OR
5?
mull
fBSBBt
THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK
2
9
4 1 ft
ii r-i- ' iT i' "i i i --iT i' iVii1'iiti ii ii.iw a
Many noted golfers, playing at White Sulphur
Springs, have declared that the supreme touch
to perfect golf the touch needed to put the full
physical value of the game into you to keep is
the magical " Medical Bath as given at the
Greenbrier.
GOLF is a great cure ; but Golf and just the right
Baths, given with scientific regard for your in
dividual needs, constitute the greatest " Cure "
in the world.
ALVONThe water of the Mountain Top Medically Pure
HE
Greenbrier
SOUTHERN PINES
NORTH CAROLINA
Half the Travel, Half the Time, Half the Cost, Twice the Comfort.'
Southern Pines is one hundred miles from the ocean, The sea breezes
tempered by the gulf stream, blow over vast stretches of resinous pine
forests, giving a peculiarly genial and healthful quality to the air.
. FINE EIGHTEEN HOLE GOLF COURSE.
Southern Pines has several very fine hotels, ranking with the best in the
South. There are also many cottages and apartments, furnished for imme
diate occupancy, ranging in price from $150 to $2,500
GOOD QUAIL SHOOTING
$
A.
LIST OF HOTELS
Highland Pines Inn . .
Hollywood . . .
Hotel Juneau ....
Jefferson Inn . . .
Southland . .
Tara Nook .
Highland L odge .
New England House !.
Hotel Perkins . . . '
300
100
. 70
65
.'45
. 30
.25
. 25
. 15
r
Real Estate and Rental Agents,
SANDHILL INSURANCE OFFICES, J. M. WINDHAM
. Farm Land a Specialty
For booklet address, H. E. Foss, Manager
- I
White Sulphur Springs
West Virginia
: .-il
tournament. C. L. Becker followed
and the prevailing fashion, in the sec
ond sixteen, and waited until the 19th
hole before winning against E. L.
Lennox, of the Highland Club.
Second Match Round
The second match round and the
semi-finals were both played on Fri
day. Stearns had a narrow escape in his
second round match with R. H.
Gwaltney, the Baltusrol expert, but
finally won by 1 up.
F. C. Leonard walked away with his
match against George A. Dixon, Jr.,
of the National Links, winning by 7
and 5, and came into line to meet Mr.
Stearns in the semi-finals.
Becker pursued the even tenor oi
his way in the second sixteen and de
feated Courtlandt Van Clief by 2 up.
The Semi-Finals
In the semi-finals, Stearns had to
fight an up-hill battle against F. C.
Leonard, but won by 2 up at the sev
enteenth . In the mantime, Donald
Parson was disposing of T. R. Brown
of Scarsdale, by 6 and 5, which left
the final contest for the President's
Trophy up to Parson and Stearns.
In the second sixteen, Becker play
ed against G. T. Bloodgood, of Cherry
Valley, and found himself 4 down at
the turn. That looked good for a
short-cut home for Becker, from the
thirteenth, but there are many disap
pointments in golf and what happened
was that Becker won the 10th, 11th,
12th, 13th, 14th, and 15th holes in
succession and finally took the match
by 2 up at the seventeenth, finishing
out the inward journey for a 37.
The Finals
Donald Parson put up a game fight
against Stearns in the final, played on
Saturday, but lost by 3 and 2, at the
end of a contest singularly free from
noteworthy events.
In the second sixteen, C. L. Deck
er overcame the hoodoo that has pur
sued him all through the Tin Whistles
season, Becker has won four or five
of the Tin Whistles events up to 4:55
p. m. and then some other fellow has
come along in the last five minutes
and pushed Decker back into second
place. He played against R. A. Stra
nahan, the Inverness crack, in the
final, and won the Governor's trophy
by a margin of 2 and 1.
R. H. Hunt of Worcester, carried off
the Secretary's trophy in the third
sixteen.
THE QUALIFYING ROUNDS
First Sixteen
Edward Styles, North Hills 78 78 15i!
