchinson
Women's Eastern
Mrs. Clarence H. Vanderbeck
Eastern Interscholastic
Filmore K. Robeson
Southern Florida Walter J. Travis
TEAM CHAMPIONS
Robert W. Lesley Cup (Intercity)
Metropolitan- G. A.
Clement A. Griscom Cup (Intercity)
Women's Golf Association of Phila.
Intercollegiate Yale
Western Intercollegiate
University of Illinois
Philadelphia Team
Huntingdon Valley C. C.
Tom Morris Memorial Los Angeles C. C.
Crafts W. Higgins Cup Los Angeles C. C.
Chicago open
Chicago junior
Boston women
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