{"1": {"fulltext": "\u00e2\u0096\u00a0m^:\\nm\\nm.\\nm^\u00c2\u00a7-", "height": "3180", "width": "2233", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0001.jp2"}, "2": {"fulltext": ".s^-v WWW\\nvV s^ V C 0^\\nC^ ^.s\\nO.", "height": "3191", "width": "2074", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0002.jp2"}, "3": {"fulltext": "U 4 V\\n-r.\\nv-i^\\nr .V c^\\nN\\nV- -^y", "height": "3190", "width": "2033", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0003.jp2"}, "4": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3191", "width": "2074", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0004.jp2"}, "5": {"fulltext": "Price 25 Cents\\nPALDINCS\\nV^J^MHHK^ ^IPS CONIXIIVIISG THE olH\\nLt-^^%im. P%1 WITH INTERPRETATIONS L5l5\\n\u00c2\u00bbt Hi^a*\u00c2\u00bb\u00c2\u00bbtV^cil\u00c2\u00bba^^^Vti\u00c2\u00bbllI\u00c2\u00ab\\nJAL REVIEW\\nATIONAL\\nMPIONSHIPS\\nECTIONAL\\nLE EVENTS\\nSTATE\\nIRNAMENTS\\nANADIAN\\nSEASON\\n:OPH\\\\ AND\\nCONTESTS\\nORL\\\\I.\\nCOMMENT\\nETHODS OF\\nNDICAPPING\\nTOUR OF\\nVARDONandRAY\\nBRITISH\\nMATCHES\\nMAKING A\\nPUTTING\\nCOURSE\\nWOMEN S\\nCOMPETITIONS\\nPLAY OF THE\\nJUNIORS\\nGOLF S START IN\\nNEW ENGLAND\\nHINTS ON\\nLAYING OUT A\\nCOURSE\\nRICAN SPORTS PUBUSHING COMPANY\\n45 ROSE STREET, NEW YORK", "height": "3237", "width": "2217", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0005.jp2"}, "6": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3264", "width": "2116", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0006.jp2"}, "7": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S ATHLETIC LIBRARY\\nRed Cover Scries. 25c. Blue Cover Series. 10c. Green Cover Series. 10c\\nNo.\\nNo.\\nNo.\\nNo.\\nNo.\\nNo.\\nNo.\\nNo.\\nNo.\\nNo.\\nNo.\\nNo.\\nNo.\\nIR.\\n3R.\\n6.\\n55R.\\n57R.\\n59R.\\nSPALDING S\\nSPALDINGS\\nSPALDING S\\nSPALDINGS\\nSPALDING S\\nSPALDING S\\nlOOR. SPALDING S\\n200R. SPALDING S\\n700R. SPALDING S\\nIC. SPALDING S\\n9. SPALDING S\\n7A. SPALDING S\\n12 A. SPALDING S\\nOFFICIAL ATHLETIC ALMANAC. Price 25c.\\nOFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE Price 25c.\\nOFFICIAL ICE HOCKEY GUIDE Price 25c.\\nOFFICIAL SOCCER FOOT BALL GUIDE. Price 25c\\nLAWN TENNIS ANNUAL Price 25c.\\nOFFICIAL BASE BALL RECORD. Price 25c.\\nOFFICIAL BASE BALL GUIDE. Price 25c\\nOFFICIAL FOOT BALL GUIDE Price 25c\\nOFFICIAL BASKET BALL GUIDE. .Price 25c\\nOFFICIAL BASE BALL GUIDE (S-Ttfr) Price 25c\\nOFFICIAL INDOOR BASE BALL GUIDE. Price lOc\\nOFFICIAL WOIVIEN S BASKET BALL GUIDE. Price 10c.\\nOFFICIAL ATHLETIC RULES (A. A. U.). Price 10c\\nNo. 350\\nNo. 365\\nNo. 9\\nNo. 80R.\\nNo. 81R.\\nNo. 82R.\\nGroup I. Base Ball\\nBlue Cover Series, each number 10c,\\nNo. 202 How to Play Base Ball\\nHow to Score [ners\\nBase Ball for Boys Begin-\\nSpalding s Official Indoor\\nBase Ball Guide (including\\nrules for Playground Ball)\\nRed Cover Series, each number 25c.\\nNo. 59R. Official Base Ball Record\\nNo. IGOR. Official Base Ball Guide\\nNo. 79R. How to Pitch\\nHow to Bat\\nHow to Umpire\\nKnotty Base Ball Problems\\nHow to Organize a League\\nHow to Organize a Club\\nHow to Manage a Club\\nHow to Train a Team\\nL How to Captain a Team\\nNo. 96R. How to Catch; How to Run\\nBases. New. In one volume\\nHow to Play the Infield and\\nOutfield Positions. En-\\ntirely new. In one volume.\\nReady Reckoner Percentages.\\nSpalding s Official Base Ball\\nGuide (Canadian Edition)\\nGroap 11. Foot Ball\\nRed Cover Series, each number 25c.\\nNo. 200R. Official Foot Ball Guide\\nNo. 47R. How to Play Foot Ball\\nNo. 55R. Official Soccer Guide\\nNo. 39R. How to Play Soccer\\nNo.\\n83R\\nNo. 97R.\\nNo. 98R.\\nNclC\\nGroup III. Tennis\\nRed Cover Series, each number 25c.\\nNo. 57R. Spalding s Tennis Annual\\nNo. 2R. Strokes and Science of Lawn\\nTennis\\nNo. 76R. Tennis for Girls (Miss Ballin)\\nNo. 84R. Tennis Errors and Remedies\\nNo. 85R. Tennis for Girls (Mile. Leng-\\nNo. 99R. How to Play Tennis Hen)\\nNo. lOlR. The Outdoor Group or Com-\\nmunity Sports Club; How to Organize\\nOne. Includes directions for con-\\nstructing a tennis court\\nGroup IV. Golf\\nGreen Cover Series, each number lOe.\\nNo. 2P. How to Learn Golf\\nRed Cover Series, each number 2Se.\\nNo. 3R. Spalding s Golf Guide, with\\nrevised rules\\nNo. 4R. How to Play Golf\\nNo. 63R. Golf for Girls (Miss (3ecil\\nLeitch)\\nGroup V. Basket Ball\\nBlue Cover Series, each number 10c.\\nNo. 7A. Spalding s Official Women a\\nBasket Ball Guide\\nNo. 193 How to Play Basket Ball\\nRed Cover Series, each number 25c.\\nNo. 700R. Spalding s Official Basket\\nBall Guide\\nNo. 93R. How to Play Basket Ball,\\nfor Women\\nSpecially Bound Series of Athletic Handbooks\\nAny 25 cent Red Cover book listed in Spaldinp s Athletic Library\\nwill be bound in flexible or stiff covers for 75 cents each or anytwo 10\\ncent Blue Cover or Green Cover\\nMention style binding preferred.\\nbooks in one volume for 75 cents.\\n(Continued on the next page. Prices subject to change without notice.)\\nS-21", "height": "3278", "width": "2095", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0007.jp2"}, "8": {"fulltext": "Contents ^l\\n;^13\\nPAGE\\nIntroduction 5\\nBad Form in Golf 10\\nGolf Comment 17\\nGolf has No Age Limit 17\\nGolf and Its Benefits 17\\nImpressions of the National Open Championship 18\\nImpressions of the Western Amateur Championship 19\\nWestern Golf Association Rules 20\\nRay\u00e2\u0080\u0094 England s Babe Ruth 20\\nWomen Need More Practice 21\\nSir Walter Scott on Golf s Etymology 22\\nFrom Link to Link 23\\nVardon and Ray in the United States 27\\nUnited States Crolf Association 35\\nOfficers 35\\nAnnual Meeting 37\\nChampionship Tournaments, 1921 39\\nThe Walker Cup 40\\nClub Members 43\\nNational Amateur Championship 51\\nNational Open Championship 63\\nPirof essional Golfers Championship 69\\nNational Women s Championship 71\\nIntercollegiate Championship 75\\nGolf in New England 77\\nGolf in the Middle States 85\\nWestern Golf Association 107\\nGolf in the Middle West 113\\nTrans-Missisisippi Golf Association 119\\nWestern Golf 120\\nGolf in the South 135\\nGolf on the Pacific Coast 141\\nGolf in Canada 143\\nGolf in Great Britain 153\\nOther Foreign Championships 152\\nCalkins System of Handicapping 159\\nShort Hole and Long Hole Handicapping 163\\nGlossary of Technical Terms 167\\nGolf History at a Glance 170\\nGolf Diversions for Si ecial Occasions 172\\nObstacle Golf 172\\nFlag (or Tombstone) Golf 172\\nClock Golf 173\\nThe Game of Six-Pin Putt 174\\nThe Compact Putting Course 175\\nHints on Laying Out a Golf Course 176\\nSelecting a Golf Course 183\\nand\\nTHE OFFICIAL RULES OF GOLF\\nIn Convenient Detachable Form\\nIncluding Golf Interpretations, Index of Rules and a Special Chapter on\\nStaiidnrdization of the Golf Ball.\\nA614122", "height": "3279", "width": "2059", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0008.jp2"}, "9": {"fulltext": "TNDEX OF TOURNAMENTS.\\nPA(iK\\nAlabama Amateur 139\\nAlabama CO 139\\nAreola CO 97\\nAtlantic City O.C 96\\nBala G.C 102\\nBelleair. Fla 138\\nBerthellyn Oiip 103\\nBoston Women s 79\\nBuffalo C.C 94\\nCalifornia Amateur 141\\nalifomia Junior 141\\nCarolinas 136\\nChej-ry Valley Club 94\\nChevy Chase Club 105\\nhicago City 116\\nChicago District Women s 116\\nCleveland City 114\\nColorado\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Golf in 130\\nConnecticut Amateur 82\\nConnecticut Women s 82\\nDeal G.C 97\\nDetroit District 115\\nEastern Women s 99\\nKxmoor Cup 116\\nFather and Son, Sleepy Hollow.. 89\\nFlorida\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Golf in 137\\nFo.\\\\ Hills G.C 91\\n(Jarden City C.C 93\\nCeist Cup 103\\n(ieorgia Amateur 136\\nGriscom Cup 100\\nIndiana Amateur 114\\nIndianapolis Amateur 115\\nInland Empire 142\\nIntercollegiate 75\\nInterscholastio 94\\nInterstate at Des Moines 129\\nIowa\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Golf in 128\\nIsham Cup 83\\n.Tacque.s. Memorial Cup 81\\nKansas Amateur 127\\nKansas City\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Golf in 120\\nKansas Women s 127\\n\u00e2\u0096\u00a0N,,^ Kentucky Amateur 138\\nP Lake Geneva C.C 117\\nlAJ Lakewood C.C 96\\nLesley Cup 99\\n^Udo G.C 94\\nV\\\\ Louisiana Amateur 139\\n\u00c2\u00abJ( Ijumbermen s Association 116\\n^O Lynnewood Hall Cup 103\\n^vMaine State Golf Association 81\\n_^ Massachusetts Amart:eur 78\\n0\\\\Massachusetts Caddy 81\\n.^Massachusetts Junior 81\\nMassachusetts Open 78\\nXfassachnsptts vs. Connecticut 81\\nMetropolitan Amateur 85\\n\u00e2\u0096\u00a0Metropolitan Junior 88\\nftletropolitan Open 87\\nMetropolitan Women s 87\\nMichigan Amateur 115\\nMichigan Women s 11.\\nMiddle Atlantic 105\\nMinnetf^ota Amateur 132\\n.Mississ ippi .\\\\maiteur 139\\nPAGK\\nMississippi Women s 139\\nMissouri Amateur 126\\nMissouri Women .s 127\\nMontana Amateur 132\\nMorris County G.( 97\\nNas-sau C.C 93\\n-National Amateur 51\\nNational Open 63\\nNational Women s 71\\nNebraska Amateur 133\\nNew England Professional 78\\nNew Jersey Amateur 95\\nNew Jersey Cad^ly 95\\nNew Jersey Junior 95\\nNew Jersey vs. New York 96\\nNew Mexico Amateur 133\\nNew York A.C 93\\nNorthern Michigan 116\\nNorth Hills CO 103\\nOhio Amateur 314\\nOhio\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Golf in 113\\nOhio Women s 114\\nOklahoma Amateur 133\\nOregon Ama teur 142\\nOregon Women s 142\\nPacific Northwest 142\\nPennsylvania Anuiteur 97\\nPennsylvania Open 97\\nPhiladelphia Tourmiments 101\\nPinehurst, N. 0... 136\\nPiping Rock Olub 93\\nProfessional Golfers A-ssociation. 69\\nRace Brook C.C 83\\nRhode Island Amateur 83\\nRhode Island Women .s 83\\nSt. Louis Tournaments 127\\nSan Francisco Women s 141\\nSeniors at Apawamis 89\\nShawnee CO 102\\nShenecossett C.C 83\\nSiwanoy C.C 94\\nSleepy Hollow C.C 94\\nSouth Dakota Amateur 132\\nSouthern Amateur 135\\nSouthern Open 135\\nSouthern Women s 136\\nStaten Island 91\\nStockbridge Invitation 81\\nSyracuse Open 94\\nTexas Amateur 133\\nTexas Women s 133\\nTrans-Mississippi 119\\nUnited States vs. Canada 90\\nVictory Cup 94\\nWestchester County 91\\nWestchester-Long Is land Women s 93\\nWestern Amateur 107\\nWestern Junior 108\\nWestern Open 107\\nWestern Women s 108\\nWestern Pennsylvania\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Golf in 103\\nWest Virginia Amateur 105\\nWilmington C.C 105\\nWinter Golf Iveague 136\\nWisconsin .\\\\mateur 117\\nWisconsin Women s 117", "height": "3278", "width": "2095", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0009.jp2"}, "10": {"fulltext": "GRANTLAND RICE.", "height": "3279", "width": "2059", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0010.jp2"}, "11": {"fulltext": "Introduction\\nOf the United Slates national golf champions who began the season of\\n1920 modestly wearing their honors and sturdily striving to retain them as\\ncompetition started for supremacy in another year, only one was successful.\\nThe woman triumplied. Miss Alexa Stirling of Atlanta retained her title\\nas the champion woman golfer of the United States, and won in addition the\\nchampionship of Canada as. well as the championship of the South. She\\nplayed excellent golf all season. Her combined skill and knowledge of the\\ngame and her perseverance and faithful application to the task which she\\nhad set for herself made her game of golf an admirable creation. She has\\nnot lost a match since 1915, when she was defeated on the twenty-second\\nhole in the semi-final round by Mrs. Clarence H. Vanderbeck of the Phila-\\ndelphia Cricket Club, who won the title that year. Miss Stirling has won\\nthe national women s championship three times in succession and has been\\nvictor for three times in the Southern championship.\\nWhatever difference of opinion may exist as to the personal abilities of\\nthe men golfers of the United States ^the leaders of men golfers among\\nthe women there seems to be no disapproving nor dissenting voice to the\\nacknowledgment of Miss Stirling s superiority. Tihe women golfers of the\\nUnited States have said there is no woman who can defeat her. There\\nmay be some player who will overcome this Georgia girl at some time in\\nher career, if Miss Stirling continues to play until she is forced to admit\\ndefeat, but none seemed to approximate that possibility during the past\\nseason. The women players of the United States have called her the\\nGlorious Golfing Girl, a fanciful title appropriately bestowed.\\nFrom abroad there came that stout-hearted and stout-muscled player of\\nGreat Britain, Ted Ray, to take away the open championship. There were\\nAmerican golfers at Inverness, where the championship was played, who\\nhad their chance, but they were not quite equal to the game of the power-\\nful professional of the land across the sea. It was a close battle. Vardon\\nwas in the thick of it for awihile, as well as his contemporary, with whom\\nhe was speeding through the country; Leo Diegel, Jock Hutchison and\\nJack Burke spurred the victor to his very best, and his very best was just\\na little too much for them. Walter Hagen, former holder of the title, was\\nvanquished, but he played well except for one unfortunate round.\\nWho of those who saw the final round in tbe national amateur at the\\nEngineers Club, Roslyn, L. I., will forget the thrill of the play when\\nCharles Evans, Jr., better known as Chick, met Francis Oudmet in a\\nround which had l Ben dreamed of by golfers, although hardly expected to\\nhappen as it did? Evans won and, for the second time in his golfing career,\\nheld the title. He had been champion in 1916. The champion of 1919,\\nS. Davidson Herron, made a brave fight to retain the lead, but the golf of\\nthe tournament was a trifle superior, on the whole, to that which had been\\nplayed in the preceding season. Not only did the national championship go\\nto Evans, but he won the Western championship, too.\\nWalter Hageo retained his grip on the open championship of the Metro-\\npolitan Golf Association, even though ihe was unable to wrest a title from", "height": "3278", "width": "2095", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0011.jp2"}, "12": {"fulltext": "Levick, N. Y., Photo.\\nCHARLES CHICK EVANS, JR.,\\nEdgewater,\\nNational Amateur Champion.", "height": "3279", "width": "2059", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0012.jp2"}, "13": {"fulltext": "SPALDIN(!S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 7\\nthe golfers of Great Britain, whom he had visited earlier in the year. While\\nabroad Hagen won the French open championship, so that all of his journey\\nroiihl not be considered as loss of effort. Jock Hutchison, after many a\\nthreat, came into his own in the Western open championship, wliich lie\\nwon with a display of golf that will long be remembered. In addition to\\nthat, he won the championship of the tournament of the Professional Golf-\\ners Association, in which he played with such skill and judgment that he\\nwas congratulated by all his fellow associates.\\nA new college champion superseded the champion of the previous year,\\nJesse Sweetser, the Yale man, winning laurels in 1920 for the sons of Eli\\nwhere their athletes on other fields of sport had failed. Mrs. Quentin\\nKeitner became the new woman s champion of the Metropolitan Associa-\\ntion, and Mrs. R. H. Barlow won the women s championship of the Eastern\\nAssociation. In a struggle which called for the best that he had, D. E.\\nSawyer, but recently a resident of the E^st, wrested the Metropolitan cham-\\npionship from players who had been famous in their day on Eastern courses.\\nC. B. Grier earned the honor of being the new amateur champion of\\nCanada; Bobby Jones, tliat wonderful golf youngster of the South, won the\\nSouthern championship; Robert McKee, a young player of strength and\\nskill, won the Trans-Mississippi; and thus it went into the local and state\\ntournament, one after the other, new faces broadening with the smile of\\nhonors honorably acquired. It was surely a great year for the new cham-\\npions, however severe it may have been upon the old.\\nJ. Douglas Edgar retained the open championship of Canada one sur-\\nvival despite the many overthrown. Throughout the Dominion, however, the\\nolder men found the insistence of the younger too much for them in many\\ninstances, and years at the game gave way to strength and skill. A notable\\nCanadian victory was that of George S. Lyon, the grand old man of golf\\nin Canada, over Robert A. Gardner in the United States-Canadian team\\nmatch, a victory which was most grateful to the man who, despite his years,\\nplays with the best on almost even terms. Gardner had been the runner-up\\nto Tolley in the amateur championsihip of Great Britain, which made it the\\nmore gratifying to the Canadian veteran to win.\\nThe tour of the Elnglish professionals, Vardon and Ray, was the occasion\\nof great golf gatherings in one city after the other as they swiftly made\\ntheir way on an arduous route through the E^st, the West and the South,\\nventuring into Canada, too, where they were greeted with great enthusiasm,\\nand in one city followed over the course by a large gallery despite the fact\\nthat the rain fell constantly.\\nNever have there been so many active golfers in the United States as\\nthere were in 1920. Never has there been so much interest of a general\\ncharacter in the game. The increase in interest brought out the new play-\\ners. Pre-eminent in this increase in interest is that it is beginning to\\nexpress itself among the younger element far more than in the past. The\\nboys and the girls are playing more golf now than they ever have played\\nsince the United States took up the game in a national manner. It has\\nbeen astonishing to note what some of the younger players have been able\\nto do. Naturally less powerful as a whole than their elders, perhaps a\\nlittle more disposed to take things for granted and to play with more free-", "height": "3278", "width": "2095", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0013.jp2"}, "14": {"fulltext": "Pietzcker, St. Louis, Photo.\\nMISS AXiEXA STIRLING,\\nAtlanta, Ga.\\nNational Champion of tlie United States for the third successive time and\\nwinner of the Canadian Ladies Championship, 1920.\\n1", "height": "3279", "width": "2059", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0014.jp2"}, "15": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL (JOLF ClIIDH. 9\\ndom than the conservatives, they have forced their way into the champion-\\nships with capital results, occasionally have won, and not infrequently have\\nbeen runners-up in tournaments which were supposed to belong almost\\nexclusively to the players of experience by reason of their presumed more\\ntrained skill.\\nThe modifioations which have been made in the rules have been placed\\nbefore the American golfers, and for a year trial will be given to the new\\nrule regarding the stymie. There are some who think that too revolutionary\\nan attitude has been taken by the golfers of some sections who wish to\\nmake the game conform to the surroundings of their immediate environ-\\nment. It must be appreciated by even the radicals that it is out of the\\nquestion to have a game of national and international scope which is not\\ngoverned by a uniform code of rules. Take base ball or lawn tennis as an\\ninstance. Of what would either consist if both contained rules dependent\\nupon wishes in a variety of sections. That which makes any game valuable,\\ncreative and historical is the nniformity of the code of laws which stipu-\\nlates that which may be done and may not be done. Where all contestants\\nplay alike under like regulations the local aspect is only incidental.\\nAn interesting incident of the season was the visit to the United States\\nof Mr. Cyril Tolley, the British amateur champion; Mr. H. Wethered and\\nLord Charles Hope. Unfortunately, -all of them were bowled out quickly in\\nthe championships. There were other visiting golfers from abroad who par-\\nticipated in United States tournaments with varying success. It is fairly\\nwell settled that a party of United States golfers will go to England in\\n1921 to compete in the amateur tournament, and that in this party will be\\nthe best representation of United States golfers which has sought to win\\nthe British trophy. Equally is it in evidence that a team of professional\\ngolfers will sail from here to the shores of England to try their skill in the\\nopen championship on the other side.\\nThe national championships of the United States for 1921 have been\\nappointed. The men s tournament goes to St. Louis, the woonen s to Holly-\\nwood, and the open to Washington, D. C. At all of these there is more\\nthan a prospect of competing golfers from the clubs of the Isles. It has\\nbeen stated that if Miss Stirling should select to go to- GreaC Britain to\\nplay for the women s title, it is very probable that Miss Cecil Leitoh, the\\nchampion woman player of Great Britain, will journey to this side. Indeed,\\nshe may come to the United States w hether Miss Stirling decides to ven-\\nture upon a title quest in Great Britain or not.\\nIt is evident by the number of tournaments which have been scheduled\\nfor 1921, by the number of new courses that have been built throughout\\nthe United States, and bv the demand for golf supplies, which is in excess\\nof the demand of all other years, that the season can only be prevented\\nfrom surpassing all golf seasons in general interest by something of which\\nnone of us is aware at the present moment. The season is all the year\\nwith us, for when golf sihrinks from Nortliern frost it is embraced by\\nSouthern balm. There is golf all the year around for the votary of the\\ngame in this country, and on tourses which are gradually improving until\\nthey shall be of the standard which the experts of old, where golf began,\\nwill acclaim as **being like home.", "height": "3278", "width": "2095", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0015.jp2"}, "16": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nBad Form in Golf\\nBy Bernard Darwin.\\nThe following article by Bernard Darwin, one of the leading authorities\\non the Royal and Ancient Game in Great Britain, was printed originally in\\nBadminton Magazine for November, 1920, and is the first of a series on the\\nsubject of Bad Form in Sport (the second paper was b^y Mr. William\\nCaine, who wrote on Bad Form in Fishing In an introduction to Mr.\\nDarwin s article, the editor of Badminton Magazine says:\\nWe begin this month a new series of articles on Bad Form in\\nSport. The title may perhaps be confusing; bad form, as Mr.\\nBernard Darwin points out in his article, may mean so many things.\\nWhat we actually meant it to mean, however, is bad manners;\\nthings which in the best regulated circles aren t done. Mr. Darwin\\nhas covered wider ground than that, but all that he has to say is\\nadmirable. Next month (December, 1920) Mr. William Caine will\\nwrite on Bad Form in Fishing.\\nThe title under which I have been asked to write this article suggests\\nseveral different ideas. There is, for example, the habit of contorting our-\\nselves into one of those attitudes, too often to be seen on a golf course,\\nwhich are almost prohibitive of hitting the ball. Again, it may suggest\\nsome act of real moral turpitude, such as that of suddenly exclaiming Bo\\nwhile our adversary is in the act of playing a highly critical putt. Or, to\\nanother reader, it may imply a more pardonable breach of the established\\nconventions of golf, such as appearing on the first tee in a frock coat,\\nknickerbockers and a billycock hat. Let us inquire into all three of them,\\nand I think I will begin with the last.\\nThere is a blessed freedom about the clothes in which custom allows us\\nto appear on the links. When the red coat was in fashion, more especially\\nin the eighties, when igolf was to most people a new thing, there was a\\nmisty notion that a man ought to have attained to some sort of ill-defined\\nstandard of play, before he bought a red coat. I remember in those back\\nages hearing someone say that he would buy one when he had got round\\nunder a hundred. I think a brand-new beginner who should have worn a\\nbrand-new coat, complete with club facings and gold buttons, might have\\nbeen accused of bad form. Or he would have been regarded, at any rate,\\nas would the small boy at Eton who should abandon his Eton jacket before\\nhe was really quite tall enough to go into tails. Incidentally I now find it\\ndifficult to realize that when I was in the Cambridge team I possessed not\\nonly a red coat with the University arms emblazoned on the breast pocket,\\nbut also a light blue cap decked with silver crossed clubs. To be sure I\\nonly hung the cap on the comer of a photograph in my rooms; to wear it\\nwould have been bad form. But only a very few years earlier, so I am\\ncredibly informed, the whole Cambridge team appeared at the Empire, after\\nthe University match at Wimbledon, and also after dinner, in full panoply\\nof red coats and blue caps.\\nHowever, this is a digression. To-day people play in red coats on one or\\ntwo commons, because they are compelled to do so as a danger signal, and", "height": "3279", "width": "2059", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0016.jp2"}, "17": {"fulltext": "SI ALDINCJ S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDH H\\nat Wimbledon and Blackheath, because it is in those clubs a pleasant and\\npretty tradition. Elsewhere a man in a red coat would be deemed decid-\\nedly eccentric, but apart from that we can wear what we like. I used to\\nknow one golfer who always wore out the trousers of his old dress clothes\\non the golf course, and very shiny ones they were.\\nThere is, to be sure, some general feeling against playing golf in shirt\\nsleeves. I seem to recollect that some years ago Mr. Spencer Gollan was\\nconsidered rather a brave man for doing so in a tournament at St. Andrews.\\nThe feeling has greatly died down; the thin end of the wedge has been\\nfreely introduced in the form of the woolly waistcoat, and if a golfer likes\\nto play without his coat on a hot day I cannot conceive that any sane per-\\nson would object. Our American visitors, who at home always play coat-\\nless, are under the impression that we over here consider it a crime. When\\nMr. Chick Evans, now the Amateur Champion of America, and probably\\nthe finest amateur golfer in the world, first came to play in our Amateur\\nChampionship at Prestwick in 1911 it was broiling weather. Fearing to\\nhurt our national susceptibilities, he stuck resoluetly to his coat until he\\nhad to go to the nineteenth hole in his match against Mr. Bruce Pearce,\\nthe left-handed Australian. At this supreme moment, finding him\u00c2\u00abelf in a\\nbunker close to the green, he tore off his coat before tackling his niblick\\nshot; but it was too late, and he lost the hole and match. This spring at\\nMuirfield there was no temptation; indeed the easterly wind had such a\\nnip in it that before one of his matches Mr. Robert Gardner, who so nearly\\nbeat Mr. Tolley, was practising pitches wrapped in a green coat. The same\\ntenderness towards our supposed prejudices survives, however, and one of\\nthe Americans spoke of playing coatless in a British Championship as an\\nimpossible thing to do.\\nI have always imagined that such feeling as exists against coatless golf\\nhas a decidedly practical origin, just as has the superstition about walking\\nunder ladders or the prejudice against potting the white at billiards. We\\ndo not as a rule walk under a ladder for fear of getting a pot of paint on\\nour heads: we do not pot the white because it greatly diminishes our\\nchances of making a break. Gradually the sensible reason is forgotten and\\nan unreasonable tradition remains. Similarly if we, being accustomed to\\nplay golf in a coat, take that coat off, we generally play very badly. We\\nenjoy a heavenly sense of freedom and it is altogether too much for us:\\nwe hit far too free-and-easily and miss the ball. I can back this statement\\nfrom personal and painful experience. During the war I was for over two\\nvears in Macedonia, and played some golf there. In summer it was far too\\nhot to think of playing till five o clock, and even then it was impossible to\\nplay in a coat. I found that after a few coatless games I invariably devel-\\noped a slice. Most people brought back with them a horrible souvenir of\\nSalonica in the shape of malaria. I was lucky enough to escape that, but\\nI did bring home that slice and have got it still. It is some consolation to\\nhave an excuse, and I believe that this is at least partly owing to coatless\\ngames on the marshes of that infernal Macedon.\\nApropos of playing without a coat, a delicate point mav arise in regard\\nto brace?. Braces are in themselves incontestably unlovely, but if a man\\nalways plays goJf in them he will feel uncomfortable when he takes them", "height": "3278", "width": "2095", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0017.jp2"}, "18": {"fulltext": "12 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\noff. When some of our amateurs were starting for the American Cham-\\npionship this summer iMr. Roger Wethered was in a quandary. He was\\nquite prepared to play without a coat, but not to take off his braces nor to\\nexhibit them to the American public. I believe that one day he did play\\nwithout them, and at once holed a very long iron shot and did a hole over\\na quarter of a mile long in two strokes.\\nIt is, by the way, rather curious to remember that not so very, very long\\nago many people thought it not good form for a player to smoke while\\nplaying a match before spectators. I recollect well a friend of mine telling\\nme that he had publicly smoked cigarettes in an Amaiteur Championship in\\nScotland, wherein he distinguished himself, and heard hostile remarks made\\non the subject by the crowd. He is no older than I am, but has long since,\\nalas! been rash enough to forsake golf for hard work. I suppose the cham-\\npionship was about twenty-four years ago. The late Mr. F. G. Tait, who\\nwas in his prime in those days, was fond of his pipe, but refrained from\\nsmoking it in a big match. He used to keep it in the hands of a trusty\\nfriend, and at intervals mingle in the crowd and take a surreptitious suck\\nat it. Mr. Hilton, however, always boldly smoked his cigarette, and I rather\\nfancy that he was the first player to simoke regularly and openly in a big\\nmatch. Perhaps I am wrong and some older golfer can correct me. To-day\\neverybody smokes if he has a mind to it. Very possibly we should play\\nbetter if we smoked less. Even J. H. Taylor, who was proof against the\\nhabit for a long time, may sometimes be seen with a cigarette in a tight\\nfinish. Braid has entirely resisted the habit, but I do not think he has ever\\nbeen seen to smoke in the most domestic privacy.\\nLet us now come to the questions of moral turpitude. It seems to me\\nthat the people Who to-day need a little admonition are not those who play\\ngolf, but those who look at it. Some of them are, let us hope, not golfers\\nat all, but many who do play golf and ought to know better are very ill-\\nmannered spectators. I was thoroughly delighted by a little scene at Mid-\\nSurrey the other day during the News of the World tournament. Herd\\nwas playing Robson. He was 1 up with four to go in a desperately hard\\nmatch, and at the fifteenth hole Robson had to play a very critical shot\\nfrom under the branches of a tree. To a well-meaning but foolish old gen-\\ntleman this appeared a suitable moment to come and talk to Herd. To his\\nfirst remark a brief answer was returned; to his second Herd replied, Don t\\ntalk to me now I m playing. It was a well-deserved rebuff sturdily\\nadministered. The old gentleman collapsed, and I trust thait he is still\\nyoung enough to have learned better. In this matter there is one golden\\nrule for the spectator, and that is to speak only when he is spoken to. To\\nobtrude his conversation upon the player in any other circumstances is,\\nhowever friendly and well meant, a crime. There are, of course, degrees\\nof criminality. Some people are much more wrought-up than others when\\nplaying a big match, and in any case he who is several boles up is more\\nlikely to be in a conversational mood than he who is down; but whatever\\nthe state of the match let the player make the first advance. In certain\\nmoods a golfer likes to talk; he relieves the tension of his nerves by\\nbabbling. In such a case by all means let the spectator make of himself a\\nbeneficent receptacle; but at the same time let him always be on the look", "height": "3279", "width": "2059", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0018.jp2"}, "19": {"fulltext": "SrALDlNGS OFFICIAL (iOLF GUIDE. 13\\nout for signs that his company is no longer welcome, and when he observes\\nthem let him sheer off. It is very hard work to play a hard match, and\\nwhat may seem the player s caprices should be tenderly treated.\\nApart from this tyi e of crime, which is committed by the individual, spec-\\ntators collectively are rather selfish and inconsiderate in the way in which\\nthey talk and move and crowd in on the players. No doubt none of us are\\nguiltless in this respect, and I am sure that, having watched more matches,\\nI have committed more crimes than most other people. Too much immo-\\nbility and silence cannot be expected, and he who has skill enough to\\nattract onlookers must harden himself to some extent. But there are cer-\\ntain things that spectators ought not to do. They ought not to talk loudly\\non the stroke; they ought not to move just in a line with the tail of a\\nplayer s eye; they ought not, in cricket language, to move behind the\\nbowler s arm, that is in this case behind the green which the player is\\napproaching. Again, they ought not to creep in so close to the player as\\nto give him the feeiling that he has not room to swing his club or so close\\nto the line of play as very possibly to stop the ball. Whether or not they\\nlike to take the risk of a ball on their heads is primarily their own con-\\ncern, but their being hit may turn the whole fortuneis of the game. At\\nMid-Surrey during the News of the World tournament Abe Mitchell s ball\\ntwice struck a spectator. It did the spectator no harm, but certainly on\\none occasion it did Mitchell some good. At the eighteenth hole in his\\nmatch against young Percy Allis his pitch was decidedly hooked and would\\nhave finished in some hummocky ground. The ball hit an onlooker s hat\\nand stayed on the flat ground. Mitchell then played a magnificent little\\nrunning shot, got his 4 and halved the hole and match. He might have\\ngot that 4 without the hat s intervention, but he would have been hard\\nput to it.\\nThe leading professionals go so extraordinarily straight and are so accus-\\ntomed to play down a living avenue that we come to believe that they can\\nnever go crooked, but they are human and do err now and again. I remem-\\nber very well an episode at Muirfield when Ray won his Open Champion-\\nship there in 1912. He was playing I think in his last round, the four-\\nteenth, a short hole which has now been abolished. There was a pot bunker\\non the right hand edge of the green, and the onlookers completely masked\\nit. Mr. John Ball was helping to manage the crowd and he insisted on\\nmoving them back to leave this bunker clear, although some of them, who\\nwere professional players, plainly showed that they thought the precaution\\nabsurd. And then plump into that very bumper went Ray s ball, and a\\nslight smile of satisfaction was momentarily seen on Mr. John Ball s face.\\nWe are all, I am afraid, apt to forget our manners when we are watching\\nsome very famous champion playing with one comparatively unknown. The\\nunknown does not have such a bad time in a match because he is unde-\\nniably part of the show, but it is otherwise in a scoring competition. Then\\nit is only the champion whom we want to watch, and as soon as he has\\nplayed his shot we stampede forward and the jwor little unknown has to\\nplay as best he can. It makes a sufficiently difficult situation almost impos-\\nsible for him. I remember once to have watched a young amateur playing\\nwith Massey yi the qualifying round for the championship at Prestwick.", "height": "3278", "width": "2095", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0019.jp2"}, "20": {"fulltext": "14 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nWhen it came to the fourth hole, where the tee shot used to be jylayed over a\\nstone wall 1 thought that poor amateur never would get over the wall He\\ntopped and he topped and he topped again. The spectators had perjforce\\nto wait for him that time for fear of being killed, and it was very good\\ndiscipline for them.\\nThere is another tiresome thing which we are all prone to do when look-\\ning on. When the approach putts are being played from the edge of the\\ngreen we have naturally to make a big circle. As soon as the balls are\\nnear the hole we instantly press forward and crowd in. This is worrying\\nto the players and does nobody any good. We could all see just as well if\\nwe kept to the original circle, but an irrepressible instinct always seems to\\npush us forward. It is mere thoughtlessness that makes us do these things\\nas a rule. It is only occasionally that spectators are wilfully contumacious.\\nWhen they are they become also rather amusingly illogical.^ Mr. Groome\\ntold me a pleasant little story in illustration. It was on the second day of\\nthe Open Championship of 1914 at Prestwick. The Ayrshire miners had a\\nholiday; the course was nearly swamped with them, and to make matters\\nworse Var don and Taylor, between whom the championship clearly rested\\nwere drawn to play together and took the entire mob with them. Players\\nplease, said Mr. Croome, the traditional form of request for room for the\\nplayers^^to get through to the green. Players be d d, answered a\\nminer, we re here to see.\\nThe ethics of applause in a golf match are rather difficult. Spectators\\ndo not clap much at golf in this country, though they do so more than^ they\\nused to and at one exhibition match at Totteridge last year they applauded\\nthe professionals when they came on to the first tee, an entirely new depar-\\nture. Ihe one absolute rule that may be laid down is that there should be\\nno applause when a shot is missed. The eager partisan may plead that he\\n15 not clapping because the other man has missed a putt, but because his\\nman has won the hole. The point is, however, too subtle and will not be\\nawjreciated by the man who has just missed. It is also much better to\\nretrain from any demonstration till the hole is played out. Suppose the\\ntwo players^ are like as they lie on the green. A plays the odd and holes\\nhis long putt, and the crowd breaks into rapturous cheers. This does not\\nmake things easier for B, who is in a sufficiently unpleasant predicament\\nwithout them. But stop a bit, here some enthusiast may exclaim, yon\\nare getting me into a regular tangle. If I wait till after B has tried his\\nputt and failed I must not clap because he has missed, and I may not clap\\nbefore he tries for fear of putting him off. You don t give me a chance of\\napplauding A s fine putt. I admit the difficulty and can only reply that\\nthe enthusiast in this case must as far as possible bottle his pent-up feel-\\ninp. Golf, with Its solemnities and silences and lack of rapid movement\\nIS not a game for applause, and the less of it there is the better. A dis-\\nconsolate follower of Scottish League foot ball was heard to make this\\nremark at the professional tournament at Gleneagles this summer: It s\\ny\u00c2\u00ae7\u00e2\u0080\u009e^ f J\u00e2\u0080\u009e^i^Y? a had a richt guid shout all day nor a chance to cry\\nWell played. Well yes. it is very quiet and it ought to be, and that\\ngentleman had better go back and shout at the Celtic and the Glasgow\\nKangers, p", "height": "3279", "width": "2059", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0020.jp2"}, "21": {"fulltext": "Sl ALDlNdS OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 15\\nA British golfer on a first visit to American courses will be surprised at\\nthe ebullitions of feeling. The American spectator is very liberal with his\\napplause. He does not merely clap a long pult holed or some extraordi-\\nnarily fine recovery or stroke through the green. Any ordinarily well\\nstruck tee shot or an approach shot that finishes anywhere near the hole\\nwill send him into transports. At least it was so when I was there in 1913,\\nand I am told by those who have just come back that it is so still. I\\nought to add that if the Americans are very demonstrative they applaud\\nwith a generous impartiality, and the visitor is every bit as weill treated as\\nthe home player.\\nWhen we come to bad form in the actual playing of the game we quit\\nthe region of actual crime. No style is criminal, but many of those that\\nwe see make it practically impossible to hit the ball either far or sure,\\n[ncidentally also they are for the most part exceedingly unbecoming. They\\nresult as a rule from people being too independent-minded and teaching\\nthemselves. The more I see of golf the more 1 am convinced of the value\\nof coaching in the early stages: not so much a positive value perhaps as a\\nnegative one. It may not make a beginner a scratch player, but it should\\nprevent him or her from acquiring some horrible trick that will cling\\nand recur through all golfing life. Those are on the whole undoubtedly\\nfortunate who begin the game when they are young, supple and imitative.\\nThey do acquire at least a passably sound method, and they are not so\\ndependent as are later beginners on regular practice. But even they can\\nacquire ineradicable bad habits, which tend nearly always in the direction\\nof too loose, long and florid a swing. A small boy is extremely flexible:\\nhe can tie himself into knots, and unless he is checked in youth he will\\nmake a habit of doing so. To take a personal instance, I began to play\\ngolf when I was eight years old. I remember very well that when I was\\nabout ten I was told by a professional of certain things that I did wrongly,\\nin particular that I bent both knees too much. Now, alas! some four\\nand thirty years later I am conscious, when playing worse than usual, of\\ncommitting those very same faults, and especis^lly of those knees wobbling\\nunder me till I feel and look like a broken-down cab-horse. Therefore a\\ngolfing father has a duty to perform to his boys who are beginning to play\\ngolf. They must not be coached too much lest they become cramped and\\nunnatural. Moreover, it is astonishing how a child will exaggerate any-\\nthing that is told him. He may be whirling the club round his head\\ntill k neariv touches his toes. Tell him to swing a little shorter and he\\nwill only take the club about a foot back from the ball. If you tell him\\nnot to be as slithery as an eel he becomes as stiff as a ramrod. He needs\\nvery judicious coaching, therefore, but a little of it at the right moment\\nmay save him from many agonies of style-hunting when he is older.