TEE P1NEEUBST OUTLOOK PAGE 8 -,ll W'-F' I tr 1 nil is? MOR IP1 ATLANTIC CITY WORLD'S GREATEST HOTEL SUCCESS The luxurious center of social life in America the inspiration of the gayest and most fascinating life on the continent. Traymore guests have full privileges of the beauti ful Country Club of Atlantic City, where Golf is played the year round. 18-hole championship course of 6459 yards. AMERICAN AINU cUKUFcAIN PLAIN DAAIEL 8. WHITE President Mill " 4mmMm.MXWrm - , f ...,-... An Ideal Gift, Prize or Dinner Favor EASY TO SLIP ON tic uni nco w CANT INJURE TIE O? SHRJi Holds" the cravat neatly in place when Golfing and Motoring. Men who never wore Tie Clasps . now wear the "Ged." Worn by women too. 14K. Red or Green Go d Also mounted with Precious modos at .'reasonable prices. At Best Jewelers and Haberdashers. 'Stanley L. Gedney, 1 Mad. Ave., N. Y. i - 'PIHE BLUFF INN pF!NcE SKI; fi j A modern homelike hotel. Free golf. Close to ' Pinehuret and Southern Pines. Hates f 4 per day up. Weekly, $3.50 per day up. Mid-Winter Canoeing Club Headquarters. Hunting Booklet. The Kirtaood CAMDEN HEIGHTS CAMDEN. S. 0. HARRY H. COSPEB PIANO TUNER Grass Seed of Known Quality TESTED for PURITY and GERMINATION KB MEMBER All our seed is of the highest quality, purchased direct from the most reliable sources of supply and is carefully examined as to purity and growth, including tests made for us by leading Seed Testing Stations. tfmpp 30 DarclajrSt., Hew Ytk Pianos bought, sold & rented. Indiana Avenue, Southern Pines, N. C. Peach and Building Land Exceptionally well placed Building Lots in Pinehurst and adjoining country. Cottage with all modern conveniences to let for season. Apply A. LOFTUS BRYAN Box 164, 'Pinehurst, - - N. C. P. W. WHITTEMORE LEADS BIG FIELD IN SPRING TOURNAMENT F. C. Newton, Runner-up Parker W. Whittemore of the Brook line Country Club, the favored one to win the major prize, lived up to expecta tions and led the big field of 346 con testants in last week's Spring tourna ment and won the first division trophy with a 5 and 4 victory over his club-fellow, F. C. Newton. The winner lost a total of only two holes to his oppon ents in the semi-final and final rounds. Whittemore came through to the final by defeating the medalist, L. A. Hamil ton of Garden City, in the morning's semi-final round. Newton played against B. P. Merriman of Waterbury in the semi-finals and won by 4 and 3. Playing against Hamilton, in the semi finals, Whittemore went out in 37 despite a 7 on one hole and a 6 on another. He was 5 up at the turn and brought the match to an end by winning the eleventh and twelfth holes. Hamilton won only one hole in the course of the contest. This was the par 5 fifth hole where Whit temore slipped up on his second shot, put his third into a trap and wound up with a 7. Newton played much better golf in his semi-final contest with B. P. Merriman than he did in the final round. He start ed off, against Merriman, by winning the first hole with an eagle 3 and reached the turn in 38. Merriman won two holes on the way out by sinking putts of a dozen feet or so and saved himself a couple of other holes by the same process. Newton was one up at the turn and took the tenth and eleventh in 4 's, lost the twelfth, won the thirteenth with a birdie 3, halved the fourteenth and took the match by 4 up at the fifteenth, which he won in 3. He needed a 4, 3, 4 for a 73 when the contest came to an end. In view of Newton 's good game against Merriman, a close final match with Whit temore was looked for but the expecta tion was doomed to disappointment. Newton