John N. Sterns, 3, Nassau 78 82 160
R. H. Gwaltney, Baltusrol 81 86 167
J. D. Chapman, Greenwich 82 86 168
H. C. Fownes, Oakmont 78 91 169
Franklin H. Gates, Moore 82 87 169
R. F. Mundy, Garden City 85 84 169
Qeo. B. ,Carhart, Greenwich 85 86 171
L. Deane Pierce, Ekwanok 87 85 172
F. C. Leonard, North Hills 86 86 172
T. R. Brown, Scarsdale 90 82. 172
T. A. Kelly ,Southern P. 89 84 x,o
C. F. Watson, Jr., Baltusrol 84 89 173
G. A. Dixon, Jr., National 88 8 175
F. W. Kennedy, Toronto 85 90 175
D. Parson, Youngstown 90 85 175
Second Sixteen
A. E. Ranney, GreenVich 87 90 187
F. T. Keating, Spring Lake 90 87
D. R. Meigs, Merion 90 88
Courtlandt VanClief 88 90
R. A. Stranahan, Inverness 86 93
John W. Watson, Merion 85 95
F. H. Mahan, St. Davids 88 92
Everett E. Wilbar, Alpine 88 93
C. L. Becker, Philadelphia 92 90
J. W. Carroll, Jr., Norwich 88 94
George Williams, Areola 89 94
G. T. Bloodgood, Cherry V. 85 98
J. H. Clapp, Chevy Chass 94 89
P. A. Proal, Deal 96 87
E. L. Lennox, Highland 97 87
G. W. Statzell, Aronimink 91 93
Third Sixteen
W. S. Van Clief, Fox Hills 92 96
J. L. Weller, St. Catherine 94 95
R. C. Shannon, Brockport 95 94
R. J. Francisco, Oak Hill 96 93
J. O. H. Denny, Aliesberry 97 92
E. B. Fay, Bellerive 92 97
W. W. Shedden, New York 96 94
W. T. Barr, Garden City 97 ,93
J. I. Melanson, Tedesco 97 94
S. H. Patterson, Plainfield 98 93
R. H. Hunt, Worcester 93 98
P. S. Maclaughlin,Ekwanok 96 95
J. S. Brown, Montclair 96 96
Jaifsen Noyes, Montclair 95 98
T. A. Cheatham, Pittsburgh 97 96
J. R. Bowker, Woodland 92 102
Fourth Sixteen
H. S. Cummings, Woodway 95 99
C. B. Hudson, North Fork 94 101
Nat S. Hurd, Pittsburgh 101 94
Walter L. Milliken,
P. B. O'Brien, Detroit
E. E. Wadbrook,
R. D. Clemson
A. C. Potter, Belmont Sps. 100 97
J. A. Bryant, Detroit 99 99
Martin G. Brumbaugh, 100 98
G. T. Dunlap, Canoe Brook 103 95
C. N. Sturtevant 103 96
Emile de Planque 104 95
A. S. Higgins, St. Andrews 99 100
B. V. Covert, Lockport 99 100
S. M. Morgan, Pittsburg 99 100
106 89
100 96
99 98
99 98
177
178
178
1?9
180
180
181
182
132
183
183
193
193
184
184
188
189
189
189
189
189
190
190
191
191
191
191
192
193
193
ItM
194
195
195
195
196
197
197
197
198
198
193
199
199
199
199
199
THE MATCH ROUNDS
First Sixteen
First round: F. W. Kennedy beat
L. D. Pierce, 2 and 1; T. R. Brown
beat J. D. Chapman, 5 and 3; Donald
Parson beat R. F. Mundy, 1 up (22
holes). T. A. Kelly beat G. B. Carhart,
2 and 1; George A. Dixon, Jr., beat
Franklin H. Gates, 4 and 2; F. C.
Leonard beat C. F. Watson, Jr., 1 up
v20 holes); John N. Stearns, 3rd, beat
Udward Styles, 2 and 1; R. H. Gwalt
ney beat H. C. Fownes, 6 and 5.
Second round: T. R. Brown beat
F. W. Kennedy, 1 ip; Donald Parson
-eat T. A. Kelly, 5 and 4; F. C. Leon
:rd beat George A. Dixon, Jr., 7 and
5; John N. Stearns, 3rd, heat R. H.
Gwaltney, 1 up.
Seci-finals: Parscn beat Brown, 6
and 5; Stearns beat Leonard, 2 and 1.
Final: Stearns beat Parson, 3 and
2.
First Beaten Eighth
Second round: J. D. Chapman won
from L. L. Pierce, by default; R. F.
Mundy beat G. B. Carhart, 3 and 1;
Franklin H. Gates beat C. F. Watson,
Jr., 1 up; Edward Styles won from H.
C. Fownes, by default.
Semi-finals: Mundy beat Chapman,
2 and 1; Gates beat Styles, 1 up. ,
(Continued on page six)