\\nThere seem to be two or three common and obvious faults to be repressed\\nin the young golfer\u00e2\u0080\u0094 either young in years or only in the sense in which\\nmature gentlemen of forty were lately young officers. One is that of\\nover-swinging. We all know that we ought not to do it. We know that it\\nis dangerous and useless to take the club at the top of the swing beyond\\nthe horizontal, since we have all the additionar trouble of hauling it back\\nagain, with no compensating advantage whatever. But we cannot see our-", "height": "3278", "width": "2095", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0021.jp2"}, "22": {"fulltext": "16 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nselves. We all or nearly all take the club back further than we think,\\nand too long a swing, once it becomes a habit, is terribly hard to check.\\nWe may curb it for a while, but then perhaps in a moment of over-confi-\\ndence we begin to hit too hard and back comes the old fault again. To\\nhave a short swing was once deemed rather derogatory to a golfer s dignity.\\nThe learner who had acquired what he pleased to call a St. Andrews swing,\\nno matter how gross the travesty of the original or how lamentably uncer-\\ntain the results, was looked on by his fellow foozlers with a certain awe.\\nWe are not so foolish now, and envy the man who has a comparatively\\nshort swing well under control.\\nThere is another bad habit, an exceedingly ugly one likewise, as to whi ch\\nI have the acutest personal feelings. It is that of crouching over the ball.\\nIt does not make the game easier far from it. If we get our noses close\\nto the ground there is a great probability that we shall move the head\\nupwards in the middle of the upward swing and dislocate the whole move-\\nment. We shall, too, lose a good deall of power which should naturally\\nbelong to us. In approaching and putting it is less harmful, and indeed\\nthere are some very good putters who get very well down to the ball and\\nmake little use of the leather grips of their clubs. But even here it is\\nbetter to stand up boldly, for we are far more likely to be able to hit the\\nball freely\u00e2\u0080\u0094 the most important thing of all. To stand up and give it one\\nis the best way to treat a golf ball, but once we have got the trick of\\nstooping, how dreadfully hard it is to do! And one thing is sure as fate,\\nthat whenever we feel nervous or anxious we shall stoop the more.\\nFinally, let the beginner determine to curtail his preliminary^ waggles to\\nreasonable proportions, for if once we go on fidgeting and waggling beyond\\na certain point we feel that there is no reason why we should ever stop,\\nand that is truly paralyzing. There is one great professional who is A\\nnotorious waggler, but he has an excellent retort. When an onlooker once\\nremarked that he had taken a great many waggles in a championship round\\nhe replied, Yes, and he had played a great many d d good shots, too.\\nWe, who cannot say that, had better take as few waggles as possible, for\\nthey do not make our strokes sublime and they certainly make us look\\nridiculous.", "height": "3279", "width": "2059", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0022.jp2"}, "23": {"fulltext": "SPALDINGS OFFK IAI. COLF GUIDK.\\nGolf CoiTiinent\\nGOLF HAS NO AGE LIMIT.\\nAt the present time golf can be played by everyone, to any age, provided\\nthey are good walkers. Occasionally the older men, who are less nimisle in\\ntheir movements, hang back and permit the younger generation to get an\\nearly start on the links, but it is not such a great hardship to pass a pair\\non the course, unless one is quite bereft of courtesy.\\nIf it is not so easy for the older men to drive long and far, as they did\\nwhen they were a few years younger, there is compensation derived, as the\\nolder men almost invariably putt better than the younger players. Though\\nshots for distance may have lost their effectiveness, when it comes to the\\ngame on the putting green the older man frequently does much better than\\nhis younger opponent. Putting improves with years, and experience is\\nworth such an unspeakable amount that the loss of distance in the long\\ngame is more than compensated for.\\nThe historical octogenarian foursomes that took place at Westward Ho\\nin England some years ago give a fine example of how the i ower to play\\ngolf never leaves us provided health remains. There must be many octo-\\ngenarians who still enjoy the game. Near London there is a great-grand-\\nfather who plays his two rounds a day regularly.\\nGOLF AND ITS BENEFITS.\\nEvery golfer is an advocate before the bar of outdoor sport for the game\\nof golf. One of the best pleas for the benefits to be derived from golf is\\nthat of D. L. Anderson, a director of the Union League Club of PWladel-\\nphia, who said, in a published statement in the Public Evening Ledger:\\nGolf is a splendid tonic for both the old and the young, but espe-\\ncially the old. I can safely say that one of the chief concerns of men who\\nare reaching mature years is how to continue in good health or how to\\nregain good health when it has been lost. Some go to California in the\\nbelief the elixir of life is there; others try other methods, some good and\\nsome worthless. If they would only try golf they would discover how easy\\nit is to keep as young as possible and young as long as possible.\\nLet me tell this story: A man well known here, successful in helping\\nto build up two of the largest business houses in Philadelphia, a hard\\nworker who knew no eight-hour day, who worked harder on Sunday in\\nreligious institutional work than during the week, became prematurely old,\\nbroken down and nervous as the result of his all-work-and-no-play pro-\\ngramme. He went twice to Europe, searching for nerve cures which he\\nfailed to find. He was about to go on his third trip when he called upon\\nthe late Dr. S. Weir Mitchell, the great nerve specialist.\\nDr. Mitchell at once saw his c iller was worn to a frazzle. He told him\\nto get out in the open air, play golf, more golf and still more golf. The\\nnervous wreck took Dr. Mitchell s advice. Result: A man old at fifty-five", "height": "3278", "width": "2095", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0023.jp2"}, "24": {"fulltext": "18 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GTTTPE.\\nis young to-day at past seventy. Golf did it! What golf has done for this\\nman it has done for many men. I feel it is a real privilege to be able to\\nencourage men to take up the game, especially as I am associated with so\\nmany men who need it in a club of more than 3,000 members.\\nSunshine is a great tonic, and golf takes one out into the sunshine. Let\\nthe business or professional man who thinks he has no time for golf try to\\nescape for an hour or more from his desk. Not the least of the benefits\\nfrom golf is the taste and love for walking it creates. And in this day of\\nthe lazy, injurious habit of calling your automobile to go a few steps, how\\nmuch better off thousands would be if they knew how to enjoy a tramp\\nover the country roads.\\nSome men never walk a block in these days of high-powered locomotion\\nno wonder they can t sleep at nights.\\nAre you sleepless? Try golf.\\nAre you nervous? Try golf.\\nAre you too stout? They try golf.\\nAre you too thin? Try golf.\\nAre you overworked and soft-muscled? Try golf.\\nIMPRESSIONS OF THE NATIONAL OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nBy D. H. Tweedie.\\nNo contest in sport offered a more exacting and exciting finish than the\\nlast few holes of the 1920 open championship. Ten players, by virtue of\\nan exceptionally fine nine holes, could have won the golf crown. Four had\\nan opportunity to tie the winner by getting down in a single putt on the\\nlast hole. All were probably grateful that it did not require three. Edward\\nRay, with his ruthless game through the green, his chips and putts handled\\nwith the delicate ease of the surgeon s scalpel, is a fascinating man to\\nwatch. A ^cyclonic tee shot, a trifle off line, a tramp through the rough, a\\nprodigious heave and the ball is on the green, these are the broad impres-\\nsions of his play.\\nDiminutive Jack Burke is a neat, trimly built, every ounce of muscle and\\nenergy evident in his tee shots, a skillful iron player and a cheerful, deter-\\nmined young golfer, withal. The old master, Vardon, ease and grace in\\nevery shot with three bad shots on the first hole, settled down to seventeen\\nmore without the trace of another error the grand old man of golf with-\\nout a peer. A certain winner up to the last nine, when age, not Ray,\\ndefeated him.\\nJock Hutchison is a dashing Scot, a stream of liquid fire, across the golf\\ncourse one hundred and forty pounds of contorted flesh lashed at every\\nshot, his final tee shot fully three hundred yards there is only one Jock\\nand he is a legion. The game of Leo Diegel is self-developed and of great\\nhitting strength. He is a good putter and an able warrior, in the eyes of\\nmany the future American-born champion.\\nThe Inverness Club had the course in exceptional condition. The greena\\nwere soft enough to hold the balls, yet smooth and of excellent texture.\\nThe fourth and seventh holes were invitations for daring skill and the seven-", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0024.jp2"}, "25": {"fulltext": "J\\nSPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 19\\nteenth tested the shots of the long iron players. Some of the holes enchant\\none more than others, but there is no really weak hole on the course.\\nIt was a blow to our hopes to see the cup cross the water, but to the\\nwriter it seemed a question of equable temperament rather than superior\\nskill. The picture of Ray on the last green, coolly knocking the ashes from\\nhis pipe, refilling and relighting his Dunhill while his opponent putted out,\\nthen to his ball and without delay two putts, the first sufficiently close to\\nrelieve all anxiety, will live in the memory of those who witnessed the\\nscene long after the scores are forgotten.\\nIMPRESSIONS OF THE WESTERN AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nBy D. H. Tweedie.\\nNorthern golfers at Memphis found the torrid Southern sun distinctly\\ntrying, a temperature of 95 to 100 degrees during the day proving a novel\\nexperience. The acclimated Atlanta, Chattanooga and Memphian youths\\nplayed to excellent effect, and it seemed not unnatural for three below the\\nMason and Dixon line to be found in the semi-finals. The Memphis Coun-\\ntry Qub is one of the premier Southern organizations. The clubhouse\\nfurnishes a large area and cool space within and upon the extensive\\nveranda. Its setting within a bit of Southland forestry is impressive.\\nThe course, one of Donald Ross design a remodel is a good test of golf\\nwith many good holes but few high lights. The bunkers are nearly all\\nbermuda strewn ^those near the greens retain the ball upon their further\\nbank at times, making any sort of a shot difficult.\\nRobert F. Jones, Jr., of Atlanta played his best golf during the qualify-\\ning round and, incidentally, two unequalled rounds, including a course\\nrecord, with 69 and 70. The Atlanta wonder is one of the great golfers of\\nthe generation. His game has all the apparent ease and simplicity of the\\nartist, and his shots are well under control at all times. His tee shots are\\nlong, fairly high, and leave the impression of a slight push towards the\\nleft. His iron shots are the reverse of Evans plenty of back swing and a\\nlittle fdlow through a driving contact between club, ball and ground,\\nsharply terminated. The ball bites sharply upon alighting with an inclina-\\ntion to break. It is the converse of Evans nestling, fading shot to the hole.\\nHis putting is even and without too much effort. His game throughout is\\nwell conceived, heady, and illustrates the results of excellent coaching.\\nWenzler and Wolff, the other two semi-findlists, are distinct golfing types.\\nWenzler, a tall, slender Memphian, is a long driver and has a splendid iron\\nshot with a tendency to become unsteady, but is a player of great promise\\nand will be heard from in years to come. Wolff is very like Evans in style\\nand gives the impression of a finished player. Evans, as usual, was master\\nfrom tee to hole, and his steady, controlled par-par-and-par game seems to\\nrepresent the ultimate in golfing skill. His match against Jones was the\\nfeature of the tournament and a spun coin could have decided the issue at\\nany time. The Western Association would do well to confine their IS^hole\\nmatdh rounds to one ^two introduce too great a hazard.", "height": "3278", "width": "2095", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0025.jp2"}, "26": {"fulltext": "20 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nWESTERN GOLF ASSOCIATION RULES.\\nDirectors of the Western Golf Association announced in October the\\nadoption of general rules on the cleaning of golf balls on putting greens,\\nthe playing of a ball from an extraneous green, and for the lifting of a\\nball embedded in mud. The new Western Association rules, wiiich have\\nbeen common as local rules on many courses, and frequently used in\\nWestern tournaments, are;\\nWhen a ball is at rest on the putting green, if there be mud or other\\nsubstance adhering to the ball it may be lifted, cleaned and then replaced\\nwithout penalty, provided such an act be done with the knowledge of an\\nopponent or other competitor.\\nA ball embedded in soft mud, except in a recognized water hazard, shall\\nbe deemed to be in casual water. In such a case it may be lifted without\\npenalty and dropped not nearer the hole.\\nIf the ball be played on to a putting green other than that of the hole\\nbeing played, the ball shall be lifted and played off such green as near as\\npossible to the place where the ball lay, but not nearer the hole, without\\npenalty.\\nThe directors at their meeting also retained the Western Association\\nstymie rule which reads as follows:\\nWhere both balls are on the putting green, if the player of the ball\\nfarthest from the bode claims that the nearer ball interferes with his putt,\\nthe nearer ball upon request shall be lifted or played at the option of the\\nowner.\\nRAY\u00e2\u0080\u0094 ENGLAND S BABE RUTH.\\nBy J. B. Craig.\\nIn one of the best ninth-inning rallies seen in this country, Ted Ray,\\nthat towering offspring of swat from across the Atlantic, outslugged the\\nbest that America had at golf and really Babe Ruthed his way to the\\nopen championship.\\nMuch like the younger swatter extraordinary, Ray reminds one of Bam-\\nbino of the Yankees. Big and powerful, not graceful and yet possessing an\\nease that smacked of confidence, the giant Briton leaned into shot after\\nshot at Inverness, and when the gallery finally came up to the ball the\\ntravelers had covered many, many yards.\\nWhen the final was told it was a story much similar to that which had\\nbeen heard all simimer long of the prowess of Ruth, whose long-distance\\nhitting spelled defeat many times for his opponents. What few mistakes\\nRay made were quickly rectified by making up lost ground with a master\\nswat at the ball.\\nAccording to the belief of many the shot that won for Ray the title, as\\nhe led his nearest rivals at the finish by one stroke, was his drive on the\\nseventh hole in the second round. While the others in the field were taking\\na drive and pitch to the pin, Ray put all his bulk behind his tee effort,\\nand was repaid by seeing the ball nestling close to the pin, just beyond the\\nhole. It was a drive of more than 323 yards.", "height": "3279", "width": "2059", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0026.jp2"}, "27": {"fulltext": "SrALI lN(i S OFriCIAli (;OLF GUIDE. 21\\nAnd so it will always be told how Ray, calmly smoking his caked briar,\\ncame here and matched his hitting prowess with our best, wallop for wallop,\\nleading them by yards, and carrying the highly prized cup, significant of\\nthe championship of the United States, back to Great Britain.\\nWOMEN NEED MORE PRACTICE.\\n.Miss Alexa Stirling, champion woman golfer of the United States and of\\nCanada, has a system of her own in regard to the game which she plays so\\nadmirably. She does not play golf during the winter months. Though an\\nAtlantan, she refrains from venturing upon the links in the milder tempera-\\nture of Southern courses. When spring comes she begins to prepare for\\nthe golf of summer. Each day she does something to assist in perfecting\\nher game for the dawning season. Two hours are for practice. Some days\\nshe practises with her wooden clubs and some days with the irons. Other\\ndays she practises on the putting greens. This is varied with work on\\ntraps, playing out of the rough, and combining both. On occasions she\\nplays around the course.\\nOne reason, she thinks, why a great many women do not improve m\\ntheir golf is that they do not practice enough. She laughingly avers that\\nwomen, like the men, seem to enjoy playing practice rounds or foursomes.\\nFor the sake of amusement it is conceded that this is pleasant, but it is\\nnot practice nor instructive.\\nThe weak factor in a woman s game, according to Miss Stirling, is the\\niron work. Women s wrists and forearms are not developed like those of\\nmen and for that reason the women fail to get results with their iron shots.\\nThe iron shot of the average woman player is not compact. It is weak.\\nThe women do not put energy into their shots.\\nThat she never had any great trouble with her iron shots she ascribes to\\na general inclination, when she was a little girl, to prefer to play with\\nhammer and nails, instead of dolls. She likes to do carpentry and plumb-\\ning around the house. She cuts the grass of the lawn, tinkers with her\\nautomobile when it is ailing, and does other work that men do, whether\\nthey like to do it or not. She plays the violin, and is quite certain that\\nhas strengthened her forearms, wrists and fingers. Her wrists are more like\\na man s than any woman player whom she knows.\\nShe has modified her stance so that she crouches over the ball more than\\nshe formerly did. The right knee is bent and the left leg is kept straight.\\nWhen the ball is hit the left knee is bent and the right leg is kept straight.\\nA better pivot is the result and shots get away much more smoothly and\\ntruly. Results have been better with this stance. Miss Stirling says if she\\nstands straighter she is prone to slice, but standing over the ball she gets\\nbetter results. Another thing about the crouch stance is that she begins^ to\\nhit the ball from the time her arms are at right angles to the body coming\\ndown. From that position until she actually meets the ball with the club\\nshe does all of Her work.", "height": "3278", "width": "2095", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0027.jp2"}, "28": {"fulltext": "22 SrALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nSir Walter Scott on Golf s Etymology\\nIn 1824, Sir Walter Scott, in writing to a resident of Leith, Scotland,\\nacknowledges his admiration for the game of golf and contributes an\\nopinion as to the derivation of the name given to the game. The letter is\\nof interest to modern golfers and is as follows:\\nSir,\\nI should esteem myself happy if I could add anything to the elaborate\\naccount of the game of Golf w hich you were so good as to transmit to me,\\nas I am an admirer of that manly exercise, which in former days I occa-\\nsionally practised. I fear, however, that the activity of other gentlemen\\nhas anticipated any remarks which I can offer, especially as I have no\\nbooks by me at present. The following particulars I mention merely to\\nshow that I have not neglected the wish of the gentlemen golfers. I should\\ndou bt much the assertion that the word Golf is derived from the verb to\\ngO wff, or to strike hard. On the contrary, I conceive the verb itself is\\nderived from the game, and that to gowff is to strike sharp and strong as\\nin that amusement. If I were to hazard a conjecture, I should think the\\nname Golf is derived from the same Teutonic expression from which the\\nGermans have colb, a club, and the Low-Dutch kolff, which comes very\\nnear the sound of Golf. The exchange of the labial letter b for If is a\\nvery common transformation. If I am right, the game of Golf will just\\nsignify the game of the club. I have visited the Old House, No. 77, Ganon-\\ngate, and I see the scutcheon with the arms still in high preservation; but\\nit appears to me that they are not older than the seventeenth century.\\nThere is a Latin inscription, mentioning that Adam Paterson was the name\\nof a successful hero in the game described as proper to Scotchmen. I\\nwould have taken a copy of it, but my doing so attracted rather too much\\nattention. It would be easy for any expert plasterer to take a cast both of\\nthe arms and inscription to ornament your club^room. It is really a curious\\nmemorial of the high estimation in which the game was formerly held. I\\nfear, sir, the club will think me very unworthy of their attention, but if\\nanything else should occur in the course of my reading, I will not fail to\\nsend it to you. I am, with the best wishes for the sport of the Gowff Glub\\nin the field, and their conviviality in the club-room, very much your and\\ntheir obedient servant,\\nWalter Scott.\\nI should have said that from the inscription it appears that Paterson\\ngained as much money at a game of gowff as built his house. There is no\\nmention of the King having played either with or against him.\\nEdin., 9 June, 1824.", "height": "3279", "width": "2059", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0028.jp2"}, "29": {"fulltext": "SPALDlNiiS OKKiriAL (;OLF GTTIDR.\\nFrom Link to Link\\nJudge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, now commissioner of base ball, is also\\na golfer. He celebrated his fifty-fourth birthday on November 20 by play-\\ning a round of golf and telling all his friends not to bother him with con-\\ngratulations until he gets to be an old man. I am not going to climb off\\nthe bench until I get to be 85 years old. I m white-haired now, and the\\nonly thing that can happen to me is that I can get bald, and there seems\\nto be little chance of that. Most of my family lingered around until they\\nwere 85 to 95, and I ll follow their example.\\nThomas Morrison, Oakmont, won the first 1921 Tin Whistles handicap,\\nClass A, at Pinehurst, with a net 78, and Channing M. Wells, Southbridge.\\nwon the first Class B with a net 78. Morrison received 8 strokes and\\nWells 17.\\nThe first ace of the season was holed at Pinehurst, N. C, by D. W. Err\\nof the Youngstown Country Club, who sank his drive in the cup of the\\neighth hole on the championship course. The distance is 220 yards and\\nthe green is not visible from the tee.\\nThe Brooklyn Eagle said of Ted Ray, who captured the United States\\nopen championship: Ray is a law unto himself on the tee and through\\nthe green; yet, in a severe four-day test, he proved himself to be the best\\nof a record-breaking field of experts. Tihe Britisher is not only a skillful,\\ncourageous golfer, but he is a fine, generous sportsman, and since our\\nchampionship is to go abroad, we know of no foreigner to whom we would\\nrather give it.\\nTwice the thirty-seventh hole has played its part in an international\\nmatch. Hilton had the good fortune to have luck break for him on the\\nthirty-seventh hole and won the American championship. Gardner had the\\nmisfortune to have luck break against him on the thirty-seventh hole of the\\nBritish course and failed to win the championship.\\nWhen Mr, Tolley, amateur champion of Great Britain, returned to Eng-\\nland after his visit to the United States, he played some excellent golf at\\nthe competition of the Oxford University Club on the Frilford Heath course.\\nHe lowered the competition record of that course from 76 to 74, It was a\\nrecord of long standing, made by Captain Adair originally. With this score\\nof 74 he won the Scratch Challenge Cup, and even with the addition of\\ntwo strokes, for he plays plus two at Oxford, his score easily won for him\\nthe handicap award of the St. Andrews Cross with 76 net.", "height": "3278", "width": "2095", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0029.jp2"}, "30": {"fulltext": "ROBERT A. GARDNER,\\nCShicago.\\nRunner-up British Amateur Championship.", "height": "3279", "width": "2059", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0030.jp2"}, "31": {"fulltext": "Sl ALDIXGS OFFICIAL (JOLF CJUIDIO. 25\\nAlex. Smith made a new record for the No. 1 course at Belleair, Florida,\\nwith a 68. The best previous score was 69, made by three professionals.\\nSmith made but one mistake. This was on the third green, where he took\\nthree putts.\\nIn the first match of any importance that was played by Vardon and Ray\\nafter their return to England from the tour of the United States, the tour-\\nists defeated George Duncan and Sandy Herd in a close rub. Duncan tossed\\naway a chance to halve the match by missing a short putt on the home\\ngreen.\\nWilliam H. Crocker, San Francisco, set a record on the Pebble Beach\\ncourse when he did the 260-yard thirteenth hole in two strokes, a drive and\\na brissie.\\nDr. Carlos F, MacDonald celebrated his seventy-fifth birthday by playing\\nseventy-five holes of golf on the course of the Bretton Woods Golf Club.\\nHis card was as follows:\\nFirst round\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out 5 fi 6 8 5 6 5 5 7\u00e2\u0080\u009452 In.... 8 5 7 7 5 7 5 7 4\u00e2\u0080\u009455\u00e2\u0080\u0094107\\nSecond round\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out... 47fi84755 5\u00e2\u0080\u009451 In.... 77773657 3\u00e2\u0080\u009452\u00e2\u0080\u0094103\\nThird round\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out. 46685656 5\u00e2\u0080\u009451 In.... 8 5 8 7 4 8 6 7 5\u00e2\u0080\u009458\u00e2\u0080\u0094109\\nFourtli round\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out... 46785955 5\u00e2\u0080\u009454 In....8 7 86 47 57 3\u00e2\u0080\u009455\u00e2\u0080\u0094109\\nFiftli round\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out 5 6 6 Total of 75 holes on Iiis seventy-fif tli birthday.\\nHis best ball for eighteen holes, with his handicap of 22, gives him a\\nscore of 75 net for his seventy- fifth birthday, as follows: 45684655 5\\n\u00e2\u0080\u009448. 75763657 3-^9=97 minus 22 net 75. The course is 6,225\\nyards in length. It is very level and not over-trapped.\\nA three-ball game was being played at Duddingston, which is near Edin-\\nburgh. The sixteenth is a short hole. Taking an iron, the first player\\nplayed his ball within a foot of the hole. The second player holed out in\\n1. and so did the third. The names of the players do not accompany the\\ntale, but it is vouched for as being true.\\nA score of 51 over an eighteen-hole golf course of championship caliber,\\nthe par of which is 76 and the bogey 80, was the record of W. D. Kraft, at\\nHong Kong. Kraft, for some years an American colonist in Hong Kong,\\nwas out in 25 and back in 26. and his entire play was an extraordinary\\nexhibition of accuracy. He took one putt on each of seventeen greens and\\nnone on the other, the twelfth hole, which he negotiated in 1. Despite his\\nage ^fifty-eight Kraft was forced to use three balls on the round, since\\ntwo of them were kno(ked lop-sided by the power of his drives. His card\\nfor the round follows:\\nOut 3 3 2 3 2 .3\u00e2\u0080\u009425\\nrh 4 3 1 3 3 3 3 3 3\u00e2\u0080\u009426\u00e2\u0080\u009451", "height": "3278", "width": "2095", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0031.jp2"}, "32": {"fulltext": "EDWARD TED RAY.\\nEngland.\\nOpen CJiampiou of the United States, 1920. and winner of the Britis\\nOpen Championsliip in 1914.\\ni", "height": "3279", "width": "2059", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0032.jp2"}, "33": {"fulltext": "Sl ALDlNGS OFFICIAL (JOLF GUIDE. 27\\nVardon and Ray in the United States\\nThe visit to the United States in 1920 by Harry Vardon and Ted Ray,\\ntwo of Great Britain s professional golfers, aroused great enthusiasm, aug-\\nmented by the fact that a group of American golfers had played in Great\\nBritain the same year, in the spring and early summer, for the amateur\\nand open championships.\\nIt had been seven years since either of these famous foreign players had\\nbeen in the United States. Vardon, in the meantime, had become a half\\ncentenarian. He was fifty years old when he undertook the strain of mak-\\ning this last tour of the United States, a task severe enough to test the\\nendurance of a young man of twenty-five for the long trip that had been\\noutlined.\\nRay, who is Vardon s junior by seven years and a stronger, heavier-framed\\nman, seemed better fitted physically for the strain of the long journey. Had\\nit been possible, California would have had them engage in special matches\\non the Pacific Slope. So many demands were made for their time east of\\nthe Mississippi River, however, that no trouble was experienced in arran-\\nging a schedule which would take up all the playing days until October 21.\\nAfter that they expected to remain here but a short time, both being\\nanxious to return to their homes.\\nIn 1913 they lost only three matches out of one hundred in their tour of\\nthe United States. They were not so successful in 1920, winning about\\nseventy per cent, of the total number played. Immediately after landing\\nVardon was not in the best of condition to play, as he had injured hi\u00c2\u00ab\\nthumb in a pillow frolic during the last night on the steamer.\\nRay played without Vardon in two matches at Siwanoy and then went\\nover to Shawnee, where he took part in an invitation tournament. Vardon\\ndid not start in this tournament because of his ailing r ml) Rmv w\\nsecond at Shawnee with a score of 293 to Jim Barnes 287. On July 22\\nthey began playing through the East, the start being at Fox Hills. They\\nwon there and at Woodway, but lost at Greenwich. Again they won in\\nsuccessive matches, until July 31 at Scarsdale. Playing over this course in\\nWestchester, they were beaten by McNamara and Jack Dowling, 6 and 5.\\nIn the morning round Ray, McNamara and Dowling each had 71, and\\nVardon 75. This admirable performance was followed in the afternoon\\nwhen Dowling, the home professional, went out in 32, against the par of 34.\\nOn the 4th of August they started West and the next day at Youngstown,\\nOhio, picked up a tartar when French and Lagerblade forced them to halve\\na match. Ajiother winning streak was followed, until August 19, when they\\nlost at Miami Valley (Dayton. Ohio) to Sherwood and Miller.\\nOn August 21 they were at Skokie Valley, where Evans and Gaudin\\ntrimmed them beautifully. 6 to S. in thirty-six holes. The next dav thev\\nplaved on the Lake Shore course at Chicago and were beaten by Diegel\\nand Loos, 3 and 2, but in a match with Evans, August 22, at the Lake\\nShore Club. Chicago, the same day they defeated him with Gardner as\\npartner, 1 up. On the following day, at South Bend, Ind., they halved a", "height": "3278", "width": "2095", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0033.jp2"}, "34": {"fulltext": "HAKKi; VAKDUIN,-\\nEngland.\\nS ix times British Open Oliampion\u00e2\u0080\u0094 1896, 1898, 1899, 1903, 1911, 1914\u00e2\u0080\u0094 and one of\\nthe quartette who finished one strolce behind Ray in the National Open Cham-\\npionship, 1920.", "height": "3279", "width": "2059", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0034.jp2"}, "35": {"fulltext": "SrALI)Ii\\\\f;S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 29\\nmatch with Hagen and Evans. At Glen View the day after they lost to\\nHutchison and Ayton, 7 and 5.\\nThey made a little excursion after this to Canada, where they were suc-\\ncessful, and returning to the United States, were beaten by Rodick and\\nPeters, 4 and 3 in eighteen holes, at Omaha. From that time untU Sep-\\ntember 11 they were uniformly successful. After winning at Columbus,\\nOhio, they ran into a streak of five successive defeats. At Englewood, Jones\\nand C. Walker defeated them in eighteen holes, 3 and 2. Jones and Kirkby\\ndefeated them over the same course, and at Morris County they were given\\nthe worst beating they had had in the United States, losing to Evans and\\nJones by 10 and 9. Following the Englewood matches, they won a long\\nsuccession of victories in the vicinity of New York, until on October 5 they\\nlost to Barnes and Hutchison at Garden City, 6 and 5.\\nA match was arranged for them at the Mohawk Club, Schenectady, Octo-\\nber 22, which caused a great deal of interest. Their opponents were Travcrs\\nand Herron, the latter amateur champion of 1919. The round was very\\nkeenly played. Ray and Vardon winning by the narrow margin of 1 up.\\nIn the matches which were played against Walter Hagen and Jim Bamet,\\nthe British pair won the first at Shenecossett by 1 up. At Hollywood. N. J.,\\nthey lost to Hagen and Barnes by 4 and 2. Their next meeting was at\\nSunset Hill, St. Louis, where Vardon and Ray won, 4 and 3, In the match\\nat Fairview, Hagen and Barnes won by 2 and 1, and at Rochester Hagen\\nand Barnes were again victorious by 3 and 2.\\nVardon and Ray after the result of the match with Bobby Jones and\\nEvans, which culminated in one of the worst beatings they received in the\\nUnited States, were sincerely warm in their praise of both men. They\\nasserted that Jones and Evans were two of the best golfers whom they had\\nseen play. Before they departed from the United States they said they\\nwere preparing to give information to their friends at home, that if Jones\\nand Evans should decide to enter for the next amateur tournament in Great\\nBritain, the golfers of the British Isles could get ready for rome excellent\\ngolf. It may be that they figure an American golfer as the possible winner\\nover Tolley or any British amateur who may aspire to capture the cham-\\npionship in 1921. A complete record of the trip of the British pair will\\nbe found on pages 31 and 33.", "height": "3278", "width": "2095", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0035.jp2"}, "36": {"fulltext": "M^\\nWALTER C. HAGEN,\\nDetroit.\\nMetropolitan Open Champion; French Open Champion.", "height": "3248", "width": "2069", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0036.jp2"}, "37": {"fulltext": "SrALDINCS OFFICIAL OOLF GUIDK.\\na a*- a\\no o o\\n73 \u00e2\u0096\u00a0O O C O _\\nad ac c a B C.1\\n3cs3eaolo8o83\\ni-l- r COM\\n\u00e2\u0096\u00a0O O O O O \u00e2\u0080\u00a2O CTS\\nca o c c a caa a c Oii\\nM us IC lO M M\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2c-p\\nT O ts -a -o -c -o co^-c-ot\\nacssDCcBCiCaOisac\\neee3e3e5\u00c2\u00abol\u00c2\u00ab\u00c2\u00abS53083a\u00c2\u00abs\\na a g S ^^fl fl te\\nQ aaas as o a\\ng) gg\\nij- -t;-jj- -i1- i-\\n*J*\u00c2\u00b0\u00c2\u00b0**", "height": "3247", "width": "2209", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0037.jp2"}, "38": {"fulltext": "TAMES M. BARNES,\\nSunset mu,", "height": "3228", "width": "2069", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0038.jp2"}, "39": {"fulltext": "SrALDINC.S OFFTCIATi (UM.V OITITtK.\\n33\\nJ ^rt rHUJ M 0 N(MrHrHl-IM rH r^ M C-S CO j^ 00 U5 rl rH lO CO t~- r^ M 0 CO M M C^ M CO fO\\n2 a a fl d ofl 0.0.0 a o a rt OP fta a a o a o a a o a a 0.0.0 o. gooooo 22S222\\n5 iO^ WXCrHCO.rt^^OCOWcOMW f CO CO *\u00c2\u00abC0 MCO\u00c2\u00abD^rHr^0OrH CO M M O CO CO CO CO O\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a25 :a^\\nOS Q,a.O.D.O.OiD.ft OkC^OiO.\\nIiagBini!!!riSS!KniIlIlllir^\\ni. p, O. ft O. a ft O. ft O. ft a*i t^t .tiotjoaotJtjooooooc S S So^wowoO\\nS|5S^M^^ ^\u00c2\u00ab\u00c2\u00ab\u00c2\u00ab000000000000000000000000000^.\\nk", "height": "3231", "width": "2173", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0039.jp2"}, "40": {"fulltext": "HOWARD F. WHITNEY\\nNassau.\\nPresident United States Golf Association.\\nLevick, N. T.. Photo.", "height": "3248", "width": "2069", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0040.jp2"}, "41": {"fulltext": "SPATiDINOF OFFirtAL COT.K (iltlUK.\\nOfficers United States Golf Association\\nPresident\\nHOWARD F. WHITNEY\\nNassau CiMinlry (!lnl\u00c2\u00bb\\nVice-Presidents\\nJ. F. BYERS\\nAllegheny Country (!lul\u00c2\u00bb\\nROBERT A. GARDNER\\nOnwentsia Club\\nSecretary\\nW. D. VANDERPOOL\\nMorris County CJolf Clul)\\nTreasurer\\nMORTIMER N. BUCKNER\\nGarden City Golf Club\\nExecutive Committee\\nThe above officers and\\nAlbert D. Locke Hugh I. Wilson\\nBrae-Burn Country Club Merlon Cricket Club\\nNelson M. Whitney James D. Standish\\nAudubon Golf Club Lochmoor Club\\nRoger D. Lapham Wilbik H. Bkooks\\nPresident California Golf Association Pr. si.lent Wrstrrn Golf Awociation\\nJohn R. Lemist A. L. Walker, Jr.\\nPresident Trans-Mississippi Golf Association President Intercollrgiate Golf Awocialion", "height": "3237", "width": "2115", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0041.jp2"}, "42": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3248", "width": "2069", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0042.jp2"}, "43": {"fulltext": "Sl ALniNOS \u00c2\u00bbFFI( IAI. COI.F rMIDH\\n87\\nU.S.G.A. Annual Meeting\\nAt the twenty-seventh annual meeting of the United States Golf Associa-\\ntion, which was held January 7 in New York City, Howard F. Whitney of\\nthe Nassau Country Club was elected president to succeed G. H. Walker,\\nwho retired after one year in office on account of pressure of business!\\nRobert A. Gardner of Onwentsia was named as one of the two vice-presi-\\ndents to succeed Mr. Whitney, and J. F. Byers of the Allegheny Country\\nClub was re-elected. Wyant D. Vanderpool of Morris County was re-elected\\nsecretary and Mortimer N. Buckner of Garden City was retained as treas-\\nurer. Albert D. Locke, Brae Burn; Nelson M. Whitney, New Orleans;\\nHugh I. Wilson, Merion Cricket Club, Philadelphia, and James D. Standish,\\nLx ohnnoor Club, Detroit, are llie remaining members of the executive\\ncommittee.\\nBefore retiring, the nominating committee, consisting of Cornelius J.\\nSullivan, Garden City, chairman; Thomas B. Paine, E. L. Litchfield, Daniel\\nF. Altland and Frank E. Miller, selected the following committee to make\\nnominations a year hence: James A. Stillman, National Links, chairman;\\nHarry L. Ayer, Brae Burn; William C. Fownes, Jr., Oakmont; Robert P.\\nJones, Atlanta Athletic, and Wallis Winter, Onwentsia.\\nDuring the year the following clubs were elected to active membership:\\nTredyffrin Country Club, Paoli, Pa.; Race Brook Country Club, Orange,\\nConn.; Roxborough Country Club, Roxborough, Philadelphia, Pa.; Stenton\\nGolf Club, Philadelphia, Pa.; Brookside Country Club, Pottstown, Pa.;\\nBellevue Country Club, Syracuse, N. Y.; Milbum Country Club, Baldwin,\\nL. L, N. Y.; The Links Golf Clxih, Searington, L. 1., N. Y. Clubs elected\\nto allied membership were: Franklin Country Club, Franklin, Mass.;\\nCountry Club of Northampton County, Easton, Pa.; Toy Town Golf Qub,\\nWinohendon, Mass.; Suburban Club, Richmond, Va.; Irondequoit Country-\\nClub, Rochester, N. Y.; Milburn Golf and Country Club, Kansas City, Mo.;\\nJackson Heights Golf Club, Elnlhurst, L. I., N. Y. The Winchester Coun-\\ntry Club of Winchester, Mass., was transferred from allied to active mem-\\nbership. The Merchantville Country Oub of Merchantville, N. J., and the\\nNorth Jersey Country Club of Warren Point, N. J., were transferred from\\nactive to allied membership. The Colorado Springs Golf Club was dis-\\nbanded, and so was the Wheaton Country Club of Wheaton, 111. The\\nToledo (Ohio) Golf Club was reinstated as an allied member.\\nThe following resdlution in regard to reinstatements to amateur standing\\nwas announced as agreed upon:\\nThe professional holds an advantage over the amateur by reason\\nof having devoted himself to the game as his profession. He docs\\nnot lose this advantage merely by deciding no longer to earn money\\nby playing or teaching golf.\\nEvery application for reinstatement shall be considered on its\\nown merits, as it is impossible to lay down hard and fast rules\\nthat would be just in all cases.\\nIn considering applications for reinstatements the following prin-\\nciples shall be observed:\\n(1) A player may not be reinstated more than once.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0043.jp2"}, "44": {"fulltext": "S^ SPALDING S OPFICiAL GOLP GtJiDE.\\n(2) Any applicant for reinstatement must have acted so as to\\ncome within the definition of an Amateur Golfer for a period of\\nthree consecutive years immediately preceding the date of appli-\\ncation.\\n(3) A player who has acted for five years or more so as not to\\ncome within the definition of an Amateur Golfer, shall not be\\neligible for reinstatement.\\nAny club can elect a professional to its membership, and this\\ndoes not affect either the status of those professionals or the ama-\\nteur status of other members.\\nIt was announced that the executive committee, with the sanction of the\\nRules of Golf Committee of the Royal and Ancient, has adopted a rule\\nwhich eliminates the stymie definition or other mention of the stymie as\\nfollows:\\nWhen either ball is on the putting green, the player may remove\\nthe opponent s ball; the opponent shall then be deemed to have\\nholed in his next stroke.