Newspapers / The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, … / Dec. 21, 1929, edition 1 / Page 7
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Greenville, South Carolina, and in earlier years was known in the Pinehurst colony. In his later life he often spent his vacation playing polo in Minehead, Eng land. He also was fond of skating, fishing and tennis and was promoter and President of the New York Skat ing Club, a member of the Beaver Brook Skating Club of Long Island, the Meadowbrook Club, the Piping Rock Club, the Recess Club, the Metropolitan Club of Washington and India House. New York may lose its place as playing ground of the annual Army and Notre Dame football game. Bal timore or Philadelphia may get. the battle because of friction between authorities of New York and West Point athletic circles. Major Philip Fleming, who handles Cadet athletic matters, and Knute Rockne will confer on the matter during January. Trapshooting will come into its own more than ever over the country, it is believed, with the advent of spring. The coming Pinehurst events are already at tracting unusual attention. The high light in the sport in this section just now is the Travers Island traps of the New York Athletic Cub. T. H. Lawrence and J. B. Brune, Jr., tied for the high scratch cup in the most recent shoot, each breaking 98 out of a possible 100. In a 25-bird shoot-off, Lawrence broke 34 and Brune took the second cup with 22. Twenty-seven gunners tied for the high handicap cup with full cards of 100. After a shoot-off, the winner turned up in E. J. Orsenigo. C. B. Thomas won at the Larchmont Club traps with 99 out of a possible 100 targets. The second cup went to A. L. Burns with 93. Governors of the National Hockey League are still trying to speed up the game and have raised the player limit of each club from thirteen to fifteen. The board explained it was feared players would grow stale if re quired to play as much as they were under the thirteen player limit. The scoring leaders in the national race have come very close together in the last few days. Hector Kilrea, left winger of the Ottawa Senators, holds the lead with 13 goals and seven assists and has a 20-point standing. Nels Stewart, center of the Montreal Maroons, is right after Kilrea, however. Stewart is chief goal m^ker of the league, but drops behind in number of assists. He has 16 goals and three assists, for a 19 total. King Clancy, of Ottawa, is a defense man of much ability and is in the third notch in standing, Gainer, a Bruin, scored t\ko goals and made an assist against the Americans on Sun day, thereby taking fourth place, leading Ranger Bill Cook. Welland, Bruin, is tied with Captain Cook, while Aurel Joliat, of Les Canadiens, and Frank Bouch er, a Ranger, are not far behind. Red Horner wears the gonfaon of having served most time in the penalty corner—51 minutes-Lwhile Joe Lamb, Ottawa center, is second with 47 penalties. More interest than ever is being shown this season in the famous ice game. Word from Pinehurst is that much interest is shown there in indoor polo and further interest will be created by the victory of Squadron A’s trio over Riding Club’s team 10 1-2 to 8. Preliminary clash results are shown in the summary below: CLASS A Riding Club (3). Squadron A (10^/2). Position Matthews. Bancroft Number One Hopping . Jackson Number Two Law Vdetor Number Three SCORE BY PERIODS Riding .lYz 4 J4 1— 8 Squadron A ...4 3 lj4 2—10 Goals—Riding Club: Matthews (3), Hopping (3), Law (2), pony 1. Squadron A: Bancroft (5), Jackson (2), Vietor (2), handicap 2. Fouls—Riding Club: Law, Hopping. Squadron A: Bancroft. Referee—John Wise. CLASS C Squadron A (10). Ex-Members (5^4). Position Tate... Francke Number One Klausner .. Whitehead Number Two Coxe . McKay Number Three SCORE BY PERIODS Squadron A .......2 6 0 2—10 Ex-Members ..2 2 1J4 0— 5^4 Goals—Squadron A: Tate (5), Klausner, Coxe (3), pony 1. Ex-Members Francke (3), Whitehead (3). Foul—Ex-Members: McKay. Referee—Capt. F. A. Veitor. The Metropolitan Golf Association met in New York the other night, committed generally to the tenents of the National Association in the mater of paying ex penses of amateur golfers in minor tournament play, and discussion among members at the session was almost wholly in favor of the U. S. G. A. rule banning such liberality. The New York State Association takes the same view.
The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 21, 1929, edition 1
7
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