started off by getting trapped on the way to the first hole and kept it up practically throughout the round. Whit temore did no more than hold his own at the beginning of the match, however, but came strong after making the turn 2 up and ended the match on the fourteenth green, 5 and 4. He won the first hole with a birdie, halved the next four in par, and lost the sixth to Newton's 3 by slip ping up on an eight-foot putt, the only putt of less than ten feet missed by Whittemore in the course of the round. This hole put Newton on even terms but it was the only win accorded to him in the match. Whittemore took the seventh and eighth, where he ran one down for a 2 from the edge of the green after Newton had approached dead to the pin for a 3. The ninth was halved in 3's, leaving Whittemore 2 up at the turn and out in par 36. Coming in, the tenth was halved in 4 s and then Whittemore took three in a row in a total of one stroke under par. He won the eleventh with a 20-foot putt, put his second shot dead at the twelfth and got a birdie 3 and sank a six-footer for a winning 4 at the thirteenth. . The match ended with the halving of the fourteenth and with Whittemore 5 up with even 4's for a medal score. The cards: Whittemore, out 44455452 336; Newton, out x 4 4 5 5 3 6 3 3 . Whittemore, in 4 4 3 4 5 Newton, in 4 5x55 Donald Parson of the YoungjtoAvn Country Club, won the major consolation trophy and Joe Hotchkiss, a New Haveu youngster of seventeen, carried off the Governor's trophy in the second division. Results of semi-final and final rounds: First Sixteen Semi-finals F. C. Newton, Biookline, beat B. P. Merriman, Waterbury, 4 and 3; Parker W. Whittemore, Brookline, beat L. A. Hamilton, Garden City, 7 and 6 Final Whittemore beat Newton, 5 and 4. First Beaten Eight Semi-finals Donald Parson, Youngs town, beat George Van Keuren, Eagle wood, 3 and 2; J. Watson Yuile, "Royal Montreal, beat H. C. Fownes, Oakmont, 4 and 3. Final Parson beat Yuile, 4 and 3. Second Sixteen Semi-finals Parry, Old York Road, beat P. S. Maclaughlin, Ekwanok, 3 and 2; Joe Hotchkiss, New Haven, won from George S. Proctor, Oakmont, by default. Final Hotchkiss beat Parry, 3 and 2. Second Beaten Eight Semi-finals R. D. Clemson, Orange County, beat H. C. Fownes 2nd, Oak mont, 2 up ; A. B. Ashf orth, Garden City, beat J. L. Weller, Hamilton, 3 and 1. Final Clemson beat Ashforth, 3 and 1 Third Sixteen Semi-finals J. M. Thompson, Spring haven, beat D. W. Kerr, Youngstown, 2 up; Robert E. Harlow, Scarboro, beat Dr. W. J. Speers, Fall River, 5 and 3. Final Harlow beat Thompson, 4 and 2 Third Beaten Eight Semi-finals E. H. Wiswell, Montclair, beat Malcolm McGregor, Detroit, 1 up (20 holes); W. T. Stall, Thorney Lea, Avon from H. N. Spaulding, Rochester, by default. Final Stall beat Wiswell, 5. and 4. Fourth Sixteen Semi-finals Darwin P. Kingsley, Gar den City, beat F. W. Hill, Skokie, 3 and 1; J. M. Johnson, Brooklawn, beat A. S. Higgins, St. Andrews, 1 up. Final Kingsley beat Johnson, 8 and 7. Fourth Beaten Eight Semi-finals G. Wyman Carroll, Jr., Norwich, beat C. B. Hollingsworth, Greensburg, 3 and 1; Harold E. Porter, Siwanoy, beat I. Hellman, Fairview, ; 4 and 3. Final Carroll beat Porter, 3 and 2. Fifth Sixteen Semi-finals N. W. Peters, Englewood, beat S. D. Capen, Jr., St. Louis, 2 and 1; James F. Hallowell, Old York Road, beat R. L. Oakley, St. Andrews, 1 up. Finals Peters beat Hallowell, 4 and 3. Fifth Beaten Eight Semi-finals Jesse O. Norcross, Wor cester, by default; Jansen Noyes, Mont clair, beat H. C. Munger, Plainfield, 4 and 3. Final Norcross beat Noyes, 2 up.