\\nAnnouncement was made of an amendment to the bylaws pertaining to\\nihe selection of the courses for the various championships. The new read-\\ning of the section follows:\\nSec. 6. The Amateur, Open and Women s Amateur Champion-\\nship Tournaments shall take place on the courses of active clubs,\\nin selecting which, due consideration will be given to accessibility,\\naccommodations and conditions of the courses. The selection shall\\nbe made by a committee of three, to be appointed by the executive\\ncommittee; one of said committee only to be a member of the\\nexecutive committee and to be chairman of the committee. This\\ncommittee shall determine the course on which the Amateur, Open\\nand Women s events shall be played, and shall make and announce\\nsuch selection at least one year before the holding of the cham-\\npionship.\\nThis amendment was adopted so that the club at which the championship\\nis to be played may have ample time to engage in the necessary construc-\\ntion work and make changes in the layout which may be necessary for the\\ntournament.\\nAnother important change which was approved was an amendment to the\\nconstitution providing for an addition of four members to the executive\\ncommittee.\\nThe amateur championship for 1921 was awarded to the St. Louis Coun-\\ntry Club, the women s to the Hollywood links at Deal, N. J., and the open\\nto the Columbia Country Club of Washington, D. C.\\nWilliam C. Fownes of Pittsburgh, who has captained the team to Canada for\\nthe last two years, announced that he had received assurances from the\\nbest of United States golfers that they would go with him to England for\\nthe amateur tournament of 1921. Assuring a return match to this country,\\nMr. Walker, the retiring president, announced that he had presented a cup\\nwhich is to be competed for on the lines of the Davis lawn tennis trophy.\\nThe first competition for the cup was fixed for the month of September,\\n1921, over the National Golf Links at Southampton, L. I., N. Y.", "height": "3248", "width": "2069", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0044.jp2"}, "45": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL fJOLF r.TUnF. 39\\nChampionship Golf Tournaments, 1921\\nThe season for eharnpionship golf will begin in the United Stales July 18.\\nThe National Open tournament will start on that date on the links of the\\nColufmbia Country Club, at Qhevy Chase, Md. On September 5, over the\\ndifficult links of the National Golf Club, at Southampton, the great inter-\\nnational match will start, with many of the leading Britiali players teeing up.\\nFrom September 17 to 24 the National Amateur championship will be\\ndecided over the course of the St. Louis Country Club, at St. Louis, and\\nthe last of the national events will begin on October 3, when the women\\nwill play over the seaside course of the Hollywood Golf Club, at Holly-\\nwood, N. J.\\nMr. Vanderpool, secretary of the United States Golf Association,\\nannounced that in the men s National Amateur tourney there will be two\\ndays of medal play, the sixty-four survivors to continue at match play on\\nSeptember 19, 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24.\\nThe date for the international match will permit the leading amateurs\\nfrom Great Britain and France, including Cyril Tolley and Wethered, to\\ncome here and test their skill against the best of our men, for the British\\namateur championship begins on June 20.\\nIt is expected that the National Open, at Chevy Chase, will bring forth\\nmany stirring battles between home-bred golfers and the greatest of the\\nBritish pros, including Abe Mitchell and George Duncan, and perhaps\\nHarry Vardon, Ted Ray, who won this title last year, has already announced\\nthat he will not defend it in 1921,\\nThe Western Amateur championship, to be held at the Westmoreland\\nCountry Club, Chicago, will take place the week of July 11. This event was\\noriginally set for July 18 but was changed to allow the National Open, at\\nColumbia Country Club, Washington, D. C, to use that week.\\nThe Western Open championship was awarded to the Oakwood Club of\\nCleveland, for August 24, 25 and 26. This championship was held at the\\nMayfield Club, two miles from the Oakwood course, two years ago, when\\nJames Barnes won the title which he lost to Jock Hutchison last summer at\\nthe Olympia Fields Club.\\nThe Western Open meet will consist of eighteen holes by all entrants on\\nthe first day and another round on the second day. those scoring the 64\\nlow totals for the .two rounds competing the tliird day at thirty-six holes.\\nThe low score for the seventy-two holes will win the title.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0045.jp2"}, "46": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nThe Walker Cup\\nConditions to govern the play for the International Golf Team champion-\\nship trophy, recently donated by George H. Walker of St. Louis, show the\\ngroundwork for a world-wide golfing competition similar to that existing in\\nthe Davis Cup tennis play.\\nThe championship tournament will be open to each nation which has a\\nrecognized golf governing body, and for the purposes of challenging and\\ncompetition the various colonies of Great Britain will be considered as sepa-\\nrate nations. Thus, Canada, South Africa, Australasia, India and the\\nBritish Isles must enter individual teams as is the case in the Davis Cup\\nmatches.\\nThe regulations provide that after the initial tournament for the Inter-\\nnational Golf Team championship, to be held at the National Golf Links of\\nAmerica on Long Island during the first week of September, 1921, all pre-\\nliminary and challenge rounds shall be held in the country holding the cup\\nand to be known as the Champion Nation.\\nIn the preliminary rounds the various challenging nations will play elimi-\\nnation matches at thirty-six holes, in which one point will be awarded to\\nthe winner of the first eighteen holes; one point to the winner of the second\\neighteen holes, and two points to the winner of the match. The nation\\nscoring the greatest number of points under these conditions shall be con-\\nsidered the challenging nation and ^hall meet the trophy-holding nation in\\nthe championship round.\\nIn this final contest the teams of the two competing nations will meet:\\nFirst, in a foursome contest; second, in four-ball matches; and complete\\nthe tournament with single matches in which each individual player of the\\nchallenging nation shall meet in turn each competitor of the defending\\nnation. The teams in all matches shall consist of four players and two sub-\\nstitutes to be named twenty-one days before such matches. Twenty- four\\nhours before the match the team captain must name his four players, but\\nfor the second round of matches the captain may name a substitute in case\\nthe committee in charge of the contests considers that one of the regulars\\nis physically unable to continue.\\nThe eligibility rules require that each player of a teanl shall be an ama-\\nteur; a native-born citizen of the country, or at least a resident of the\\nnation for a period not less than five years preceding his. competition, and\\nno player shall represent two nations in any one year. All challenges shall\\nbe in the hands of the champion nation not later than the first. Monday\\nof March of the year of competition.\\nThe regulations also provide that the Executive Committee of the United\\nStates Golf Association is specifically authorized to pay the expenses of a\\nteam representing the United States in all matches for this cup, including\\nelimination contests.\\nThe rules to govern the play for the International Golf Team champion-\\nship trophy follow:", "height": "3248", "width": "2069", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0046.jp2"}, "47": {"fulltext": "si .\\\\iii\u00c2\u00bbiN ;s oKi iciAi, (ioLF wriDi:. 41\\nRULES FOR THE INTERNATIONAL GOLF TEAM CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nThe competition shall be called the International Golf Team Champion-\\nship and shall be open to any nation which has a recognized golf associa-\\ntion; and for the purposes of the regulations, Australia with New Zealand,\\nthe British Isles, British South Africa, Canada, India, Sweden, Norway, and\\nthe United States of America, shall, among others, be regarded as separate\\nnations.\\nIn case of dispute between two associations as to which is the recognized\\nassociation, the decision of the Executive Committee of the U.S.G.A. will\\nbe final.\\nThe nation holding the International Golf Team Championship shall here-\\nafter be termed the champion nation.\\nThe competition shall be played under the rules of the champion nation.\\nThe management of the competition shall be entrusted to a committee,\\nhereafter termed the Committee of Management, which shall be appointed\\nannually by the golf association or corresponding organization of the cham-\\npion nation.\\nThe Committee of Management shall make all arrangements for the pre-\\nliminary round or rounds (if any) of the competition, such preliminary\\nround or rounds to be played in the country of the champion nation, and\\nalso for the challenge round; and its decision in respect to all such arrange-\\nments shall be final. The Committee of Management shall also have power\\nto depute to others in any preliminary round or rounds the making of all\\nor any such arrangements as may be deemed necessary.\\nAny nation wishing to compete shall give notice to the secretary of the\\ngolf association of the champion nation, so that it shall reach him not later\\nthan the first Monday in March of the year in which the competition is to\\ntake place. Should more than one nation challenge, they shall compete\\namong themselves for the right to play the champion nation in the chal-\\nlenge round.\\nThe draw, at which each challenging nation may be represented, shall be\\nmade by the Committee of Managemnt on the day preceding the elimina-\\ntion matches, and the respective captains shall be notified of the particulars.\\nFailure to conclude a round by the date fixed by the Committee of Man-\\nagement shall render either or both sides liable to be defaulted, unless in\\nthe opinion of the Committee of Management the weather or other unavoid-\\nable hindrance shall have made the competition impracticable.\\nWhen more than one nation challenge, the elimination competition to\\ndetermine the challenge nation shall be played the week prior to the date\\nset for the championship.\\nA player shall be qualified to represent a nation if he shall have been\\nborn in that nation or shall have resided therein for at least five vears\\nimmediately preceding his selection to represent the nation, provided always\\nthat he be a bona-fide amateur; but no one shall be entitled to play for\\nmore than one nation in this competition during the same year.\\nThe golf association of each of the nations concerned shall appoint a\\ncaptain of its side. In default of such appointment a side shall choose its\\nown captain.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0047.jp2"}, "48": {"fulltext": "42 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nFor each match a referee, from w hose decision there shall be no appeal,\\nshall be appointed by common consent of the captains of the competing\\nsides. He shall have the power to appoint umpires.\\n(a) Each competing nation shall, twenty-one days before the date fixed\\nfor the commencement of a match, nominate to the Committee of Manage-\\nment not more than four players and two substitutes, who shall represent\\nthe competing nation.\\n(b) Each captain shall, twenty-four hours before the time fixed for the\\ncommencement of play in each contest, give notice of the composition of J\\nhis team to the Committee of Management, and his team shall consist of I\\nthe four players nominated by him for the contest.\\n(c) For the second round of any matches the Committee of Management\\nmay sanction the substitution of another player who has been named as a\\nsubstitute, in place of any player who in the opinion of the committee is i\\nincapacitated by illness, accident or other unavoidable hindrance.\\nThe first competition shall be held at the National Golf Links of America\\nduring the week beginning September 5, 1921. This first competition shall\\nbe open to teams from all countries, as hereinbefore described, the details\\nof play to be arranged by the Committee of Management to be appointed\\nby the Executive Committee of the United States Golf Association.\\nThe champion nation must defend annually if called upon to do so.\\nAfter the year 1921 there shall be an elimination competition each year,\\nwhich shall be held in the country of the champion nation, in which com-\\npetition all teams of challenging nations shall play off, under such rules\\nand regulations as may be laid down by the Committee of Management, for\\nthe right to become the challenging team.\\nThe team of that nation which wins the greatest aggregate number of\\npoints in the elimination competition s hall be declared the challenging team.\\nAll matches shall be of thirty-six holes, and in computing points the fol-\\nlowing system shall be used: One point to winner of the first eighteen;\\none point to winner of second eighteen; two points to winner of match.\\nIn championship competitions the play should be as follows: First day,\\nfoursomes; second day, four-ball matches; third, fourth, fifth and sixth\\ndays, single matches, in which each competitor of the challenging team shall\\nmeet each competitor of the dhampion nation team.\\nAny competing nation whose golf association or whose representatives\\nshall fail to conform to these regulations may be disqualified by the Com-\\nmittee of Management in respect to the competition for the year wherein\\nsuch failure shall occur.\\nThe foregoing regulations s hall be binding upon the nations concerned\\nand shall not be altered except with the consent of two-thirds of the asso-\\nciations whose nations shall have from time to time competed and who shall\\nrecord their votes.\\nThe Executive Committee of the U.S.G.A. is specifically authorized to pay\\nthe expenses of the team representing the United States in all matches\\n(including elimination contests) for this cup.", "height": "3248", "width": "2069", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0048.jp2"}, "49": {"fulltext": "SrALDINGS OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 43\\nU. S. G. A. Club Members\\nACTIVE CLUBS.\\nAlgonquin Golf Club, Webster Groves, Mo.\\nAllegheny Country Club. Sewlekley, Pa.\\nApawamis Club, Rye, N. Y.\\nAreola Country Club, Areola, N. J.\\nAroniinink Country Club, Drexel Hill. I a.\\nAtlanta Athletic Club, Atlanta, Ga.\\nAudulwn Golf Club, New Orleans. La. _\\nBala Golf Club, West Park Station, Philadelphia, Pa.\\nBaltimore Country Club. Roland Park, Baltimore County, Md.\\nBaltusrol Golf Club, Baltusrol, N. J.\\nBeacon Hill Country Club. Atlnntic Highlands. N. .T.\\nBelle Claire Golf and Country Club, Bayside, L. I., N. Y.\\nBelmont Springs Country Clr.b, Waverley, Mass.\\nBercBford Country Club, San Mateo, Cal.\\nBeverly Country Club, Chicago, III.\\nBlind Brook Club, Port Chester, N. Y.\\nBloomfleld Hills Country Club. Birmingham, Mich.\\nBob O Link Golf Club, Highland Park, 111.\\nBrae-Burn Country Club, West Newton, Mass.\\nBroadmoor Golf Club, Colorado Springs. Colo.\\nBrooklawn Country Club (Inc.). Bridgeport. Conn.\\nCalumet Country Club. Chicago, 111.\\nCedarbrook Country Club, Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa.\\nCherry Valley Club (Inc.), Garden City, L. 1., N. Y.\\nChestnut Hill Golf Club, Chestnut Hill, Mass.\\nChevy Chase Club, Chevy Chase, Md.\\nChicago Golf Club, Wheaton, 111.\\nCincinnati Golf Club, Cincinnati, Ohio.\\nClaremont Country Club, Oakland. Cal.\\nColorado Springs Golf Club, Colorado Springs, Colo.\\nColumbia Country Club, Chevy Chase, Md.\\nCommonwealth Country Club, Chestnut Hill, Mass.\\nCountry Club of Atlantic City, Northfleld, N. J.\\nCountry Club, Brookline, Mass.\\nCountry Club of Buffalo. Buffalo, N. T.\\nCountry Club of Detroit. Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich.\\nCountry Club of Springfield, West Springfield, Mass.\\nDeal Golf Club, Deal. N. J.\\nDedham Country and Polo Club, Dedhani. Mass.\\nDelavan Country Club, Delavan. Wis.\\nDenver Country Club, Denver, Col.\\nDetroit Golf Club, Detroit. Mich.\\nDruid Hills Golf Club. Atlanta. Ga.\\nEdgewater Golf Club, Chicago, III.\\nRkwanok Country Club, Manchester, Vt.\\nEngineers Country Club, Roslyn, L. I., N. Y.\\nFnglewood Country Clnb. Englewood. N. J.\\nEssex County Club, Manchester, Mass.\\nEvanston Golf Club. Evnnston, 111.\\nBxmoor Country Club, Highland Park, 111.\\nFalrvlew Country Club. Elrasford, N. Y.\\nFlossmoor Country Club, Flossmoor, 111.\\nFox Hills Golf Club. Stapleton, S. I.. N. T.\\nG.Trden City Country Club. Garden City, L. I.. N. Y.\\nGarden City Golf Club, Garden City, N. Y.\\nGednev Farms Country Club, White Plains. N.\\nGlen View Club. Golf. 111. t\\nGolf and Country Club of Des Moines. Des Moines. Iowa.\\nGreen Meadow Country Club. Harrison. N. Y.\\nGreenwich Country Club. Greenwich, Conn.\\nGulph Mills Golf Club, Gulph Mills, Pa.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0049.jp2"}, "50": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nHartford Golf Club, West Hartford, Conn.\\nHighland Country Club, (Inc.), Merlden, Conn.\\nHighlands Country Club, Grand Rapids, Mich.\\nHillcrest Country Club, Kansas City, Mo.\\nHinsdale Golf Club, Clarendon Hills, 111.\\nHollywood Golf Club. Deal, N. J.\\nHudson River Country Club (Inc.), Yonkers, N. Y.\\nHuntingdon Valley Country Club, Noble, Pa.\\nHyannisport Club, Hyannlsport, Mass.\\nIdlewUd Country Club, Flossmoor, 111.\\nInverness Club, Toledo, Ohio.\\nKent Country Club, Grand Rapids, Mich.\\nLakewood Country Club, Lakewood. N. J.\\nKnickerbocker Country Club, Tenafly, N. J.\\nLido Golf Club, Long Beach, L. I., N. Y.\\nLochmoor Club, Detroit, Mich.\\nLlanerch Country Club, Manoa, Delaware Co., Pa.\\nLosantlTllle Country Club. Pleasant Ridge, Ohio.\\nMaidstone Club, Bast Hampton, L. I., N. Y.\\nllayfleld Country Club, Cleveland, Ohio.\\nMerlon Cricket Clnb, Hayerford, Pa.\\nMidlothian Country Club, Blue Island. III.\\nMilwaukee Country Club, Milwaukee, Wis.\\nMlnlkahda Club. Minneapolis, Minn.\\nMohawk Golf Club. Schenectady. N. Y.\\nMorris County Golf Club, Convent, N. J.\\nMyopia Hunt Club. Hamilton, Mass.\\nNashua Country Club, Nashua, N. H.\\nNassau Country Club, Glen Cove. L. I., N. Y.\\nNational Golf Links of America, Southampton. L. I., N. Y.\\nNew Haven Country Club, WhltneyvUle. Conn.\\nNew Orleans Country Club, New Orleans, La.\\nNewport Country Club, Newport, R. I.\\nNorth Hills Country Club, Edge Hill, Pa.\\nNorth Shore Country Club (Inc.), Glen Head, L. I,. N. Y.\\nOakland Golf Club, Bay Side, L. I., N. Y.\\nOakland Hills Country Club, Detroit, Mich.\\nOakley Country Club, Watertown, Mass.\\nOakmont Country Club. Oakmont. Allegheny County, Pa.\\nOak Park Country Club, Oak Park, III.\\nOak Ridge Golf Club, Tuckahoe N. Y.\\nOld Elm Club, Fort Sheridan. Lake County. 111.\\nOld York Road Country Club. Jenklntown, Pa.\\nOnwentsla Club, Lake Forest. 111.\\nOverbrook Golf Club. Overbrook. Pa.\\nPark Club of BufTalo, Buffalo. N. Y.\\nPhiladelphia Country Club, Bala, Pa.\\nPhiladelphia Cricket Club, St. Martins, Philadelphia, Pa.\\nPhilmont Country Club, Philmont, Pa.\\nPine Valley Golf Club. Sumner. N. J.\\nPiping Rock Club. Locust Valley, L. I., N. Y.\\nPlalnfield Country Club. Plalnfleld. N. J.\\nQuaker Ridge Golf Club (Inc.), Mamaroneck, N. Y.\\nRace Brook Country Club. Orange, Conn.\\nRaritan Valley Country Club, Somerville, N. J.\\nRichmond County Country Club, Dongan Hills, Staten Island, N. J\\nRidgedale Country Club, Normandy, Mo.\\nRockaway Hunting Club. Oedarhurst, L. I., N. Y.\\nRock Island Arsenal Golf Club, Rock Island, 111.\\nRumson Country Club, Rumson, N. J.\\nSt. Albans Golf Club, St. Albans, L. I., N. Y.\\nSt. Andrews Golf Club, Mount Hope. Westchester County. N. Y,\\nSt. Louis Country Club, Clayton, Mo.\\nScarsdale Golf and Country Club. Hartsdale. N. Y.\\nScioto Country Club, Columbus, Ohio\\nSeaview Golf Club, Absecon, N. J\\nShackamaxon Country Club, Westfield, N. J\\nShaker Heights Country Club, Warrensville, Ohio.\\nBhawnee Country Club, Shawne^-.p^j-pelawar^^ Pa.", "height": "3248", "width": "2069", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0050.jp2"}, "51": {"fulltext": "SrALl)lN(;S OFFICIAL GOLF GUllMO.\\nSlienecossett Country Club. New Lcndon, Conn,\\nShinnecock Hills Golf Club. Southampton. L. I., N. T.\\nSlwanoy Country Club, Mount Vernon, N. Y.\\nSkokle Country Club. Olencoe, 111. ti la\\nSleepy Hollow Country Club, ScarborouRh-on-Hudton. N. T.\\nSomerset Country Club. BernardBVllle, N. J.\\nSunnybrook Golf Club. Philadelphia, Pa.\\nTedesco Country Club, Swampscott. Mass.\\nTown and Country Club, St. Paul. Minn.\\nTredyffrin Country Club, PaoU, Pa.\\nTuxedo Golf Club. Tuxedo. N. Y.\\nTipper Montclalr Country Club. Upper Montclalr. N. J.\\nWannamoisett Country Club, Rvtmford. R. I.\\nWestmoreland Country Club, Glen View, 111.\\nWest Okobojl Golf Club. Mllford. Iowa.\\nWestward-Ho Golf Club, Cra gin Station Chl^^^^^^\\nWhltemarsh Valley Country Club. Ohestnut HIU. ra.\\nWilmington Country Club, Kennett Pike. Del.\\nWinchester Country Cl;ib, Wincheeter. Maas.\\nWollaston Golf Club. Montclalr, Mass.\\nWoodway Country Club (i\u00c2\u00b0 \u00c2\u00abl i: ;P^ iS V\\nWykagyl Country Club. New RocheUe, N. Y.\\nYahnundasls Golf Club, Utlca N. Y.\\nYountakah Country Club, Nutley. N. J.\\nALLIED CLUBS.\\nAgawam Hunt. Providence, R.\\nAlbany Country Club, Albany, N. Y.\\nAlbemarle Golf Club. West Newton, Mass.\\nAlbuquerque Country Club, Albuquerque. N. M.\\nAlpine Golf Club. Fitchburg. Mass.\\nAltoona Cricket Club. Altoona. Pa.\\nAnnandale Country Club. Pasadena, Oal.\\nArdsley Club. Ardsley-on-Hudson, N. Y.\\nArlington Golf Club, Columbus, Ohio.\\nArlmont Golf Club, Arlington Heights Mass.\\nAsheville Country Club, Ashevllle, N. C.\\nAustin Country Club. Austin, Tex.\\nBalsams Country Club. Dlxvllle Notch. N. H.\\nBannookburn Golf Club, Glen Echo, Md.\\nBass Rocks Golf Club. Gloucester. Mass.\\nBear Hill Golf Club. Wakefield. Mass.\\nBeaver Meadow Golf Club, Concord. N. H.\\nBedford Golf and Tennis Club. Bedford, N. Y.\\nBelleair Country Club, Bellealr, Fla.\\nBellevue Country Club, Bellevue, Pa.\\nBellevue Golf Club. Melrose. Mass.\\nBelmont Golf Club, Downers Grove, 111.\\nBen Lomond Golf Club. Sagamore, Mass.\\nBerkshire Country Club. Reading. Pa.\\nBethlehem Country Club. Bethlehem. N. H.\\nBlnghamton Country Club, Blnghamton, N. Y.\\nBismarck Country Club. Bismarck. N. Dak.\\nB ue Mound Country Club, Wauwatosa. Wis.\\nRrflckenridee Heights Country Club, Tarentum. Pa.\\nBrockLn ConntrTciub, Campello Station, Brorkton, Mass.\\nBrSoklands Golf and Country Club Rochester, Mich.\\nrcts^^^n^/^C^uifry^C^^\\nSSfCgaSf C S^ty S^uSfng^ame. San Mateo Co.. Cal.\\nButler Country Club. Butler. Pa.\\nCambria Country Club Johnstown^ Pa.\\nCanoe Brook Country Club. Sunamlt, N. J.\\nCape Fear Country Club, Wilmington. N. 0,\\nCape May Golf Olul Cape May. N.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0051.jp2"}, "52": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nCapital City Club, Atlanta, Ga.\\nCarolina Country Club, Raleigh. N. C.\\nCentury Country Club, White Plains, N. T.\\nChampaign Country Club, Champaign, III.\\nCharleston Country Club, Charleston. S. 0.\\nCharlotte Country Club, Charlotte, N. C.\\nChattanooga Golf and Country Club, Chattanooga, Tenn.\\nChicago Heights Country Club, Chicago Heights. 111.\\nClarksburg Country Club, Clarksburg, W. Va\\nCohasset Golf Club, North Cohasset, Mass.\\nColonia Country Club, Colonia, N. J.\\nConcord Country Club, Coucord, Mass.\\nCooperstown Country Club, Cooperstown, N. T.\\nCoronado Country Club, Coronado, Cal.\\nCountry Club of Augusta, Augusta, Ga.\\nCountry Club of Birmingham, Birmingham, Ala.\\nCountry Club of Cleveland, Cleveland, Ohio.\\nCountry Club, Farmington, Conn.\\nCountry Club of Glen Ridge, Glen Ridge, N. J\\nCountry Club of Greenfield. Greenfield Mass\\nCountry Club of Hagerstown, Hagerstown, Md.\\nCountry Club of Indianapolis, Indianapolis, Ind.\\nCountry Club of Lansdowne. Lansdowne Pa\\nCountry Club of Little Rock. Little Rock, Ark.\\nCountry Club of New Bedford, New Bedford, Mass.\\nCountry Club of New Canaan, New Canaan, Conn.\\nCountry Club of Pittsburgh, Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburgh Pa\\nCountry Club of Pittsfield, Pittsfleld, Mass. \u00e2\u0080\u00a2gn, i-a.\\nCountry Club of Ridgefleld, RIdgefleld, Conn.\\nCountry Club of Rochester, Brighton, N T\\nCountry Club of Scranton, Scranton. Pa\\nCountry Club, Toledo, Ohio\\nCountry Club of Virginia, Richmond, Va.\\nCountry Club of Waterbury, Waterbury, Conn.\\nCountry Club of Westchester, Westchester N Y\\nOranford Golf Club, Cranford, jj j\\nCrescent Athletic Club, Brooklyn*. N T\\nCrow Point Golf Club. Hingham. Mass.\\nDallas Country Club. Dallas, Tex\\nD, i.?J2^*\u00c2\u00aen? Country Club, Del Monte. Cal.\\nDick nson Town and Country Club, Dickinson N Dak\\nDornick Hill Country Club, Ardmore. Carter County Okla\\nDunwoodie Country Club, Tonkers, N Y ^y*\\nDutchess Golf and Country Club. Pouchkeensle N v\\nEagles-Mere Golf Club, Eagles-Mere Pa.\\nBdgewood Country Club, Charleston, W. Va\\nPflfriro^ir? Edgewood. Pittsburgh, Pa.\\nISs^^^lf^fu^Efrursf 7lf^^^\\nBlmira Country Club. Elmlra. n Y\\nF\u00c2\u00abov \u00c2\u00b0ty Country Club, West Orange, N J\\nEssex Fells Country Club, Essex Fells N f\\nFairmont Country Club. Fairmont. W.Va\\nFall River Country Club, Fall River Mass\\nf SnJ p ^l!?^ Ja -k8onvillI Fii.\\nFlushine Country Club, Flushing, LINY\\nForest Hill Field Club Soho. Belleviny n J*\\nK\u00e2\u0080\u009e^^\u00c2\u00abt Pf -k Golf Club. St. Louis. Mo\\nGenesee Golf Club. Rochester/ N. Y\\n^,^\u00c2\u00b0f^\u00c2\u00ab Country dub, Geneva, NY\\nG en Garden Country Club, Fort Worth Ter\\nGreensburg Country Club. GreeMbure Pa\\nPackensack Golf Club. Hackensack. N. j/", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0052.jp2"}, "53": {"fulltext": "SrALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 47\\nHaddon Country Club, Haddonfleld, N. J.\\nHampton Roads Golf and Country Club, Newport News, Va.\\nHatherly Golf Club, North Scituate, Mass.\\nHighland Country Club, Attleboro, Mass.\\nHighland Golf Club. Indianapolis, Ind.\\nHighland Park Golf Club, Cleveland, Ohio.\\nHomestead Golf Club, Danvers, Mass.\\nHoosic-Whisick Club, Ponkapoag, Mass.\\nHouston Country Club, Houston, Tex.\\nHuntington Country Club, Huntington, L. L, N. T.\\nIndian Hill Club, Wlnnetka. 111.\\nIntervale Country Club, Manchester, N. H.\\nInwood Country Club, Inwood, L. I., N. T.\\nIsland Club, Haverhill, Mass.\\nJefferson County Golf Club, Watertown, N. T.\\nKahkwa Golf Club, Erie, Pa.\\nKansas City Country Club, Kansas City, Mo.\\nKebo Valley Club, Bar Harbor, Me.\\nKenosha Country Club, Kenosha, Wli.\\nKernwood Country Olab. Salem, Mass.\\nKirkside Golf Club, Chevy Chaso. Md.\\nKishwaukee Country Club, DeKalb, 111.\\nKnoUwood Country Club, White Plains. N. T.\\nLa Grange Country Club, La Grange, 111.\\nLake Geneva Country Club, Lake Geneva, Wis.\\nLake George Club, Diamond Polnt-on-Lake George, N. Y.\\nLakeside Country Club, Canton, Ohio.\\nLakewood Country Club, Denver, Colo.\\nLancaster Country Club, Lancaster, Pa.\\nLawrence Park Country Club, BronxvlUe, N. T.\\nLeicester Country Club, Leicester, Mass.\\nLenox Club, Lenox, Mass,\\nLexington Golf Club, Lexington, Mass.\\nLong Meadow Golf Club, Lowell, Mass.\\nLos Angeles Country Club, Beverly Mills, L. A. Connty, Oal.\\nLouisville Country Club. T.\u00c2\u00abaiaTlUe. Ky.\\nLa La Temple Country Club, North Glenside, Pa.\\nMahopac Golf Olub, Lake Mahopac, N. Y.\\nManhattan Golf Olub, Pelham Bay Park, N. T.\\nMaplewood Country Club. Maplewood, N. H.\\nMarine and Field Club, Brooklyn, N. Y.\\nMarin Golf and Country Club, San Rafael, Oal.\\nMassapequa Golf and Country Club, Massapequa, L. I., N. Y.\\nMeadow Brook Golf Club. Reading, Mass.\\nMemphis Country Club, Bnntyn, Tenn.\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2Merchantville Country Club, Merchantville, N. J.\\nMerrimack Valley Country Club, Methuen, Mass.\\nMetacomet Golf Club, Providence, R. I.\\nMidland Golf Club. Garden City, L. I., N. Y.\\nMldwick Country Olub, Los Angeles, Cal.\\nMlsquamicut Golf Olub. Watch Hill, R. I.\\nMonoosnock Country Club, Leominster, Mass.\\nMontclair Golf Club, Montclair, N. J.\\nMontour Heights Country Club, Coraopolis, Pa.\\nMoorestown Field Club. Moorestown, N. J.\\nMount Anthony Country Club. Bennington, Vt.\\nMount Kisco Golf Club (Inc.), Mount Kisco, N. Y.\\nMount Pleasant Golf Club, Lowell. Mass.\\nMount Tom Golf Club, Holyoke. Mass.\\nMount Vernon Country Club, Mount Vernon, N. Y.\\nNashville Golf and Country Club, Nashville, Tenn.\\nNew Brunswick Country Club, New Brunswick, N. J.\\nNew York Golf Club, Van Cortlandt Park, New York, N. Y.\\nNew York New8pai)er Golf Club, Van Cortlandt Park, New York, N, Y.\\nNorfolk Country Club, Norfolk, Va.\\nNorfolk Golf Olub. Dedham. Mass.\\nNormandle Golf Club, St. Louis, Mo.\\nNorth Adams Country Olub. North Adams. Mass.\\nI^^orth Fork Country Club, Oatchogue, L. I,, N. Y.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0053.jp2"}, "54": {"fulltext": "SPALDINGS OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nNorth Jersey Country Club, Warren Point, N. J.\\nNorthland Country Club, Duluth, Minn.\\nNorwood Golf Club, Long Branch, N. J.\\nOak Bluffs Country Club, Oak Bluffs, Mass.\\nOak Hill Country Club, Rochester, N. Y.\\nOakland Country Club, Metaire Ridge, New Orleans, La.\\nOakwood Club, South Euclid, Ohio.\\nOakwood Country Club, Lynchburg, Va.\\nOcean Country Club, Far Rockaway, L. I., N. Y.\\nOld Point Comfort Golf and Country Club. Fortress Monroe, Va.\\nOlympia Fields Country Club, Matteson, 111.\\nOmaha Country Club, Benson, Neb.\\nOmaha Field Club, Omaha, Neb.\\nOneida Community Golf Club, Kenwood, N. Y.\\nOnondaga Golf and Country Club, Fayetteville, Onondaga County, N. Y.\\nOswego Country Club, Oswego, N. Y.\\nOuld Newbury Golf Club, Newburyport, Mass.\\nOwasco Country Club, Auburn, N. Y.\\nOxford Country Club, Chicopee Falls, Mass.\\nPalmetto Golf Club, Aiken, S. 0.\\nParkersburg Country Club, Parkersburg, W. Va.\\nPensacola Country Club, Pensacola, Fin.\\nPhiladelphia Golf Club, Cobb s Creek Park, Philadelphia, Pa.\\nPinehurst Country Club, Pinehurst, N. C.\\nPittsburgh Field Club, Pittsburgh, Pa.\\nPlum Brook Country Club, Sandusky, Ohio.\\nPlymouth Country Club, Norristown, Pa.\\nPlymouth Country Club. Plymouth, Mats.\\nPortage Country Club, Akron, Ohio.\\nPort Chester Country Club, Port Chester, N. Y.\\nPort Henry Country Club (Inc.), Port Henry, N. Y.\\nPortland Country Club, Portland, Me.\\nPortsmouth Country Club, Portsmouth, N. H.\\nPowelton Club, Newburgh, N. Y.\\nPresidio Golf Club, San Francisco, Cal.\\nPrinceton Golf Club, Princeton, N. J.\\nRacine Country Club. Racine, Wis.\\nRavisloe Country Club, Homewood, 111.\\nRedlands Country Club, Redlands. Cal.\\nRed Run Golf Club, Ro.val Oak, Mich.\\nRhode Island Country Club, Nayatt, R. I.\\nRidgewood Club, Columbia, S. C.\\nRidgewood Country Club, Ridgewood, N. J.\\nRiverside Golf Club. Riverside, 111.\\nRIverton Country Club, Rlverton, N. J.\\nRiverview Golf Club. Mt. Clemens, Mich.\\nRoanoke Country Club (Inc.), Roanoke, Va.\\nRockland Country Club. Sparkill, N. Y.\\nRunaway Brook Golf Club, Clinton, Mass.\\nRutland Country Club, Rutland, Vt.\\nSadaquada Golf Club. Utica, N. Y.\\nSt. Augustine Golf Club, St. Augustine, Fla.\\nSt. Clair Country Club, South Hills Branch, Pittsburgh, Pa.\\nSt. Davids Golf Club, St. Davids, Pa.\\nSt. George s Golf and Country Club, Stony Brook, L. I.. N. Y.\\nSalem Golf Club, Salem, Mass.\\nSan Antonio Country Club, San Antonio. Texas.\\nSan Francisco Golf and Country Club, Ingleside, San Francisco. Cai\\nSaratoga Golf Club, Saratoga Springs, N. Y.\\nSavannah Golf Club, Savannah, Ga.\\nScarboro Golf Club. Franklin Park. Boston, Mass.\\nBcituate Country Club, Scituate, Mass.\\nScottish-American Golf Club. Van Cortlandt Park, New York. N. T\\nSeattle Golf Club, Seattle, Wash.\\nSegreganaett Country Club, Taunton, Mass.\\nSharon Country Club, Sharon, Mass.\\nSharon Country Club. Sharon, Pa.\\nShuttle Meadow Golf Club (Inc.). New Britain. Conn.\\nSiMcoaeet Oo\u00c2\u00ab Olub. Siaiconset. Mass.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0054.jp2"}, "55": {"fulltext": "SPALDTNOS OFFICIAL (;(H F (niin:.\\neioux City Country Club, Sioux City, Iowa.\\niSoutb Shore Couuiry CluD, Cbic-atfo, ill.\\nSouth Shore Field Club, Bay Shore, U I., N. Y.\\nSpokane Country Club, Spokane, Wash.\\nSprlnghaven Country Club, Wallingford, Pa.\\nSpring Lake Golf and Country Club, Spring Lake, N. J.\\nStamford Country Club, Stauiford-lu-the-Catskills, N. Y.\\nStanton Heights Golf Club, EMttsburgh, Pa.\\nSteubeuville Country Club, Steubenville, Ohio.\\nStockbi lUge GoU Club, Siockbridge, Mass.\\nStorm King Golf Club, Corn\\\\vall-ou-Hudson, N. Y.\\nSuburban Club. Elizabeth, N. J,\\nSuffolk Country Club, Patchogue, L. I., N. Y.\\nSunuingdale Country Club, Scarsdale, N. Y.\\nSwope Park Golf Club, Kansas City, Mo.\\nTacoma Country and Golf Club, South Taoouia, Wash.\\nTaconic Golf Club, Wllliamstowu, Mass.\\nTatnuck Country Club, Worcester, Mass.\\nTekoa Country Club, Westfleld, Mass.\\nTeugega Country Club, Rome, N. Y.\\nThornburg Country Club. Thornburg, Pittsburgh, Pa.\\nThousand Islands Country Club. Alexandria Bay, N. Y.\\nToledo Golf Club, Toledo, Ohio.\\nTorresdale Golf Club, Torresdale, Pa.\\nTown and Country Club, Lockport, N. Y.\\nTrenton Country Club, Oaklands, Trenton, N. J.\\nTuscumbia Golf Club, Green Lake, Wis.\\nUnlontown Country Club, Unlontown, Pa.\\nUnited Shoe Machinery A. A., Beverly, Mass.\\nVan Shaick Island Golf Club, Troy, N. T.\\nVesper Country Club, Tyngsboro, Mass.\\nVirginia Hot Springs Golf and Tennis Club, Hot Springs, V*\\nWampatuck Country Club, Canton, Mass.\\nWanango Country Club, Reno, Pa.\\nWashington Golf and Country Club (Inc.), Jewell Station, Va.\\nWashington County Golf and Country Club, Washington, Pa\\nWaumbek Golf Club. Jefferson, N. H.\\nWaverly Country Club, Portland, Ore.\\nWee Burn Golf Club, Noroton, Conn.\\nWeldwood Cx)untry Club, Elgin, 111.\\nWellesley Country Club, Wellesley Hills, Mas\u00c2\u00bb.\\nWenham Golf Club, Wenham, Mass.\\nWestbrook Golf Club, Great River, L. I., N. Y.\\nWest Chester Golf and Country Club, West Chester, Pa.\\nWestfleld Golf Club, Westfleld, N. J.\\nWestmoreland Country Club, Verona, Pa.\\nWeston Golf Club, Weston, Mass.\\nWestwood Country Club Co., Cleveland. Ohio.\\nWheatley Hills Golf Club (Inc.), East Williston, L. I., N. Y.\\nWhoaton Country Club, Wheaton, 111.\\nWheeling Country Club, Wheeling, W. Va.\\nWhite Beeches Golf and Country Club, Haworth, N. 3.\\nWilliamsport Country Club, WilUamsport, Pa.\\nWinchester Country Club, Winchester, Mass.\\nWindsor Golf Club, Chicago. 111.\\nWinnesuket Country Club, Woonsocket. R. I.\\nWolferts Roost, Albany, N. Y.\\nWoodbury Country Club, Woodbury, N. J.\\nWoodhaven Golf Club, Woodhaven, L. I. N. Y.\\nWoodland Golf Club, Auburndale, Mass.\\nWoodmere Club (Inc.), Woodmero, I,. I., N. Y.\\nWoods Hole Golf Club, Falmouth, Mass.\\nWorcester Country Club, Worcester. Mass.\\nWyantenuck Golf Club, Great Harrington, Mass.\\nWyoming Valley Country Club, WUkes-Barre, Pa.\\nYork Country Club, York. Pa.\\nYoughiogheny Country Club, McKeesport. Pa.\\nYoungstown Country Cbib, Youngstown, Ohio.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0055.jp2"}, "56": {"fulltext": "FRANCIS OUIMET,\\nWoodland.\\nRunner-up National Amateur ChampionBhip.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0056.jp2"}, "57": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nNational Amateur Championship\\nCharles Evans, Jr., of the Edgewater Club, Chicago, won the amateur\\nchampionship of the United States over the course of the Engineers Coun-\\ntry Club at Roslyn, L. I., September 11. with Francis Ouimet of the Wood-\\nland Club, Boston, runner-up. The result was even more decisive than that\\nin the tournament of 1919. Evans won by 7 up and 6 to play. Herron won\\nfrom Bobby .lones dn 1919 by 5 and 4. The score of the final round of\\n1920 was as follows:\\nMORNING ROUND.\\nEvans -Out 5 5 4 5 5 4 4 4 5\u00e2\u0080\u009441 In 3 4 4 4 3 5 4 4 4\u00e2\u0080\u009435\u00e2\u0080\u009476\\nOniniet\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out 5 5 4 5 5 3 4 4 G\u00e2\u0080\u0094 41 In 434 5 4554 3\u00e2\u0080\u009437\u00e2\u0080\u009478\\nAFTERNOON ROUND.\\nEvans\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out 4 4 4 4 3 4 4 4\u00e2\u0080\u009434 In 2 5 4\\nOuimet\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out 45544444 5\u00e2\u0080\u009439 In 2 4 5\\nThe result of the match play, which brought Evans and Ouimet into the\\nfinals, had been dreamed of as a superlative finish for the tournament,\\nbecause much discussion had arisen from time to time as to the merits of\\nthe present champion and his runner-up in 1920. Thus it happened that\\nanticipation most sought was the realization of the tournament. In describ-\\ning the match, Kerr Petrie said:\\nIf ever a golfer won on his merits, that one was Evans. He gathered a\\nlead of two holes in the morning, and in the afternoon he simply was ram-\\npant. The .Chicagoan s afternoon round was a withering blast, for in twelve\\nholes he made only one mistake, this being when he pulled his approach\\nfor the eleventh and had to play from a bunker. And it was here that\\nOuimet won his first and only hole of the round. After the match those\\nwho had attended since play began found themselves recalling the fact that\\nonly once had Evans really been extended to win. That was when Reginald\\nM. Lewis of Greenwich took him to the forty-first hole in the second round.\\nAgainst this, however, Evans had played the most consistent golf of all, gen-\\nerally scoring away down within a few strokes of the hard Engineers par.\\nLike Ouimet. he was wobbly at the outset of this big test, but after he\\nhad played the first nine holes the Chicagoan played golf of which Vardon\\nat his best well might have been proud. He had these last nine holes in\\n35, and in the afternoon he went out in the remarkable total of 34, which,\\nhowever, may not look remarkable to those who do not know the Engineers\\ncourse. For a single round, then, it can be claimed that Evans scored a 69.\\nThat was a withering blast, a blast that even the stout-hearted and emi-\\nnently skilful Ouimet found himself unable to withstand. Further than\\nthat, Evans played the next three holes in eleven strokes, so that for twenty-\\none holes he had a total of 79.\\nOuimet, like the grand sportsman that he is. had no excuse to offer. Too\\nbad that there are not more Ouimets. He would have given a leg almost to\\nhave beaten Evans, but. having gone down in defeat, he took it like a man.\\nOuimet had a b ad cold and fever when he defeated Evans in the second", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0057.jp2"}, "58": {"fulltext": "...^i\\nROBERT T. JONES, JR.,\\nAtlanta, Ga.\\nSouthern Amateur Champion.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0058.jp2"}, "59": {"fulltext": "SrALDlNOS OFFTCIAL GOLF OTTTDR. 53\\nround of the national amateur championship at Oakmont. Stung to the\\nquick by what he considered the needless magnifying of Ouimets illness,\\nEvans came back with the reply that he himself played that day under the\\nhandicap of neuritis. In 1920 the match was played on its merits. It was\\nno porous plaster contest, but a golf match for blood and glory.\\nThere is no use saying that Ouimet did not play his best. He did not,\\nby a long shot. This was no fault but his own. Ouimet, generally so\\nreliable on the greens, the man of whom it has been said needs no more\\nthan two putts to a green, was often guilty of weakness m propelling the\\nball toward the hole. At least four times during the day he needed an\\neyitra putt. More than that, he had a recurrence of the malady which\\nafflicted him last year at Brae Burn in the national open championship and\\nleft too high a percentage of bis drives in the left of the rough.\\nThe play in the final round follows:\\nMorning Round.\\nNo 1 (415 Yards) Par 4\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Evans had the honor. He played his ball\\n,out on the right, fifteen yards short of Ouimet s. Both approaches were\\nhooked, that of Evans short of the bunker Ouimet was in the trap but\\nmade the closer third. Over the hole twelve feet, Evans gave the baU a\\nchance and just missed. From ten feet Ouimet also was over. Halved in 5.\\nNo 2 (412 Yards), Par 4\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Ouimet beat Evans on the drive fifteen yards.\\nBoth were down the middle. Evans approach was sliced to the short rough\\nwhile Ouimet s dropped short on the bank Using a jigger, Ouimet halt\\ntapped, but laid his ball four feet to the left. Evans made a miserable\\neffort his ball getting about half way from a spongy lie. The Chicagoan\\nwas left with a fifteen-foot putt, which he missed. Ouimet had a chance,\\nbut did not give the ball a chance. Halved m 5.\\nNo 3 (325 Yards), Par 4\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Evans outdrove Ouimet by forty yards.\\nEvans did not hit the ball well on the approach, but he was on whik\\nO^met swung his shot to a trap on the left. Recovering cleverly, Ouimet\\nholed a yard putt for his half in 4. j\\nNo 4 (405 Yards), Par 4^Evans had the better line on the drive and\\nwas slightly ahead of his opponent, who with a slight slice had to play his\\nsecond from the rough. Ouimet put his second in %^u k^\\\\^ /7 ^IL\\ngreen while Evans with nothing to bother him pulled to the fourth tee.\\nOuimk made a fine recovery, but left Evans with a glorious chance to win\\nthe hole when he missed his putt. Evans had played a superb third, a\\nyard and a half over the cup. Evans missed this one. Halved in b.\\nNo 5 (380 Yards), Par 4\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Evans played the odd after the drive. He\\nwas too much to the right. He pulled his second, whereas Ouimet was on\\neighteen feet short of the cup. Ouimet overran and missed coming back.\\nEvans was on with his third. His fourth was strong and he also missed his\\nshort one. Halved in 5. u u\\nNo 6 (316 Yards), Par 4\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Ouimet pushed his tee shot into the rough,\\nbut laid his approach a yard to the left, hole high. Evans was straight on\\nthe drive, but his second was on the edge of the green. Evans ran up dead,\\nbut Ouimet holed his 3, winning the first hole of the match.