OTLOOK VOL. XIX, NO. 12 SATURDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 2G, 191G FIVE CENTS THE WINNING COLORS Belong to R. H. Hunt and J. D. C. Rumsey In 111 Flafir Conteat of the Tin Whlatle Clul on Monday THE brassie and the midiron were put to a new test by the Tin Whistle Brigade on Monday last. By imme morial custom the championship Num ber Two Course was dedicated to their ex clusive use in the afternoon. Every fel low was given so many strokes over bogey by way of a handicap, and sent forth to go as far as he liked, or was able with those strokes. If he could go on around the treacherous way twice, why all right. No peusilanimous eighteen hole limit on this game. The man with the longest drive and the shortest putt (provided it reached its goal) would win with a clear distance between him and his rivals. For instance. If E. H. Hunt of Wor cester is compelled to proceed until he has taken 94 strokes obviously he will have long since covered the course and will be going on down the line again well towards Carthage- before they are con sumed. So it proved. His 94th shot rolled home in the 20th hole, and there he camped, the farthest north, waiting to see if any Doctor Cook would pre sume to challenge his championship. None turned up. W. L. Milliken of Ilyannisport loomed out of the offing and drove from the 19th hole towards glory with still five shots in his locker. The Milliken colors advanced over the fair way like Picket making for Bound Top. It was a noble effort. He came close enough to see the white of Hunt's eyes, and fired his last shot upon the green. Within two feet he came of the 20th hole, out of sight of Dr. M. W. Marr, who held third place, roosting exhausted by the 19th hole. Meanwhile this battle had been waged in two sections. And the second devel oped a more heart rending finish still. Up out of the valley, dodging the traps, his ball soaring in the clouds and whistl ing in triumph, came J. D. C. Rumsey, master of the spoon, leader of the hosts, from Brooklyn by the Sea. Up to the 19th hole he comes, and with a last and cautious effort drops the eager ball into the cup, displays his banner, and calls for the silver trophy. But slow. Out of the west, from Cleveland, comes a champion with gin ger in his drive and discretion in his mashie, eating up the distance like Bel lerafon on Fair Day. Consider then the consternation of the Rumsey clan when Johnson is seen rolling' evenly over the country making for the 19th hole with confidence and precision. The Johnson ball soars over the rough; it mounts the. fairway, it falls like a malediction on the green. It makes for the hole as if it had lived there always. Three inches more, and all will be over. But like Milliken, Picket and Banaparte, high T. B. Boyd, St. Louis J. D. C. Rumsey, Brooklyn M. B. Johnson, Cleveland II. II. Rackham, Detroit G. T. Dunlap, Canoe Brook Dr. M. W. Marr, Bethlehem T. A. Kelly, Southern Pines H. C. Fownes, Oakmont J. D. Foot, Rye, N. Y. Stuyvesant LeRoy, Newport II. II. Buckley, Dunwoodie C. S. MacDonald, Lambton W. E. Truesdell, Fox Hills John McLeod, Woodland C. B. Hudson, North Fork 92 19 100 19 101 19 107 19 96 19 93 19 90 19 89 18 91 . 18 90 18 102 18 92 18 86 18 95 18 89 18 TROTTING MATINEE A V ' fir' ate .. A- M fa3 ill At. I Oi l H 1 1 -T i -. f-rf I j t; 111 4 fill f I THE PINEHURST CHAPEL tide at Pinehurst, Gettysburg and Water loo had all been reached. There it died. Within three inches of the goal. And Johnson ended second. The course was marked with the finish of heroes all way from the 15th hole to the twentieth, as will be seen by anyone interested to compare the tabulated an nals of this classic event. ST. PO. R. H. Hunt, Worcester 94 20 W. L. Milliken, Hyannisport 94 19 P. S. MacLaughlin, Scarsdale 93 19 C. L. Becker, Woodland 93 19 S. Waters, Apawamis 92 19 W. S. Van Clief, Richmond 94 19 G. W. Statzell, Aronimink 93 J. T. Newton, Tuxedo 106 J. V. Beekman, Plainfield 109 F. P. Lee, Framingham 94 C. II. Lay, Oil City 97 II. S. Houston, Mt. Tom 119 C. B. Fownes, Oakmont 91 N. D. Clark, Woodbridge 98 J. M. Robinson, Harbor Beach 103 G. F. Brown, Huntingdon 96 T. A. Cheatham, Pittsburgh 90 C. F. MacDonald, New York 117 James Barber, Englewood 104 C. F. Bacon, Brae Burn 97 W. T. Statzell, Brockton 101 (Concluded on page thirteen) Rodman Wanamaker Wins the Steeplechase Itace Track ChrUtvned Willi Horn Fait Performance Ij ir .Am IBe and the Thoroughbred Iflare MEMORIES of Autumn days on the Deerfield River and the shades of of Neil Burgess and the County Fair were revived yesterday at the Pinehurst Race Track, when the country gen try and the local trot ters, the hunters and the pacers, the assembled throng and a grand stand of automobiles assembled to make a racing holiday. Colonel R. A. Swigert of Palmetto was on hand to start the races and see the meet was managed according to the rules made and provided and our neighbors from Suthern Pines brought over some fast mounts. First on the program came a 2.19 pace, half a mile, between two of the fastest mounts in the business. Are Am Bee, Leonard Tufts, owner, driven by J. C. Thomas, in the past has won more money in the Carolina circuit than any other one horse. The reputation was main tained. The half-mile was done easily in 1.10, and W. W. W. Hines, . driving his own horse, Rockridge, was distanced. It is fair, however, to .say that he had some trouble with his sulky, and that this will probably prove a very close thing next time. The race for green trotters brought out a competition between two of Tufts ' horses Fred Patchin, driven by Haines, and Red Reo, driven by Thomas. This was a fierce enough battle to suit any one. Each took two heats of half a mile, and it was left that way to be settled another day. The best time was 1.20. Too much cannot be said for the per formance of the new thoroughbred mare, Miriel II., from the Pinehurst stables. She has every evidence of having the makings of a winner. With Cameron up she kept a small lead over the veteran, Travellor, ridden by Bachelor, the entire distance of a half mile dash, finishing easily in 49 seconds. Thomas is in rap tures about her, and predicts that she will make a name for herself on the turf this Summer. (Concluded on page thirteen)