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0059.jp2"}, "60": {"fulltext": "CYRIL J. TOLLEY,\\nBritish Amateur Champion.\\n!.e^^a-|f r C\\\\-M- V. -?a.^S L^ X,S?^ ^^ZS^S^^I!^.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0060.jp2"}, "61": {"fulltext": "SPALDINGR OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 55\\nNo. 7 (350 Yards), Par 4 Ouimet pulled his tee shot among the spec\\ntators and had a lie in the rough for his approach. Evans was straight, but\\nOuimet was the ck)ser of the two. Evans from twenty feet to the left ran\\nup within an inch of the cup. Ouimet iiad a downhill eight-footer, which\\nhe missed. Halved in 4.\\nNo. 8 (213 Yards), Par 3\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Ouimet pulled to the bunker on the left,\\nwhile Evans was on the left edge of the green. Ouimet was out short and\\na yard over on his third. Evans laid his second four feet from the cup, but\\nmissed the putt for a win. Halved in 3.\\nNo. 9 (556 Yards), Par 5 Ouimet drove into the rough at the right and\\nthen flubbed his iron shot. Evans had a fine drive and brassie, these two\\nbeing as good as three for Ouimet. Evans short approach was eighteen\\nfeet short, while Ouimet s was over the pin. Ouimet missed, and Evans\\nwon in 5 to 6, squaring the match.\\nNo. 10 (155 Yards), Par 3 Evans was just short of the green, while\\nOuimet s ball rolled down to the mound on the left. Evans chipped to\\nwithin four feet, and holed while Ooiimet putted to within two and a half\\nfeet and missed. Evans, 1 up.\\nNo. 11 (406 Yards), Par 4 Ouimet had a terrific ball from the tee,\\ntwenty yards ahead of Evans. Evans laid his second twelve feet beyond the\\nflag, but Ouimet beat even this fine effort. He was but seven feet away,\\nand after Evans had missed Ouimet holed for his 3. Match all square.\\nNo. 12 (360 Yards), Par 4 ^Ouimet outdrove Evans again and once\\nmore had the closer approach. Evans long run-up was six feet short, but\\nhe holed and saved a half. Ouimet had missed from twelve feet. Halved\\nin 4.\\nNo. 13 (413 Yards), Par 4 Evans had the longer ball against the wind\\nby a few yards. Ouimet pushed his second to the rough, getting a lie on\\nthe side of a mound of soft earth used in connection with the upkeep of\\nthe course. Evans, with his second, was on the far corner of the green.\\nAfter a consultation Ouimet was given the right to lift and drop. Ouimet\\napproached twenty feet short. Evans, who now had almost a stroke on his\\nopponent, chipped short, but sank a four^foot putt to win in 4 to 5, Ouimet\\ngoing a yard strong on his putt. Evans, 1 up.\\nNo. 14 (105 Yards), Par 3 Evans stopped his ball within four feet of\\nthe cup, with back spin, while Ouimet s ball bounced and went over the\\ngreen. Ouimet played a nice recovery, but failed on a nine-foot putt.\\nEvans stabbed nervously at his putt and had to exercise great care on his\\nnext. He holed his 3 to lead 2 by 2 up.\\nNo. 15 (415 Yards), Par 4 Evans hooked his drive to rough and was\\nshort with his second, while Ouimet was straight from the tee and on in 2.\\nEvans chip was ten feet short and Ouimet s putt four feet strong to the\\nright. Evans missed and Ouimet putted short. Halved in 5.\\nNo. 16 (355 Yards). Par 4\u00c2\u00bb Both drove well over the hill, straight on\\nthe line. Evans laid his second on the green about thirty-five feet short,\\nwhile Ouimet was just a trifle further off but with a lie in clover. Ouimet\\nchipped short six feet, while Evans was three and one-half feet short on his", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0061.jp2"}, "62": {"fulltext": "LORD CHARLES HOPE.\\nPlaying on the course of the\\nEngineers Club.\\nH. WiETHERED,\\nThe Oixford star, in a practice\\nround.\\nLevick, N. Y., Photo.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0062.jp2"}, "63": {"fulltext": "S1 ALU1N(;S OFrU IAL UOLF GUIDE. 57\\nputt. Ouimet made a woeful stab of his putt, never giving the ball a chance,\\nEvans holed and won in 4 to 5. Evans, 3 up.\\nNo. 17 (340 Yards), Par 4 Ouimet s ball on the drive came down off\\nthe hill into rough. Evans was straight and his ball held the bill. Both\\nwere beyond the pin on the approach. Putting first, Ouimet overran about\\nthree feet, while Evans was short about the same distance. Both holed and\\nhalved in 4.\\nNo. 18 (430 Yards) Par 4 Ouimet let out on his drive and was forty\\nyards ahead of his opponent, who had to use a brassie for his second.\\nEvans second rolled into a trap to the right and short of the green, while\\nOuimet with an iron laid his ball up within six feet of the cup. Evans\\nmade a masterful recovery, hole high and five feet to the left of the flag-\\nstaff, but Ouimet holed for his 3, leaving off 2 down.\\nAfternoon Round.\\nNo. 1 Ouimet was fifty yards over Evans on the opening drive. Both\\nreached the green on the second, Ouimet having the advantage and being\\nonly twenty feet short. Evans ran his ball within a yard and holed for the\\nhalf after Ouimet had given his ball a chance and missed by inches only.\\nHalved in 4.\\nNo. 2 Evans outdrove Ouimet by forty yards, both being down the center\\nof the fairway. On his second Ouimet sliced slightly, overshot the green\\nand got a lie on the roadway. On his third he was further from the hold\\nthan Evans was on his second and he had to play two more. Evans ball\\non the approach had run across to the bank beyond the green. However, it\\ntrickled back and lay not twelve feet away. With his fourth Ouimet came\\nclose, but not close enough. Evans failed at the 3, but won in 4 to 5.\\nNo. 3 Again Ouimet used an iron from his tee. Evans used wood and\\ngained a distinct advantage. His approach he laid up hole high, eighteen\\nfeet to the right, while Ouimet was short. On his run-up Ouimet was away\\nshort. He missed his second putt and took S, whereupon Evans dropped\\nhis short putt for a 4, winning the hole and standing 4 up.\\nNo. 4\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Evans played the odd on the second this time. Both were straight\\nfrom the tee. On his second Evans reached the edge of the green, whereas\\nOuimet s ball trickled over the green to the fringe of a bunker. A little\\nmore strength and Ouimet would have been in the sand. The Woodlander\\nmade a brave recovery and looked to have a chance when Evans was short.\\nHowever, the Chicagoan finished out perfectly, holed from four and a half\\nfeet and halved.\\nNo. 5\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Ouimet got the longer ball over the hill, but he was only a few\\nyards ahead of his opponent. Both were on the center of the fairway.\\nEvans laid his approach within six feet of the cup, and sinking this became\\n5 up. Ouimet s approach was on, but short by about twenty-five feet. He\\nwas not even close to his 3.\\nNo. 6\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Ouimet intended to hook his tee shot around the trees, but got\\nsomewhat of a slice instead. However, he, like Evans, was on the center of\\nthe fairway. Ouimet made a high pitch eighteen feet over, while Evans ran\\nhis up, laying the ball a yard from the cup. Evans missed this one and\\nallowed Ouimet a half,", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0063.jp2"}, "64": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3248", "width": "2064", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0064.jp2"}, "65": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 59\\nNo 7\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Ouimet s drive had the better direction and was also the longer.\\nEvan; ball finished in the fringe of the rough, but despite the di^advan^\\ntage he brought off the better approach, Ouimet s ball kicking off the green\\nto the right. Ouimet chipped back perfectly and got his 4, halving the hole.\\nNo. 8-Ouimet s ball overran the green and finished in the bunker while\\nEvans shot held. Making a good recovery, Ouimet stabbed valiant y for a\\n3, but missed. From eighteen feet vans ran up close and holed for 3 to\\nbecome 6 up. u\\nNo. 9-Evans placed his drive where he would get a good brassie shot\\naround the trees and over the elbow, whereas Ouime sliced to rough\\nplayed safe on his second and over the hil on his third. Evans had a\\n^troke on his opponent. He was on in 3 and Ouimet in 4. Ouimet holed\\nfrom six or severfeet for his 5, but Evans beat him to it, sinking his ball\\nfrom four feet for a birdie 4. At the turn Evans was 7 up, but he had\\ngone out in the magnificent total of 34.\\nNo lO-Using a jigger, Evans laid his ball within six feet of the cup,\\nhT6nLt^ot\\\\n evfn better shot, being less than four feet away. They\\nhalved in 2. This left Evans 7 up with 8 to play.\\nNo. ll-Ouimet had one of the longest drives of the match. He out-\\nrlrnve Evans by sixty yards. Evans pulled his approach into the bunker.\\nSet was on, Tbout ten feet from the cup. Evans was left with an\\neiS^een-Toot ^utt for any chance of a half. He overran -d then conceded\\nthe hole. This was Ouimet s first success of the round. Evans, 6 up with\\n7 to play.\\nNo 12\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Evans had the shorter drive but the better direction Ouimet\\nwa^down toward the left. With the tips of his fingers Evans feU the tex^\\nrhr;2t^^^l iiZ^Lvlnt si^feeT^orth^rc^f si:^:^^^^\\na 5 E^ans missed his 3, but won in 4 and 5 and took the championship\\nby 7 up and 6 to play.\\nIn the semi-final round Evans had an unusual experience inasmuch as he\\nwon by 10 up and 8 to play-an overwhelming margin, to be sure-despite\\nhe fact that when they were driving off for the seventeenth hole in the\\nmorning he Ind Allis Jere all square. The reason for this is to be ^und\\nrihe freak nature of the Milwaukee man s putting Any time hat Evans\\ngot in the lead Allis was certain to apply the wizard s wand and tumble he\\nball into the hole all the way across the green. Three times f am ^e\\nfourth to the fifteenth Hole-In-One he sank putts ranging all the way\\nT Kfte^^^^^^^^ were no fifty-foot putts by Allis. Instead there\\nwere a lot of hooked and sliced drives by the Milwaukee man and a well\\nTustained dMay of brilliant golf by Evans This time, instead of winning\\nholes with freauency, Allis halved them infrequently.\\nTo manv it was a genuine surprise to find Ouimet taking the measure of\\nBobby Jones so liandiy. Bobby was a finalist in ^919 and therefore should\\nnot have felt the importance of the occasion so much, but there is just a", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0065.jp2"}, "66": {"fulltext": "60 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nI\\nsuspicion that it weighed heavily on his young shoulders. The cards of the\\nsemi-finals were: morning round.\\nEvans-Out 44545353 6\u00e2\u0080\u009439 In 3 4 5 5 3 4 5 4 4\u00e2\u0080\u009437\u00e2\u0080\u009476\\nAllis-Out 4 5 5 3 5 4 5 3 6-39 In 3 3 5 5 5 3 5 5 5-39-78\\nOuimet-Out 4 4 5 4 4 4 4 3 5-37 In 3 4 4.4 2 5 6 4 5-37-74\\nJon^-Out 5 5 4 5 5 4 4 3 5-40 In 4 3 4 4 3 3 4 6 5-36-76\\nAFTERNOON ROUND,\\nEvans\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out 4 4 4 4 4 4 5 2 4\u00e2\u0080\u009435 In 3\\nAUis-Out 5 5 4 5 5 5 5 4 5-43 In 4\\nOuimet\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out 55454343 5\u00e2\u0080\u009438 In 3 4 4 4\\nTones\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out 4 5 4 5 4 3 5 6 6\u00e2\u0080\u009442 In 3 4 5 4\\nIn the third round T. D. Armour of Lothianburn, Scotland, was elimi-\\nnated hy Ouimet, and the British menace was wiped out. The summary\\nof the round is as follows:\\nEvans d. Fownes, 7 and 6; Allis d. Piatt, 2 and 1; Ouimet d. Armour, 5 and 4;\\nJones d. Wright, 6 and 4.\\nIn the second round there was a mighty fall of good golfers and cham-\\npions. S. Davidson Herron, champion of 1919, was put out by J. Wood Piatt\\nof North Hills; Robert A. Gardner of the Hinsdale Club, Chicago, who had\\nbeen runner-up in the British amateur tournament, was eliminated by W. C.\\nFownes, Jr., of Oakmont, Pittsburgh, while E. P. Allis of Milwaukee put\\nout Oswald Kirkby, a Metropolitan champion. The result of the round\\nwas as follows:\\nEvans d. Levs is, 1 up (41 holes); Fownes d. Gardner, 2 and 1; Allis d. Kirkby, 1\\nup (39 holes); Piatt d. Herron, 2 and 1; Ouimet d. Jack, 9 and 7; Armour d. Carter.\\n4 and 3; Jones d. Dyer, 5 and 4; Wright d, Sweetser, 2 and 1.\\nThe first round resulted:\\nEvans d. Newton, 8 and 7; Lewis d. White, 1 up; Gardner d. Grier, 9 and 7; Fownes\\nd. Weber, 4 and 3; Allis d. McKee, 1 up; Kirkby d. Cockran, 4 and 3; Herron d.\\nHarmon, 1 up (39 holes); Piatt d. Risley, 1 up; Ouimet d. Hickey, 3 and 2; Jack d.\\nBush, 5 and 4; Carter d. Manston, 3 and 1; Armour d. Hoffner, 1 up; Dyer d. Rose,\\n9 and 7; Jones d. Dean, 5 and 4; Sweetser d. Sawyer, 7 and 6; Wright d. Seckel,\\n7 and 6.\\nThe qualifying round eliminated Cyril J. Tolley, the British amateur\\nchampion; Roger Wethered, Oxford star, and Lord Charles Hope, all of\\nwhom had crossed the Atlantic to try for the United States title. Tolley\\nturned in an 81 on the North Shore course and went out in 43 over the\\nEngineers course. Par for the 155-yard tenth hole is 3 and for the eleventh\\nhole is 4. Tolley took fourteen strokes, seven over par, on both of these\\nholes, and that was his undoing. Those who qualified were:\\nEng.NS. Eng.NS.\\nRobert T. Jones, Atlanta A.C. 79 75\u00e2\u0080\u0094154 J. B. Rose, Allegheny 82 80\u00e2\u0080\u0094162\\nw -Albemarle.. 79 75\u00e2\u0080\u0094154 Philip Carter, Shinnecock Hills 80 82\u00e2\u0080\u0094162\\nn k^* ^T^^^^ i Oakmont.. 78 79-157 T. D. Armour, Loth bun, Scot. 83 79\u00e2\u0080\u0094162\\nRobert McKee, Grandview 78 80\u00e2\u0080\u0094158 J. Wood Piatt, North Hills.... 86 77\u00e2\u0080\u0094163\\nOswald Kirkby, Englewood 79 79-158 F. W. Dyer, Upper Montclair. 82 81\u00e2\u0080\u0094163\\nPeter Harmon, Scottish-Am 79 79-158 F. C. Newton, Brookline 81 82\u00e2\u0080\u0094163\\nD.B. Sawyer, Siwanoy 79 80-159 S. Davidson Herron, Oakmont. 81 82\u00e2\u0080\u0094163\\nFrancis Ouimet Wood and 77 82-159 .Tess W. Sweetser, Siwanoy.... 82 82-164\\nRobert A Gardner Hinsdale., 77 82-159 George W. Hoflfner, Bala 80 84-164\\nnvfJ^i V i n 78 81-159 Meredith Jack, Merion 80 84\u00e2\u0080\u0094164\\nLhaHes Evans Jr Edgewater 83 77-160 Maurice Risley, Atlantic City. 86 78-164\\nB ^l\\\\^^^^ 82-160 J. N. Steams, .Tr., Nassau 80 85-165\\np w nil? A Libert Seckel, Riverside 81 84\u00e2\u0080\u0094165\\na.,.^?.?,^w- w7?J Montreal... 78 83-161 Sam J. Graham, Greenwich.... 83 82-165\\nn ri\u00c2\u00abrt ?^;tT^^ Nassau... 79 82-161 W. J. Thompson, Canada 83 82-165\\nR^^J^J T^Zi^^^ H Baltiniore... 79 83-162 W. H. Gardner. Bufifalo 80 85-165\\nB *P Aimi MnSo1fv7^^^ If IMP Harold Weber, Inverness 82 83-165\\nD. P. AUlB. Milwaukee 84 7\u00c2\u00bb-162 R. B. Bush. Audubon 84 81~W6", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0066.jp2"}, "67": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OIFICIAI. GOLF GUIDE.\\n61\\nNATIONAL AMATEUR CHAMPIONS\\nFIUST cnAMPIONSIIir\\nPrior to the Organization of the U.S.G.A.\\nHeld at Newport (K. L) Golf Club, September\\nW. G. Lawrenco, Newport\\nC. B. Maedoiiald, Chicago\\nG. MeC. Sargent, Essex County.\\nVictor Sorehan, Newport\\nW. W. Watson, Montreal\\n1S J4\\n47\\nentries.\\nH. C. Leeds, Boston\\nSECOND CHAMPIONSHIP.\\n64\\n40\u00e2\u0080\u0094188\\n50\u00e2\u0080\u0094189\\n49\u00e2\u0080\u0094201\\n53\u00e2\u0080\u0094212\\n51\u00e2\u0080\u0094214\\n52\u00e2\u0080\u0094217\\n221\\n5\u00c2\u00ab\u00e2\u0080\u0094 246\\ni^\\nL. Curtis. Boston.\\nJames Wright\\nSECOND CllAA\\no.i. .c. rr if rinli October 11 12. 1.3. 1894: won by L. B. Stoddart,\\ns?* And.ws^ wh7^d?fe,ftS c^^^ Chicago Ciub, Wheaton. 1 up.\\nUNDER UNITED STATES GOLF ASSOCIATION AUSPICES.\\nWinner and Runner-up\\nYr.\\n1895 C B. Macdonald\\nC. E. Sands\\n1896 H. J. Whigiiam\\n.1. G. Thorp\\n1897 H. J. W^higham\\nW. R. Betts\\n1898 Findlay S. Douglas\\nW. B. Smith\\n1S9 Herbert M. Harriman\\nFindlay S. Douglas.\\n1900 Walter J. Travis.\\nFindlay S. Duuglas\\n1901 Walter J. Travis\\nWalter E. Egan.\\n1902 Louis N. .Tames\\nE. M. Byers\\n1903 Walter .1. Travis\\nE. M. Byers\\n1904 Chandler Egan.\\nTred HerreshofT\\n1905 H- Chandler Egan.\\nD. E. Sawyer\\n190G E. M- Byers\\nGeorge S. Lyon\\n1907 Jerome D. Travers\\nArchibald (Jraham.\\n1908 Jerome D. Travers\\nMax H. Behr\\n1909 Robert A. f Gardner\\nH. Chandler Egan.\\n1010 William C. Fownes. -Ir\\nWarren IC. Wood\\n1911 Harold II. Hilton\\nFred HerreshofT\\n1912 Jerome D. Travers\\n(^harloi? Evans. Jr.\\nClub\\n.?core\\nChicago (L C\\nSt. Andrews\\nOnwentsia Club\\nCambridge\\nOnwentsia Club.\\nShinnecock Hills G.C\\n1913\\n1911\\nl 15\\n19lf\\n1917\\nl .\u00c2\u00bbl\\n1920\\nJerome D. Travers.\\nJohn G. Anderson.\\nFrancis Ouimet\\nJerome D. Travers.\\nRobert fiardnor.\\n.John Anderson\\nCharles Evans. Ji-.\\nKobort Gardner\\n-191 S\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Not held.\\na. Davidson Herron.\\nR. T. Jones, Jr.\\nCharles Eyans, Ji\\nFrancis Ouimet.\\nOnwentsia (^lub\\nMeadowbrook G. C.\\nGarden City G. C.\\nGarden City G. C...\\nExmoor C. C\\nGlenview C^lub\\nAllegheny C. C.\\nGarden City G. C.\\nAllegheny C. C.\\nExmoor C. C\\nEkwanok C. C.\\nExmoor C. C.\\nWheaton G. C.\\nAllegheny C. C\\nToronto, Canada\\nMontclair G. C\\nNorth Jersey C. C.\\nMontclair G. C\\nMorris County G. C.\\nHinsdale G. C\\nExmoor C. C.\\nOakmont C. C\\nHoniew(K)d C. C.\\nRoval Liverpool G.C\\nEkwanok C. C.\\nUpi)er Montclair C.C\\nEdgewater G. C.\\nUpper Montclair C.C\\nIBrae Burn C. C.\\nWoodland G. C\\nT |ij)er Montclair C.C\\nHinsdale G. C\\nSiwanoy C. C.\\nEdgewater G.C...\\nHinsdale G. C.\\nOakmont C. C\\n,\\\\tlanta\\nEdgewater G. C\\nWoodland G. C\\nWhere Played\\n12 and 11 Newport Golf Club.\\nNewport, R. I.\\n8 and 7 Shinnecock Hills G. C,\\nShinnecock Hilis. L. I.\\n8 and G Chicago Golf Club,\\nWheaton. 111.\\n5 and 3 Morris County G.C,\\nMorristown, N. J.\\n3 and 2 Onwentsia Club.\\nI ake Forest, 111.\\n2 up Garden City Golf Club.\\nGarden City, L.I. ,N.Y.\\nand 4 C. C. of Atlantic City,\\nAtlantic City, N. J.\\n4 and 2 Glen View Club,\\n(iolf. 111.\\n5 and 4 Nassau C. C,\\nGlen Cove, L. I,.N. Y.\\n8 and 6 Baltusrol CJolf Club.\\nSpringfield. N. J.\\n6 and 5 Chicago Golf Club,\\nWheaton. III.\\n2 up Englewood Golf Club,\\nEnglewood, N. J.\\n6 and 5 Euclid Club,\\nCleveland, Ohio\\n8 and 7 Garden City Golf Club.\\nGarden City. L.L.N. Y.\\n4 and 2 Chicago Golf Club,\\nWheaton. 111.\\n4 and 3 Country Club.\\nBrookline, Mass.\\n1 up (37) Apawamis Club,\\nRye. N. Y.\\n7 and 6 Chicago Golf Club,\\nWheaton. 111.\\n5 and 4 Garden CMty CJolf Club.\\nCJarden City. L.I. ,N.Y\\n6 and 5 Ekwanok C. C,\\nManchester, Vt.\\n5 and 4 Detroit V. C. Grosse\\nPointe Farms. Mich,\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2l and 3 Merion (^-icket Club,\\nHaverford. Pa.\\n5 and 4 Oakmont Country Club\\nOakmont, Pa.\\n7 and 6 Engineers C. C.\\nRaslyn.L. I.,N. Y.", "height": "3241", "width": "2152", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0067.jp2"}, "68": {"fulltext": "LEO DIBGEL.\\nChicago.\\nOne of the quartette of professionals who finished one stroke behind Rav in\\nthe National Open Championship.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0068.jp2"}, "69": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 63\\nNational Open Championship\\nEdward Ray of Great Britain won the national open golf championship,\\nwhich was played at Toledo, Ohio, August 10-13, over the Inverness course.\\nRay s score for seventy-two holes was 295. The cup went to England for\\nthe second time, as Harry Vardon -won the title twenty years ago at the\\nChicago Golf Club. One stroke behind Ray were Harry Vardon of Great\\nBritain; Leo Diegel, Chicago; Jack Burke, St. Paul; Jock Hutchison,\\nGlen View. Behind them came Chick Evans, Chicago, and Jim Barnes\\nof St. Louis, with 298 for each. i i c i\\nOn the first day of qualifying round play Leo Diegel held first place\\nwith a card of 71. On the second day Hutchison led with 141. Hutchison\\nmade 69 on that round. On the first day of play for the championship\\nHutchison again made a 69 in the morning and 76 in the afternoon. With\\na total of 145, he was one ahead of Jim Barnes and Leo Diegel, and two\\nstrokes ahead of Harry Vardon, Edward Ray and Walter Hagen.\\nThe closing round created more excitement than in any previous national\\nchampionship. A big gallery followed the play of Barnes and Vardon Ihe\\nlatter went along swimmingly until the twelfth hole. From then on he was\\none stroke over par at six successive holes. He finished with 296 and tied\\nwith Jack Burke of St. Paul, who had come from behind with two fine\\nrounds of 72, one of the best performances of the day. u\\nWhen Ray reached the turn in 35 it looked possible for him to win. He\\nstarted at the tenth with a par of 4 and then dropped three shots at the\\nnext two holes. Needing a 4 at the last green, he reached home m 2 and\\nwas down in two putts. i i\\nHutchison reached the turn in 39 and at that point was three strokes\\nbehind Ray. but the Englishman s mediocre round was known to Hutchison\\nand he knew he had to get home in 37 to tie. He opened with a brace of\\n4 s and then was trapped at the twelfth hole. This led to a 6, but he sailed\\nalong until the fifteenth green and there missed a three-foot putt. He got\\ntwo more 4 s and reached the home green in 2 with a twenty-foot down-\\nhill putt in sight. Hagen brought a round of applause by sinking a longer\\nputt, and then silence reigned when Hutchison stepped up to^ make his final\\nputt If psychology could have helped this putt\u00e2\u0080\u0094 America s last hope ot\\nholding the invaders\u00e2\u0080\u0094 it would have gone in, but it refused to sink, and\\nEdward Ray, the 43-year-old Englishman, was the champion. Rays cards:\\n1st Round-Out. 5 5 4 4 5 4 3 4 +-38 In. 3 4 4 4 4 4 5 4 4-36-74\\n2d Round-Out. 4 4 2 4 5 5 3 4 5-36 Jo- j 1 p ^Ikli^^\\n3d Round-Out. 4 4 4 5 4 5 3 3 5-37 In. 4 4 4 3 J 4 4 4 ^^^^l_^^^_,jr,r,\\nSUMMARY OF CHAMPIONSHIP PLAY.\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2Amateur.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0069.jp2"}, "70": {"fulltext": "JACK BURKE,\\nSt. Paul.\\nOne of tlie quartette of Diofessionals who finished one stroke behind Ray in the\\nNational Open Championship. Pietzcker. St. Louis, Photo.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0070.jp2"}, "71": {"fulltext": "SPAI DING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nJohn Golden. Tuxedo 149 157-306\\nEddie Loos. Ravisloe UO 157-S06\\nLaurie Ayton. Evanston. 153 153-306\\nJ. Douglas Edgar Atlanta.. 155 152-307\\nJames West. Uock.away. 157 150-307\\nHarry Hampton. Richmond 155 153-308\\nGil Nichols. New York 159 loa-309\\nJ. J. O Brien, Sistersville.... 159 15^309\\nI). K. White. Toledo 153 156-309\\nTom Kerrigan, Siwanoy 158 151-309\\nAlex Ross. Detroit 15b 1^4-310\\nreter O Hara. Shackamaxon. 158 152-310\\nWilliam Melhorn. fulsa...... 152 ]frVu\\nC. W. Hall, Birm ham, Ala. 157 1;^4-311\\nWilliam Kidd, Mmneapohs 158 153-311\\nGeorge McLean, Great Neck. 159 lo2 311\\nGeorge Bowden, Boston 154 1^7-311\\nGene Sarazen, Fort Wayne 158 153-311\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2W C. Fowues, Jr.. Oakmont 158 lo4-3iz\\nEmil Loefler. Oakmont 156 15G-312\\nFred Bell. Den^ 159 lg_g.^\\nGeorge_Sargent^CoU|mbus. 0. 157 lo6^31.^\\nsrOUES OF OTHER CONTESTANTS.\\nOtto Hackbarth, Cin.iuuati. 161 1..3-314\\nPat Doyle. Deal 161 1^3-314\\nCharles Thorn. Shinnecock. 162 l-;3-315\\nJohn Farrell. Tucker Ridge.. 157 158-315\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2K. E. Knepper. Sioux City 153 163-3^6\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2Harrison Johnston. St. Paul. 161 1^6-317\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2T. D. Armour, Scotland...... 160 157-317\\nA. Cunningham, St. Joseph.. 157 161-318\\nFred Brand, Allegheny....... 161 ]f-l}l\\n*J. M. Simpson, Indianapolis. 155 163-318\\nUave Robertson, Detroit 159 161-^\\nFrank Adams, Winnipeg 166 154-3^\\nAlex Ayton. Chicago 158 162^^\\nCharles Ix)nns. Toledo 161 1603321\\nWilfrid Reid. Wilmington.... I60 156-321\\nC. H. Mayo, Edgewater. 158 163-3^1\\nF. Sprogel. Montgomery Ala. 163 15^^2\\nDan Kenny. Olean. N. Y 159 163-322\\nJohn Cowen. Boston... 161 161 32^\\nJames Carberry. La Grange. 161 163-324\\nL. Gullickson. Westmoreland 160 165-325\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2Howard B. Lee. Detroit 165 162-3^\\nJohn Rodgers. Parkersburg. 172 157^:^^\\nPeter Walsh. Butler Pa...... LO 166-336\\nE AI McCarthy. Jacksonville 159 178 337\\nJack Gordon, ii^q\u00e2\u0080\u0094 ^I\\n^i ,l\\\\, 5 S /r B^S.::;: S\\nWiUie Hun,er. 0\u00e2\u0080\u009e v.n..,:,.. ^^VrVING SCOItKS.\\nHutchUc. Gle\u00e2\u0080\u009e View p e\u00c2\u00bb-l\u00c2\u00ab C. W. Hac..e,v,\u00e2\u0080\u009eA.,a\u00e2\u0080\u009e..c C.v ,5 ,^lo,\\nF. Adams. Winnipeg 74 74-148\\nL. Tellier. Brae Burn 74 7o^l49\\nT. B. Avton, Evanston 74 i^i-f^\\nL. B. Ayton, ^^i. 7R_i4q\\nL. Diegel. Lake S^iore 71 78 149\\nW. B. Melhorn, Tulsa.. 74 75-149\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2C. Evans, Jr.. Edgewater 76 7^150\\nR. MacDonald, Bob o Link.... 78 72-150\\nE. D. Ivoos, Ravisloe 77 73^ibu\\nE. Ivoefler, Oakmont 78 --ibu\\nW. R\u00c2\u00abid, W ilmington 8 ^-J^^\\nJ. Golden, Tuxedo... 74 -b lou\\nT. Kennett, Olympia Fields... 74 77-151\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2R. Jones, Atlanta 75 7G-151\\nF. Bell. Denver 78 d-ioi\\nF. Sprogell, Montgomery 77 75-l\\nC. H. Howe. Oakmont 77 75-iw\\nD. Kenny. Olean. NY 75 78-153\\nH. Vardon. England 75 78-153\\nJ. M. Barnes. Sunset Hill 74 7J\u00e2\u0080\u0094 iw\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2H. R. Johnson, St Paul...-.-- 76 7\u00c2\u00bb-155\\nW. MacFarlane, Port ash. 76 79-lo5\\nW. C. Hagen. Detroit 78 77-1\\nD. K. White. Toledo 74 81-1d5\\nM. J. Brady, Detroit 79 76-155\\nH. Lorms. Inverness 79 ^6\u00e2\u0080\u0094 IM\\nHunter. Onwentsia 77 76 153\\nHampton. Richmond........ 72 81 w-^\\nGullickson. Westmoreland.. 77 76-153\\nB. Lee. Detroit 79 74-lb3\\nHackbarth. Cincinnati 76 7^ib4\\nSargent. Columbus 77 77 154\\nWalsh. Butler. Pa 77 77 154\\ntT\u00e2\u0080\u009eii THrminchnm i-^2\\nC Hall. Birmingham\\nr-J^{?^rif^:^tU:W.Va. 79 75-154\\nJ 1). Edgar, Atlanta 73 81 154\\nT Kerrigan. Siwanoy \u00c2\u00bbi 3\u00e2\u0080\u0094^^ m T\\nWalker, Englewood, N. J\\nP. Doyle, Deal.. f i^^f^\\nEd Ray, England 80 75-155\\nA. Cunningham, St. Joseph. 75 80-155\\nF. McNamara, New York...... 79 77-15b\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2W. C. Fownes, Jr Oakmont.. 78-l5b\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2J G. Anderson, Siwanoy 76 \u00c2\u00bb0-i5b\\nF. Brand, Alleghen 77-156\\nG Nicholls, New York 77 -9-156\\nC. McKenna, Oak Hill 78 78-156\\nC. H. Mayo, Edgewater 78 7^156\\nF. McLeod, Washington. 77 79-156\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2R. E. Knepper Sioux (ity.... 72 84-156\\nAlec Ross. Detroit... 80 7b-i50\\nD. Robertson. Detroit 77 79 i5b\\nJ. Carberry. La Grange 78 79-157\\nA Ayton. Evanston 82 7 -157\\nJ. Gordon. Buffalo......... 77 80-157\\nJ. J. Farrell, Quaker Ridge^^. 79 78-157\\nE. K. McCarthy. Jacksonville. 78 79-157\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2T. D. Armour. Scotland 82 75-157\\nJ. Dowling. Scarsdale 79 .8-10/\\nG. McLean. Great Neck 82 75-157\\nO Hara. Shackamaxon 75 8.-15/\\nP.\\nG. L. Bowden. Boston 1? I i?i\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2J. M. Simpson. Indianapolis. 8.3 74-1d(\\nJ. E. Rodgers. Parkersburg.... 8 79-157\\n158;\\nC. H. Hoffner. Phila\\nKMLEI) TO QT ALIFY-C. Walker, migie\u00c2\u00bb^M. youngstown. 158; A B.\\nlothlan. 161; E. B. Lloyd. Chicago. 163\\nSkokle. 164. \u00e2\u0080\u00a2Amateur", "height": "3142", "width": "2178", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0071.jp2"}, "72": {"fulltext": "MICHAEL, J. BRADY,\\nDetroit,", "height": "3184", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0072.jp2"}, "73": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nNATIONAL OPEN CHAMPIONS\\n67\\nYr.\\n1894\\n1895\\n1896\\n1897\\nWinner and Runner-up\\nWillie Dunn\\nW. Campbell.\\nHoraco Kavviins.\\nWillie Dunn\\nJames Foulis\\nHoraco liawlins.\\nJoe Lloyd\\nWillie Anderson.\\nFred Herd\\nAleck Smith\\nWillie Smith\\nGeorge Low.\\nClub\\nVal. Fitzjohn.\\nW. H. Way..\\n1900 Harry Vardon.\\nJ. H. Taylor.\\n1901 Willie Anderson\\nAleck Smith\\nPlay-off Anderson w\\n1902 Lawrence Auchterlonie\\nStewart Gardner.\\nWalter J. Travis*\\n19031 Willie Anderson\\nDavid Brown\\nPlay-off Anderson h\\n1904i Willie Anderson\\nGilbert Nicholls.\\n1905 Willie Anderson\\nAleck Smith\\nAleck Smith\\nWillie Smith\\nAleck Ross\\nGilbert Nicholls\\nFred McLeod\\nWillie Smith\\nPlay-off McLeod wo\\nGeorge Sargent\\nTom McNamara.\\nAleck Smith\\nMacdonald Smith\\nJ, J. McDermott.\\nPlay-off A. Smith\\nJ. J. McDermott.\\nM. J. Brady\\nGeorge O. Simpson\\nPlay-off McDermott\\nJ, J. McDermott\\nTom McNamara\\nFrancis Ouimet*\\nHarry Vardon\\nEdward Ray\\nPlay-off Ouimet, 72\\nWalter C. Hagen\\nCharles Evans, Jr.*.\\nJerome D. Travers*\\nTom McNamara.\\nCharles Evans, Jr.*\\nJock Hutchison.\\n-1918\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Not held.\\nWalter C. Hagen\\nM.J. Brady\\nPlay-off Hagen 77;\\nEdward Ray\\nHarry Vardon\\nLeo Dicpel\\nJack Burke\\nJock Hutchison\\nNewport G. C\\nShmnecock Hills G.C\\nChicago G. C\\nSadaquada G. C\\nEssex County Club\\nWatch Hill. R. I\\nWashington Park\\nWashington Park\\nMidlothian C. C\\nDyker Meadow G. C.\\nOtsego G. C\\nDetroit\\nGanton, Eng\\nRichmond, Eng\\nPittsfleld, Mass\\nWashington Park\\non by one stroke.\\nGlen View Club\\nGarden City G. C...\\nGarden City G. C...\\n1906\\n1907\\n1909\\n1910\\n1911\\n1912\\n1913\\n1914\\n1915\\n1916\\n1917\\n1919\\n1920\\nApawamis Club\\nWoUaston G. C\\nad 82 to Brown s 84.\\nApawamis Club\\nSt. Louis C. C\\nApawamis Club\\nNassau C. C\\nNassau C. C\\nMexico\\nBrae Burn C. C\\nWoodland G. C\\nMidlothian C. C\\nMexico\\nC.\\n75;\\n2 up\\n173\\n175\\n152\\nl.- 5\\n162\\n163\\n328\\n335\\n315\\n326\\n313\\n315\\n331\\n307\\n313\\n307\\n303\\n308\\n314\\n316\\n295\\n302\\n302\\n304\\nWhere Played\\nHydo Manor G\\nWollaston, Mass\\nWykagyl C. C...\\nClaremont, Cal.\\nMerchantville F.\\n71; McDermott,\\nAtlantic City.\\nWollaston G. C\\nWheaton G. C\\n80; Brady, 82; Simp\\nAtlantic City\\nBoston\\nWoodland G. C\\nEngland\\nEngland\\nVardon, 77; Ray, 78.\\nRochester, N. Y\\nEdgewater G. C\\nUpper MontclairC.C.\\nBoston\\nEdgewater G.C\\nPittsburgh\\n322\\n290\\n294\\n298\\nSt, Andrews (iolf Club,,\\nMt. Hope. N. Y.\\nNewport G. C,\\nNewport, R. I.\\nShinnecock Hills G. C,\\nShinnecock Hills, L. I.\\nChicago Golf Club,\\nWheaton. 111.\\nMyopia Hunt Club,\\nHamilton, Mass.\\nBaltimore C. C,\\nBaltimore. Md.\\nChicago Golf Club,\\nWheaton. III.\\nMyopia Hunt Club,\\nHamilton, Mass.\\nGarden City Golf Club.\\nGarden City, i^.L.N.Y.\\nBaltusrol Golf Club,\\nSpringfield, N. J.\\nGlen View Club,\\nGolf, 111.\\nMyopia Hunt Club,\\nHamilton, Mass.\\nOnwentsia Club,\\nLake Forest, Iii.\\nPhiladelphia Cricket\\nClub\\nMyopia Hunt Club.\\nHamilton, Mass.\\nEnglewood G. C,\\nEnglewood, N. J.\\nPhiladelphia Cricket\\nClub\\nOakland Hills C. C.\\nOakley C. C\\nBrady, 78\\nEngland\\nEngland\\nChicago\\nSt. Paul\\nGlen View Club\\nI. Smit\\n307\\na, 86.\\n294\\n296\\n304\\n290\\n291\\n297\\n298\\n286\\n288\\n296\\nh. 77.\\nChicago Golf Club,\\nWheaton. III.\\nBuffalo C. C,\\nBuffalo, N. Y.\\nCountry Club,\\nBrookline, Mass.\\nMidlothian C. O..\\nBlue Island, lU.\\nBaltusrol G. C\\nShort Hills. N. J.\\nMinikahda Club,\\nMinneapolis, Minn.\\nBrae-Burn C. C.\\nWest Newton, Mass.\\nInverness Club,\\nCleveland, Ohio\\nAmateur.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0073.jp2"}, "74": {"fulltext": "GIL NICHOLS,\\nNew York.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0074.jp2"}, "75": {"fulltext": "Sl Al.DINGS OFKiriAL r:OI.F GTTIDi:. f 9\\nProfes^iioaal Golfers Chanipioii!)\u00c2\u00bbhip\\nBy J. B. Craig.\\nAlthough he failed to qualify in the sectional preliminary, held at the\\nWestmoreland Country Club, Joclc Hutchison secured a place in the 1920\\nf vals when Arthur Clarkson was unable to play, and from the very first\\niualeh played such superb go lf that he won the big classic over the Floss-\\nmoor Country Club course, defeating J, Douglas Edgar, 1 up.\\nTo win the pro title Jock was called upon to score as he had never\\ndone before in competition. While all but his last match with J. Douglas\\nEdgar do not appear in black and white to be as close as they were, the\\nblond from St. Andrews had a task cut out for him, and fought his way\\nto the Edgar match after nerve-racking rounds with both Laurie Ayton,\\nwho was making his debut in the pro tourney, and with Harry Hampton.\\nJ. Douglas Edgar, the runner-up, also uncorked some sparkling golf to\\nwin his way into the finals. Edgar nosed out Pat O Hara in the first round,\\n1 up. Walking away with his next match, 11 and 10, Edgar and Bob\\nMac.Donald had a bitter fight in the third round, the Atlanta pro winning,\\n5 and 4. It was in this match that Edgar played six holes in 19, scoring\\n3, 3, 4, 3, 3, 3. Four of these figures were birdies and robbed MacDonald\\nof what chance he had to win.\\nThe triumph of Clarence Hackney of Atlantic City over Jim Barnes, who\\nhad held the title of the association since its birth, was the big surprise of\\nthe tournament.\\nJ. Douglas Edgar started the final match by winning the first two holes,\\nbut by missing two short putts on the sixteenth and seventeenth greens was\\n1 down in the morning. In tJie afternoon Jock went out in 35 while Edgar\\nwas two strokes behind, Jock being 3 up at the turn. With five holes to\\nplay and being 3 up, Jock started pulling his tee shots and soon found\\nhimself 1 up and 3 to play. A wonderful spoon recovery to the green on\\nthe sixteenth after a pulled drive to the rough saved the day for Hutchison,\\nas he won, 1 up, when the home hole was halved in 5. Summary of play:\\nFIRST ROUND\u00e2\u0080\u0094 A. Cunningham, St. .Tosepli, Mo., d. W. MacFnrlane, New York,\\n2 and 1; Peter O Hara, Shackaniaxon. d. Pat Doyle, Deal, 1 up; George McLean.\\nGreat Neck, d. George Sayers, Philadelphia, 2 up; T. Kennett, Olympia Fields, d.\\nA. F. Hackbarth, Hinsdale, 2 and 1; Douglas Edgar, Atlanta, d. Pat O Hara, New\\nYork, 1 up; Bob MacDonald, Bob o Link, d. I^o Diegel, Lake Shore. 4 and 3; J.\\nSylvester, New York, d. Tom Boyd. Fox Hiils, 4 and 3; W. Melhorn, Tulsa, d. W.\\nNelson, Indianapolis, 3 and 2; H. Hampton, Richmond, d. J. Gordon, Buffalo, 6 and\\n5; George Thompson, New York, d. Isaac Mackie, Canoe Brook, 3 and 2; C. H. Hack-\\nney, Atlantic City, d. P. Hessler, Tulsa. 3 and 2; J. M. Barnes. S-unset Hill, d.\\nGeorge Bowden. Boston, 4 and 3; C. H. Mayo, Edgewater, d. L. Gullickson, West-\\nmoreland, 2 and 1; Louis Tellier, Boston, d. .Toe Uoscman. Westmoreland. 11 and 10;\\nL. Avton. Evanston. d. C. Hoffman. Philadelphia. 1 up (39 holes) .Ink Hutchison,\\nGlen view. d. E. I^oos, Ravisloe, 4 and 3. SECOND ROUND\u00e2\u0080\u0094 O Hara d. Cunning-\\nham, 5 and 4: McLean d. Kennett. 8 and 7; Edgar d. Sylvester. 11 and 9; MacDonald\\nd. Melhorn. 1 up; Hampton d. Thompson. 5 and 4; Hackney d. Barnes. 5 and 4;\\nTellier d. Mayo. 4 and 2; Hutchison d. Ayton, r and 3. THIRD BOUND\u00e2\u0080\u0094 McLean d.\\nO Hara. 1 up US holes); Edgar d. MacDonald, f) and 4; Hampton d. Hackney, 4 and\\n3; Hutchison d. Tellier, C and SEMI-FINAL ROUND\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Edgar d. McLean. 8 and 7;\\nHutchison d. nami)ton, 4 and 3. FINAL ROUND\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Jock Hutchison, Glen View. d. J.\\nDouglas Edgar, .\\\\41anta, 1 up.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0075.jp2"}, "76": {"fulltext": "MRS. DOROTHY CAMPBELL HURD. MISS ALEXA STIRLING.\\nRunner-up. National Champion.\\nFINALISTS IN THE NATIONAL WOMEN S CHAMPIONSHIP AT\\nTim M.AYFIELI) COUNTRY CLUB, CLEVELAND, OHIO.\\nPietzcker, St. Louis, Photos.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0076.jp2"}, "77": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nNational Women s Championship\\nMiss Alexa Stirling of Atlanta, Ga., won for the third time in succession\\nthe women s championship of the United States, over the course of the\\nMayfield Country Club at Cleveland, played October 4-7. She defeated\\nMrs. Doro thy Campbell Hurd, 4 and 3, in the final.\\nMiss Stirling s severest match was with Mrs. C. H. Vanderbeck of Phila-\\ndelphia in the semi-final. It was not decided until the seventeenth green.\\nIn this match Miss Stirling was out in 39 and back in 41.\\nin the qualifying round Miss Marion HoUins, former Metropolitan chain-\\npion, made a new record for women over the course. She went around in\\n82, with Miss Stirling three strokes behind her. Both of the well-known\\nPhiladelphia women golfers iMrs. Ronald H. Barlow and Mrs. C. H. Van-\\nderbeck did excellently in the qualifying round.\\nIn the first round Mrs. Dorothy Campbell Hurd defeated Miss Sara\\nFownes after a hard struggle, and Mrs. W. A. Gavin defeated Mrs. H. A.\\nJackson, a former champion. In the second round Miss Marion Hollins\\ndefeated Mrs. F. C. Letts of Chicago, the Western champion, on the twen-\\ntieth green. Miss Edith Cummings, who had been runner-up to Mrs. Letts\\nin the Western championship, won from Mrs. Gavin. Miss Elaine Rosen-\\nthal was defeated by Miss Stirling. It was Mrs. Barlow s ill fortune to lose\\nto Mrs. Feitner, the Metropolitan champion. The scores of those who\\nqualified and the results of match play follow:\\nQUALIFYING SCORES.\\nMiss Marion Hollins, New York 82 Miss Edith Cummings, Chicago 93\\nMiss Alexa Stirling, Atlanta 85 Miss Sara Fownes, Pittsburgh 93\\nMrs. Ronald H. Barlow, Philadelphia. 86 Miss Mildred Caverij% Philadelphia... 93\\nMrs. C. H. Vanderbeck. Philadelphia. 87 Miss Glenna CoUett, Providence 94\\nMiss Bessie Fenn. Portland, Me 88 Mrs. H. E. Law, California 94\\nMrs. David Gaut, Memphis 89 Miss Miriam Burns, Millburn 95\\nMrs. Ernest Byfield, New London 89 Mrs. Caleb F. Fox, Philadelphia 96\\nMrs. A. K. Billstein, Pliiladelphia 90 Miss Dorien Kavanagh, Los Angeles.. 96\\nMrs. William A. Gavin, New Y ^ork 90 Miss Frances Hadfield, Milwaukee 96\\nMrs. J. V. Hurd, Pittsburgh 90 Mrs. J. N. Turnbull, Philadelphia.... 97\\nMrs. Harold Foreman, Chicago 90 Mrs. E. T. Harwood, Chicago 97\\nMrs. H. Arnold Jackson. New York.. 91 (Miss Dorothy Klotz, Cliioago \u00c2\u00bb7\\nMrs. Quentin F. Feitner, New York... 91 Mrs. Eugene K. Hays, Cleveland 97\\nMiss Elaine Rosenthal, Chicago 92 Mrs. J, M. Hodges, Memphis 97\\nMrs. Thurston Wright, Pittsburgh.... 92 Mrs. E. ]VL Kunstadler, Chicago 97\\nMrs. F. C. Letts, Jr., Chicago 93 Mrs. L. K. Sterrett, Kansas City 98\\nSUMMARY OF MATCH PLAY.\\nFIRST ROUND\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss Fenn d. Mrs. Turnbull, 5 and 4; Mrs. Byfield d. Mrs. Har-\\nwood, 5 and 4; Miss Klotz d. Mrs. Billstein, 3 and 1; Mrs. Vanderbeck d. Miss\\nKavanagh, 4 and 3; Miss Cummings d. Mrs. Wright, 3 and 2: Mrs. Gavin d. Mrs.\\nJackson, 3 and 2; Miss Rosenthal d. Miss Collett, 2 and 1: Miss Stirling d. Miss\\nBurns, 6 and 4; Mrs. Hurd d. Miss Fownes, 1 up (20 holes); Miss Caverly d. Miss\\nHadfield, 6 and 4: Mrs. Letts d. Mrs. Hays, 7 and 6; Miss Hollins d. Mrs. Foreman.\\n5 and 3; Mrs. Feitner d. Mrs. S terrett, 5 and 4; Mrs. Barlow d. Mrs. Hodges, 3 and\\n1; Mrs. Gaut d. Mrs. Law. 2 and 1; Mrs. Fox d. Mrs. Kundstadler. 7 and 5. SEC-\\nOND ROUND\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. Byfield d. Miss Fenn, 3 and 1; Mrs. Vanderbeck d. Miss Klotz.\\n5 and 4; Miss Cummings d. Mrs. Gavin, 3 and 2; Miss Stirling d. Miss Rosenthal.\\n2 and 1; Mrs. Hurd d. Miss Caverly, 3 and 2; Miss Hollins d. Mrs. Letts, 1 up (20\\nlioles) Mrs. Feitner d. Mrs. Barlow, 7 and Mrs. Gaut d. Mrs. Fox, 4 and 3.\\nTHIRD ROUND\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. Vanderbeck d. Mrs. Byfield. 3 and 2; Miss Stirling d. Miss\\n(Jummings, 3 and 2; Mrs. Hurd d. Miss Hollins, 1 up; Mrs. Gaut d. Mrs. Feitner.\\n1 up. SEMI-FINAL ROUND\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss Stirling d. Mrs. Vanderbeck, 2 and 1; Mrs. Hurd\\nd. Mrs. Gaut, 2 up. FINAL ROUND\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss Stirling d. Mrs. Hurd, 4 and 3.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0077.jp2"}, "78": {"fulltext": "^^^H\\ns\\n^mM^\\nMISS MARION HOLLINS,\\nNew York.\\nE. Levick, N. Y., Photo.\\nMedalist in the National Women s Championship with the low qualifying score\\nof 82. a new record for women over the Mayfield Club course.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0078.jp2"}, "79": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OiriCIAL GOLF GUIDK.\\nNATIONAL WOMEN CHAMPIONS\\n93\\nYr. Winner and Runner-up.\\nClub\\nISO j Mrs. U. S. Browu Sniuuecocii ilills (j.U\\n1.S96 Miss Beatrix lloyt.\\nMrs. A. Turnure.\\n].s )7 Miss Jiealrix iloyt.\\nMiss N. C Sargent\\nLSltS Miss Beatrix lloyt.\\nMi.ss Maud Wetniore\\nl.s .)0 Mi.ss llutli Under))ili.\\nMrs. (Jalco l Fu.x.\\n1900 Mifss K. C. Griscom.\\nMiss Margaret Curtis\\nlUOl Miss Genevieve Ilecker\\nMiss Luey Herron.\\n1902 Miss (Jenevie.e Jfeciver\\n.Miss L. A. Wells.\\n190.3 M ss l?essio Anthony..\\n.Miss .1. Carpenter.\\n1901 Mi.ss teorjriantra Jiisliop\\nMrs. E. F. Sanford.\\n1905 Mi.ss Pauline MaeUay.\\n.\\\\Ii.ss Marc?iiret C urtis.\\n1906 -Miss ilarri )t S. Curtis..\\nMiss Moilv Adams..\\n1907 .Miss Mar.ra-.^b (Curtis.\\n.Mi.ss Ilarri )t S. Curtis\\n190S Miss Kate C. Ilarley.\\nMrs. T. IT. I olhennis\\n1909 Miss Dorothy C^ampbell.\\nMrs. Ron. IT. Harlow.\\n1910 Miss D )rotliy Campbell\\nMrs. (J. M. Martin\\n1911 Miss Marjcar.^t (Uirtis.\\nMiss l.iilliaa Ilvde.\\n1912 MLss Margar-b Curtis\\nMrs. lion. H. IJarlow.\\n1913 Miss (j. Ravenseroft.\\nMiss Mari VI Rollins\\n1914 Mrs. H. Arnold Jackson\\nMiss K. Rosenthal\\n1915 Mrs. C. rj. Vanderbeck\\nMrs. W. A. Gavin.\\n1916 Miss Alfxa Rtirlins?.\\nMiss Mildred Caverly\\n1917 -lois\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Xot held.\\n1919 Miss Alexa Stirlins\\nMrs. W. A. Gavin.\\n1920 M ss Aloxa StiHinfr.\\nMrs. n. n. TTurd.\\nShinnecock Hills J.C\\n.Sliinnecoc-K Hills CJ.C\\nSliinmrork Hills\\n10sse\\\\ County (.iub\\nShinni coek Hills G.C\\nNe\\\\Vi)ort (i. C.\\nNassau C:.\\nHuntingdon al. C.C\\nMerion Cri ket Club\\nE.ssex Connt.\\\\ Club\\nApawamis Club\\nCincinnati\\nApawamis Club\\nlirookline\\n(i let) view Club\\nWestward Ho G. CL\\nBrooklawn C. C\\nEssex County C. C.\\nOakley C C\\nEssex County Club\\nEssex County Club\\nWollaston G. C.\\nEssex County Club.\\nEssi!X County Club\\nFall River G. C\\nRichmond Co. C. C.\\nGreat Britain\\nMerion Cricket Club\\nHamilton, Can\\nTnvistock, En?\\nE.ssex Countv Club.\\nSouth Shore F. f\\nEssex County Club\\nMerion Cricket Club\\nEngland\\nW^estbrook G. C.\\nOaklev C. C\\nRavisloe C. C.\\nPhiladelphia\\nShirley Park. Eng.\\nAtlanta\\nPhiladelphia\\nScore\\n\\\\tlnnta\\nSouth Shore F.C.\\n\\\\tlanta\\nPittsburgh\\nWhere Played\\n132 Meadowbrook G. C,\\nReading, Ma. ss.\\n2 and 1 Morris County (J. O.,\\nMorristown. N. J.\\nind 4 I ^s.sex County Club.\\nManchester. Mass.\\n5 and 3 .Vrdsley Club,\\nI Ardsley, K. Y.\\n2 and 1 Pliiladelphia C. C.\\nBala, I hiladelphia, Pa.\\n6 and 5 Shinnecock Hills G. C\\nI Shinnecock Hills, L. 1.\\n5 and 3 jBaltusrol Golf Club,\\nI SpringHeld. N. J.\\n4 and 3 Country Club,\\nBrook line, Mass.\\n7 and 6 C^hicago Golf Club.\\n1 Wheaton, HI.\\n5 and 3 Merion Cricket Club.\\nI Haverford, J a.\\n1 up .Morris County C. C,\\nConvent, N. .1.\\n2 and 1 .Brae Burn C. C,\\nI West Newton, Mass.\\n7 and G Midlothian C. C,\\nBlue Island. III.\\n6 and r. Chevy Cha.se Club.\\nWashington, D. C.\\n3 and 2 Merion Cricket Club.\\nI Haverford, Pa.\\n2 and 1 Iloniewood C. C,\\nI Flossmoor, 111.\\n5 and 3 Baltusrol G. C,\\nI Springfield. N. J.\\n3 and 2 Essex County Club,\\nManchester, Mass.\\n2 up Wilmington C. C,\\nWilmington, Del.\\n1 up Nassau C. C,\\nGlen Cove. L. I.. N.Y\\n3 and 2 Onwentsia Club,\\nLake Forest, III.\\n2 and 1 Belmont Spring C C,\\nWaverly.IMass.\\n6 and Shawnee C. C.\\nShawnee-on-DeL, Pa.\\n4 and 3 May field C. C.\\nI Cleveland, Ohio", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0079.jp2"}, "80": {"fulltext": "^w-WM^HKKfp^-^i^,\\nJESSE SWEETSBR,\\nYale.\\nIntercollegiate Champion.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0080.jp2"}, "81": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OrnCIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nIntercollegiate Championship\\nJesse W. Sweetser of Yale, whose home club is Ardsley, N. Y., super-\\nseded A. L. Walker of Columbia University as intercollegiate champion in\\nthe tournament over the course at Apawamis in the last week, of June.\\nJames C. Ward of Kansas City, representing Williams College, was run-\\nner-up. Sweetser in 1919 showed that he was on the way to become one of\\nthe best of the Metropolitan golfers when he won the qualifying round\\nfor the Westchester County championship at Apawamis with a new amateur\\nrecord of 69 for the course. Later he carried D. E. Sawyer to the thirty-\\neighth hole in the final round for the Victory Cup at Siwanoy.\\nFor several years Ward has been a prominent golfer in Kansas City and\\nin 1919 won the Missouri State championship. He was compelled to forego\\nthe 1920 championshiip so that he might represent his college in the annual\\nintercollegiate tournament in the East.\\nThis victory for Sweetser lands the Elis in front in the matter of indi-\\nvidual championships, breaking the tie which had existed with Harvard\\nsince 1917, when James Hubbell of Des Moines won the last individual title\\nfor the Crimson. The count now stands eight for Yale against seven for\\nHarvard, with one tie between the two in 1898, four for Princeton, and\\none for Columbia, siince the tournament was first inaugurated back in 1897\\nat Ardsley.\\nTeam honors went to Princeton by a margin of thirty-four strokes, with\\nYale second. The Princeton quartette finished with 1,269 against 1,303 for\\nYale in seventy-two holes of play. Others finished in the following order:\\nDartmouth, 1,336; Harvard, 1,339; Williams, 1,376; Cornell, 1,407; Penn-\\nsylvania, 1,419; Columbia, 1,421.\\nPREVIOUS\\nWINNERS.\\nYeab\\nName\\nCollege\\nWhere\\nPlayed\\n1897\\nj Spring J F Curtis\\nHarvard\\nArdsley\\n1898\\nt Fall, J Reid, Jr\\nYale\\nArdsley\\n1899\\nP. Pyne, 2d\\nNo tournament.\\nH Lindsley\\nPrinceton\\nGarden City\\nAtlantic City\\n1900\\n1901\\nHarvard\\nYale\\n1902\\nC Hitchcock Jr\\nGarden City\\nGarden City\\nMyopia\\nGarden City\\nGarden City\\n1903\\n1904\\nA G White\\nHarvard\\n1905\\nYale\\n1906\\nW E Clow Jr\\nHarvard\\n1907\\nYale\\n1908\\nH H Wilder\\nHarvard\\nBrae Burn\\n1909\\nA. Seckel\\n1910\\nR Hunter\\nYale\\nYale\\nManchester\\n1911\\nG. C. Stanley\\nBaltusrol\\n1912\\nF C Davidson\\nHarvard\\nEkwanok\\n1913\\nN Wheeler\\nYale\\nHunt gr n Val\\n1914\\ne P AUis, 3d\\nHarvard\\nGarden Citv\\n1915\\nF R Blossom\\nYale.\\nGreenwich\\n1916\\nJames W. Hubbell\\n1919\\nA. L. Walker. Jr\\nColumbia\\nMerion C. C.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0081.jp2"}, "82": {"fulltext": "MR. GEORGE WRIGHT.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0082.jp2"}, "83": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 77\\nGolf in New England\\nINTRODUCING GOLF INTO NEW ENGLAND.\\nGolf began its New England career because George Wright, veteran ath-\\nlete and all-around player of outdoor games, was sponsor for it. By his\\nown confession, a confession, by the way, in which he takes delight, it hap-\\npened this way:\\nMy firm annually imported from England cricket bats and balls. I\\nnoticed in looking through an English sporting goods catalogue, among\\nother goods listed were golf clubs and balls. Thinking this game might\\npossibly appeal to sport folks here sooner or later, I imported with the\\ncricket goods a dozen clubs, but when they arrived no rules came with them.\\nNot knowing just how the game was played, nor could I find anyone\\nwho did, the balls and clubs were put away on the shelves, when later on\\nin dressing our windows two or three clubs and balls were placed in them.\\nA Scotchman, naturally, would be the most attracted by a display of\\ngolf clubs, and one came into the store inquiring of a salesman where the\\ngolf course or courses were located. The salesman said he did not know,\\nand brought him back to my office and explained what he wished. When\\nI informed him that we had no golf course, he seemed surprised and\\nreferred to the clubs in the window.\\nI explained how we came to get them, but no rules came with the clubs\\nto tell us how the game was played, but would be pleased to know. The\\nScotchman immediately became interested and explained to me by drawing\\non a piece of paper how a course should be laid out. the number of holes\\nand how they should be placed with distances between them, with a full\\ndescription of the game.\\nI promised him to introduce the game, when he said upon his return to\\nNew York City he would send me a book of rules. About a week after-\\nward I received the book with cuts of players making the different shots,\\nalso a full set of clubs with the names under each.\\nAfter becoming acquainted with the rules I went looking for a field\\nlarge enough to play the game and decided on Franklin Park. WTien I\\ninterviewed the park policeman about allowing me to play, he informed me\\nthat I would have to get a permit from the park commissioners.\\nI wrote a letter to them asking their consent, and explaining about the\\ngame. They refused, saying the game was too dangerous for people walk-\\ning about the park. I then visited them in person and received a hearing,\\nwhen I was favored with a permit allowing me to play. After this I went\\nto the park with John Smith, now manager of the golf department of our\\nstore, paced off nine holes, dug them in (he earth, had sticks made three\\nfeel in length, to which were attached pieces of red flannel flags to mark\\nthe holes.\\nI then invited a half dozen friends interested in sports to play the game\\nwith me. A day was set and the weather was perfect. Upon my arrival at\\nthe course Mr. Smith had everything ready for play.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0083.jp2"}, "84": {"fulltext": "78 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nIt looked quite inviting with the red flags flying in the breeze from the\\nsticks in the nine holes, and all in the party were anxious to play the new\\ngame. Ihe nine holes were played and even the necessary for the extra\\nwas not forgotten. Selecting an inviting spot, we sat down to talk over the\\nresult of our play and the merits of the game, and all decided they enjoyed\\nthe outing and the game of golf was a grand success, and all wished to\\nsurely try it again at some future date. This resulted in our deciding to\\nget someone to show us how the game should be played.\\nMr Wright is more than seventy years old and golf is his favorite sport\\nHe still plays a fine game, being consistently in the low nineties.\\nNEW ENGLAND PROFESSIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP.\\n.-.hf^ ^ifT T- t^hampion, won the New England profes-\\nsional golf championship, July 12, at the Wannamoisett Country Club\\nProvidence, R. I He made the thirty-six holes in 145, a new coZerition\\niTld^Ar r^ T^l? ^,h?,M-\u00c2\u00ab\u00c2\u00ab^^husetts champion, was runner ifpTtE\\n147, and Alec Campbell of Rockport third, with 155.\\nMASSACHUSETTS AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\n1903 A r /\u00c2\u00b0f R\u00c2\u00bb\u00c2\u00b0\u00c2\u00ab\u00c2\u00abr- P- Year. Winner and Runner-up\\n909-P. Gilbert (J. G. Thorp ia}2~^ .Guilford rs. T.- Hicks)\\n1910\u00e2\u0080\u0094 H. W. Stucklen (P Gilbert) 1919\u00e2\u0080\u0094 F. Quimet (J. P. Guilford)\\npion, was second with 78 \u00c2\u00bbP^ =han,.\\nMASSACHUSETTS OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP\\n23,^o\u00e2\u0084\u00a2T.he-CoZt.\u00e2\u0084\u00a2,?H IriitSf 1^/ MassachuseUs, June\\n=efl\\\\s?L,eT\u00c2\u00b0raanr\u00c2\u00a3F~", "height": "3216", "width": "2069", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0084.jp2"}, "85": {"fulltext": "SI-ALOINCS OFI ICIAIi COLF UIIDK. 79\\nStrokes in the rear, but tied on the thirty-sixth hole and beat McNamara\\nfrom then on. The cards of the winner and runner-up follow:\\nBowilen\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out 44345545 3\u00e2\u0080\u009437 In 34344334 4\u00e2\u0080\u009432\u00e2\u0080\u009469\\nOut 45435446 4\u00e2\u0080\u009439 In 45343444 4\u00e2\u0080\u009435\u00e2\u0080\u009474\u00e2\u0080\u0094215\u00e2\u0080\u0094289\\n.MiNaniara- Out 45436446 4\u00e2\u0080\u009440 lu 3 5 3 4 4 4 6 3 4\u00e2\u0080\u009436\u00e2\u0080\u009476\\nOut 4 3 4 4 5 4 5 6 5\u00e2\u0080\u009440 In 36344543 3\u00e2\u0080\u009435\u00e2\u0080\u009475\u00e2\u0080\u0094222-297\\nOTHEK SCORES.\\n(Jcorgp Dornbaeli, Brae Burn 152 148\u00e2\u0080\u0094300 Jack Shea, Kernwood 160 165\u00e2\u0080\u0094325\\nLouis Tellier, Brae Burn 156.146\u00e2\u0080\u0094302 R. deZ. Pierce. Brae Burn.. 165 160\u00e2\u0080\u0094325\\nTom Kerrigan. Siwanoy 154 151\u00e2\u0080\u0094305 Ed Myers, Metaconiet 164 161\u00e2\u0080\u0094325\\nAlex Campbell, Rockport.... 152 154\u00e2\u0080\u0094306 \u00e2\u0099\u00a6B\\\\ G. Thayer, Wollaston 165 162\u00e2\u0080\u0094327\\nCarl Anderson, New York... 157 149\u00e2\u0080\u0094306 Fred Miley, Homestead 163 165\u00e2\u0080\u0094328\\nF. McNamara, Cherry Valley 154 157\u00e2\u0080\u0094311 Joe Farren, Albemarle 164 165 329\\nHugh Gordon, Rhode Island. 155 156\u00e2\u0080\u0094311 R. C. Van Arsdale, Woodland 164 166\u00e2\u0080\u0094330\\nGeorge Gordon. Rhode Island 159 153\u00e2\u0080\u0094312 *H. Wentworth, New Bedford 163 167\u00e2\u0080\u0094330\\nWillie Dow, Brockton l. ie l. ie\u00e2\u0080\u0094 312 T. R. Fuller, Marion 167 164\u00e2\u0080\u0094331\\nDonald Vinton, Plymouth.... 163 151\u00e2\u0080\u0094314 William Hoare, Tedesco 172 160\u00e2\u0080\u0094332\\nRalph Thomas, Weston 159 155\u00e2\u0080\u0094314 C. H. Bowler, Winchester... 166 166\u00e2\u0080\u0094332\\nClark Hodder, Com wealth.. 157 158\u00e2\u0080\u0094315 \u00e2\u0099\u00a6W. H. Workman, Com w th. 163 169\u00e2\u0080\u00943.32\\nT. L. Jones, Fall River 161 157\u00e2\u0080\u0094318 Joe Lally, Jackson, N. H.... 163 169\u00e2\u0080\u0094 .332\\nMatt Campbell, Essex 157 163\u00e2\u0080\u0094 .320 Ed McPhail. Norfolk 168 166\u00e2\u0080\u0094334\\nChris J. McGrath, Worcester 159 161\u00e2\u0080\u0094320 W. B. Uhler, Commonwealth 171 164\u00e2\u0080\u0094335\\nFrank Oilman, Augusta, Me. 163 158\u00e2\u0080\u0094321 \u00e2\u0080\u00a2L. P. Gutterson, Com wealth 169 167-336\\nD. B. Waters, Wollaston.... 1.58 163-321 James Kaye. Wollaston 165 172\u00e2\u0080\u0094 .3.37\\nTom Mahan, Greenfield 163 1.58\u00e2\u0080\u0094321 J, J. Costello, unattached... 169 168\u00e2\u0080\u0094337\\nW. F. Mulcahy, Wellesley... 166 155\u00e2\u0080\u0094321 B. S. Evans, Boston 179 163\u00e2\u0080\u0094 .342\\nJames McGregor, Providence 159 163\u00e2\u0080\u0094322 W. Nicoll, Woodland 177 168\u00e2\u0080\u0094345\\nG. G. Folin, Commonwealth. 162 161\u00e2\u0080\u0094323 fBurt Nicoll. Belmont 158\\nE. F. Wogan, Essex 159 165\u00e2\u0080\u0094324 fD. Hackney, No. Andover... 166\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2Amateur. tNo card for fourth round. tFred Elliot. Woodland 176\\nBOSTON WOMEN S GOLF ASSOCIATION.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\n1900\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss Grace B. Keyes, at Oakley Country Club.\\n1901 Miss Margaret Curtis, at The Country Club.\\n1902\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss Mary B. Adams, at Wollaston Golf Club.\\n1903 Miss Fanny C. Osgood, at Oakley Countrv Club.\\n1904\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss Fanny C. Osgood, at Wollaston Golf Club.\\n190.5 Miss Pauline Mackay, at Brae Burn Country Club.\\n1906\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss Pauline Mackay, at Woodland Golf Club.\\n1907 Miss Margaret Curtis, at The Country Club.\\n1908 Miss Margaret Curtis, at Brae Burn Country Club.\\n1909\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss Mary B. Adams, at Oakley Country Club.\\n1910 Mjss Fanny C. Osgood, at Wollaston Golf Club.\\n1911 Miss Fanny C. Osgood, at Oakley Country Club.\\n1912\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. G. W. Roope, at Wollaston Golf Club.\\n1913 Miss Fanny C. Osgood, at Oakley Country Club.\\n1914 Miss Margaret Curtis, at Woodland Golf Club.\\n1915 Miss Vera Ramsay, at Brae Burn Country Club.\\n1916 Miss Vera Ramsay, at The Country Club.\\n1917\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. H. A. Jackson,\\nMiss Harriot Curtis won the Boston women s ciiampionship by defeating\\nMiss Elizabeth Gordon at the Belmont Counlry Chib course in the final\\nround. Mi.ss Gordon lied with Miss F. C. Osgood, Miss Margaret Curtis\\nand Mrs. M. C. Rowley for the qualifying round. Miss Curtis and Mrs.\\nRowley failed to appear and Miss Gordon won by six strokes in the play-off.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0085.jp2"}, "86": {"fulltext": "t\\ni\\nf\\nMISS flARRIOT CURTIS,\\nriiampion Woman s Golf Association of Boston.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0086.jp2"}, "87": {"fulltext": "SPALDINGS OFFICIAL PxOLF OUIDK. 81\\nMassachusetts Junior Championship.\\nEddie Lowery, Newton Classical, won the junior championship of Massa-\\nchusetts from George Aulbach, Quincy, 2 and 1. The seventeenth was\\nhalved in 5. They played the eighteenth, Lowery taking a 4 and Aulbach\\na 5. Lowery s total was 76, with the second and twelfth holes approxi-\\nmated, and Aulbach was around in 81. In the qualifying round Lowery led\\nwith 76 and Aulbach was second with 80.\\nMassachusetts Caddy Championship.\\nJohn MacAndrews won the caddy championship of Massachusetts for the\\nsecond time over the course of the Wollaston Golf Club with 168 for thirty-\\nsix holes. His brother, Charles, finished second with 172. The winner s\\nrounds were 87 and 8L\\nMassachusetts Defeats Connecticut.\\nIn the annual team match between Massachusetts and Connecticut golf-\\ners, which was played over the course of the Brooklawn Club, at Bridgeport,\\nJuly 31, Massachusetts won by 9 and 6. Jesse P. Guilford, the Massachu-\\nsetts titleholder, defeated Roger H. Hovey, Conneqticut champion, by 5\\nand 3.\\nJacques Memorial Cup.\\nFrancis Ouimet won the second annual contest for the Jacques Memorial\\nCup over the course of the Brookline Country Club, Brookline, Mass., in\\nJune, 1920, with an even 300. This was just three strokes better than the\\nrecord for the 72-hole competition for the cup. Ouimet, by the way, made\\nthat record, too. Parker W. Whittemore was runner-up with 317. W. C.\\nChick was third with 326.\\nStockbridge Invitation Tournament.\\nAt the annual invitation tournament held at Stockbridge, Mass., Jesse\\nGuilford won the qualifying medal with low score of 73, and then the cup\\nby defeating D. Fairchild of Providence, R. I., by 5 and 4.\\nMAINE STATE GOLF ASSOCIATION.\\nBy Harlan Turner, Secretary.\\nThe Maine State Golf Association was formed three years ago and is a\\nlive and strong organization. Its membership is composed of the Augusta\\nC.C; Augusta; Arundel G.C., Kennebunkport; Belgrade G.C., Belgrade;\\nBrunswick G.C., Brunswick; Conduskeag Canoe and C.C, Bangor; Kebo\\nValley G.C., Bar Harbor; Kineo G.C., Kineo; Megunticook G.C., Camden;\\nNorthport CC, Northport; Portland C.C, Portland; Poland Spring G.C,\\nSouth Poland; Prouts Neck G.C, Scarboro; Waterville C.C, Waterville.\\nMany of these are summer clubs and the state championship events have\\nnot been confined to residents of the state. In the amateur championship", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0087.jp2"}, "88": {"fulltext": "82 SrALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nat the Augusta C.C. in 1918 the winner was W. F. Clapp, Portland C.C,\\nand the runner-up E. A. Randall, Portland C.C. On August 21 to 23, 1919,\\nthe amateur championship was held at the Portland C.C. and was won by\\nH. Turner, Portland C.C. The runner-up was W. R. Campbell, Portland\\nC.C On August 26 to 28, 1920, the amateur championship was held at\\nthe Waterville C.C, Waterville, and was won by M. L. Fearey, Kebo Valley\\nG.C The runner-up was H. Turner, Portland CC\\nOpen championships have been won by the following professionals: Sep-\\ntember 13-14, 1918, at Waterville C.C, won by A. H. Fenn, Poland Spring\\nG.C; A. Chisholm, Portland CC, runner-up. September 10-11, 1919, at\\nKebo Valley G.C, Bar Harbor, won by F- A. Oilman, Augusta C.C; A.\\nChisholm, Portland CC, runner-up. September 10-11, 1920, at Poland\\nSpring G.C, South Poland, won by C L. Mothersele, Kineo G.C; A. Chis-\\nholm, Portland C.C, and W. C Skelly, Rangeley G.C, runners-up.\\nCONNECTICUT GOLF ASSOCIATION.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS,\\nYear. Winner and Runner-up.\\n1899 Thos. L. Cheney (S. H. Patterson)\\n1900\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Carl E. Martin (C. H. Seely)\\n1901 Chas. H. Seely (Thos. L. Cheney)\\n1902 Chas. H. Seely (John P. Cheney)\\n190.3 Chas. H. Seely (Harry H. Taylor)\\n1904 S. H. Patterson (James E. Hewes)\\n1905 W. K. Shepard (Roger H. Hovey)\\n1906\u00e2\u0080\u0094 R. D. Sanford (Carl E. Martin)\\n1907 W. K. Shepard (B. Tredennicli)\\n1908 B. P. Merriman (Roger H. Hovey)\\n1909 B. P. Merriman (Richard L. Jackson)\\n1910 Roger H. Hovey (E, S. Parmelee)\\n1911 C. G. Waldo, Jr. (Roger H. Hovey)\\n1912\u00e2\u0080\u0094 C. G. Waldo, Jr. (P. R. Cooley)\\n1913 R. Abbott (H. J. Topping)\\n1914 W. P. Seeley (W. F. Whitmore)\\n1915\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Hamilton K. Kerr (H. J. Topping)\\n1916 Reginald M. Lewis (Samuel J. Graham)\\n1919 Roger Hovey.\\nRoger Hovey of Shuttle Meadow Club defended his title as amateur\\nchampion of Connecticut in the annual state championship, held over the\\ncourse of the Brooklawn Country Club of Bridgeport, in the last week of\\nJune, 1920. Mr. Hovey and W. Parker Seeley tied in the qualifying round,\\nbut Hovey won the play-off. R. M. Lewis of Greenlawn was runner-up for\\nthe championship, being defeated by Mr. Hovey, 5 and 4. The champion\\nhad the match well in hand throughout.\\nCONNECTICUT WOMEN S CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nIn the annual championship for Connecticut women, played over the\\ncourse of the Shuttle Meadow Golf Club, at New Britain, in June, Miss\\nGeorgianna Bishop won from Mrs. Herbert Shouse of the Farmington Coun-\\ntry Club. Miss Bishop scored 94 for the eighteen holes of play and Mrs.\\nShouse 98. Mrs. Bryant H. Blood of the Hartford Golf Club turned in the\\nbest low net score of 85.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0088.jp2"}, "89": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GTIDK\\nShenecossett Tournament.\\nHarold Lake of the Harvard golf team, in the annual tournament of the\\nShenecossett Club at New London, Conn., won by 8 and 7 in thirty-six\\nholes. The runner-up was Robinson Cook of Hartford, Conn. C. A. Gris-\\ncom of the Yale team won the qualifying round.\\nShenecossett Women s Tournament.\\nMiss Glenna Collett of the Metacomet Country Club of Providence cap-\\ntured the trophy in the women s tournament of the Shenecossett Country\\nClub of New London, Conn., by defeating Miss Elaine Rosenthal of Chi-\\ncago, 2 up. In the semi-final Miss Rosenthal defeated Mrs. Ronald TH.\\nBarlow, 1 up. Miss Collett and Mrs. Barlow tied for the qualifying medal\\nwith 86 each.\\nRace Brook Invitation Tournament.\\nS. H. Pierson of the Wee Burn Golf Club, in the annual invitation tour-\\nnament of the Race Brook Country Club at New Haven, Conn., won with\\n157 for two days of competition, thirty-six holes medal play. R. D. Sanford\\nof the Litchfield Country Club was runner-up with a total of 160.\\nRHODE ISLAND AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nF. M. Hancock of the Metacomet Club won the Rhode Island amateur\\nchampionship in a 36-hole competition over the Wannamoisett course by\\ndefeating J. A. Gammons of the Wannamoisett Club. Hancock s total for\\nthirty-six holes was 160 and Gammons played in 165.\\nRHODE ISLAND WOMEN S CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nThe women s championship of Rhode Island was won by Miss Elizabeth\\nGordon of the Metacomet Club at the Rhode Island Country Club, by 3\\nand 2, from Miss Glenna Collett, also of the Metacomet Club. The greater\\nexperience of Miss Gordon over the runner-up, who is seventeen years of\\nage, unquestionably was of assistance at the finish.\\nIsham Cup Tournament.\\nIn the Isham Cup tournament at the Ekwanok Country Qub, July 31, the\\nplay narrowed down to A. L. Walker. Jr., former intercollegiate champion,\\nand Max Marston. Walker was the virtor. 6 and 5, in thirty-six holes.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0089.jp2"}, "90": {"fulltext": "SAWYER,\\n^letroyolitan Amateur Champion.\\nLevick, N. Y., Photo.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0090.jp2"}, "91": {"fulltext": "srAi.niNcs rtFFKTAi, ;oi,r (jtidI\\nGolf in the Middle States\\nMETROPOLITAN AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPKEVIOUS WINNERS.\\nTear. Winner and Where Held.\\n1899 H. M. Harriman. Garden City Golf Clnh.\\n19(X1 W. J, Travis, Nassau Country Club.\\n1901 F. S. Douglas, Apawamis Club.\\n1902 W. J. Travis, Tu.xedo Golf Club.\\n19():{ F. S. Douglas. Deal Golf and CouMlr.v Club.\\nUM14 H. Wilcox. Garden City G-df bdi.\\nlOn. i\u00e2\u0080\u0094 C. U. Seely, Fox Hills G df Cbd).\\n190\u00c2\u00ab) .J. I). Trnvers, St. Andrews Gol! Club.\\n1907 J. D. Travers, Nas.sau Country Club.\\n1908\u00e2\u0080\u0094 C. H. Seely, Ualtusrol Golf Club.\\n19119\u00e2\u0080\u0094 W. J. Travis, Apawamis Club.\\n1910 F. Herreslioff, Morris C(uuity Gulf Club.\\n1911 J. D. Travers, Garden City Golf Club.\\n1912 J. 1). Travers. Haltusrol Golf Club.\\n1913 J. D. Travers, Fox Dills Golf Club.\\n1914 Oswald Kirkby. Englewood Country Club.\\n1915 W. J. Travis. Apawanii.* Club.\\n1916 Oswald Kirkby, Nassau Country Chib.\\n1919 ^Oswald Kirkby. Brooklawn Country Club.\\nD. E Sawyer, not long a resident of the Metropolitan district, formerly a\\nrival of Chick Evans in Chicago, won the Metropolitan amateur cham-\\npionship in June over the course at Apawamis by 1 up in thirty-seven holes.\\nAlthough both Jerome Travers and Oswald Kirkby, Metropolitan champions\\nof the past, were in the competition, neither of them as much as finished\\nin the final. Gardner While of the Nassau Club was runner-up to Sawyer.\\nThe first hole at Apawamis is 375 yards, through a valley banked by\\nrough at either side, with an uphill slope to the green. Playing it for the\\nthirty-seventh, Wliite got a par 4, but with a ten-foot putt to make, after a\\nfine approach Sawyer had the pleasure of seeing the ball roll into the cup\\nand receive the congratulations of his opponent and the gallery.\\nThe new champion played with confidence from the start, feeling tliat he\\nuas in his best mood to do well. On the qualifying round he came through\\nwith a 71, leading all the field. The next best was Frank W. Dyer of Upper\\nMontclair with 74.\\nIn the second sixteen, J. Simpson Dean. Princeton, defeated H. K. Kerr,\\nGreenwich, 7 and 5. In the third sixteen, T. V. Bermingham, Wykagyl, won\\nfrom E. H. Driggs, Jr., Engineers, 1 up. In the fourth sixteen. C. H. Brown,\\nHudson River, defeated A. E. Ranney, Greenwich. 3 and 2. H. K. B. Davis\\nand Ray W. Thompson. Engineers, won the team pairs match, 35.27 72.\\nIll medal plav, handicap (gross), A. F. Kammer, Baltusrol. was 34,40 74;\\n(net) William Reekie. Upper Montclair. 7-4-4,72; Ray Twveffort, New\\nYork Golf Club, 83 11.72. Reekie wot. the plav off.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0091.jp2"}, "92": {"fulltext": "-Mi;S. (KENT IX F. FEIT.NEK,\\nSoutli Sliore,\\nMetropolitan Champion.\\nLovirk. N. T.. Photo.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0092.jp2"}, "93": {"fulltext": "SrAI l)IN ;S OFKICTAT, (JOLF fJlIIDi:. 87\\nMETROPOLITAN WOMEN S CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nrUEVIOUS WINNERS.\\nYear. Winner and Runner-up.\\n1900 Miss Genevieve Ilccker (Mrs. Ruth Underhill).\\n1901 Miss Genevieve Ilecker (Mrs. II. B. Ashmore).\\ni902 Mrs. E. A. Manice (Miss H. Hernandez).\\n1903\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. E. A. Manice (Miss L. Vanderhoef).\\n1904\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. E. A. Manice (Mrs. M. D. Patterson).\\n1905\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. C. T. Stout (Miss Gertrude Travers).\\n1906\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. C. T. Stout (Miss G. M. Bishop).\\n1907 Miss Georgianna M. Bishop (Miss Julia R. Mix).\\n1908 Miss Georgianna M. Bishop (Mrs. L. W. Callan).\\n1909\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss Julia R. Mix (Miss G. M. Bishop).\\n1910\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss Lillian B. Hyde (Miss J. R. Mix).\\n1911\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss Lillian B. Hyde (Mrs. V. M. Earle).\\n1912\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. V. M. Earle (Miss Marion Hollins).\\n1913\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss Marion Hollins (Miss G. M. Bishop).\\n1914\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss Lillian B. Hyde (Miss G. M. Bishop).\\n1915\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss Lillian B. Hyde (Mrs. J. E. Davis).\\n191(5 Mrs. Quentin F. Feitner (Miss G. M. Bishop).\\n1917 Mrs. W. A. Gavin (Mrs. Thomas Hucknall).\\n191S\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. L. C. Stockton (Red Cross Tournament).\\n1919 Miss! Marion Hollins, Areola Country Club.\\nOver the course of thef Greenwich Country Club in June, 1920, Mrs.\\nQuentin Feitner of the South Shore Club won the Metropolitan women s\\nchampionship from Miss Georgianna Bishop of Brooklawn. They contested\\nfor the same title in 1914 and 1916, and their third meeting had an ending\\nsimilar to the other two. Mrs. Feitner s victory gave her the Metropolitan\\nhonors for the sixth time. As Miss Lillian Hyde she first began winning\\nMetropolitan championships in 1910.\\nMrs. Feitner played a wonderful game, especially toward the finish, and\\ntriumphed over Miss Bishop by the score of 2 and 1.\\nThere were two 88 s for the medal score. They were made by Mrs. F.\\nE. DuBois, Baltusrol, and Mrs. Qiarles M. Knight of Garden City. Mrs.\\nFeitner defeated Mrs. Knight in the semi-finals.\\nMETROPOLITAN OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\nYear. Winnor and Where Held.\\n1905\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Aleck Smith. Fox Hills Golf Club.\\n1900 George Low, Hollywood Golf Club.\\n1907 No Tournament.\\n1908 Jack Hobens, Baltusrol Golf Club.\\n1909 Aleck Smith, Wykagyl Country Club.\\n1910 Aleck Smith, Deal Golf and Country Club.\\n1911 Gilbert Nicholls, Englewood Country Club.\\n1912 Tom McNamara, Apawaniis Club.\\n1913 Aleck Smith, Salisbury Links.\\n1914 Macdonald Smith, Scarsdale Golf and Country Club.\\n1915 Gilbert Nicholls, Fox Hills Golf Club.\\n191fi Walter C. Hagen, Garden City Golf Club.\\n1919 Walter C. Hagen, North Shore Country Club.\\nWhile Walter C. Hagen was not as successful in the championship of\\nGreat Britain as he wished to be, he repeated in the Metropolitan open\\nrhampionship, winning the title for 1920 at Greenwich, Conn., over the\\n(ourse of the Greenwich Country Club.\\nBarnes made a glorious start. He completed the first eighteen holes in\\nf)9. one stroke better than par and two better than Hagen or Willie MacFar-", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0093.jp2"}, "94": {"fulltext": "88 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nlane. In the second round Barnes had a 74, netting him 143 for the first\\nhalf of the journey. Hagen fell back to 77, six strokes behind Barnes, and\\ntied with Tom MoNamara and Jack Forrester. MacFarlane was still on the\\ntop side with 73 for his score, one short of that of Barnes,\\nIn the third round Hagen began to show the finishing strength which has.\\nbeen characteristic of his golf. Not only did he pick up his handicap of\\nfive strokes, but he had gained a lead over MacFarlane of two strokes.\\nMore than that, he was four strokes in front of Barnes. He made 69,\\nequaling Barnes record of the first day.\\nOn the final round, at the last hole, Hagen lifted his ball to permit\\nTellier to putt from furtfcher away. With three feet to go, Hagen missed the\\nputt when it came his turn, and Barnes, who had finished strong, was tied\\nwith him on total strokes. In the play-off, where Hagen always is strong,\\nhe defeated Barnes and held his title. The scores on the regular seventy-\\nIwo ho-les of play follow:\\nWalter Hagen, New York... 148 144\u00e2\u0080\u0094292 Chris Shea, Trenton 157 155\u00e2\u0080\u0094312\\nJim Barnes, Sunset Hill 143 149\u00e2\u0080\u0094292 Willie Maguire, Houston 153 159\u00e2\u0080\u0094312\\nJ. D. Edgar, Druid Hills 147 149\u00e2\u0080\u0094296 Charles Clarke, Engineers.... 156 158\u00e2\u0080\u0094314\\nW. MacFarlane, Pt. Wash... 144 153\u00e2\u0080\u0094297 Alex. Gerard, Baltusrol 155 1 9\u00e2\u0080\u0094 314\\nT. McNamara, Siwanoy 148 152\u00e2\u0080\u0094300 C. P. Betscher, Maryl d C.C. 159 156\u00e2\u0080\u0094315\\nH. Hoffner, Philmont 149 151\u00e2\u0080\u0094300 George Sparling, Brooklawn. 159 156\u00e2\u0080\u0094315\\nT. Forrester, Meadow Brook. 148 153\u00e2\u0080\u0094301 G. Thompson, Mt. Vernon... 156 159\u00e2\u0080\u0094315\\nW. Reid, Wilmington, Del... 147 155\u00e2\u0080\u0094302 W. Braid, Upper Montclair.. 157 159\u00e2\u0080\u0094316\\nR. French, Youngstown, O... 150 152\u00e2\u0080\u0094302 Fred Canausa, Oak Ridge.... 160 157\u00e2\u0080\u0094317\\nJ. Svlvester, St. Albans 151 151\u00e2\u0080\u0094302 Tom Mulgrew, Hackensack.. 160 157\u00e2\u0080\u0094317\\n.less Sweetser. Siwanoy 152 152\u00e2\u0080\u0094304 Joe Mitchell, Montclair 156 161\u00e2\u0080\u0094317\\nJohn Golden, Tuxedo 151 153\u00e2\u0080\u0094304 A. Sanderson, Sleepy Hollow 160 158\u00e2\u0080\u0094318\\nJack: Dowling, Scarsdale 154 151\u00e2\u0080\u0094305 Alex Campbell, Rockport 156 162\u00e2\u0080\u0094318\\nJ. Farrell, Quaker Ridge.... 151 154\u00e2\u0080\u0094305 Dan Mackie, Century 160 158\u00e2\u0080\u0094318\\nG. McLean, Great Neck 155 151\u00e2\u0080\u0094306 *T. D. Armour, Scotland 163 156\u00e2\u0080\u0094319\\nW. Leach, Merchantville 154 153\u00e2\u0080\u0094307 Hugh Clasby, Trenton 157 162\u00e2\u0080\u0094319\\nEugene Sarazen, Ft. Wayne. 154 153\u00e2\u0080\u0094307 George Smith, unattached.... 156 164\u00e2\u0080\u0094320\\nF. McNamara, Cherry Valley 155 152\u00e2\u0080\u0094307 Gordon Smith, Sunningdale. 160 161\u00e2\u0080\u0094321\\nC. Anderson, Laurence Park. 155 153\u00e2\u0080\u0094308 Nick de Mane, Huntington... 150 171\u00e2\u0080\u0094321\\nAlex Smith, Shenecossett 152 156\u00e2\u0080\u0094308 E. K. McCarthy, Jacksonv le 157 166\u00e2\u0080\u0094323\\nPat O Hara, Shackamaxon.. 155 153\u00e2\u0080\u0094308 Arthur Beebe, West End.... 161 163\u00e2\u0080\u0094324\\nTom Kerrigan, Siwanoy 157 151\u00e2\u0080\u0094308 Frank Dowling, Scarsdale.... 158 169\u00e2\u0080\u0094327\\nLouis Tellier, Brae Burn 152 157\u00e2\u0080\u0094309 Willie Gourlay, Suburban.... 159 168\u00e2\u0080\u0094327\\nH. J. Topping, Greenwich... 157 153\u00e2\u0080\u0094310 J. Dante, Rockaway River.. 162 166\u00e2\u0080\u0094328\\nA. Ciuci, Weatogue 157 153\u00e2\u0080\u0094310 E. D. Newnham, Pine Orch. 163 165\u00e2\u0080\u0094328\\nWiUie Ogg, Atlanta. Ga 159 151\u00e2\u0080\u0094310 John Druker, North Shore... 166 163\u00e2\u0080\u0094329\\nT. Harmon, Jr., Hud. RiT.. 159 151\u00e2\u0080\u0094310 *R. L. Finkenstaedt, Col. C.C. 164 165\u00e2\u0080\u0094329\\nJim Donaldson, Norwood 150 161\u00e2\u0080\u0094311 J. C. Dalgleish, Westfield. 165 167\u00e2\u0080\u0094332\\nFrank Hunt, Mosholu 158 153\u00e2\u0080\u0094311 George Jacobus, Ridgewood.. 159 184\u00e2\u0080\u0094343\\n.\\\\rt E. Reld, Ardsley 154 157\u00e2\u0080\u0094311\\nAmateur.\\nMETROPOLITAN JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\nYear. Winner and Where Held.\\n1912 Stuart Connolly. Plainfield Country Club.\\nim.3\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Philip V. G. Carter, Plainfield Country Club,\\n1914\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Philip V. G. Carter. Plainfield Country Club.\\n191.- Philip V. G. Carter. Garden City Golf Club.\\n191 B\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Vincent k. Hilton. Garden City Golf Club.\\n191!) Peter Harmon, Siwanoy Country dub.\\nThe Metropolitan junior championship was captured by J. G. McMahon\\nof the Sleepy Hollow Golf Club by 3 and 2 to go, after a stubborn battle\\nagainst J. Leonard, a youth from the Shackamaxon Club. McMahon also\\nwon the medal round with a fine 77.", "height": "3237", "width": "2091", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0094.jp2"}, "95": {"fulltext": "SI Al,IHN(;s OFI ICIAL (JOLF (JllKK. 89\\nFATHER AND SON TOURNAMENT AT SLEEPY HOLLOW.\\nFor the annual Father and Son tournament, played over the Sleepy Hollow\\ncourse, there were 244 entries. W. Rossiter Betts and W. Rossiter Betts, Jr..\\nof Tuxedo, were winners by the narrow margin of one stroke with a total\\nof 74. Two pairs were tied for second with 75. The leading scores follow:\\nW. Rossiter Retts and W. Rossiter Retts. .Ir.. Tuxedo 83\u00e2\u0080\u009412. 74\\nR. P. C. Sanderson and Richard Sanderson. Upper Montc-lair 8. 10, 75\\nFrank .1. Helmie and Edward H. Helmie, Maliopar 89 14. 75\\nCornelius S. I^e and Cornelius S. Jiee, .Jr.. Tuxedo !\u00c2\u00bb1\u00e2\u0080\u0094 14. 77\\nLewis H. I aphani and Roger D. Lapham, Blind Brook 87\u00e2\u0080\u009410, 77\\nA. L. Pierson and Charles L. Pierson, Essex Fells 91 14. 77\\nWilson Kinnear and Lawrence W. Kinnear, Sleepy Hollow 84 6,78\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2T. H. Wells and T. R. Wells,, Yountakah 98\u00e2\u0080\u009420. 78\\nG. G. .\\\\(korson and G. Ackerson, .Jr., Hackensack 96 18. 78\\nCharles Waldo and G. Gilbert Waldo, Jr., Brooklawn 78\u00e2\u0080\u00940, 78\\nOharles R. .Tung and Harold V. Jung, Mahopac 99\u00e2\u0080\u009420, 79\\nA. C. Fetterolf and C. M. Fetterolf, Upper .Moutclair 88\u00e2\u0080\u00949,79\\nWiliani L. Colt and Leonard B. Colt, Sleepy Hollow 93\u00e2\u0080\u009414,79\\nG. C. Piatt and Gardiner Piatt, Montclair 97\u00e2\u0080\u009418,79\\nJonathan T. Lannian and Ludlow T. Lannian, Rockaway Hunt 104 25, 79\\nC. A. Newkirk and G. A. Newkirk. Hackensack 104\u00e2\u0080\u009425. 79\\nT. K. Lomas and T. K. r omas, Jr., Scottish-American 93\u00e2\u0080\u009414, 79\\nSENIORS TOURNAMENT AT APAWAMIS.\\nHugh Halsell of Dallas. Tex., won the championship of the United States\\nSeniors at Apawamis, September 17. His score for the two days play was\\n162, 80 on the first day and 82 on the second day. By some it was thought\\nto be the best score ever made in competition by a man who had passed\\nhis fifty-seventh birthday. His excellent play would have given him a\\nchance to qualify in the fast company of the amateur tournament. The\\nscores made by each class in the second section are as follows:\\nCLA.SS A (55 TO 59 YEARS).\\n(Jeorge C. How-jll. Baltusrol 186-32. 154\\nA. C. Fetterolf. UpiK^r Montclair 181-22. 159\\nG. Van Keuren. Englewootl 183\u00e2\u0080\u009424. 159\\nLorenzo Daniels. Richmond Country 191\u00e2\u0080\u009432, 159\\nHugh Halsell. Dallas, Tex 162\u00e2\u0080\u0094.. 162\\nH. S. Redfield, Hartford 17.5\u00e2\u0080\u009412,163\\nFrank M. Clute. Garden City 187-24, 163\\nW. B. Pratt. Colonia 200\u00e2\u0080\u009436, 164\\nSidmon McHie, Englewood 176\u00e2\u0080\u009412, 164\\nGeorge C. Austin. Englewood 199\u00e2\u0080\u009434,165\\nL. M. Dennis. Itliaca 189\u00e2\u0080\u009424. 165\\nE. J. Freedman. Wykagyl 206\u00e2\u0080\u009440, 166\\nA. H. Wright. Baltusrol 218\u00e2\u0080\u009450. 168\\nJerome A. Peck, .\\\\pawamis 181\u00e2\u0080\u009412,169\\nCLASS B (60 TO 64 YEARS).\\nRobert H. Tremain, Ithaca 191\u00e2\u0080\u009430. 161\\nMartin Carey. Apawamis 182\u00e2\u0080\u009420. 162\\nA. Ivedoiix. Scarsdale 202\u00e2\u0080\u009438, 164\\nCharles Cooper, Garden City 193\u00e2\u0080\u009428.165\\nL. H. Vories, Areola 19^-24. 168\\nE. A. Young, Wykagyl 216\u00e2\u0080\u009418. 168\\nieorge Ryall. Glen Ridge 229\u00e2\u0080\u009460. 169\\nE. W. I arker. Chevy Chase 209\u00e2\u0080\u009440,169\\nD. L. Elmendorf, Areola 207\u00e2\u0080\u009436, 171\\nJ. A. Tedford, Apawamis 211\u00e2\u0080\u009440, 171\\nGeorge F. Brown. Huntingdon Valley 20. 32. 173\\nW. N. Bavier. Wykagyl 212\u00e2\u0080\u009436,176\\nRev. Dr. Charier* Wadsworth, Jr., Overbrook 217\u00e2\u0080\u009440, 177", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0095.jp2"}, "96": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nCLASS C (65 TO 69 YEARS).\\nJohn H. Boyoe, Fox Hills 192\u00e2\u0080\u009436, 156\\nD. W. Whitmore, Siwanoy 202\u00e2\u0080\u009440, 162\\nH. M. Adams, Nassau 193\u00e2\u0080\u009430, 163\\nColin C. Bell. Brae Burn 194\u00e2\u0080\u009428, 166\\nM. E. Haviland, Garden City 212\u00e2\u0080\u009444, 168\\nT. B. Boyd, Algonquin 196\u00e2\u0080\u009428, 168\\nJoseph J. Smith, Oakley 206\u00e2\u0080\u009438, 168\\nD. S. White, Atlantic City 205\u00e2\u0080\u009436, 169\\nDavid Strachan, Glen Ridge 213\u00e2\u0080\u009444, 169\\nW. H. Canterbury, Crow Point 203\u00e2\u0080\u009432, 171\\nHerman Wendell, St. David s 186\u00e2\u0080\u009412, 174\\nCLASS D (70 YEARS AND OVER),\\nA. S. Nichols, Areola 199\u00e2\u0080\u009440, 159\\nGeorge Wright, Wollaston 193\u00e2\u0080\u009430, 163\\nThomas H. Gray, Woodland 205\u00e2\u0080\u009440, 165\\nCol. B. Arnold, Cincinnati 211\u00e2\u0080\u0094 14, 167\\nL. K. Passmore. Huntingdon Valley 208\u00e2\u0080\u009440,168\\nW. T. Dunmore, Yahnundasis 213\u00e2\u0080\u009444, 169\\nMorton Alden, Wollaston 220\u00e2\u0080\u009450, 170\\nDr. W. S Worthington, Forest Hill 219\u00e2\u0080\u009440, 179\\nJ. B. Carrington, New Haven 220\u00e2\u0080\u009440, 180\\nJ. R. Gilkeson, Leicester 197\u00e2\u0080\u009416, 181\\nW. R. Peters, Nassau 228-\u00e2\u0080\u0094 tO, 188\\nJ. L. Porter, Greenwich 241\u00e2\u0080\u009452, 189\\nRev. Dr. E. P. Johnson, New Brunswick 254\u00e2\u0080\u009460,194\\nI\\nUNITED STATES vs. CANADA.\\nThe annual match between teams of players chosen from the United\\nStates and Canada was played over the course of the Engineers Country\\nClub, Roslyn, N. Y., September 5. The team of United States golfers won\\nby 10 1-2 matches to 4 1-2. Two surprises of the tournament were the\\ndefeat of R. A. Gardner by G. S. Lyon, the grand old man in golf of\\nCanada, who won, 1 up, and the defeat of Francis Ouimet by W. B.\\nMoLuckie, 3 and 1. C. B. Grier, the Canadian amateur champion, was\\ndefeated by S. Davidson Herron, 4 and 3.\\nIn the foursomes the United States won four of the five matches and in\\nthe twosomes 6 1-2 to Canada s 3 1-2. The Oswald Kirkby-Seymour Lyon\\nencounter, the latter a son of the famous George S., ended all square. It\\nwas the fifth international meeting of the series and proved once again that\\nintense excitement and rivalty exist. In 1898, 1899 and 1900 the first three\\nmeetings were held, America winning all of them. Then there was a lapse\\nof nineteen years before the fourth of the series was played. This was last\\nseason at Hamilton, Ont., when the States team won by 12 to 3.\\nSINGI\\nUNITED STATES.\\nD. Herron 1\\nFrancis Ouimet..\\nChick Evans 1\\nR. A. Gardner...\\nR. T. Jones\\nM. R. Marston.. 1\\nOswald Kirkby..\\nG. W. White.... 1\\nJ. G. Anderson.. 1\\nW. C. Fownes.Jr. 1\\nTotal\\n..eva\\n.ES.\\nCANADA.\\nC. B. Grier\\nW. McLuckie 1\\nG. H. Turpin..,.\\nG. S. Lyon 1\\nF. Thompson 1\\nW. J. Thompson.\\nSeymour Lyon...\\nF. G. Hoblitzel..\\nFritz Martin\\nNorman Scott\\nTotal 31/,\\nFOURSOMES.\\nUNITED STATES.\\nEvans-Gardner*... 1\\nHerron-Kirkby. 1\\nOuimet-Fownes. 1\\nJones-AndersOn 1\\nWQiite-Marston...\\nTotal 4\\nGrand total..lO%\\nCANADA.\\nGrier-Turpin\\nG. S. Lyon-W. J.\\nThompson\\nS. Lyon-\\nF. Thompson..\\nMcLuckJie-Martin\\nHoblLtzel-Scott... 1\\nTotal 1\\nGrand total... 4%", "height": "3279", "width": "2122", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0096.jp2"}, "97": {"fulltext": "SPALDINGS OFFICIAL COLF GUIDE. 91\\nStaten Island Championship.\\nW, H. Follett won the championship of Staten Island, October 17, over\\nthe course of the Fox Hills Golf Club, by defeating S. V. D. Bowers, 8 up\\nand 6 to play. On the eighteenth hole Follett was 1 up and Bowers fell\\noff badly in the afternoon round.\\nFox Hills Tournament.\\nA. C. Perry won the championship of the Fox Hills Golf Club by defeat-\\ning Roy Barnhill, 3 and 2. Barnhill defeated G. G. Baxter in the first\\nround on the twenty-fourth green. In the second round he was forced to\\ngo to the twenty-third hole to defeat A. H. Follett.\\nFox Hills Invitation Tournament.\\nA. C. Perry of the Fox Hills Golf Club defeated J. D, Newman, of the\\nsame club, by 2 up, June 20. W. E. Donohue of the Shackamaxon Club\\nwon the qualifying medal with 74. Par for the course is 73. Donohue was\\nput out in the first round of match play.\\nWestchester County Tournament.\\nThe annual Westchester County tournament was renewed in 1920 over the\\ncourse of the Dunwoodie Golf Club. J. S. Worthington was winner over\\nWalter E. Purcell of Dunwoodie, 5 and 4. John G. Anderson and C. H.\\nPaul, the latter the Gedney Farms champion, tied in medal play for the\\nqualifying round. In the play-off Anderson made the capital score of 69,\\ntwo strokes under par, setting a new amateur record for the course.\\nWestchester County Open Tournament.\\nThe Westchester County Open Golf Association held its first tourney over\\nthe course at Gedney Farms in July, 1920. Tom Kerrigan of Siwanoy\\nwas the winner. Thirty-six holes were played. Kerrigan made 70 in the\\nfirst eighteen and 73 in the second eigliteen, a total of 143. Arthur Reid\\nof Ardsley finished second with 149. Others in the first ten were: Jack\\nDowling, Scarsdale. 150; John Farrell, Quaker Ridge, 151; Fred Canausa,\\nOak Ridge. 152; Tom Harmon. Hudson River, 152; Peter Harmon. Hudson\\nRiver. 152; Frank E. Hunt, Mosholu, 152; Tom MoNamara, 152; J. S.\\nWorthington (amateur), 152.\\nWestchester Junior Championship.\\nIn the first competition for juniors in the Westchester section of New\\nYork, John MacMahon defeated Willis G. Jones at the thirty-seventh hole.\\nJones was runner-up in the interscholastic championship. MacMahon is\\naffiliated with the Sleepy Hollow Club.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0097.jp2"}, "98": {"fulltext": "E\\nS\\nV y^ 1^ Vuik; -J., Bert Way, professional; 3, H. B. Martin,\\nA( \\\\v iork, golf entliiisiast and ijrominent sport writer. (2) Seymour Dunn,\\nprofessional at the Lake Placid Club. Lake Placid. N. Y. (3) Bonner Miller.\\n.St. Louis, President Missouri S tatc Golf Association.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0098.jp2"}, "99": {"fulltext": "SI ALDINGS OFFHIAli COLF GUIDE. 93\\nWestchester-Long Island Women s Team Match.\\nOver the Nassau Country Club links. May 19, the women s team of Long\\nIsland golfers defeated the team of ^stchester women golfers. Players\\nand points are as follows:\\nLONG ISLAND. WESTCHESTER.\\nMrs. W. A. Gavin, Belleclaire 3 Miss Beatrice Lounebery, Bedford\\nMrs. a. M. Ileckscher, Piping Rock.. Mrs. A. A. Rossin, Century\\nMrs. .r. H. Alexandre, Piping Rock... 3 Mrs. S. A. Ilerzog, B airview\\nMrs. Ralpli Hammer, Flushing Mrs. M. H. BYayne, Dunwoodie\\nMrs. G. K. Morrow, Engineers 3 Mrs. S. Calm, Century\\nMrs. H. Curtis, Piping Rock 3 Miss Molly Conroy, Fox Hills\\nMrs. Philip Boyer, Piping Rock 3 Miss Irma Waterliouse, Ardsley\\nMrs. Joseph E. Davis, Piping Rock... Mrs. W. I. Seaman, Richmond County 1\\nMrs. Howard F. Whitney, Nassau 3 Mrs. Steel, Scarsdale\\nMrs. D. G. Geddes, Nassau 2 Mrs. Lester Ketcham, Fox Hills\\nMrs. C. D. Barnes, Piping Rock 2 Mrs. M. S. De Costa, Dunwoodie\\nMrs. D. Smithers, Piping Rock 3 Mrs. Eugene Benjamin, Century\\nMrs. G. F. Baker, Jr., Piping Rock... Miss Constance Roberson, KnoUwood.. 1\\n-Mrs. (Charles Fair, Piping Rock 1 Miss Margaret Wolfe, Sunningdale\\nMrs. H. C. Martin, Nassau 3 Mrs. Milroy, Apawamis\\nTotal 29 Total\\nPiping Rock Invitation Tournament.\\nGardiner White, runner-up for the Metropolitan championship, defeated\\nJohn Stearns, 3 and 2, in the Piping Rock invitation tournament. In the\\nsemi-finals Mr. White defeated Tom Armour of Scotland, 5 and 3. John\\nStearns and Hamilton Kerr were tied for the medal with 76.\\nNew York Athletic Club Tournament.\\nHarold V. Richards won the championship of the New York Athletic\\nClub over the course of the Garden City Country Club by defeating L. A.\\nHamilton of the National Links, .5 and 4. The qualifying medal was won\\nby A. E. Ranney of Greenwich.\\nGarden City Invitation Tournament.\\nIn the Garden City invitation tournament, played May 20-22, Grant A.\\nPeacock, Cherry Valley, defeated Hamilton K. Kerr, Garden City, 2 and 1,\\nfor the Garden City Cup. J. Simpson Dean, H. K. B. Davis and H. P.\\nBingham tied in the qualifying round with 164 each. C. J. Sullivan, Garden\\nCity, defeated George T. Brokaw, Nassau, 1 up, for the Hempstead Cup;\\nT. W. Potter, Westchester, defeated J. K. Van Vranken, Cherry Valley, 3\\nand 2, for the Mineola Cup.\\nNassau Country Club Invitation Tournament.\\nJ. Wood Piatt of North Hills won the Nassau Country Club s invitation\\ntournament by 1 up, thirty-seven holes. The runner-up was Thomas D.\\nArmour of Scotland. The latter was 1 up at the turn. Going to the last\\nliole Armour was still 1 up. This hole was won by Piatt witli a 4 to his\\nrival s 6, and on the extra hole Piatt sunk a 25-foot putt for a birdie 3.\\nThat was too much for Armour to overcome. Armour won the qualifying\\nround with 76.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0099.jp2"}, "100": {"fulltext": "94 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nINTERSCHOLASTIC TOURNAMENT.\\nThe interscholastic title was won over the course of the Nassau Country\\nClub, at Glen Gove, May 17-199 by Henry Gassoway Davis, 3d, of Hill\\nSchool, by 2 up, from Willis G. Jones, Tome School. In the team match\\nHill School won with 371, Tome was second with 375, and Lawrenceville\\nthird with 392.\\nLido Invitation Tournament.\\nIn the first tournament over the new Lido course, William M. Reekie of\\nUpper Montclair, New Jersey champion, defeated Gardiner W. White of\\nNassau. Reekie was dormie 5 on the thirteenth hole and won the match on\\nthe next with a par 3 against 4.\\nSiwanoy Invitation Tournament.\\nCharles H. Paul of Gedney Farms won the Siwanoy Country Club invi-\\ntation tournament from Ray Thompson of the Engineers Club, 5 up and 4\\nto play. In the semi-finals he defeated Lester Conley, whose qualifying\\nscore of 73 was two strokes above that of Paul. Jesse Sweetser, intercolle-\\ngiate champion, was medalist.\\nCountry Club of Buffalo Invitation Tournament.\\nJ. Simpson Dean, Princeton team captain, won the invitation tournament\\nof the Country Club of Buffalo by defeating W. H. Gardner of the Buffalo\\nClub, 8 and 7.\\nHagen Won Open at Syracuse.\\nIn the two days open invitation meet of the Bellevue Country Club at\\nSyracuse, N. Y., Hagen won with a total of 293 for seventy-two holes. He\\nwas eight strokes below Pat Doyle and Pat O Hara, who were tied for\\nsecond place.\\nVictory Cup Tournament.\\nThe second annual competition for the Victory Cup was held in July,\\n1920, over the course of the Wykagyl Country Club, and the cup was won\\nby Jesse W. Sweetser. He had low qualifying score of 75, and in the final\\ndefeated John G. Anderson of Siwanoy, 3 and 2,\\nCherry Valley Invitation Tournament.\\nAlfred S. Bourne of the National Links won the invitation tournament of\\nthe Cherry Valley Club at Garden City, L. L, in September, from Grant\\nPeacock. They finished the first nine holes of the final round even. Bourne\\nwon the first four holes turning for home and halved the fourteenth and\\nfifteenth to end the match. Peacock won the qualifying medal with a\\ncard of 74.\\nSleepy Hollow Invitation Tournament.\\nFrank W. Dyer of Upper Montclair won the cup in the Sleepy Hollow\\ninvitation tournament, July 3, by defeating Gardiner W. White of Nassau,\\n2 and 1. Dyer also won the qualifying round with 74,", "height": "3268", "width": "2080", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0100.jp2"}, "101": {"fulltext": "Sl AlvDlNGS OFFICIAL (iOLF GUlDi:. 95\\nNEW JERSEY AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\nYear. Winner and Where Held.\\n1900 Archibald Graham, North Jersey Country Club\\n1901 Allan Kennaday, Montclair Golf Club\\n1902 Allan Kennaday, Montclair Golf Club\\n1903\u00e2\u0080\u0094 M. M. Michael, Yountakah Golf Club\\n1904 Murray Olyphant. Englewood Golf Club\\n1905\u00e2\u0080\u0094 John M. Ward, Montclair Golf Club\\n1906 Archibald Graham, North Jersey Country Club\\n1907 J. D. Travers, Montclair Golf Club\\n1908 J. D. Travers, Montclair Golf Club\\n1909 Max Behr, Morris Co. Golf Club\\n1910 Max Behr, Morris Co. Golf Club\\n1911 J. D. Travers, Upper Montclair Country Club\\n1912 O. Kirkby, Etiglewood Country Club\\n1913 J. D. Travers, Upper Montclair Country Club\\n1914 O. Kirkby, Englewood Country Club\\n1915 Max R. Marston, Baltusrol Golf Club\\n1916 O. Kirkby, Englewood Country Club\\n1919\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Max R. Marston. Deal Golf Club.\\nNeither Max Marston, nor Kirkby, nor Travers won the championship of\\nNew Jersey for 1920. The title passed to W. M. Reekie of Upper Mont-\\nclair, June 5, at the Areola Country Club. The morning round ended with\\nReekie 2 up. Dyer, the runner-up, started the last round by losing his ball\\non the first hole. He was finally beaten, 7 up and 5 to play. Reekie went\\nto the front on the twelfth hole, never to be caught again. Reekie also\\nwon the qualifying round.\\nNew Jersey Junior Championship.\\nIn the second annual junior championship of New Jersey, over the Hack-\\nensack Golf Club links, J. J. Leonard of Shackamaxon won the title and\\nhad low qualifying score. The medal was won with 78, one stroke better\\nthan that of Stephen Berrien of Upper Montclair, and in match play he\\ndefeated Charlie Pierson of Montclair by 4 and 2.\\nNew Jersey Caddy Championship.\\nFrom seventy-three entries, representing nineteen clubs. Dan Williams of\\nShackamaxon won the annual state caddy championship of the New Jersey\\nState Golf Association over the course of the Cranford Club. In the regu-\\nlation thirty-six holes of play Williams tied with Howard Coyle of Engle-\\nwood at 156. In the play-off at six holes Williams won by three strokes.\\nIn the team competition Baltusrol won with 666 for thirty-six holes. The\\nteam was composed of G. Murray, Joseph Piano and Tony Dante. Moun-\\ntain Ridge was second with 670; Essex County and Deal tied with 684 for\\nthird place. The best individual rounds were by Joe Anastasia of Deal and\\nCharles Luhr of Essex, with 76 each. Seventeen rounds were under 80,\\nalthough the course measures more than 6,500 yards.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0101.jp2"}, "102": {"fulltext": "96 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nNew Jersey-New York Team Match.\\nThe long-heralded match between teams of New Jersey and New York\\ngolfers was played over the course of the Englewood Country Club, May 19\\nresulting m a victory for the New Jersey team. The players and scores\\nare as follows:\\nNEW JERSEY.\\nKirkby 1\\nTravere 1\\nKammer 1\\nReekie 1\\nDean\\nDyer 1\\nTurrell\\nPfeil\\nC. Maxwell\\nFenn\\nProal\\nLansing\\nEddy\\nCoxe\\nRice\\nNEW YORK.\\n1\\n1\\n1\\n1\\nGwaltney 1\\nBarrow\\nTotal\\nAnderson\\nSawyer o\\nConley o\\nReid\\nBenton i\\nPaul\\nL. Maxwell 1\\nWorthington 1\\nMundy i\\nDowney\\nT. Brown l\\nLyon 1\\nCondon o\\nGaines\\nHarris\\nC. Brown e\\nMcDonald 1\\nTotal\\nLakewood Thanksgiving Tournament.\\nWilliam Reekie of Upper Montclair, a veteran of the old Twenty Club\\nat Edinburgh, Scotland, won the Thanksgiving tournament of the Lakewood\\nr i!^^Jt revived in 1920. He defeated Gardiner W. Wbite\\nof the Nassau Country Club, 2 up and 1 to play. Reekie holds the New Jer-\\nsey Mate cbanipionship arid won the first invitation tournament played over\\nthe new Lido links. By defeating White he took the rubber from him in\\nthree interesting matches. The first was over the National Links in August\\nwhere he lost to White in the semi-final. He defeated him at Lido and won\\ntrom him the second time at Lakewood. It was the first tournament over\\nthe Lakewood course since its reconstruction. C. J. Dunphy, Woodland,\\nand F. W. Knight, Whitemarsh, tied for the medal.\\nAtlantic City Spring Tournament. 41\\nMaurice Risley of the Atlantic City (N. J.) Country Club won the annual f I\\nspring to;urnament by 4 up and 3 to play from W. E. Donohue of Shacka-\\nmaxon. The latter defeated J. Wood Piatt of Philadelphia in the semi-final\\nby /up, after having been 3 down at one stage of the match. Dr. A T\\nHaight of Belleclaire won the qualifying medal with 79.\\nAtlantic City Autumn Tournament.\\nAtlanI ntv^^o .t^K North Hills won the annual autumn tournament at\\nAtlantic C ty, October 23, by defeating Maurice Risley, champion of the\\nCountry Club of Atlantic City, 4 and 3. Piatt also won the qualifying\\nZTrt f^ J? ^^i ^t^^kes for the reconstructed\\nZT, 0.1^111 TurZ\\ni", "height": "3248", "width": "2091", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0102.jp2"}, "103": {"fulltext": "SPALDTNTtS OFFiriAL GOLF GUIDE. 97\\nMorris County Invitation Tournament.\\nIn the September invitation tournament of tlie Morris County Golf Club,\\nBobby Jones of Atlanta won the medal with low qualifying score of 74,\\nseven strokes better than Cyril Tolley, the British champion, who finished\\nsecond with 79. In subsequent match play Jones defeated Gardiner White,\\n1 up; G. C. Greenway, 6 and 5, and Reginald M. Lewis, in the final, 2 up.\\nIn the special competition for veterans who took part in the amateur cham-\\npionship at Morris County in 1898, Finlay S. Douglas repeated his victory\\nof that year with a best card of 83. This was two strokes better than that\\nof Walter J. Travis.\\nAreola Club Tournament.\\nWilliam M. Reekie, champion of New Jersey, won the Areola tournament\\nby 10 and 9 from G. A. Hobart of Areola. In the semi-finals Reekie\\ndefeated Tom Armour of Scotland by 4 and 3. R. N. B. Fay of Springfield,\\nMass., won the medal with 79, eight strokes over par.\\nDeal Golf Club Invitation Tournament.\\nThe winner of the Deal Golf Club invitation tournament was J. J. Kane\\nof Newark. He defeated Frank W. Dyer, runner-up in the New Jersey\\nState championship, in the semi-final by 1 up, and in the final he won from\\nHerbert C. Buchanan of Shackamaxon by 2 and 1. Dyer and Percy Kendall\\ntied in the qualifying round.\\nPENNSYLVANIA AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\nTear. Winner and Runner-up.\\n1909\u00e2\u0080\u0094 H. B. McFarland (A. W. Tilllnghast)\\n1910 W. C. Fownes. Jr.\\n1911 Henry Heyburn (W. L. Thompson)\\n1912 ^W. O. Fownes (G. A. Ormiston)\\n1913 W. C. Fownes (H. B. McFarland)\\n1914\u00e2\u0080\u0094 H. W. Croft (J. B. Crookston)\\n1915 F. W. Dyer (E. M. Byers)\\n1916 W. C. Fownes (J. B. Crookston)\\nS. Davidson Herron won the amateur championship of Pennsylvania over\\nthe course of the Oakmont Country Club, at Pittsburgh, by 5 and 3, from\\nMax Marston. Herron also won the qualifying round.\\nPENNSYLVANIA OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\nTear. Winner and Runner-up.\\n1912 ^Tom Anderson (Norman Clark)\\n1913 Jas. Thomson (Fred McLeod)\\n1914 Macdonald Smith (Jock Hutchison)\\n1915 Thomas Anderson (E. W. Loos)\\n1916\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Jock Hutchison (J. B. Crookston*)\\nAmateur.\\nEmil Loeffler, former caddy and groundkeeper for the Oakmont Club of\\nPittsburgh, won the open championship of Pennsylvania at Oakmont with\\na total of 150. The last nine holes were played in 36, one under par,\\ngiving him a total of 73 for the round. Loeffler is a war veteran and always\\nhas been a good* golfer, with a tendency to slight unsteadiness.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0103.jp2"}, "104": {"fulltext": "MRS. RONALD H. BARLO^V\\nMerion.\\nWomen s Eastern Champion for the fifth time.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0104.jp2"}, "105": {"fulltext": "Sl ALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nLESLEY CUP TEAM MATCHES.\\nIll I he aiimial matches for the Lesley Cup, which were played in Sep-\\ntember over the course of the Merion Cricket Club, Merion, Pa., the Penn-\\nsylvania golfers retained their title to the trophy. S. Davidson Herron of\\nPittsburgh, former amateur champion, led the Pennsylvania team. Only\\nnine players of the New York team put in an appearance and Cornelius J.\\nSullivan, president of the Metropolitan Golf Association, kindly volunteered\\nto play that the match might not go by default against New York. The\\nscores in all the matches resulted as follows:\\nLES.\\nNew York.\\nPts.\\nOswald Kirkby..\\nJ. Sweetser 1\\nR. M. I^wis\\nG. W. White....\\nF. W. Dyer 1\\nJ. G. Anderson..\\nA. F. Kammer. 1\\nP. Harmon 1\\nG. A. Peacock...\\nA. L. Walker. Jr. 1\\nSINGLES.\\nSING\\nNew York.\\nMassachusetts.\\nPennsylvania.\\nPts.\\nPeter Harmon...\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2lesse Sweetser... 1\\nOswald Kirkby..\\nR. M. Lewis\\nG. W. White.... 1\\nF. W. Dyer 1\\nJ. G. Anderson.. 1\\nA. F. Kammer... 1\\nA. L. Walker. Jr.\\nC. J. Sullivan....\\nPts.\\nFrancis Ouimet.. 1\\nF. J. Wright, Jr.\\nJesse Guilford... 1\\nT. M. Claflin 1\\nP. W. Whif more\\nF. M. Newton...\\nRay Gorton\\nParker Schofield.\\nW. C. Chick 1\\nR. W. Brown.... 1\\nPts.\\nS. D. Herron 1\\nW. C. Fownes.Jr.\\nM. Marston 1\\nJ. W. Piatt 1\\nNorman Maxwell\\nG. Hoffner 1\\nF. S. Kemble....\\nW. H. Reynolds.\\nM. M. Jack 1\\nL. M. Washburn.\\nTotal\\n5\\nTotal\\n5\\nTotal\\n5\\nFOURSOMES.\\nFO\\nURS\\nSullivan-Harmon.\\nAnd son-S^veetser\\nWhite-Dyer\\nI^wis-Kirkby\\nKammer-Walker.\\n1\\n1\\n1\\nOtfimet-Guilford.. 1\\nWright-Schof ld..\\nGorton-Newton...\\nWhit more-Brown\\nClaflin-Chick 1\\nMarstooQ^Fownos\\nHoffner-Platt\\nHerron-Ormiston.\\nMaxwell-Rey lds.\\nJack-Kemble\\n1\\n1\\n1\\nTotal\\n3\\n8\\nTotal\\nGrand total\\n2\\n7\\nTotal\\nGrand total....\\n3\\nGrand total....\\n8\\nTotal 5\\nMES.\\nLewis-Kirkby\\nAnd son-Sweetser 1\\nWhite-Dyer 1\\nHarmon-Peacock.\\nKammer-Walker. O\\nTotal 2\\nGrand total.... 7\\nEASTERN WOMEN S CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS CHAMPIONS.\\nYear. Winner. Year. Winner.\\n1906 Miss Fanny Osgood, 178 1912 Mrs. Ronald H. Barlow, 261\\n1907\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss Mary B. Adams. 189 1913\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. Ronald H. Barlow, 296\\n1908 Miss Fanny Osgood. 171 1914 Mrs. H. Arnold Jackson, 172\\n1909 Miss Mary B. Adams. 185 1915 Mrs. C. H. Vanderbeck\\n1910\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss Fanny Osgood, 175 191fi Mrs. W. J. Gavin. 266\\ntoil Mrs. Ronald H. Barlow, 272 1919 Mrs. Ronald H. Barlow. 177\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2Played 54 holes.\\nMrs. Ronald H. Barlow of the Merion Cricket Club won for the fifth\\ntime in June, 1920, the Eastern women s championship over the links of the\\nPhiladelphia Cricket Club. With rounds of 87 and 83, she turned in a\\ntotal of 170 for thirty-six holes, three strokes better than Mrs. W. A. Gavin\\nof New York, the runner-up. Quite every star player of the East was rep-\\nresented. There were some players of prominence who were still abroad,\\namong them Miss Hollins. At the end of the first day s play Mrs. Barlow\\nwas in the lead, two strokes better than Mrs. Gavin, while Miss Elizabeth\\nGordon of Providence, R. I., was two strokes behind Mrs. Gavin.\\nAt the thirteenth hole on the second round, Mrs. Barlow was still two in\\nthe lead. She reached the home hole with a lead of three strokes, and with\\na par 3 needed to give her a split with the women s record for the course,", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0105.jp2"}, "106": {"fulltext": "100 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nheld conjointly at 81 by Mrs. Vanderbeck and Miss Caverly, she took 5\\nfor the hole. Those who finished 195 or better for thirty-six holes are as\\nfollows:\\nMrs. K. H. Barlow, Meriun. 87 83\u00e2\u0080\u0094170 Miss G. (Jollett, Metaooniet.... 96 96 192\\nMrs. W. A. Gaviu, Belleclaire 89 84\u00e2\u0080\u0094173 Miss JVI. Curtis, Essex County 100 93\u00e2\u0080\u0094193\\nMiss Eliz. Gordon. Metacomet 91 90\u00e2\u0080\u0094181 Mrs. G. H. Stetson, Hunt.Val. 92 102\u00e2\u0080\u0094194\\nMrs. C. Knight, Garden City.. 93 92\u00e2\u0080\u0094185 Mrs. C. F. Fox, Hunt. Valley. 95 99\u00e2\u0080\u0094194\\nMiss H. Curtis, Essex County. 96 89\u00e2\u0080\u0094185 Miss F. Griscom, Phila. Cr....l03 92\u00e2\u0080\u0094195\\nMrs. H. A. Jackson, Greenw h 98 89\u00e2\u0080\u0094187 Mrs. F. E. Du Bois, Baltusrol. 98 97\u00e2\u0080\u0094195\\nMiss May Bell, Phila. Cricket 95 94\u00e2\u0080\u0094189 Mrs. E. H. Baker, Oakley 97 98\u00e2\u0080\u0094195\\nMrs. A. K. Billstein, Bala.... 92 98\u00e2\u0080\u0094190\\nGRISCOM CUP COMPETITION.\\nYear. Winner and Where Held. Year. Winner and Where Held.\\n1902 Boston, Baltusrol Golf Club 1910 Boston, Huntingdon Valley\\n1903 Boston, Country Club. Brookline 1911 Boston, Brae Barn Country Club\\n1904\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Boston, Phila. Cricket Club 1912\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Phila., Philadelphia Cricket Club\\n1905 New York, Morris County Golf Club 1913 Boston, Brae Burn Country Club\\n1906 Phila., Nassau Country Club 1914 Phila.. Greenwich Country Club\\n1907\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Boston, Country Club, Atlantic City 1915 Phila.. Merion Cricket Club\\n1908 Boston. Oakley Country Club, Mass. 1916 New York, Essex Country Club.\\n1909\u00e2\u0080\u0094 New York. Baltusrol Golf Club 1919\u00e2\u0080\u0094 New York\\nThe Philadelphia team won the Griscom Cup from the New York and\\nMassachusetts women at the annual match, which was held at the Philadel-\\nphia Cricket Club. The Philadelphia players defeated Boston, 10 to 5, and\\nNew York, 9 to 6. New York won from Boston, 10 to 5. Mrs. W. A. Gavin\\nof New York, who finished second to Mrs. R. H. Barlow in the Women s\\nEastern Association championship, drew the satisfaction of turning the\\ntables on the Merion star in the New York-Philadelphia meeting, winning\\n2 and 1. She also subdued Miss Harriot Curtis, the Boston champion, by\\nthe same score.\\nMiss Elizabeth Gordon of Metacomet, affiliated with the Boston district\\nfn these team matches, who was runner-up to Miss Curtis for the Boston\\ntitle and who played second position on the Boston team, won both of her\\nmatches. She defeated Miss May Bell, the Philadelphia champion, 3 and 2.\\nIn the New York-Boston meeting, she defeated Miss Georgianna Bishop,\\nformer national champion, 3 and 2.\\nMrs. Caleb F. Fox, Philadelphia, was another to win both of her matches.\\nMeeting the New York team, she defeated Mrs. H. Arnold Jackson, herself\\na former national champion, 1 up. Against Boston, Mrs. Fox emerged a 5\\nand 4 winner over Miss Margaret Curtis, another former national champion.\\nExtra holes were required in several matches for a decision. The meet-\\ning between Mrs. G. M. Heckscher of New York and Mrs. E. G. Betz of\\nPhiladelphia was especially notable in this respect, requiring twenty-three\\nholes to land the former the winner.\\nPhiladelphia Interclub Championship.\\nThe Merion Cricket Club golf team for the second year in succession\\nwon the interclub champions hip from the Huntingdon Valley Country Club,\\n.July 10. The victory was gained by 21 1-4 points to 12 1-2 points. The\\nbig surprise of the competition was the overwhelming defeat of J. Wood\\nPiatt by Max Marston, the latter finishing 13 holes up. Dwight Armstrong\\nsubsequently defeated Marston by five holes.", "height": "3258", "width": "2017", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0106.jp2"}, "107": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL (JdLF GTTIDK. 101\\nPhiladelphia District Championship.\\n,1. Wood Plati won the lille of Pliiladelpliia District clianipion from\\n(,c( r\u00c2\u00ab;e Hoffner of Bala in the annual tournament of the Huntingdon Valley\\nCountry Club in the last week of June. H. H. Francine, a former cham-\\npion, was runner-up. Piatt won by 8 and 6. Paul Tewkesbury and Fred\\nW. Knight tied for the qualifying round and in the play-off Knight was the\\nwinner.\\nPhiladelphia City Championship.\\nJohn Wood Piatt, North Hills, won the city championship of Philadel-\\nphia, June 26, over the Huntingdon Valley links by defeating Horace Fran-\\ncine, 8 up and 6 to play.\\nPhiladelphia Open Championship.\\nThe open championship of the Golf Association of Philadelphia, played\\nin June, 1920, on the course of the Atlantic Country Club, was won by\\nFrank McNamara, Cherry Valley, with 294 for seventy-two holes. Tom\\nMcNamara of the Siwanoy Club was tied for third with Pat O Hara, with\\na total of 300. George Fotheringham of the Richmond County Country\\nClub was second with 296.\\nPhiladelphia Junior Championship.\\nR. Kent Hanson of the Cedarbrook Country Club won the Philadelphia\\njunior championship over the course of the Old York Road Country Club\\nby 5 and 3 from G. Warren Stevenson of the home club. Hanson also won\\nthe qualifying round with 83.\\nPHILADELPHIA WOMEN S GOLF ASSOCIATION.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\nYear. Winner and Runner-iip.\\n1897 Miss Davis (18 holes medal play).\\n1S98\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss Elsie Cassatt (Mrs. C. F. Fox).\\n1899\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss Elsie Cassatt (Mrs. W. M. Gorliam).\\n1900 Miss F. C. Griscom (Mrs. C. F. Fox).\\n1901 Miss Sophie Starr (Miss E. F. Cassatt):\\n1902\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. C. F. Fox (Mrs. R. H. Barlow).\\n1903\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. T. W. Reath. Jr. (Mrs. C. F. Fox).\\n1904 Miss A. F. McNeely (Miss Lillian Biddle).\\n1905\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. R. H. Barlow (Miss Lillian Biddle).\\n1906 Mrs. R. H. Barlow (Miss F. C. Griscom).\\n1907\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss F. C. Griscom (Mrs. C. F. Fox).\\n1908\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. C. F. Fox (Miss E. G. Hood).\\n1909\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Miss E. Noblet (Mrs. R. II. Barlow).\\n1910 Mrs. C. F. Fox (Mrs. C. H. Vanderbeck).\\n1911\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. C. F. Fox (Mrs. R. H. Barlow).\\n1912\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. R. H. Barlow (Mrs. C. F. Fox).\\n1913\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. R. H. Barlow (Miss E. Noblet).\\n1914 Mrs. R. H. Barlow (Mrs. V. H. Vanderbeck).\\n15)15 Mrs. R. H. Barlow (Miss Catherine Davis).\\n191 Miss Mildred Caverly (Mrs. George S. Munson).\\n1917 Mrs. C. F. Fox (Miss Eleanor T. Chandler).\\n1918\u00e2\u0080\u0094 :Miss Mildred Caverly (Mrs. R. II. Barlow).\\n1\u00c2\u00bb19\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. R. Ih Barlow (Miss Mildred Caverly).\\nMiss May Bell won the Philadelphia women s championship for her first\\nlime. The tournament was held at the Merion Cricket Club. For six years", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0107.jp2"}, "108": {"fulltext": "102 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nshe had qualified annually. She defeated both Mrs. Caleb Fox and Mrs.\\nRonald H. Barlow. Mrs. Fox was the runner-up and lost to Miss Bell by\\n4 up and 3 to play.\\nShawnee Open Tournament.\\nIn the open tournament at Shawnee, Pa., July 20 and 21, Jim Barnes\\nof Sunset Hill was the winner with a total of 287. Ted Ray was the\\nrunner-up. It was the English golfer s first tournament play after arriving\\nin the United States. Harry Vardon did not play because of injury to one\\nof his thumbs. For the first eighteen holes Barnes was held even by Harry\\nHampton of Richmond, each scoring a 72. Ray and Louis Tellier were\\nsecond with 73. At the end of thirty-six holes Barnes had a lead of 1 over\\nthe field, George McLean of Great Neck being the runner-up due to a 71\\nin the afternoon. In the third round Barnes made 71 and finished the fourth\\nwith a total for two days of 287 for the seventy-two holes. The first ten\\nscores of the match follow:\\nJim Barnes, Sunset Hill 144 143\u00e2\u0080\u0094287 John Golden, Tuxedo 151 148\u00e2\u0080\u0094299\\nTed Ray, Oxey, England 147 146\u00e2\u0080\u0094293 Louis Tellier, Brae Burn.... 148 152\u00e2\u0080\u0094300\\nPat O Hara, Shackamaxon... 153 144\u00e2\u0080\u0094297 George McLean, Great Neck. 145 155\u00e2\u0080\u0094300\\nHarry Hampton, Richmond.. 146 151\u00e2\u0080\u0094297 W. MacFarlane, Pt. Wash.. 150 151\u00e2\u0080\u0094301\\nWilliam Leach, Merchantville 146 152\u00e2\u0080\u0094298 Tom McNamara, Siwanov.... 149 152\u00e2\u0080\u0094301\\nShawnee Invitation Tournament.\\niMaurice Risley won the Shawnee invitation tournament from J. Wood\\nPiatt, August 7, by 2 and 1. One feature of the tournament was when\\nFrank Sheble of the Shawnee-on-the-Delaware Club won the sixteenth, which\\nis a water hole, in 1.\\nShawnee Invitation Tournament.\\nAt Shawnee, Thomas D. Armour, the Scotch amateur, won his first Amer-\\nican tournament. The medal round was won by Ray Thompson of the\\nEngineers Club, and it so happened that Thompson and Armour made the\\nfight in the finals. Thompson lost to Armour, 2 down, the last four holes\\nbeing halved.\\nWomen s Invitation at Shawnee-on-Delaware.\\nMrs. Ronald H. Barlow of Philadelphia won the Women s invitation over\\nthe course at Shawnee-on-Delaware by 7 and 6. The runner-up was Mrs.\\nCharles A. Knight of Garden City. Mrs. Barlow s score was but one stroke\\nshort of the course record for women.\\nBala Invitation Tournament.\\nWilth more than two hundred entrants, J. Wood Piatt won the annual\\nBala invitation tournament from W. H. Reynolds by 6 and 4. In t^he sec-\\nond round Fred Knight of Whitemarsh went out in 34 and returned in 35\\nfor what is reputed to be the record of the course, as no other 69 could be\\nrecalled.", "height": "3268", "width": "2100", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0108.jp2"}, "109": {"fulltext": "SI ALDIXGS OFFICIAL (JOLF (JIIltF. 103\\nGeist Cup Tournament.\\nriie medal in llie annual Gclst Cup tournament iiver the Wliitemarsli\\nourse, Pliiladelphia, was won in September by Spencer Jones with 74. In\\nthe final round of match play, Spencer Jones was defeated by Morris Jones\\nthey are not related by 2 up and 1 to play.\\nNorth Hills Invitation Tournament.\\nAlmost all of the honors of the North Hills Club s invitation tournament\\nfell to J. Wood Piatt. He won the qualifying round with 80, W. U. Dewees\\nfinishing second with 81. In the final round of match play he defeated\\nGeorge Hoffner^ the district champion, 2 and 1. In the semi-final he won\\nfrom Tom Collins, a clubmate, on the twentieth hole.\\nLynnewood Hall Cup.\\nGeorge Rotan of Pine Valley won the Lynnewood Hall Cup over the\\nHuntingdon Valley course by 4 and 3. The runner-up was J. Simpson Dean\\nof Princeton. W. H. Gardner of Buffalo made a 69 on the second round of\\nthe qualifying test. This broke the course record. He made the first round\\nin 78, giving him low qualifying score with 147. Gardner also won from\\nMax Maxston in the second round after twenty-two holes.\\nBerthellyn Cup.\\nMiss Alexa Stirling defeated Mrs. W. A. Gavin of New York City, 3\\nand 2, in the final round for the Berthellyn Cup, which was played over the\\ncourse of the Huntingdon Valley Country Club. Miss Stirling was 1 down\\nat the turn, but won the tenth and eleventh holes and was never headed\\nafter that. She finished her golf season without losing a match, a feat that\\nnever has been accomplished before in this country by a woman.\\nGOLF IN WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA.\\nBy William A. White.\\nWestern Pennsylvania experienced a capital golf year in 1920. Nine major\\ntournaments were played in that territory, including the State and Western\\nPennsylvania amateur and open tournaments. A new champion was crowned\\nin each title event.\\nEmil Loeffler. a world war veteran, who was wounded overseas the\\ngreenskeeper at Oakmont Country Club rose to his greatest golfing height\\nduring the season and won both the State and Western Pennsylvania open\\ntitles, the former over his home course and the latter over the Allegheny\\nCountry Club course. S. Davidson Herron, Oakmont, though defeated for\\nthe national amateur title earlier in the season, won the State amateur title.\\nIn addition he was medalist in the title tourney, runner-up in the open\\ntourney, runner-up in the Allegheny invitation tourney and medalist and\\nwinner at the Field Club s invitation event.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0109.jp2"}, "110": {"fulltext": "104\\nSPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nWILLIAM A. WHITE,\\ndisposed of their opponents\\nJoseph I. Crawford, Stanton Heights Golf\\nClub, a player with wonderful natural ability\\nbut with little opportunity for play, distanced\\nthe field in the Western Pennsylvania amateur\\ntourney and won by defeating Frank Nash,\\nSewickley Y.M.C.A.\\nThe state tourneys furnished the big attrac-\\ntions of the season, though neither Pat Grant\\nnor George Hoffner, champions in their re-\\nspective classes, appeared to defend their\\ntitles. Loeffler, in winning the open title,\\nwhich Hoffner had held, so far distanced the\\nfield that it was only a question of how many\\nstrokes he would be ahead of the runner-up.\\nHe finished the thirty-six holes with a birdie\\n4, which gave him 150 for the day, ten\\nstrokes better than the three who divided\\nhonors for second place.\\nBoth Max R. Marston and Herron, who\\ncontested for the title in the amateur event,\\nwith ease to the final round, where Herron,\\nin true championship form, had little trouble to win.\\nThe Cambridge Springs and Bedford Springs tournaments drew fields\\nlarger than ever, and the courses were so crowded that it was with difficulty\\nthat play was completed. This was also true of the Field Club invitation\\ntournament, which shattered all Western Pennsylvania records for entries.\\nMany young players stepped to the fore. Crawford, the new West Penn\\nleader, excelled, though he has been a figure in tournament play for sev-\\neral seasons. C. E. Kaufmann, Edgewood Country Club, looms up as a\\nnew star by virtue of leading the field in the qualifying round of the West\\nPenn amateur tourney, his medal of 144 being one of the best scores ever\\nreturned in a title event. Kaufmann has been out of \u00e2\u0080\u00a2the caddy ranks but\\na short time and first qualified in the State amateur tourney. Jimmy\\nFry, winner of the Cambridge tournament, and Greer Mcllvaine, who led\\nthe field at Bedford, are young players whose futures seem promising.\\nWilliam C. Fownes, Jr., Oakmont, former amateur champion, demon-\\nstrated that he is still to be reckoned with in title play. Starting the season\\nby defeating Herron in the Allegheny invitation he played a remarkable\\ngame to the National event, where he not only qualified but played his way\\ninto the third round. There he fell before the great play of Chick Evans.\\niNew clubs opened during the season, while virtually every club not\\nboasting an eighteen-hole course is preparing to enlarge to care for the\\ngreat increase in players, indicating that greater things are in prospect for\\nthe season of 1921. The winners in Western Pennsylvania tournaments\\nwere as follows:\\nWESTERN PENNSYLVANIA AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP: ALLEGHENY COUN-\\nTRY CLUB, September 22-24\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Joseph I. Crawford, Stanton Heights, d. Frank Nash,\\nSewickley Y.M.C.A., 3 and 1; C. F. Kaufmann, Edgewood, medalist, 144.\\nINVITATION TOURNAMENTS: ALLEGHENY COUNTRY CLUB, June 10-12-W.\\nC. Fownes, Jr., Oakmont, d. S. Davidson Herron, Oakmont, 3 and 2; Fownes medal-", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0110.jp2"}, "111": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 105\\nist, 150. STANTON HEIGHTS GOLF CLUB, July 14-16-R. C. Ix)ng. Stanton Heightt.\\nd. John Graham, Stanton Heights, 3 and 2; G. A. Ormlston, Oakmont, medalist, 153.\\nBEDFORD SPRINGS, August 17-19\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Greer Mcllvaine, PlttRbnrgh Field Club. d. A. C.\\nF. Kolleher, Oakmont, 4 and 3; Dr. F. II. Darragh, Beaver Valle.v C.C.. medalist, 79.\\n(UMBRIDGE SPRINGS (RIVERSIDE) GOLF CLUB, September 22-24-^ame8 Pry.\\nWanango Country Club, Oil City. d. D. A. Casey. Stanton Heights, 6 and 5; F. M.\\nHunter. Stanton Heights, medalist, 78. PITTSBURGH FIELD CLUB, September\\n15-17\u00e2\u0080\u0094 S. Davidson Herron, Oakmont, d. Joseph I. Crawford, Stanton Heights. 6 and\\n4; Herron medali-st, 158.\\nWestern Pennsylvania Open Championship.\\nEmil Loeffler of the Oakmont Country Club, open champion of Pennsyl-\\nvania, won the Western Pennsylvania open championship September 21,\\nover the course of the Allegheny Country Club. The runner-up was Charles\\nRowe of the Oakmont Club. Loeffler was one stroke better than his oppo-\\nnent with a total of 150 to Rowe s 151.\\nMIDDLE ATLANTIC CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nThe Middle Atlantic championship over the course of the Country Club\\nof Richmond, Va., was won by A. L. Hawse of the Richmond Club by 1 up\\nin twenty holes. The runner-up was R. L. Finkenstaedt of Washington. In\\nthe final round the match was all even at seven holes. By taking the ninth\\nFinkenstaedt was 1 up. Hawse evened the score again on the tenth, and\\nfrom there until the eighteenth it was nip and tuck, neither gaining. The\\nfirst extra hole was halved. On the twentieth Hawse came through with a\\nwinning four when Finkenstaedt required three putts. F. J. D. McKay,\\npresident of the association, won the qualifying round with 76.\\nWEST VIRGINIA AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nForrest McNeil Clarksburg, defeated Joe Holloway of Wheeling by 12\\nand 10 in the final round of the West Virginia championship, over the\\ncourse at White Sulphur Springs.\\nWilmington Club Invitation Tournament.\\nSidney Scott, Yale team captain, won first honors at the invitation tour-\\nnament of the Wilmington Country Club. George Rotan won the qualify-\\ning round with 76. W. H. Gardner of Buffalo, who had played well in the\\nLynnewood Cup competition, was runner-up against Scott, and lost when\\nthey halved on the seventeenth.\\nChevy Chase Invitation Tournament.\\nWalter R. Tuckerman of the Chevy Chase Club won the annual invita-\\ntion tournament of that club, in which a number of Canadian golfers played.\\nW. J. Thompson, one of the best of the Canadian amateurs, won the quali-\\nfying gold medal with a score of 75.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0111.jp2"}, "112": {"fulltext": "JOCK HUTCHISON,\\nGlen View.\\nZXZfon-a^ Sio ^^Z Professional Golfers Association Champion; one of the four\\nChampTonship. runner-up position in the National Open", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0112.jp2"}, "113": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFKKIAL (iOLF GUI UK.\\n107\\nWestern Golf Association\\nWESTERN AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nChick Evans for the fifth time won the Western amateur champion-\\nship in the annual tournament held in July, 1920, over the course of the\\nMemphis Golf and Country Club. In the semi-final round he played Bobby\\nJones. They finished the first eighteen holes in the morning round all even.\\nE^ch took 76 to cover the course. On the first nine holes of the afternoon\\nround Evans led by 3. He did the nine holes in 35, while Jones required\\n37. At the fourteenth hole Jones made the match all even. The next two\\nholes were halved. On the seventeenth Evans won, and as the eighteenth\\nwas halved, Jones was defeated.\\nIn the final, Evans defeated Clarence Wolff of St. Louis. After rather\\nmediocre golf for the first nine holes, Evans held Wolff 3 up on the\\neighteenth. The outcome of the match was 5 and 4 in favor of Evans.\\nJones record card over the course is as follows:\\nOut\\nIn\\n44434435 3\u00e2\u0080\u009434\\n34444444 4\u00e2\u0080\u009435\u00e2\u0080\u009469\\nOf course Jones record of 139 took the qualifying medal. It also went\\na long way toward landing the Olympic Cup for the Southern Golf Asso-\\nciation. This competition is based on the scoring for the first eighteen\\nholes of the qualifying round. The Southern team was made of Jones, 69;\\nTom Prescott, 74; Perry Adair, 76\u00e2\u0080\u0094 all of Atlanta\u00e2\u0080\u0094 and Pollock Boyd, 80,\\nof Chattanooga, totalling 299. St. Louis District Association finished second\\nwith 302, Richard Bockenkamp. Clarence Wolff, Walter Kossman and James\\nManion composing the team. The Indiana Golf Association finished third,\\nChick Evans being a member of the team. The total was 321. Following\\nare the qualifying scores:\\nR. T. .Tones, Jr., Atlanta 69 70\u00e2\u0080\u0094139\\nR. E. Bockenkamp, St. Louis. 72 75-147\\nChick Evans, Kokomo 73 77\u00e2\u0080\u0094150\\nClarence Wolff, St. Louis 75 78\u00e2\u0080\u0094153\\nJames Manion, St. Louis 78 75 153\\nPerry Adair. Atlanta 76 78\u00e2\u0080\u0094154\\nTom Prescott, Atlanta 74 80\u00e2\u0080\u0094154\\nGeorge McConnell, Chicago.. 80 76\u00e2\u0080\u0094156\\nPollack Boyd, Chattanooga.... 80 76\u00e2\u0080\u0094156\\nWalter Kossman, St. Louis... 77 80\u00e2\u0080\u0094157\\nJohn Simpson, Indianapolis 78 80 158\\nR. F. Knepper, Siou.v City.... 80 78\u00e2\u0080\u0094158\\nH. R. Walton. Chicago 83 76\u00e2\u0080\u0094159\\nDouglas Tweedie. Chicago 79 82\u00e2\u0080\u0094161\\nDudley Weaver. Sr.. Memphis. 82 80\u00e2\u0080\u0094162\\nFrank Crager, Helena, Ark... 82 81\u00e2\u0080\u0094163\\nBurt Wilbur, Indianapolis 82 81\u00e2\u0080\u0094163\\nC. 0. Pfiel, Memphis 79 84\u00e2\u0080\u0094163\\nR. L. Hickey, Atlanta 83 81\u00e2\u0080\u0094164\\nEd Limberg, St. Louis 78 87\u00e2\u0080\u0094165\\nT. W. Palmer, Jacksonville... 79 86\u00e2\u0080\u0094165\\nHenry Wenzler, Memphis 81 84\u00e2\u0080\u0094165\\nJames Ward, Kansas City 88 78\u00e2\u0080\u0094166\\nDudley Weaver, Jr., Memphis. 85 82\u00e2\u0080\u0094167\\nF. G. Gardner, Memphis 85 82\u00e2\u0080\u0094167\\nHarlow Hurley, Topeka, Kans. 85 83\u00e2\u0080\u0094167\\nBaxter Sparks, Terre Haute... 88 80\u00e2\u0080\u0094 IfiS\\nP. W. Hubby, Dallas. Te.v.... 88 80\u00e2\u0080\u0094168\\nLouis Morrow, Memphis 81 87-168\\nT.eroy Taylor, Memphis 86 82\u00e2\u0080\u0094168\\nMartin J. Condon, Memphis... 78 91\u00e2\u0080\u0094169\\nR. W. Thompson. New York.. 87 82\u00e2\u0080\u0094169\\nWESTERN OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nJock Hutchison won the Western open championship at Olympia Field,\\nChicago, August 4-6, defeating Jim Barne.s. titleholder of 1919, by one\\nstroke. Hutchison had tlireatened winning the championship for some time\\nby his good play and at last made his threat good, although toward the", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0113.jp2"}, "114": {"fulltext": "108\\nSPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nlatter part of the match he had a bad time of it. He undeniably cracked\\non the last round after playing the first nine excellently. The sixteenth\\nwas disastrous. He topped bis drive, had to force his second out of a cart\\nrun, and his niblick ^hot cut into a trap, the hole eventually costing him\\nan 8. A sliced tee shot on the home hole found him behind a clump of\\ntrees and he got down in 6, the round costing him 80.\\nBarnes, starting eight strokes in arrears of Hutchison, fought valiantly\\nand brought in a 72, which lacked one stroke of leveling Jock s winning\\ntotal. Hackney had the best effort in the last round, a 70, which tied him\\nwith Barnes and Hampton for second place. The scores were:\\nJock Hutchison, Glen View.. 145 151\u00e2\u0080\u0094296 L. Montresser, Kansas City. 160 154\u00e2\u0080\u0094314\\nJames Barnes, Sunset HiU... 151 146\u00e2\u0080\u0094297 Robert Peebles, Beloit 153 161\u00e2\u0080\u0094314\\nHarry Hampton, Richmond.. 147 150\u00e2\u0080\u0094297 W. C. Sherwood, Newark, 0. 150 164\u00e2\u0080\u0094314\\nC. W. Hackney, Atl. City... 149 148\u00e2\u0080\u0094297 C. W. Hall, Birmingham.... 159 156\u00e2\u0080\u0094315\\nWilliam Creavy, Kansas City 146 152\u00e2\u0080\u0094298 George Turnbull, Chicago.... 161 154\u00e2\u0080\u0094315\\nEddie Loos, Ravisloe 155 147\u00e2\u0080\u0094302 W. J. Baman, Montgomery.. 160 155\u00e2\u0080\u0094315\\nGeorge Carney, Chicago 152 152\u00e2\u0080\u0094304 John Bredemus, San Antonio. 157 158\u00e2\u0080\u0094315\\nJ. J. O Brien, Pittsburgli. 159 147\u00e2\u0080\u0094306 S. Robson, Bradford, Tenn.. 158 158\u00e2\u0080\u0094316\\nEmil Loeffler, Oakmont 152 155\u00e2\u0080\u0094307 Charlie Rowe, Oakmont 158 158\u00e2\u0080\u0094316\\nLaurie Ay ton, Evanston 154 153\u00e2\u0080\u0094307 F. C. Williams, Chicago 159 158\u00e2\u0080\u0094317\\nWillie Ogg, Atlanta 161 147\u00e2\u0080\u0094308 Lloyd Gullickson, Chicago. 157 160\u00e2\u0080\u0094317\\nWilfrid Reid, Wilmington... 152 157\u00e2\u0080\u0094309 Jack Morton. Rockford. 111.. 159 159\u00e2\u0080\u0094318\\nA. Cunningham, St. Joseph. 157 152\u00e2\u0080\u0094309 W. J. Bell, Cedar Rapids.... 162 157\u00e2\u0080\u0094319\\nA. F. Hackbarth, Chicago... 156 153\u00e2\u0080\u0094309 G. Nelson, Lafayette, Ind... 164 157\u00e2\u0080\u0094321\\nCharles Hoffner, Philmont... 152 157\u00e2\u0080\u0094309 W. D. Robinson, Philadelphia 158 164\u00e2\u0080\u0094322\\nGeorge Kinsman, Wauwatosa 161 151\u00e2\u0080\u0094312 Matt Jans, Chicago 167 155\u00e2\u0080\u0094322\\nWm. Rautenbusch, Chicago.. 162 151\u00e2\u0080\u0094315 Arthur Reid, Ardsley 169 156\u00e2\u0080\u0094325\\nFred Brand, Pittsburgh 156 158\u00e2\u0080\u0094314\\nWOMEN S WESTERN CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nThe Oak Park Country Club, Oak Park, 111., was the scene of th^\\nWomen s Western championship in 1920, which was won by Mrs. F. C.\\nLetts, Jr., of the Onwentsia Club. It is the third time she has taken the\\ntitle. In the finals she defeated Miss Edith Cummings, also of the Onwent-\\nsia Club, by^ 2 up. The field was large with an unusual number of cham-\\npions of various sections as starters. In the qualifying round Mrs. Melvin\\nJones won with 88, one stroke over par for women on the course.\\nWomen s Western Junior Championship.\\nThe first junior championship of the Women s Western Golf Association\\nwas held over the course of the Beverly Country Club of Chicago and was\\nwon by Miss Mercedes Bush of Westmoreland, who is only fourteen years\\nof age. She turned in rounds of 100 and 96, giving her a total of 196 for\\nthirty-six holes. Miss S. Luttringhaus of Glen Oak was second with a total\\nof 203.\\nWESTERN JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nHarold P. Martin of Highland Park won the Western junior ohampion-\\nship over the course of the Bob o Link Club at Chicago by defeating\\nWalter Crowe of the Columbus Park Golf Club, 1 up in nineteen holes.\\nThe boys were never more than two holes apart. The champion weighed\\n115 pounds and learned his game as a caddy.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0114.jp2"}, "115": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE,\\nWESTERN AMATEUR CHAMPIONS\\n109\\nYr.\\nWinner and IJuuner-i^p.\\nClub\\nScore\\nWhere Played\\n1899\\nDavid U. Forgan\\nOnwentsia Club\\n6 and r\\nGlenview Golf Club.\\nWalter E. L^in\\nOnwentsia Club\\nGolf, III.\\n1900\\nWilliam VVaUer\\nOnwentsia Club\\n1 up\\nOnwentsia Club,\\nWilliam ilolabird. Jr.\\nGlen view Club\\nLake Forest, HI.\\n1901\\nIMu lps B. lloyt\\nGlen view Club\\nand\\nMidlothian C. C,\\nliriico D. Smith\\nUnwentsia Club\\nHlue Island. 111.\\n1902\\nII. Chandler I Jgan\\nExmoor C. C\\n1 up (37)\\nChicago Golf Club,\\nWalter b:. l^gan\\nLake Geneva C. C.\\nWheaton, HI,\\n190.?\\nWalter E. Kgan\\nExmoor C. C\\n1 up (37)\\n-Euclid Club,\\n11. Chandler Egan.\\nExmoor C. C.\\nCleveland. Ohio\\n1904\\nH. Chandler Egan\\nExmoor C. C\\n6 and 5\\nExmoor C. C.\\nD. E. Sawyer\\nWheaton G. C.\\nHighland Park. 111.\\n1905\\nH. Chandler Egan\\nExmoor C. C\\n3 and 2\\nGlenview Golf Club.\\nWalter E. Egan\\nExmoor C. C.\\nGolf. 111.\\n1900\\n1 up\\nWarren K. Wood\\nHome wood C. C.\\nNormandy, Mo.\\n1907\\nH. Chandler Egan\\nExmoor C. C\\n5 and 4\\nChicago Golf Club.\\nHerbert F. Jones\\nWheaton G. C.\\nWheaton, 111.\\n1908\\nMason Phelps\\nMidlothian C. C\\n6 and 5\\nR I \\\\rsenal Golf Club\\nHarry W. Allen\\nSt. Louis Field Club\\nRock Island. 111.\\n1909\\nCharles Evans, Jr\\nEdgewater G. C\\n1 up\\nHomewood C. C,\\n.\\\\lbert Seckel\\nRiverside G. C.\\nFlossmoor. 111.\\n1910\\nMa.son Phelps\\nMidlothian C. C\\n2 and 1\\nMinikahda Club,\\nCharles Evans, Jr....\\nEdgewater Q. C.\\nMinneapolis, Minn.\\n1911\\nAlbert Seckel\\nRiverside G. C\\nHinsdale G. C.\\nSand 7\\nDetroit G. C,\\nR. A. Gardner\\nDetroit, Mich.\\n1912\\nCharles Evans, .Ir\\nEdgewater G. C\\n1 up\\nDenver C. C,\\nWarren K. Wood\\nHomewood C. C.\\nDenver. Colo.\\n1913\\nWarren K. Wood\\nHomewood C. C\\n4 and 3\\nHomewood C. C,\\nEdward P. Allis. 3rd.\\nMilwaukee C. C.\\nFlossmoor, 111.\\n1914\\nCharles Evans, Jr\\nEdgewater G. C\\n11 and 9\\nKent C. C,\\nJ. D. Standish, .Jr....\\nDetroit\\nGrand Rapids, Mich.\\n1915\\nCharles Evans, Jr\\nEdgewater G. C\\n7 and 5\\nMayfleldC. C,\\nJ. D. Standish. Jr.\\nDetroit\\nCleveland, Ohio\\n1910\\nHeinrich Schmidt\\nClareraont C. C\\n7 and G\\nDel Monte G. and C. C.\\nDouglas Grant\\nBurlingame C. C.\\nDel Monte. Cal.\\n191V\\nFrancis Ouimet\\nWoodlaiKlG. C\\n1 up\\nMidlothian C. C,\\nDonald Edwards.\\nMidlothian C. C.\\nBlue Island. Ill,\\n19IH\\nNot held\\nMinikahda Club\\n2 up\\n1919\\nHarry G.Legg\\nSunset Hill C. C.\\nR. E. Bockenkamp\\nSt. Louis, Mo.\\nSt. Louis, Mo.\\n1920\\nCharles Evans. Jr..\\nEdgewater G.C\\nSt. Louis. Mo.\\nand 4\\nMemphis G. and C. O,\\nClarence Wolff\\nMemphis. Tenn.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0115.jp2"}, "116": {"fulltext": "110 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nOLYMPIC CUP TOURNAMENTS.\\n1905 Held at Chicago G.C., Wheaton, III., August 7; won by Western Golf Associa-\\ntion team W. C. Fownes, Jr., J. A. Ormiston, Dr. D. P. Fredericks, E. M.\\nByers; total medal score, 655.\\n1906 Held at Glen Echo C.C, Normandy, Mo., September 3; won by Western Golf\\nAssociation team H. Chandler Egan, D. E. Sawyer, Warren K. Wood, O. W.\\nPotter, Jr.; total medal score, 635.\\n1907 Held at Euclid Club, Cleveland, Ohio, July 8; Avon by Metropolitan Golf Asso-\\nciation team Walter J. Travis, Jerome D. Travers, Fred Herreshoff, Archie\\nReid; total medal score, 641.\\n1908 Held at Rock Island Arsenal G.C., Rock Island, 111., July 11; won by Western\\nGolf Association team K. P. Edwards, W. K. Wood, D. E. Sawyer, R. E.\\nHunter; total medal score, 632.\\n1909 Held at Chicago G.C., Wheaton, 111., September 4; won by Western Golf Asso-\\nciation team H. C. Egan, W. K. Wood, C. Evans, Jr., K. P. Edwards; total\\nmedal score, 623.\\n1910 Held at Minikahda Club, Minneapolis, Minn., July 13; won by Western Golf\\nAssociation team ^Charles Evans, Jr., R. A. Gardner, Albert Seckel, Paul\\nHunter; total medal score, 615.\\n1911 Held at Detroit G.C., Detroit, Mich., July 22; won by Western Golf Associa-\\ntion team Paul Hunter, Albert Seckel, Mason Phelps, Robert A. Gardner;\\ntotal medal score, 606.\\n1912 Held at Chicago G.C., Wheaton, 111., August 31; won by Western Golf Asso-\\nciation team Charles Evans, Jr., W. K. Wood, D. E. Sawyer, K. P. Edwards;\\ntotal medal score, 629.\\n1913 Held at Homewood C.C, Flossmoor, 111., July 19; won by Western Golf Asso-\\nciation team W. K. Wood, Charles Evans, Jr., K. P. Edwards, W. I. How-\\nland, Jr.; total medal score, 628.\\n1914 Held at Kent C.C, Grand Rapids, Mich., July 25; won by Chicago District\\nAssociation team Eraser Hale, K. P. Edwards, J. C LeDuc, E. H. Bankard,\\nJr.; total medal score, 628.\\n1915 Held at Mayfield CC, Cleveland, Ohio, July 17; won by Chicago District\\nAssociation team D. E. Sawyer, E. H. Bankard, Jr., Donald Edwards, William\\nRautenbusch; total medal score, 651.\\n1916 Held at Del Monte G. and C.C, Del Monte, Cal., July 17; won by California\\nGolf Association team Heinrich Schmidt, E. S. Armstrong, Douglas Grant,\\nHarold Lamb; total medal score, 588.\\n1917 Held at Midlothian C.C, Blue Island, 111., July 7; won by Western Golf Asso-\\nciation team K. P. Edwards, Albert Seckel, Paul Hunter, Addison Stillwell;\\ntotal medal score, 655.\\n1920 Held at Memphis G. and C.C, Memphis, Tenn., July; won by Southern Golf\\nAssociation team R. T. Jones, Jr., Tom Prescott, Perry Adair, Pollock Boyd;\\ntotal medal score, 299.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0116.jp2"}, "117": {"fulltext": "SrALDlNGS OFFUIAL (JOLr GUIDE.\\nWESTERN OPEN CHAMPIONS\\n111\\nYr.\\nWinner and Runner-up.\\nClub\\nScore\\nWhere Played\\n1899\\nWillie Smith\\nMidlothian C. C\\nGlenview Golf Club,\\nGolf. 111.\\nLawrenceAuchterlonie\\nGlenview C. C.\\n1900\\nNo open championship\\nwas held.\\n1901\\nLawrence Auchterlome.\\nGlenview C. C\\n160\\nMidlothian C. C.\\nDavid Hell\\nMidlothian C C\\n162\\n299\\nBlue Island. 111.\\nEuclid Club.\\n1902\\nWillie Anderson\\nPittsfleld, Mass\\nWillie Smith\\nMidlothian C. O\\n304\\n3 IS\\nCleveland. Ohio\\nW H Way\\nEuclid Club.\\n1903\\nAleck Saiith\\nNassau C. C\\nMilwaukee C. C.\\nLawrenceAuchterlonie\\nGlenview C. C\\n322\\nMilwaukee. Wis.\\nDavid Brown\\nWcllaston G. C\\n1904\\nWillie Anderson\\nApawamis Club\\n304\\nKent C. C,\\nAleck Smith\\nNassau C. C\\n308\\nGrand Rapids. Mich.\\n1905\\nArthur Smith\\nColumbus, Ohio\\n278\\nCincinnati Ciolf Club.\\nJames Maiden\\nYoungstown. Ohio...\\n280\\nCincinnati. Ohio\\n1906 Aleck Smith\\nNassau C. C\\n306\\n1 John Hobens\\nEnglewood, N. J\\n309\\nFlossmoor. 111.\\n1907 Robert Simpson\\nOmaha C. C\\n307\\nHinsdale Golf Club.\\nWillie Anderson\\nOnwentsia Club\\n309\\nHinsdale, 111.\\nFred McLeod\\nMidlothian C. C\\n1908\\nWillie Anderson\\nOnwentsia Club\\n299\\nNormandie Golf Club.\\nFred McLeod\\nMidlothian C. C\\n300\\nSt. Louis. Mo.\\n1909\\nWillie Anderson\\nSt. Louis C. C\\n288\\nSkokie Country Club.\\nS. Gardner\\nExmoor C. C\\nEdgewater G. C\\n297\\nMatch\\nGlencoe. 111.\\n1910\\nCharles Evans, Jr.*\\nBeverly C. C.\\nGeorge Simpson\\nLa Grange C. C\\nPlay\\nChicago, 111.\\n1911\\nRobert Simpson\\nKenosha C. C\\nMatch\\nKent C. C,\\nTom McNamara\\nBcston\\nPlay\\nGrand Rapids. Mich.\\n1912\\nMacdonald Smith\\nDel Monte C. C\\n299\\nIdlewild C. C.\\nAleck Robertson\\nRock Island Arsenal\\n302\\nFlossmoor, 111.\\n1913\\nJ. J. McDermott\\nAtlantic City\\n29.^\\nMemphis C.C,\\nM. J. Brady\\nWollaston G. C\\nWhitemarshVal.C.C.\\nSt. Louis\\n302\\n293\\n294\\n304\\n306\\nMemphis. Tenn.\\n1914\\nJ. M. Barnes\\nInterlachen Golf Club,\\nWilliam Kidd\\nTom McNamara\\nA. Cunningham\\nMinneapolis. Minn.\\n1915\\nGlen OakC. C.\\nWheeling. W. Va....\\nGlen Ellyn. 111.\\n191(i\\nWalter Hasen\\nRoche ^ter. N. Y\\n286\\nBlue Mound C. C.\\nGeorge Sargent\\nTnterlachen G. C.\\n5 287\\nMUwaukee. Wis.\\nJock Hutchison\\nPittsburgh\\n1917\\nWhitemarsh Val.C.C.\\nRochester\\n283\\n2S.=J\\nWestmoreland C. C,\\nWalter Hagen\\nNot held\\nEvanston, 111.\\n1918\\n1919\\nJ. M. Barnes\\nSunset Hill C.C\\n283\\n286\\n296\\nMayflcid C. C.\\nLeo Diegel\\nCleveland, Ohio\\n1920\\nJock Hutchison\\nGlen View Club\\nOlympia Fields C. O.,\\nJ. M. Barnes\\nSunset Hill C.C\\nChicago, 111.\\nHarry Hampton\\nRichmond\\nI 297\\nC. W. Hackney\\nAtlantic City\\nAmateur.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0117.jp2"}, "118": {"fulltext": "112\\nSPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nWESTERN WOMEN CHAMPIONS\\nYr.\\nWinner and Runner-up.\\nClub\\nScore\\nWhere Played\\n1901\\nMiss Bessie Anthony\\nMrs. H. Chatfield Taylor..\\nGlen view Club\\n3andl\\nOnwentsia Club,\\nLake Forest, HI.\\n190?,\\nMiss Bessie Anthony\\nGlenviewClub\\nlup\\nOnwentsia Club,\\nMrs. W. A. Alexander\\nExmoor C. C.\\nLake Forest, HI.\\n1908\\nMiss Bessie Anthony\\nGlenviewClub\\nExmoor C. C,\\nMiss Mabel Higgins\\nMidlothian C. C.\\nHighland Park, 111.\\n1904\\nMiss Frances Everett\\nExmoor C. C\\nGlenview Golf Club,\\nMiss J. Anna Carpenter.,..\\nWestward Ho G. C.\\nGolf, 111.\\n1905\\nMidlothian C. C\\nHomewoodC. C,\\nMrs. W. France Anderson.\\nHinsdale G. C.\\nFlossmoor, 111.\\n1906\\n\\\\Trs C L Bering\\nMidlothian C. C\\nExmoor C. C.\\nlup\\nExmoor C. C,\\nMiss Frances Everett\\nHighland Park, 111.\\n1907\\nWindsor (Ont.)G.C.\\nWestward Ho G. C.\\nlup\\nMidlothian C. C,\\nMiss Sallie Ainslee\\nBlue Island, 111.\\n1908\\nMrs. W. France Anderson.\\nHinsdale G. C\\nSt. Louis C. C,\\nMiss Grace Semple\\nSt. Louis C. C.\\nSt. Louis, Mo.\\n1909\\nMiss Vida Llewellyn\\nLa Grange C. C\\n6 and 5\\nHomewood C. C,\\nMiss Caroline Painter\\nMidlothian C. C.\\nFlossmoor, 111.\\n1910\\nMrs. Thurston Harris\\nWestward Ho G.C...\\n3 and 2\\nSkokie C. C,\\nMrs. Harvey L. Pound\\nSkokie C. C.\\nGlencoe, 111.\\n1911\\nMiss Caroline Fainter\\nMidlothian C. C\\n3 and 2\\nMidlothian C. C.\\nMiss Alva Sanders\\nMidlothian C. C.\\nBlue Island, 111.\\n1912\\nMiss Caroline Painter\\nMidlothian C. C\\n1 up\\nHinsdale G. C,\\nMiss Ruth Chisholm\\nMayfield C. C.\\nHinsdale, 111.\\n1918\\nMiss Myra Helmer\\nMidlothian C. C\\nMayfield C. C,\\n5 and 3\\nMemphis C. C,\\nMiss Ruth Chisholm\\nMemphis, Tenn.\\n1914\\nMrs. Harry D. Hammond..\\nHighlandG.CIndpls\\n5 and 3\\nHinsdale G. C.\\nMrs. F. S. Colburn\\nGlenview Club.\\nHinsdale, 111.\\n1915\\nMiss Elaine Rosenthal\\nRavisloe C C\\n4 and 3\\nMidlothian C. C,\\nMrs. Harry D. Hammond..\\nHighland G.C.Jndpls\\nBlue Island. 111.\\n191fi\\nMrs. Fred C. Letts, Jr\\nCincinnati\\n3 and 2\\nKent C. C,\\nMiss Laurie Kaiser\\nFlossmoor C. C.\\nGrand Rapids, Mich.\\n1917\\nMrs. Fred C. Letts, Jr\\nIndian Hill G. C\\n5 and 4\\nFlossmoor C. C,\\nMiss Elaine Rosenthal\\nRavisloe C. C.\\nFlossmoor, 111.\\n1918\\nMiss Elaine Rosenthal\\nRavisloe C.C\\n4 and 3\\nIndian Hill Club\\nMiss Frane Hadfield\\nBlue Mound C. C.\\nWinnetka, 111.\\n191^\\nMrs. Perry Fisk\\nDeKalb. Ill\\n3 and 2\\nDetroit G. C.\\nMrs. Fred C. Letts, Jr\\nIndian Hill G. C.\\nDetroit, Mich.\\n19?f\\nMrs. Fred Letts, Jr\\nOnwentsia C. C\\nOnwentsia C. C.\\n2 up\\nOak Park C.C:\\nMiss Edith Cummings\\nOak Park, 111.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0118.jp2"}, "119": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 113\\nGolf in the Middle West\\nGOLF IN OHIO.\\nBy Joe Williams.\\nGolf reached its topmast peak in Ohio in 1920. The national open was\\ndecided on the Inverness links at Toledo and the women s national held at\\nthe Mayfield Club, in Cleveland. It is reasonably safe to assert that more\\ngolf was played by more persons in O hio the past season than ever before.\\nAn outstanding feature was the organization of the first women s golf\\nassociation in the history of the state. The women named Mrs. S. B. Kent\\nof Cincinnati their leader, and Mrs. Kent, being a tireless and efficient\\nworker, promptly arranged for a state championship. This was held at the\\nbeautiful Scioto course in Columbus and attracted a field of some ninety\\ncompetitors. The tournament resolved itself into a purely local affair, with\\nMrs. Blanche Graham meeting Mrs. Katherine Starbuck in the final. The\\nmatch went to Mrs. Starbuck after a spirited duel. In a later match for\\nthe city title Mrs. Graham, playing a vastly improved game, reversed the\\ndecision. Cincinnati is to get the 1921 tournament.\\nThe men decided their championship at Dayton, playing for a cup\\nawarded by Governor James M. Cox. This resulted in another victory for\\nthat sterling Toledo veteran, Harold Weber. Exactly 150 players competed\\nfor the title. In numbers and ability it was the most notable tournament\\nin the history of the state.\\nEllsworth Augustus, the Cleveland champion, who was never really on\\nhis game all the year, fell by the wayside early. Joe K. Bole, who is Cleve-\\nland s best known golfer, bowed to Weber in the semi-finals, but not until\\nhe had carried the Toledo player to the nineteenth hole. Young Joe Bush\\nof Columbus, who made a most impressive showing in his victory over\\nAugustus, found Weber a bit too much for him in the final and was beaten,\\n7 and 6, Jack Munro, the 1918 ohampion, who won the medalist honors\\nwith a neatly turned 76, lost in the second round.\\nThe pros failed to hold their annual open event, but it is probable the\\nfixture will be revived this season, with George Sargent in control.\\nAll the old favorites fell in the annual Cleveland amateur championship.\\nAugustus and Bole, former champions, and Howard Hollinger. erstwhile\\nstate champion, succumbed early in the fray. In the final Mike Wilson\\nof Country won from Art Behm of Highland, 3 and 2.\\nThe women s championship was won by Miss Jeannette Kinney of Coun-\\ntry, after a remarkable uphill fight in the final. She was opposed by Mrs.\\nLee Seelover, who got away to an early lead and was 5 up going to the\\nthirteenth. Here her game broke badly, while Miss Kinney, a golfer of the\\nnever-say-enough type, took advantage of every opportunity and won the\\nnext six holes and the match, 1 up.\\nGrange Alves, who once caddied with George Duncan in Scotland, won\\nthe Cleveland open with a total of 148 strokes. The cards:\\nOut 5 4.. 4 4 4 4 5 3\u00e2\u0080\u009436 In.. ..44455444 4\u00e2\u0080\u009438\u00e2\u0080\u009474\\nOut 5 4 3 6 3 4 4 5 4\u00e2\u0080\u009438 In.... 3 5 4 4 5 3 4 4 4\u00e2\u0080\u009436\u00e2\u0080\u009474\u00e2\u0080\u0094148", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0119.jp2"}, "120": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 114\\nOHIO AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\n1904 T. Sterling Beckwith, Country Club, Cleveland.\\n1905 Ohas. H. Stanley, Country Club, Cincinnati.\\n1906 Robert H. Crowell, Country Club, Toledo.\\n1907 Harold Weber, Inverness Club, Youngstown.\\n1908 T. Sterling Beckwith, Country Club, Canton.\\n1909 J. K. Bole, Euclid Club, Akron.\\n1910 J. K. Bole, Euclid Club. Cleveland.\\n1911 Jones, Elberon Country Club, Cincinnati.\\n1912 Harold Weber, Inverness Club, Toledo.\\n1913 DeWitt C. Balch, Cincinnati Golf Club, Toledo.\\n1914 J. K. Bole, Mayfleld Club. Cleveland.\\n1915 Holland Hubbard, Toledo.\\n1916 Ira S. Holden. East Hill Club.\\n1919 De Witt C. Balch, Cincinnati Golf Club, Columbus.\\nHarold Weber of Toledo won the amateur championship of Ohio over the\\ncourse of the Dayton Country Club by the wide margin of 7 and 6 to play.\\nHis opponent was Jimmie Bush of the Scioto Club, Columbus. In the semi-\\nfinals Weber defeated Joe K. Bole of Cleveland, who had been champion\\nin 1909, 1910 and 1914. Weber is also a winner three times, as he was\\nOhio s Champion in 1907 and 1912.\\nOHIO WOMEN S CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nThe first tournament for Ohio women was held over the course of the\\nScioto Club, at Columbus. The championship was won by Mrs. Katherine\\nStarbuck of the Scioto Club by 3 and 1. The runner-up was Mrs. Blanche\\nGraham, a fellow club member. Mrs. Starbuck won the medal honors with\\n92. This was a new record for women on the course.\\nCleveland City Championship.\\nMyron H. Wilson of the Cleveland Country Club won the championship\\nof Cleveland by 3 and 2, from Arthur Behm of the Highland Club, over the\\ncourse of the Country Club. Four scores of 161 tied for the qualifying\\nmedal. These were made by Ellsworth Augustus, Nelson Davies, S. S.\\nHughes and Charles Windett. Messrs. Augustus, Bole and Hollinger, all\\nonetime champions, either of the state or city, failed to survive the second\\nround.\\nINDIANA AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS,\\nYear. Winner and Where Played. Year. Winner and Where Played.\\n1900 H. I. Miller, Indianapolis. 1910 Will Dlddel, Logansport, Ind.\\n1901 L, H. Lillard, Marion Golf Club. 1911 Burr Swezey, Richmond.\\n1902 J, C, Smith, Terre Haute, Ind. 1912 Will Dlddel, Indianapolis.\\n1903 L. H. Lillard, Indianapolis. 1913 Robt. Resener, Muncie.\\n1904 Newton Cox, Richmond. 1914 Robt. Resener, Marion, Ind.\\n1905 Will Dlddel, Ft. Wayne. 1915 John Simpson, Kokomo, Ind.\\n1906 ^Will Dlddel, Indianapolis. 1916\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Bert Wilbur. La Porte.\\n1907 Will Dlddel, Terre Haute. 1918 Herman Seilken, Indianapolis.\\n1908 Edgar Zimmin, Indianapolis. 1919 Burr Swezey, Lafayette.\\n1909 David Baxter, Marion.\\nThe amateur championship of Indiana was won over the course of the\\nKokomo Country Club in August by Robert Resener of the Kokomo Club.\\nHe played the final against Baxter Sparks, a 19-year-old member of the\\nTerre Haute Country Club, making the first and second nines each in 38.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0120.jp2"}, "121": {"fulltext": "SPALDINfJS OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDK. 115\\nAt the end of the eighteenth hole Resener was 5 up. He won the nine^\\nteenCh, twentieth, twenty-first and twenty-second, and after that the result\\nof the match was a formality. The twenty-ninth hole was halved. Sparks\\neliminated Simpson, former state champion, on the third round, repeating\\nthe feat whiioh he had acccomplished against Simpson at Memphis.\\nIndianapolis City Championship,\\nThe Indianapolis city championship was won by Bert D. Wilder of the\\nHighland Golf and Country Club, over the Highland course. Competition\\nextended over fifty-four holes of medal play and Wilder had a margin of\\nten strokes over the field. His total was 232, against 242 for John Simpson\\nof the Indianapolis Country Club.\\nMICHIGAN AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\nYear. Winner and Where Held.\\n1906 J. T. Wylle, Saginaw CJountry Club.\\n1907 Philip Stanton, Kent Country Club.\\n1908 Jos. B. Schlotman, Detroit Golf Club.\\n1909\u00e2\u0080\u0094 J. D. Standlsh, Jr., Country Club of Detroit.\\n1910 H. B. Lee, Country Club of Detroit.\\n1911 H. B. Lee, Country Club of Detroit.\\n1912 J. D. Standlsh, Jr., Country Club of Detroit.\\n1913\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Philip Stanton, Kent Country Club.\\n1914 Edward Brown, Country Club of Detroit,\\nigi.^\u00e2\u0080\u0094 J. D. Standish, Jr., Kent Country Club.\\n191ft\u00e2\u0080\u0094 A. H. Vincent, Saginaw Country Club.\\n1919\u00e2\u0080\u0094 L. L. Bredin.\\nThe amateur championship of Michigan was won by Howard B. Lee,\\nLochmooi Club, Detroit, over the course of the Highlands Country Club\\nby 1 up from James D. Standish, Jr. From the beginning of the morning\\ngame Standish took the lead, and until he drove into the woods at the\\ntwenty-seventh hole in the afternoon he did not seem to be in danger. Lee\\nevened the match at the twenty-seventh and lost the next. At the thirty-\\nfourth he bad Standish 2 down. The latter won the thirty-fifth and the\\nthirty-sixth was halved, leaving Lee winner.\\nMICHIGAN WOMEN S CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nThe women s championship of Michigan was won over the course of the\\nCountry Club of Detroit by Mrs. J. Stuart Pritchard of the Battle Creek\\nCountry Club, 3 up, on the sixteenth green. Mrs. William L. McGiverin\\nof Detroit was runner-up. Mrs. Pritchard, formerly Miss Myra Helmer of\\nChicago, had won the women s Western championship prior to her mar-\\nriage. General better ability to drive carried her through successfully in\\nthe Michigan championship.\\nDetroit District Championship.\\nJoseph B. Schlotman, Country Club of Detroit, won the district champion-\\nship over the Bloomfield Hills course by defeating C. Gilbert Waldo, Jr.,\\nCountry Club, 10 up and 9 to play in the 36-hole final round.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0121.jp2"}, "122": {"fulltext": "116 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nNorthern Michigan Tournament.\\nModie Holdsworth, 19 years of age, won the championship of Northern\\nMichigan over the course of the Traverse City Golf and Country Club\\nAugust 19, by defeating Dr. T. W. Thirlby, 2 and 1, in thirty-six holes\\nChicago City Champion.\\nGeorge Hartman of Marquette Park retained the title of Chicago cham-\\npion by deteating Roy Patterson, also of Marquette Park by 1 up in 39\\nholes at the Jackson Park Golf Club. Hartman assumed the lead by win-\\nning the thirty-fifth hole, only to have Patterson square the match on the\\nlast hole. They halved the first two extra holes, and at the thirty-ninth\\nHartman landed his hall about three feet from the cup and made his putt\\nlor a 6, giving him the match.\\nChicago District Women s Championship.\\nIn the Chicago district tournament for women, Miss Elizabeth Klotz won\\nthe title by defeating Mrs. Melvin Jones of the Glen Oak Club, 1 up at\\n?i^i_ ^^i^\u00c2\u00ae round, over the course of the Glen Oak\\nClub. The qualifying medal was won by Mrs. Jones with 90. Miss Klotz\\nscored 98 in the qualifying round.\\nLumbermen s Association Tournament.\\nJohn Simpson of Indianapolis, Western junior champion in 1916 and\\nIndiana State champion in 1915, won the fourteenth annual tournament of\\nr ^olf Association, over the course of the Beverly Countrv\\nClub of Chicago, with rounds of 78 and 75.\\nwith 306.\\nChick Evans in Practice.\\nPrior to the national open and amateur tournaments, Chick Evans in\\na practice game with Charlie Mayo over Evans home course at Edgewa ter\\nnear Chicago, turned the first nine holes of the course five strokes under\\npar. On the second rime he conceded one stroke to par. His finish in 68\\nwas four strokes under for the eighteen holes.\\nExmoor Club Cup.\\nDudley H. Mudge of the Town and Country Club of St. Paul, Minn\\nwon the first leg on the cup offered by the Exmoor Club of Chicago in its\\nrV^^^J amateur tournament. Mudge defeated Raymond J. Daly\\nof the Flossmoor Club by 5 and 3. The quaHfying round resulted in a tie\\nbetween Albert Seckel and J. R. MdNulty of La Grange, both scoring 73,\\nwhich IS par for the course.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0122.jp2"}, "123": {"fulltext": "SPAI.DINdS OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 117\\nNew Course Record for La Grange Country Club.\\nDt wey Weber, Chicago amateur champion, broke the record of the La\\nGrange (111.) Country Club course ^vith a card of 68, going out in 35 and\\nreturning in 33.\\nWISCONSIN AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\nVenr. Winner and Runner-up. Year. Winner and Runner-up.\\n1901\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Hamilton Vose (J. L. De Moss). 1910\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Hamilton Vose (H. S Hadfield).\\n1902\u00e2\u0080\u0094 F. R. Petit (Stephen H. Bull). 1911\u00e2\u0080\u0094 E. P. Allis. 3d (C. C. Allen).\\n1903\u00e2\u0080\u0094 E. J. Buchan (W. H. Yule). 1912\u00e2\u0080\u0094 E. P. Allis, 3d (Gordon Yule).\\n1904\u00e2\u0080\u0094 R. P. Cavanagh (C. C. Allen). 1913\u00e2\u0080\u0094 R. P. Cavanagh (J. R. Anderson*.\\n190%\u00e2\u0080\u0094 W. H. Yule (F. W. Jacobs). 1914\u00e2\u0080\u0094 E. P. Allis, 3d (R. P. Cavanagh)\\n1908\u00e2\u0080\u0094 F. R. Petit (F. W. Jacobs). 191.5\u00e2\u0080\u0094 R. P. Cavanagh (E. P. Allis, 3d)\\n190G\u00e2\u0080\u0094 G. W. Hcuett (Hamilton Vose). 1916\u00e2\u0080\u0094 E. P. Allis, 3d (R. P. Cavanagli).\\n1907\u00e2\u0080\u0094 F. W. Jacobs (Al. Schaller), 1917\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Augustus A. Jonas (K. Dickinson).\\n1909\u00e2\u0080\u0094 R. P. Cavanagh (C. C. Allen).\\nRichard P. Cavanaugh, Kenosha, won the championship of Wisconsin at\\nthe Maple Bluff Golf Club of Madison by defeating H. H. Rockwell of\\nBeloit, 12 and 11, in the final round. Rockwell had low score in the quali-\\nfying round. Ned Allis, many times champion of the state, was put out in\\none of the early rounds.\\nWISCONSIN WOMEN S CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nMiss Frances Hadfield of the Blue Mound Country Club of Milwaukee\\nfor the second time in succession won the women s championship of Wis-\\nconsin, in August, with a victory of 3 and 2 over Mrs. E. R. Whitcomb of\\nthe Milwaukee Country Club. The tournament was played over the course\\nof the Blue Mound Club. Miss Hadfield defeated Miss Bernice Wall\\nof Oshkosh, champion of the Northwestern Women s Golf Association, 5 and\\n3, early in the tournament. Mrs. Whitcomb won the qualifying medal with\\n94, leading Mrs. Reed by one stroke.\\nLake Geneva Invitation Tournament.\\nKenneth Edwards of Glen View won the Lake Geneva invitation by\\ndefeating Kenneth Burns, a clubmate, 2 and 1. Edwards had to play the\\nsemi-final to the last hole, winning 1 up from Benton Sturgis of the Lako\\nGeneva Club.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0123.jp2"}, "124": {"fulltext": "PietZCkr;, o\\nROBERT McKEB,\\nDes Moines.\\nTrans-Mississippi and Iowa State Champion.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0124.jp2"}, "125": {"fulltext": "SI AI.DINO S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 119\\nTrans-Mississippi Golf Association\\nI llEVlOUS WINNERS.\\nWinner Runner-up Wl.ero Hel.I\\nH; ^i i-VJr\u00c2\u00bb oSicC \\\\V Dckuson D.Molnes G.andC.\u00e2\u0082\u00ac. Omaha O.C.\\n1908-E. H. Seaver, Lvanston G.C.. H. i^^f Moines D. Moines G. and r.(\\n191\u00c2\u00bb\u00e2\u0080\u0094 N. Whitney. New Orleans. R. t. BockenKamp. oi. uuui...\\nThe couise of the Rock Island Golf Club was chosen for the Trans-\\nMUsissippriournament for the week of June 7.12. Jome players^ were\\nmissins who had made the tournament famous in the past. Robert McKee,\\nr vounTlowa State champion, of Des Moines, ^e \u00e2\u0084\u00a2nner a ter a\\nweek of severe play. The runner-up was Clarence Wolff of St. Louis, one\\n\u00c2\u00b0\\\\rthenlh :f the rt ten holes Wolff was 4 down to McK.\u00c2\u00ab\\nIn the afternoon he played b\u00c2\u00abter golf but he d not overcome the lead\\n^f hu rival and the final round ended, 3 and 1, in tavor ot Mc^ee.\\nR^v O^met brother to Francis Ouimet, for the first time participated as\\na ^kyerT a golf event of importance. He had abandoned projessiona\\n^olf work and when he applied for reinstatement his amateur standing was\\nfe tored He Tntered irZ the Hil lcrest Club of Kansas City. In the\\nauXing round he showed improvement as a golfer, as ^\u00c2\u00ab11 P^^^^^]^\\n?VaWthP future bv winning with the sc^re of 72 for each of the two\\nMcK^e showed good form from the start. In the first round the new\\n\u00c2\u00a3^\u00c2\u00a3hTiarfe:T,t^RM^^\\nand 1 if the ne^ round McKee had championship playing to face again\\nTn he round and won. McKee came out with a 3 and 2 victory.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0125.jp2"}, "126": {"fulltext": "120 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nWestern Golf\\nGOLF IN KANSAS CITY.\\nBy C. E. McBride.\\nKANSAS CITY CLUB CHAMPIONS.\\nClub. Winner. Runer-up.\\nCity J. Stuttle Milburn R. Ouimet, Hillcrest\\nBlue Hills R. W. Hodge Dr. G. L. Miller\\nHillcrest J. E. Nugent Arthur Schooley\\nMission Hills J. B. Nugent E. R. McClelland\\nShawnee S. S. Lindley Lee Judy\\nMeadow Lake M, A. Woodbury W. R. B. Miller\\nMilburn Jess Stuttle Ralph S ackm an\\nCountry Club W, L. Karnest H. C. Campbell\\nOakwood A. Rosenberger Sam Bren\\nSwope Park Everett Sackman G.E.Martin\\nThe season of 1920 was a wonder golf year for Kansas City, the State of\\nMissouri and all the territory of the Missouri Valley and the Mississippi\\nValley of which Kansas City is the center. A wonder year, yet far from\\nthe coming pinnacle year. Just another rung on the ladder of the growth\\nof golf in this section of the country. Kansas City now has seven IS^ole\\ncourses and one 13-hole course ^the other five holes not yet completed\\nand three 9-hotle courses, one of these to be extended to eighteen holes in\\nthe spring of 1921.\\nBlue Hills, Mission Hills, Hillcrest, Country Club, Meadow Lake, Mil-\\nburn and Shawnee are the 18-ihole courses. Shawnee is situated sixteen\\nmiles due west in the state of Kansas. It is a marvelously picturesque\\ncourse. The greens are of sand, as the course is far from city water, but\\nthe sand greens are deep laid, well oiled and attractive for accurate putting.\\nNo initiation is charged for membership, the players paying nominal dues.\\nLakewood is the newest Kansas City course. It was laid out by Charley\\nThomas, an experienced golf course builder, in the summer of 1920, and by\\nfall the club had a 9-hole course that is a beauty, and a member of 200.\\nThe course is located on the Excelsior Springs line. Most of the courses\\nare situated in the opposite direction, so Lakewood filled a long-felt need.\\nThe course will be completed to the full 18-hole distance early in 1921.\\nFred Ford, a brother of Ernest Ford, the Meadow Lake professional, came\\nfrom England in the summer of 1920 to take the professional job at Lake-\\nwood. Oakwood is the Jewish club, as pretty a 9-hole course and as fine\\na test of golf as there is in Kansas City. Four holes were added in the\\nsummer of 1920, making a 13-hole course. There is ample ground for a\\nfull eighteen, and the remaining holes probably will be constructed the\\ncoming summer. Swope Park, the municipal course, is not up to the stand-\\nard of most public courses in the Middle West, but the city fathers are\\nbeginning to awaken to the demand for golf as a public recreation, and\\nthe second 9-hole course was laid out in 1920 and will be completed this\\nsummer. There is talk of another municipal course in the city.\\nA novfelty in the way of golf is the 9-ihoile sand greens course in the\\nCountry Club district. This links is known as the Community course. It", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0126.jp2"}, "127": {"fulltext": "srAM l.\\\\ ;S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDK. 121\\nwas built by tbe residents of the Country Club district, is maintained by\\nthe residents of that district and used solely by them. It is striotiV a\\nneighborhood affair, one might say, and a wonderfully popular innovation,\\nand the ground on which the course is located will be absorbed for resi-\\ndence property within the next few years, but J. C. Nichols, the founder of\\nthe district, is said to be planning a great club of twent;y-seven holes,\\nfarther out in the district. This club will be modeled somewhat after the\\nSunset Hill Club, of St. Louis. There will be memberships entitling the\\nholder to special privileges, as well as golfing, and there will be member-\\nships for men who want their golf without social privileges. Within the\\nnext few years it is probable that Kansas City will be able to boast of a\\n36-hole course. Ground has been obtained for an 18-hole course adjoining\\nthe Mission Hills course on the west. Mission Hills is the most accessible\\ncourse in Kansas City, being only a twenty-minute car ride from the down-\\ntown district and in the heart of the Mission Hills and Country Club resi-\\ndence districts. Plans are under way for the building of an 18-hole course\\nand the establishment of a new club. The arrangement when completed\\nwill be such that, on big days and for tournament play, the two courses\\nmay be linked into a championship 36-hole course.\\nThere were more players in Kansas City and in the State of Missouri in\\n1920 than ever before. The growth of the game through Missouri and also\\nthroughout the State of Kansas has been truly marvelous. Few are the\\ntowns of 5,000 population and more that have no course, and nearly every\\nweek comes the announcement that some new Missouri or Kansas town is\\norganizing a club and laying out links. J. W. Watson, former professional\\nat Mission Hills, spent all his time in the late summer and fall of 1920\\nconstructing courses in small towns in this section. Joe Mathews, for years\\nprofessional at the Kansas City Country Club, is now pro at Mission\\nHills. Mathews left the Country Club to take the job vacated by Willie\\nKidd at Algonquin, St. Louis. When the call came to him from Mission\\nHills, however, Joe could not resist the temptation to return to the city\\nwhere he grew up as a professional.\\nWilliam Creavy is the new professional at Hillcrest. James Dalgleish,\\nfor many years the Evanston, and later the Hillcrest, professional, has\\nretired from the game so far as active professionalism is concerned. Dal\\nhas charge of the greens at Hillcrest, Blue Hills and Meadow Lake. He is\\na grass expert, much in demand as a general greens and course overseer.\\nOne of the season s bright features was the return of Ray Ouimet, brother\\nof Francis, formerly instructor at Hillcrest. to the ranks of the amateurs,\\nand the brilliance of his play throughout the season. Ouimet is now in\\nbusiness in Kansas City. Several weeks after his amateur standing was\\nreturned, Ouimet entered the Trans-^Mississippi tournament at Rock Island,\\nwhere he won medalist honors, but was defeated in his third round match.\\nOuimet gave further testimony to his brilliance as a stroke player by turn-\\ning in the low medal in the qualifying round of the city tournament. He\\nplayed in the finals of this tourney, losing to Jess Stultle. a 19-year-old\\nyoungster who bids fair to become one of the Valley s sensational golfers.\\nFred Marshall, for several months professional at the Community course,\\nwas officially returned to the amateur ranks. He qualified in the city tour-", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0127.jp2"}, "128": {"fulltext": "122 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nnament, but was defeated later. J. W. Watson announced early in the\\nwinter of 1920 that he would apply for reinstatement as an amateur. If\\nhe succeeds he will enter all local, state and Valley tournaments.\\nAs usual, the Missouri tournament season opened with Charles W. Fish s\\nannual invitation tournament over the course of the Excelsior Springs Golf\\nClub, a course that Chick Evans has called the finest natural golf course\\nI have seen. It is without an artificial hazard, yet is a picturesque links\\nand as fine a test of golf as the most exacting would expect. Edgar Camp-\\nbell, known in Valley golf circles as The Iron Man, for the reason that\\nhe carries no wooden clubs, was the medalist with an 82, but the victory\\nwas won by Jess Stuttle, the brilliant player of Milbum, who was destined\\nto have a wonderful year of golf that finally ended with the winning of the\\ncity championship. In the semi-finals of this May tourney, Stuttle defeated\\nRobert W. Hodge, perhaps the most experienced tournament player in\\nMissouri, 3 and 2. In the finals he defeated H. R. Shellenberger, Beverly,\\nChicago, 7 and 6.\\nThe Trans-lMississippi, at Rock Island Arsenal, 111., was the first of the\\nValley tournaments of importance. Kansas City and the state generally\\ncontributed to the success of the tournament by sending its best players.\\nFrom the start Ray Ouimet, Hillcrest, Kansas City, and Qaxence Wolff,\\nSunset Hill, St. Louis, were the favorites; but ultimate victory fell to the\\nlot of neither, although Ouimet won the medalist prize with a pair of 72 s\\nfor 144, and Wolff had the honor of playing in the finals. C. R. Rdilly,\\nMinneapolis, dropped Ouimet by the wayside in a close match. Wolff\\nbattled his way to the finals and was expected to win the championship in\\nthe thirty-six holes play against Robert McKee, a Des Moines youngster\\niinder twenty-one. MoKee, however, shot a better grade of golf than he had\\nbeen given credit for, defeating the brilliantly erratic St. Louisan, 5 and 4.\\nMcKee, the Valley champion, is a student in Drake University, and M. K.\\nBanks, director of athletics in the Des Moines member of the Missouri\\nValley Conference, has a plan under way to introduce a Valley Conference\\nintercollegiate golf tourney each spring. This event, if Mr. Banks is able\\nto bring it about, will be something new in Valley college sports and will\\nbe a further milestone in the growth of the game in this section. There\\nare several other Des Moines youngsters at Drake, and the University o\\nMissouri has a fine young golfer in Mel Wpoidbury, who won the clui\\nchampionship of the Meadow Lake Club, Kansas City, in 1920.\\nThe Missouri state tournaments for men and women, at St. Louis, fol\\nlowed the Trans-Mississippi a week. The men competed over the Sunse\\nHill course and the women played at Bellerive. Golfers from Kansas City\\nas usual, played an important part in each tournament. In the men s pla:\\na Kansas City golfer won medalist glory and the Milburn team won th\\nteam trophy in the qualifying round. In the women s play a Kansas Cit\\nwoman was medalist and a Kansas City woman retained the state title b\\nfighting her way through the tourney. The women started their tournf\\nment on Monday, taking the entire week for the playing through of tl\\nchampionship. The men started on Wednesday of the same week, rushii\\nto a finish in two matches per day through the remainder of the wee\\nSeven Kansas City women made the trip to St. Louis and six of them qua", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0128.jp2"}, "129": {"fulltext": "SrALDINGS OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDK. 123\\nfied in the championship flight. The seventh, Mrs. Hugh Brann, Hillcre t,\\nqualified and played to the finals in Qass A. Mrs. R. C. Greenlease, Hill-\\ncrest, was the medalist with 91, a 45 and a 46. She, with Mrs. E. R.\\nMcClelland, Mission Hills; Mrs. Channing Folsom, Hillcrest, and Miss\\nMiriam Burns, 16-year-old star of Milburn drew places in the upper bracket.\\nMrs. E. R. Morrison, Blue Hills, and Miss Caro lyn Lee, Hillcrest, the cham-\\npion, played in the lower bracket. Mrs. Lynn Wasson, Glen Echo, St.\\nLouis, and Miss Lee played their way brilliantly through their respective\\nbrackets. Miss Lee, however, rose to the top of her game in the finals and\\nsewith an 88 retained her title in a 7 and 6 match. Their card follows:\\nMiss Lee\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out ....54554656 5\u00e2\u0080\u009445 In.. ..55646464 3\u00e2\u0080\u009443-45\u00e2\u0080\u009488\\nMrs. Wasson\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out. 63666687 6\u00e2\u0080\u009454 In.. ..56655454 3\u00e2\u0080\u0094 i3\u00e2\u0080\u0094 64\u00e2\u0080\u0094 97\\nWhile the Kansas City women were winning their way to fame at Belle-\\nrive, Kansas City men were doing well at Sunset Hill, although they failed\\nto travel into the semi-finals. Henry Decker, 21 years old and Kansas City\\nchampion at 19, turned in the low medal score, 76. The Milburn Club of\\nKansas City sent a quintette of golfing stars to the tourney. Decker, Stuttle,\\nSackman and Wilson entered the team play competition in the qualifying\\nrounds and won. Their qualifying scores were: Decker, 76; Stuttle, 82;\\nSackman, 82; Wilson, 86; total, 326. The team of Sunset Hill\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Wolff, 82;\\nKenney, 77; Bock, 83; Jostes, 91; total, 333 was second.\\nIn a first round match Dr. Paul R. Talbott, Springfield, known through-\\nout Missouri and the Valley as The Golfing Parson, eliminated an experi-\\nenced tourney player, E. R. McClelland, Mission Hills, Kansas City. Walter\\nWilson, a member of the Milburn team, also lost his first round match to\\nT. L. Moriarty, Kirkland, 2 up. Decker, the medalist, went through his\\nfirst and second round matches victoriously, but lost to Clarence Wolff in\\nhis third round match, 2 and 1. Hugh Brann, Hillcrest veteran, was\\ndefeated by Jimmy Manion, a former state champion, 4 and 3. Ralph Sack-\\nman, one of the Milburn quartette, fell before Richard Bockenkamp, des-\\ntined to be the runner-up, in a second round match, 6 and 5. Lawson\\nWatts, St. Louis Country Club, put Stuttle out of the running, 3 and 2.\\nIn the semi-finals Bockenkamp defeated Wolff, 3 and 2, and Chris Kenney,\\nSunset Hill, state champion of 1908 and 1909, defeated Jimmy Manion, title-\\nholder of 1917, 2 up.\\nBockenkamp was the favorite in the final 36-hole match, but the play of\\nthe veteran Kenney held up to the finish and he defeated his youthful oppo-\\nnent, 4 and 2. He is the only Missourian who ever has won the title three\\ntimes, and so took permanent possession of the beautiful cup. The card\\nof the final match follows:\\nMORNING ROUND.\\nKenney\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out 43444445 5\u00e2\u0080\u009437 In.... 3 4 4 3 4 6 4 5 3\u00e2\u0080\u009436\u00e2\u0080\u009437\u00e2\u0080\u009473\\nBockenkamp\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out. 5 4 3 3 6 4 6 4 4\u00e2\u0080\u009439 In.. ..34655545 4\u00e2\u0080\u009441\u00e2\u0080\u009439\u00e2\u0080\u009480\\nAFTERNOON ROUND.\\nKenney\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out 5 3 5 4 5 3 3 5 4\u00e2\u0080\u009437 In.... 4 3 5 6 5 7 3\\nI Bockenkamp\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out. 53435446 4\u00e2\u0080\u009438 In.... 3 4 5 4 5 7 6\\nThe annual Kansas City tournament was held at Blue Hills the third\\nweek in August; Ray Ouimet, Trans-Mississippi medalist, brought home", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0129.jp2"}, "130": {"fulltext": "-^--^^^0\\nMISS MIRIAM BURNS\\nMilburn.\\nJESS S STUTTLB,\\nMilburn.\\nKansas City Champion.\\nTWO PROMISING YOUNG GOXyFERS OF KANSAS CITY.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0130.jp2"}, "131": {"fulltext": "Sl AhlMXd S OFFIOIAIi GOI.F GUIDK. 125\\nthe low score of the qualifying round, 40,36 76. Ouimet played true to\\nform through the tournament, but in the finals he fell before the superlative\\ngame of Jess Stuttle. In fighting his way to the finals Ouimet turned back\\nthe following players: C. A. Kid Nichols, Swope Park (Municipal\\ncourse), 5 and 4 (Nichols is the old-time Boston pitcher); G. E. Martin,\\nSwope Park, president of the Public (Dourse Golf Club for 1921, 2 and 1;\\nHenry Decker, Milburn, 3 and 2; James E, Nugent, Hillcrest, 5 and 4.\\nStuttle. in his way to the finals, swept aside the following players: M. A.\\nWoodbury, Meadow Lake, 3 and 2; L. V. Graham, Blue Hills, by default;\\nPrice Wickersham, Blue Hills, 2 and 1; C. D. Smith, Country Club, 4 up.\\nOuimet was not up to his usual game in the final match, and if he had\\nbeen would have found a worthy opponent in Stuttle. The card follows:\\nMORNING ROUND.\\nStuttle\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out 5 4 4 4 3 4 3 3\u00e2\u0080\u009435 In.. ..64544554 4\u00e2\u0080\u009441\u00e2\u0080\u009435\u00e2\u0080\u009476\\nOuimet\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out 5 6 4 4 5 3 5 5 4\u00e2\u0080\u009441 In.... 4 4 5 5 3 6 4 5 3\u00e2\u0080\u009439\u00e2\u0080\u009441\u00e2\u0080\u009480\\nAFTERNOON ROUND.\\nStuttle\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out 5 5 3 3 5 3 5 5 4\u00e2\u0080\u009438 In.... 4 4 5 3 4\\nOuimet\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out 4 5 4 2 5 4 5 5 5\u00e2\u0080\u009439 In.... 5 4 3 4 5\\nThe weather in Kansas City was unusually open and warm all through\\nthe fall, so that the players did not move to the temporary greens until the\\nmiddle of November, and Saturdays and Sundays through December saw\\nmany players out on all courses.\\nOne of the features of the Kansas City and Missouri state golfing year\\nof 1920 was the rise of a remarkable girl player, Miss Miriam Burns of the\\nMilburn Club, the organi2;at!ion that sponsors Stuttle, the city champion;\\nand, incidentally. Miss Burns, who had not passed her seventeenth birthday\\nin the summer of 1920, easily won the Kansas City women s championship.\\nMiss Burns devotes her time in summer to the game. She played in the\\nstate tournament at St. Louis, being put out by the runner-up of the tour-\\nney. She qualified in the National at Cleveland, but was unfortunate in\\nmeeting Alexa Stirling in her first round match, losing, 5 and 4. In the\\nWestern women s Miss Burns qualified and won her first and second. round\\nmatches, losing in the third round to Miss Elizabeth Klotz, Chicago city\\nchampion. 1 down. In the Kansas City women s championship Miss Bums\\nwas medalist with 42,46^\u00e2\u0080\u009488. Miss Lee. the state champion and former city\\nchampion, did not defend her title, being in Chicago at the time. In win-\\nning her way to the finals Miss Burns disposed of the following opponents:\\nMrs. M. E. Levy, Oakwood. 2 and 1; Mrs. R. C. Greenlease. Hillcrest. state\\nmedalist, 7 and 5; Miss Katherine Harvey, Country Club, 7 and 5. In the\\nfinals she defeated Mrs. E. R. McClelland, Mission Hills, 5 and 3. The card:\\nMiss Burns\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out 5 6 5 7 5 2 5 5 5\u00e2\u0080\u009445 In.... 4 6 6 6 3 6\\nMrs. McClelland\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out ....557764 5 7 .5\u00e2\u0080\u009451 In.... 4 5 6 7 4 7\\nThe visits of Vardon and Ray capped the climax of a great season for\\nKansas City. The English stars played thirty-six holes at Mission Hills and\\ntwo days later returned for thirty-six holes at Hillcrest. The morning\\neighteen at Mission Hills was against professionals Tom Clark, Blue Hills,\\nand J. W. Wat.son. Mission Hills the visitors winning, and 4. In the\\nafternoon the Britishers met two Mission Hill amateurs Jay Ward, twice\\nstate champion^and E. R. McClelland. Vardon and Ray won, 1 up, after a", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0131.jp2"}, "132": {"fulltext": "126 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\ngreat match. At Hillcrest the British pair met Ernest Ford, Meadow Lake,\\nand Wiilliam Creavy, Hillcrest, professionals, winning, 4 and 3, in the\\n36-hole contest.\\nAn interesting contribution to the success of the season in Missouri was\\nthe history of the Missouri State Golf Association, published by Bonner\\nMiller of St. Louis, president of the state organization and for many years\\nthe prime mover in state golf. The book is finely illustrated and com-\\npletely summarizes all state tournaments.\\nKANSAS CITY CLUB CHAMPIONS.\\nClub. Champion. Runner-up.\\nMission Hills M. B. Nelson J. DeK. Towner\\nBlue Hills R. W. Hodge Dr. G. L. Miller\\nHillcrest .I.E. Nugent Hugh E. Brann\\nCountry Club W. W. Goodwin C. D. Smith\\nMeadow Lake W. R. B. Miller P. E. Reeder\\nMilburn Walter Wilson Robert Wilson\\nOakwood Ed Aaron Sam Heilbrun\\nSwope Park D. E. Martin F. B. Nierman\\nShawnee Heights A.. H. Little L. G. Trickett\\nCommunity F. F. Pulver E. G. Freed\\nThe championship of Kansas City was won by Jess Stuttle of the Mil-\\nburn Country Club from Ray Ouimet, 5 and 4. The victory was somewhat\\nunexpected, as Stuttle was predicted not to have the finish of some of the\\nbest of the Western Missouri golfers who entered the field.\\nMiss Miriam Burns, sixteen years old, won the Kansas City women s\\nchampionship, 5 and 3, from Mrs. E. R. Bradley. She captured the quali-\\nfying round over the course of the Mission Hills Club with 88, a new record\\nfor the course for women. In the qualifying round she had as rivals both\\nher mother and grandmother.\\nMISSOURI AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\nYear. Winner and Runner-up.\\n1905\u00e2\u0080\u0094 H. W. Allen (C. W. Scudder).\\n1906 Bart S. Adams (Christian Kenney).\\n1907 Albert B. Lambert (Harry Potter),\\n1908 Christian Kenney (Bart S. Adams).\\n1909 Christian Kenney (H. E. Brann).\\n1910\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Ralph McKittrick (I. W. Lincoln).\\n1911\u00e2\u0080\u0094 R. W. Hodge (Rev. Paul R. Talbot).\\n1912\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Stuart G. Stickney (R. C. Thome).\\n1913 R. 0. Thome (Harvey Fleming).\\n1914 Alden B. Swift (Jesse L. Carleton).\\n1915\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Cyrus B. More (A. W. Warren).\\n191( R. W. Hodge (0. O. Anderson).\\n1917\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Tames S. Manion fStuart G. Stickney).\\n1919\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Jay Ward (Hugh E. Brann).\\nChristian Kenney, Sunset Hill Country Club of St. Louis, won the ama-\\nteur championship of Missouri over the Sunset course, June 19, by 4 and 2\\nfrom Richard Bockencamp. It was Kenney s twentieth anniversary as a\\ngolfer. In addition to winning the title, the A. B. Lambert Trophy, a cup\\nto be given to the golfer who won the state title three times, became Ken-\\nney s permanent property. Kenney was state champion in 1908 and 1909.\\nJames Ward and Robert Hodge were the only ones to hold two legs on the\\ntrophy in addition to Kenney. The winner ran up an early lead on Bock-", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0132.jp2"}, "133": {"fulltext": "Sl ALlHNGS OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 127\\nencamp and never relinquished it. Kenney covered the first round in 73,\\none over par for the course. Henry Decker won the qualifying round with\\n76. The Milburn Club team of Kansas City won the team match trophy\\nuifli 326, Sunset Hill being second with 333.\\nMISSOURI WOMEN S CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nMiss Carolyn Lee of tlie Hillcrest Club won the women s championship\\nof Missouri for the third successive time over the course of the Bellerive\\nClub. June 19. She established a new woman s record of 88, two under\\npar for women. The runner-up was Mrs. Lynn E. Wasson. The result was\\n7 and 6 to play in favor of Miss Lee. The qualifying round was won by\\nMrs. R. L. Greenlease of the Hillcrest Club, with 9L Mrs. A. N. Edwards,\\nformer Kansas City champion, was second with 93, and Miss Miriam Burns,\\na 16-year-old Kansas City girl, third, with 96. In the team match compe-\\ntition the Bellerive Club won with 426, Glen Echo was second with 432,\\nand Hillcrest third with 433.\\nSt. Louis City Championship.\\nAlmost the same field of brilliant young golfers who have made recent\\ngolf history in St. Louis were entered for the city championship of 1920,\\nwhich was won by Richard Bockencamp from his old rival, James Manion,\\n2 up, after thirty-five holes of play. The tournament took place over the\\npublic links at the Forest City course. Manion was 1 up on the first\\neighteen. In the afternoon Bockencamp obtained the lead on the eighth\\nand also won the ninth, turning for home 2 up. He led to the finish.\\nSt. Louis Caddy Championship.\\nWalter Murray, an 82-pound mite, fourteen years of age, won the annual\\ncaddy championship of St. Louis at Forest Park links by defeating Richard\\nBalston, 4 and 3. Murray frequently caddies for James Manion. Gray\\nEnglish won the qualifying medal with 81. English is fifteen years of age.\\nChampions of Forest Park, St. Louis.\\nMiss Gertrude Wessling won the women s golf championship of Forest\\nPark, St. Louis, by defeating Miss M. Schraubstadter, 2 and 1. The men s\\nchampionship was won by John Pep, who defeated Harold Long, 1 up.\\nKANSAS AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nC. Middleton of the Shawnee Country Club, Topeka. won the champion-\\nship of Kansas in the tournament held on the links of the Salina Country\\nClub. The runner-up was E. A. Liebmann of Emporia, wiio lost by 1 up\\nin a well contested match.\\nKANSAS WOMEN S CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nMrs. II. 1). SttMirtl of Hiit liiiis(\u00c2\u00bbM Avon tin- women s lilK- of Kansas by\\ndefeating Mrs. Kurt/ Kelhim (\u00e2\u0096\u00baf Topeka, S and I. She also won the quali-\\nfying round with 44. She held the championship struggle well in hand all\\nof the way.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0133.jp2"}, "134": {"fulltext": "128 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nGOLF IN IOWA.\\nBy Sec Taylor.\\nGolf in Iowa came into its own in 1920. More Hawkeye golfers com-\\npeted in the large meets than ever before and all acquitted themselves with\\ncredit in severe competition. Starting early in June, with the Trans-\\nMississippi tournament, which was won by Robert McKee, the 18-year-old\\nIowa state champion, the season was a continuous triumph for Iowa golfers.\\nFrancis Dickinson, another young golfer of Iowa, was a semi^nalist in the\\nTrans-Mississippi, and the Cedar Rapids Country Club team won the Brock\\nCup. Later MoKee and William Ingham of Des Moines competed in the\\nWestern open and were in a tie for sixty-fourth honors in the first half of\\nthe qualifying round with creditable scores, twenty-four well known pros\\ntaking nine more strokes than the Iowa youngsters.\\nMcKee continued his excellent work by getting a tie for third low quali-\\nfying score in the National Amateur, an event in which several of the best\\nAmerican players and the British champion, Cyril ToUey, were unable to\\nreach the first round of match play. McKee had a score of 80 78 on the\\ndifficult Engineers course. However, he was eliminated in the first round\\nby E. P. Allis of Milwaukee, several times Wisconsin state champion.\\nMcKee was not the only Iowa golfer to bring honor to his state. Rudolf\\nE. Knepper of Sioux City, who made a splendid showing in hard compe-\\ntition in 1919. continued his fine work. He had the tenth low qualifying\\nscore in the Western Amateur at Memphis, but was defeated by Clarence\\nWolff of St. Louis, 3 up and 2 to play, in the second rouna.\\nLater he entered the National Open and ranked thirty-first in a field of\\nalmost three hundred, his medal score being the fourth best by an amateur.\\nKnepper and his brother, Frederick T. Knepper, won the American Golfer\\ntrophy after tieing with two other pairs, Jerry Travers and William Reekie\\nand W. J. and Frank Thompson. Travers and Reekie defaulted in the play-\\noff, but the Sioux City brothers defeated the other pair by scoring a 75 to\\ntheir opponents 77. Playing over his own course, Rudolf Knepper won the\\nannual Sioux City Country Club s invitation meet from a field of golfers\\nrepresenting several middle-western states, and in the last event of the\\nseason, late in October, while representing the University of Chicago, he\\nwon the individual championship of the Western Intercollegiate Conference,\\nbeing 7 down to par. Three other Iowa players ranked next to him. Robert\\nMcKee and Francis Dickinson, representing Drake University, Des Moines,\\nwere 12 and 16 down^ respectiveily, and won the team championship by\\nseven strokes from Chicago. William Ingham of Des Moines, playing on\\nthe University o-f Michigan team, ranked fourth, 26 down.\\nPlay in the state was marked by keen competition and increased interest.\\nSeveral new courses were constructed and week-end and Sunday team\\nmatches between nearby towns were common affairs. Rudolf Knepper won\\nthe state championship By defeating J, W. Hubbell of Des Moines in a\\nsensational 36-hole final match in which both men played near par golf on\\na fast course. Knepper won, 2 up. He succeeded Robert McKee, who was\\neliminated in the first round by the veteran R, G. Harrison, a former state\\nchampion. Hubbell won the low qualifying score with 74, 78 152. Knepper\\n\\\\i", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0134.jp2"}, "135": {"fulltext": "SPAI.DIXGS OFFICIAL fJOLF GUIDE. 129\\nvva lw .strokes behind Hubbell and McKee was two behind Knepper.\\nHubbell. after trailing all the way and being 5 down after playing twenty-\\nseven holes, staged a great rally on the lasit nine. He cut his opponent s\\nlead to 1 up on the thirty-fifth green through sensational putting at almost\\nevery hole for a half or a win, but failed on the thirty-sixth green and was\\nforced to concede defeat.\\nRobert McKee won the Des Moines city championship, defeating Jim\\nSwick, the 1919 runner-up, 7 to 6, by sensational playing. Francis Dickin-\\nson won the medalist honors after playing off two ties with William\\nIngham, the contest being decided on a missed putt by Ingham on the fifty-\\nfourth hole. In the only large event in which Iowa clubs entered teams,\\nthe Cedar Rapids quartette won the Brock trophy in competition in the\\nqualifying round of the Trans-Mississippi tournament. This team was\\ndefeated for state honors, the Des Moines Golf and Country Club being\\nfirst, and the Grand View Club of Des Moines second, in the state meet.\\nWarren Dickinson, the Des Moines veteran, defeated Frederick Knepper of\\nSioux City in the annual West Okoboji meet. Francis Dickinson, son of\\nWarren, did not compete, although he won the championship in 1919.\\nIOWA AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\nYear. Winner and Where Held.\\n1900 Dr. John Maxwell, Golf and Country Club. Des Moines.\\n1901 R. H. Finkbine, Golf and Country Club. Des Moines.\\n1902 Warren Dickinson, Burlington Golf Club, Burlington.\\n1903 Warren Dickinson, Golf and Country Club, Des Moines.\\n1904 H. H. Ferguson, Dubuque Country Club, Dubuque.\\n1905^ ^11. H. Ferguson, Burlington Golf Club, Burlington.\\n1906 Arthur Gordeu, Hyperion Field Club, Des Moines.\\n1907 H. II. Ferguson, Marshalltown Country Club, Marshalltown.\\n190S B. G. Guinand, Golf and Country Club, Des Moines.\\n1909\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Wm. Sheehan, Ottumwa Country Club, Ottumwa.\\n1910 Ralpli Rider, Cedar Rapids Country Club, Cedar Rapids.\\n1911 Wni. Slieehan, Waveland Park Golf Club, Des Moines.\\n1912\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Wm. Sheehan, Country Club, Sioux City.\\n1913 Roland Harrison, Golf and Country Club, Des Moines.\\n1914 Artliur M. Bartlett. Ottumwa Country Club, Ottumwa.\\n1915 Arthur M. Bartlett, Cedar Rapids Country Club.\\n1916 Wallace K. Groves, Hyperion Field and Motor Club.\\n1917 Artliur M. Bartlett, Ottumwa Country Club, Ottumwa,\\n1919\u00e2\u0080\u0094 RolH^rt M(Ke Sioux City Country Club.\\nThe Iowa amateur championship was won by Rudolf E. Knepper of Sioux\\nCity, Iowa, who played against a field that made him resort to his best.\\n.\\\\mong the entrants was Robert McKee, Trans- Mississippi winner, who was\\ndefeated in the second round by Roland Harrison. In the semi-final, James\\nSwick of Des Moines led at the twenty-fifth hole and was beaten 1 up only.\\nIn the final, James Hubbell, dormie 3 on the fifteenth, won the sixteenth\\nand seventeenth, but lost the eighteenth and the title.\\nDes Moines Interstate Tournament.\\nRudolf Knepper, champion of Iowa, won the interstate tournament at\\nDes Moines, Iow(j, from Francis Dickenson, by 10 and 8. Dickenson held\\nKnepper fairly well on the first round, but after that played poorly.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0135.jp2"}, "136": {"fulltext": "130\\nSPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nCOLORADO STATE CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\nYear. Winner and Runner-up.\\n1901 Frank L. Woodward (H. K. B. Davis).\\n1902 Walter Fairbanks (Frank L. Woodward).\\n1903\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Walter Fairbanks (Riciiard Sykes),\\n1904\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Walter Fairbanks (W. K. Jewett).\\n1905 Walter Fairbanks (H. K. B. Davis).\\n1906\u00e2\u0080\u0094 W. K. Jewett (H. K. B. Davis, Jr.).\\n1907\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Fred W. McCartney (H. K. B. Davis).\\n1908\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Fred W. McCartney (Walter Fairbanks).\\n1909\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Harold A. Fisher (D. B. Ellis).\\n1910\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Harold A. Fisher (Walter Fairbanks).\\n1911\u00e2\u0080\u0094 H. K. B, Davis, Jr. (L, D. Bromfield).\\n1912\u00e2\u0080\u0094 L. D. Bromfield (M. A. McLaughlin).\\n1913\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Jack DeWitt (M. A. McLaughlin),\\n1914\u00e2\u0080\u0094 L. D. Bromfield (M. A. McLaughlin).\\n1915 M. A. McLaughlin (L. D. Bromfield).\\n1916 L, D. Bromfield (M. A. McLaughlin).\\n1917\u00e2\u0080\u0094 L. D. Bromfield (Carrol Brown).\\nm 1918\u00e2\u0080\u0094 M. T. Townsend (L. G. Palmer).\\n1919\u00e2\u0080\u0094 M. A. McLaughlin (L. G. Palmer).\\nGOLF IN COLORADO.\\nBy N. C. Morris.\\nThe golf honors of 1920 went to L. D. Larry Bromfield, who, for the\\nWth time, won the state title at the championship tournament held at the\\nDenver Country Club, August 23 to 28. In this fifth victory the Denver\\nCountry Club star played what was perhaps the finest golf of his career,\\nhis work being flawless, except for a few holes during the first round of\\nthe final match against Harold Fisher. Bromfield was taken to the sixteenth\\nhole m only one of the first three rounds at eighteen holes each. In the\\nsemi^hnal and final he ended the matches easily, the semi-final going to the\\ntwenty-seventh hole, while the final ended on the thirtieth hole.\\n1QO ir championship had a greater entry list than any previous one,\\n182 golfers representing all parts of the state, competing. This was indi-\\ncative of the general trend of interest throughout the state during the\\nseason Several nmv clubs were formed and others are projected, ^ong\\nthose formed, and for which courses have been laid out, are Boulder, Gree\\nley and Lamar. The former two were laid out by Tom Bendelow of Chi-\\ncago, while the latter was laid out by Alex Black, a splendid local Scotch\\nprofessional, now deceased.\\nnn^w ^r.K^ n ^^T^y f^l^rse ^hich was formally opened for play\\non last Labor Day. It is nine holes, 3,333 yards in length, and has a Very\\nhne natural turf. Some excellent enthusiasts are behind it and it promises\\n.nnr/ The Greeley and Lamar\\nTZ^Z k t ^r r ^^^y f P^ay ^^^t season.\\nTnlf 3r r^u ^^u^^ ^he Rocky Mountain\\nleading W? 7^ o^pnization has been formed by many of the\\nwhrrh l,L fi f ^P T^^l y d a holding company,\\nTd^e orthe rit P^^h/^^d a tract of 170 acres situated a1 the north\\nnfl i aI^ and part of which was occupied by the old Interladhen\\nClub, now defunct. It is a beautiful site. With the men behind it, the", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0136.jp2"}, "137": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDF. 131\\nclub will surely become a leader in the future. The organization has been\\ncompleted, but the course has not yet been laid nut. The officers of the\\nclub hope to get things under way in 1921.\\nAll the local clubs kept interest at top pitch throughout the season by\\nmany tournaments. They conducted championship events and brought out\\nsome fine talent. M. A. McLaughlin, former state champion, won the\\nLakewood Club championship, Morgan Townsend won the Denver Country\\nClub championship, and Millard White the City Park Golf Club cham-\\npionship.\\nMuch improvement was made on the city links, the city officials co-operat-\\ning for the betterment of the course. The fairways were kept clean at all\\ntimes and grass was sown on three of them. A number of grass greens\\nwere also put in. This work is to be completed next year according to\\npresent plans. It is probable that an enlargement of the locker room in\\nthe club house will be made, for the present quarters are badly over-\\ncrowded. All available funds are being put on tlie course and the officials\\nhope the day will soon come that the Denver municipal course will be second\\nto none in the country. The course is crowded to its capacity in good\\nweather and the work at the club is ably taken care of by Ray Groesbeck.\\nThe year 1921 promises greater things for Colorado golf and golfer s. The\\none big event, toward which all things are centering just now, is the Trans-\\nMississippi championship, which will be held some time in June at the\\nDenver Country Club. It has been eleven years since this took place there\\nand the club is planning a surprise in the way of a capital course when\\nthe competition takes place next summer. The links have undergone many\\nimprovements, under the supervision of Donald Ross, until now they are\\namong the finest in the country in the judgment of the national amateur\\nchampion, Cick Evans, expressed to the writer at Toledo last summer.\\nThe new first and home greens will be ready by that time and they are\\nsurpassed nowhere.\\nThe Lakewood Country Club is making improvements as suggested by\\nTom Bendelow. Holes are being lengthened, traps and bunkers placed\\nwhere needed, and greens sanded to break up the harsh soil which has so\\nlong troubled them. In the end this course will be a real championship\\ntest. No club in the West has a better natural layout than this and only\\nthe contemplated improvements, now under way, are needed to place it\\namong the best.\\nCOLORADO WOMEN S CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\nWinner and Runner-up.\\n191G\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. M. A. McLauglilin.\\n1917\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Mrs. M. A. McLaughlin.\\nims Miss Frances Moffatt (Mrs. M. A. McLaughlin).\\n3919 Miss Fannie F. Campbell (Mrs. Irving Van Bradf).\\nThe women golfers took more interest in the royal and ancient game\\nthan in any previous year. A greater interest was displayed everywhere\\nand the biggest championship event yet held was conducted in mid-August\\nat the Lakewood Country Qub. A bevy of fine prizes greeted the prospec-", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0137.jp2"}, "138": {"fulltext": "132 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nlive players and a high class quality of golf was displayed. The champion-\\nship was won by Mrs. F. W. Maxwell of the Denver Country Gub by fine\\ngolf, defeating Mrs. L. M. Van Meter. Miss Fannie F. Campbell did not\\ndefend her state honors, although she displayed her great ability by win-\\nning the title of her club, the Denver Country Club. Mrs. L. M. Van Meter\\nwon the Lakewood Club championship.\\nThe Lakewood women had an especially good year from the standpoint\\nof plenty of competition. Something doing every week was their motto\\nand not a week passed without a competition. This brought out a large\\nnumber of recruits with plenty of championship material among them. The\\ncommittee, headed by Mrs. Charles Redmond and ably seconded by Mrs.\\nHarry Benight, deserve much credit for the splendid golf programme of the\\nLakewood women.\\nMINNESOTA AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\nYear. Winner and Where Held. Year. Winner and Where Held.\\n1901 T. P. Thurston, Winona. 1910 H. G. Legg, Minneapolis.\\n1902\u00e2\u0080\u0094 H. P. Bend, St. Paul. 1911\u00e2\u0080\u0094 H. G. Legg, Minneapolis.\\n1903\u00e2\u0080\u0094 M, Doran, Jr., St. Paul. 1912\u00e2\u0080\u0094 H. G. Legg, Minneapolis.\\n1904\u00e2\u0080\u0094 H. P. Bend, St. Paul. 1913\u00e2\u0080\u0094 H. G. Legg, Minneapolis.\\n1905\u00e2\u0080\u0094 H. G. Legg, Minneapolis. 1914r\u00e2\u0080\u0094 R. S. Patrick, Duluth.\\n1906 C. T. Jaffray, Minneapolis. 1915\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Dudley H. Mudge, Minneapolis\\n1907\u00e2\u0080\u0094 L. H. Johnson, Minneapolis. 1916\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Dudley H. Mudge, St. Paul.\\n1908 H. G. Legg, Mmneapolis. 1919 H. G. Legg, Minneapolis.\\n1909 H. G. Legg, Minneapolis.\\nOnce more Harry G. Legg, Minikahda, retained his title as champion of\\nMinnesota by defeating Dudley Mudge of St. Paul, 6 and 5, in the annual\\ntournament held in 1920 over the course of the Northland Country Club at\\nDuluth, Minn.\\nNew Minikahda Record.\\nHarry Legg, winner of the Trans-Mississippi and the Minnesota State in\\nother years, made a new record in June, 1920, on his home course, Mini-\\nkahda, a 71, This was better than any card of professional or amateur.\\nPar for the course is 71, and the best card prior to that of Mr. Legg was\\n72, established by Bob Taylor, the club professional.\\nMONTANA AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nOn the course of the Butte Country Club, August 6-9, E. J. Barker of\\nButte won the championship of the state. The runner-up was R. F. Gaines.\\nBarker was victorious over his opponent by 11 and 9. In the morning\\nround Barker made a 76.\\nSOUTH DAKOTA AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP\\nW. A. Kishigo of Mitchell won the championship of South Dakota by\\ndefeating the Rev. Geo. W. McDonald of Sioux Falls, 5 and 3.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0138.jp2"}, "139": {"fulltext": "srAI.I I.\\\\(; S oFliClAL (JOLF GUIDE. 133\\nNEBRASKA STATE CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\n100. E. r. Bo.ver. Field Club. J012\u00e2\u0080\u0094 S. W. Reynolds, Field Club.\\n15)06\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Spragiie Abbott, (^.^^ntr.v Club, li)13\u00e2\u0080\u0094 .1. W. Hughes, Field Club.\\n1!)07\u00e2\u0080\u0094 H. C. Sunine.v, Field Club. 1J)14 S. W. Reynolds, Field Club.\\n1908\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Blaine Young, Country Club. 1915 John W. Redick, Country Club.\\n1909\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Frank H. Gaines, Country Club. 1916\u00e2\u0080\u0094 S. W. Reynolds, Field Club.\\n1910 W. J. Foye, Country Club. 1917\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Guy Beckett, Seymour Lake.\\n1911\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Frank H. Gaines, Country Club. 1919\u00e2\u0080\u0094 S. W. Reynolds, Field Club.\\nRalph Peters, Omaha, won tlie championship ot Nebraska over the course\\nof the Omaha Country Chib by defeating John Redick of the same club,\\n1 up in thirty-seven holes. Peters was 4 down at the morning round, but\\nliad the match all even on the twenty-fifth hole, and by playing steadily\\ngained the victory at the thirty-seventh. Francis Gaines won the qualifying\\nmedal with 150.\\nNEW MEXICO AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nJack Lyons of Raton won the amateur championship of New Mexico,\\nwhich was played over the course of the Las Vegas Country Club, Septem-\\nber 4-6. The runner-up was Grover Devine of Albuquerque.\\nOKLAHOMA AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\nYear. Winner and Runner-up.\\n1910\u00e2\u0080\u0094 H. G. Gwinnup (Ed. Perry).\\n1911\u00e2\u0080\u0094 H. G. Gwinnup (Charles A. Ludey).\\n1912\u00e2\u0080\u009411. G. Gwinnup (J. F. Darby).\\n1913\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Dr. A. K. West (H. G. Gwinnup).\\n1914 Frank Moore (J. B. Furry).\\n1915 George Frederickson (Roy E. Stafford)).\\n1916 H. G. Gwinnup (George Frederirkson).\\n1917\u00e2\u0080\u0094 C. R. lIofTer (George Frederi( kson).\\nJames Kennedy of Tulsa won the amateur championship of Oklahoma by\\n4 and 3 from H. G. Gwinnup. It was a great battle with many brilliant\\nrecoveries. Kennedy was playing in his first tournament.\\nTEXAS AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nFor five years George V. Rotan had been champion of Texas, to be beaten\\nin 1920 by Louis Jacoby. The championship was played on the course of\\nthe Houston Country Club. Rotan played from Houston and Jacoby from\\nDallas. The latter won, 1 up, in thirty-six holes. On the seventeenth hole\\nin the afternoon Jacoby led, 2 up. He topped liis drive for the eighteenth\\nand the ball rebounded from a footbridge into the woods. He recovered\\nw6ll and topped again, this time with his brassie. He lost but recovered\\nby halving the next two.\\nTEXAS WOMEN S CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nMrs. Jack P. Lapliam of San Antonio, Tex., won her fourth state cham-\\npionship in succession over the Dallas Country Club course. Mrs. Lloyd\\nWhitley of Fort Worth was runner-up, beaten by 5 and 3 to play. Mrs.\\nLapham w(\u00c2\u00bbn in 4he qualifying round with 89 for eighteen holes.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0139.jp2"}, "140": {"fulltext": "FRED McLEOD,\\nWashington.\\nLevick, N. Y., Photo.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0140.jp2"}, "141": {"fulltext": "SI ALDIXCS OFFICIAL COLF (iFIDF\\nGolf in the South\\nSOUTHERN AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\nYear. Winner and Runner-up. Year. Winner and Runner-up.\\n1902\u00e2\u0080\u0094 A. F. Schwartz (Perc.v Whiting). 1911\u00e2\u0080\u0094 W. P. Stewart (R. G. Bush).\\n1903\u00e2\u0080\u0094 A. W. Gaines (H. L. Edwards). 1012- W. P. Stewart (Nelson Whitnev).\\n1904\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Andrew Manson (W. P. Hill). 1913 Nelson Whitney (Geo. Aldredge).\\n1905 A. H. Manson (N. A. Hardee). 1914 Nelson Whitney (Perry Adair).\\n1906\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Leigh Carroll (Nelson Whitney). 1915\u00e2\u0080\u0094 C. L. Dexter, Jr. (Nelson Whitnev).\\n1907 ^Nelson WJiitney (Lawrence Eustis). 1010 R. G. Bush, Jr. (Bryan Heard)\\n1908 Nelson Whitney (H. Chandler Egau). T^i? Tfobert T. Jones. Jr. (Louis Jacoby).\\n1909\u00e2\u0080\u0094 J. P. Edrington (G. C. Oliver). 1919\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Francis Ouimet (S. J. Graham).\\n1910\u00e2\u0080\u0094 F. G. Byrd (R. G. Bush).\\nBobby Jones won the Southern amateur championship over the course of\\nthe Chattanooga Golf and Country Club from Ewing Watkins of Chatta-\\nnooga, by 11 and 10, July 10. He played the final round in 69, four strokes\\nbetter than the course record. Perry Adair and Pollack Boyd tied for the\\nqualifying medal, and in the play-off Adair won. There was also a tie for\\nthe team honors between the Atlanta Golf Club and the Chattanooga Club.\\nThe committee decided to present a cup to each team. The tie score was\\n334 each.\\nBobby Jones Scores 278 for Seventy-two Holes.\\nIn the final match against Ewing Watkins in the Southern championship\\nat Chattanooga, Bobby Jones scored rounds of 69 and 70. Two days later\\nhe made a 69 on the course of the Memphis Golf and Country Club in the\\nfirst eighteen holes of the qualifying test of the Western amateur cham-\\npionship. The day following he made 70 over the same course, giving him\\na total of 278 for seventy-two holes of play. In 1919 Douglas Edgar won\\nthe Canadian open with exactly the same total for seventy-two holes, and\\nMacdonald Smith on one occasion won the Metropolitan open with the\\nsame score.\\nSOUTHERN OPEN TOURNAMENT.\\nJ. Douglas Edgar of Atlanta won the Southern open tournament over the\\ncourse of the Atlanta Athletic Club in October, after winning the Canadian\\nopen championship. In the final round at Atlanta he made 70, two strokes\\nbetter than par, and it was his splendid work on this round that found him\\nhis place as champion. The scores of the leading contestants are as follows:\\nJ. Douglas Edgar, Atlanta... 158 144\u00e2\u0080\u0094302 Willie Ogg. Atlanta 163 156\u00e2\u0080\u0094319\\nR. T. Jones. Jr., Atlanta 156 148\u00e2\u0080\u0094304 Bob McDonald, Chicago 161 158\u00e2\u0080\u0094319\\nJames M. Barnes. St. Louis. 156 153\u00e2\u0080\u0094309 Laurie Ayton, Chicago 163 161\u00e2\u0080\u0094 .324\\nC. Hackney. Richmond 159 150\u00e2\u0080\u0094309 W. P. Goebel. Charlotte 163 169\u00e2\u0080\u0094332\\nHarry Hampton, Richmond.. 157 154\u00e2\u0080\u0094311 Frank Sprogel, Montgomery.. 169 166\u00e2\u0080\u0094335\\nJock Hutchison. Chicago 160 153\u00e2\u0080\u0094313 Victor Smith. Atlanta 178 173\u00e2\u0080\u0094351\\nLeo Diegel. Cliicago 160 156\u00e2\u0080\u0094316 C. V. Rainwater. Atlanta.... 173 180-353\\nW. J. Damen, Montironifrv. ir,2 155\u00e2\u0080\u0094317\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2Amateur.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0141.jp2"}, "142": {"fulltext": "136 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nSOUTHERN WOMEN S CHAMPIONSHIP\\nMrs. David C. Gaut of Memphis won the Southern Women s chamDion-\\nship in the annual tournament over links at New Orleans, La MissXxa\\na score of 90 five strokes better than the score of Mrs. K G Duffidd\\nanother Memphis player and a former champion. The runner-up was Mrt\\nDozier Uwndes of Atlanta, who was defeated by Mrs. Gaut 3 an7 1.\\nCHAMPIONSHIP OF THE CAROLINAS.\\nFred Hyatt of the Columbia Country Club of roliiTnbi-p \u00c2\u00abn r t c\\ndefeated H. H. Thomas of Charlotte, N. C over die bourse oV^h.^^\\n^TTi? J- Z the Charlot t: QufhrdTow t^fn^Te\\nwith a 77. The championship was for North and South Carolina\\nAmateur-Professional Tournament at Pinehurst\\n.J:Z ^^i ^^^^r^ Lothianburn, Scotland won the\\namateur-professional tournament at Pinehurst, N. C, ii November Th^\\nrunners-up were J. Douglas Edgar and Perry Adair of Druid HmsAtlanm\\nThe scores of Diegel and Armour were 136,139-275, against 14 136 2?7\\nfor Edgar and Adair. Joe Seka, Cedar Brook, and Edwa?d L Clarev rJi J\\nwere third with a total of 287. i^awara i.. Liarey, Bala,\\nWinter Golf League Advertising Tournament\\nR. Murray Purves of the Woodland Golf Club, Boston, won the aualifv\\ning medal and the trophy in the annual tournament of the Wint^ Golf\\nLeague Advertising Club at Pinehurst, N. C, January 15 1921 Th.\\nrunner-up was Louis Hamilton of Garden City, ^ho was defea ted 4 an J 3\\nduring aTv^r/air ^^h- ^^e Tott\\nPinehurst Midwinter Tournament.\\nFor the third year in succession A. L. Walker, Jr., of Richmond Countv\\nwon the mid-winter Pinehurst tournament, January 1, 1921, by defeS\\nJohn D. Chapman of the Greenwich Country Club, 2 up and 1 to plav\\nGoing to the seventeenth, Chapman trapped his driv; andlst the hole the\\nmatch and the tournament. The qualifying medal was won by W hL E\\nWdfer%lf:ut Tn 3^^^^?-Sl l eighZ Xles!\\nIppedTo^rtSw^* -^;^-ke better than Donahue, but\\nGEORGIA AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nHili; r nK^ 7Ti^* ^^i^ championship of Georgia over the Druid\\nHills Golf course at Atlanta In the semi-final he defeated Bobby Jones,\\nL.l\\\\.r ^T^ ^T/ fi d^^^^^ed Tom Prescott, whose\\nlocal leputation for golf in Atlanta is almost at par with Jones Rainwater\\nKvnn^^^ Bobby Jones, Milton Dargan, Jr., and BowL\\nMaryon of Savannah tied in the qualifying round with 77.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0142.jp2"}, "143": {"fulltext": "Sl ALKINCS OKFICIAIi (JOLK (ailDH. 137\\nGOLF IN FLORIDA.\\nBeginning at the first golf hole in Jacksonville, one plays right down the\\nAtlantic coast to the eighteenth hole, say, somewhere around Key West,\\nover to the nineteenth hole in Havana, if so minded, back again and up\\nthe center and west coast of the state to the eighteenth hole over around\\nPensacola. Future generations probably will allude to Florida as the largest\\ngolf peninsula in the world.\\nWhen golf is completed in the North, with the coming of frost and snow,\\nthe golf season begins in Florida. The first Florida native who laughed at\\ngolf long since has learned better. If he does not play himself he is in the\\ngame in some way. Maybe he is a stage driver, perhaps he has a son who\\nis a caddy, and he may be just an ordinary spectator; but he has discov-\\nered that golf is bringing a great army of vacationists to Florida, and indi-\\nrectly, or directly, he is profiting by it.\\nThe old golf courses and the new are at Palm Beach, St. Augustine,\\nOrmond, Jacksonville, DeLand, Mountain Lake, St. Petersburg, Miami,\\nTampa, Belleair, Clearwater, Tarpon Springs, Fort Myers and other cities\\nand towns. They are no longer the crude courses which were first laid out\\nwith more desire to have the fact become public that a golf course existed,\\nthan to provide a golf course which was fitted for high class play.\\nThe experts can find tests of their skill that will give them all the excite-\\nment which they desire and which will improve their game by making\\ndemands upon their ability. There is sand, of course, because Florida is\\nsand. The green turf of New England is not indigenous, but there are\\ncourses, sand and all, which will try the golfer s dexterity to his limit.\\nThere are some courses on which turf has been cultivated which are get-\\nting along capitally, and there will be more, because more and more Florida\\nhas become the Mecca of the Eastern and Middle West golfer who can\\nfilch time to take a winter vacation.\\nIt must not be imagined that the sole sport in Florida during the winter\\nis golf. They play everything in the state, from pitching horseshoes up.\\nPolo, base ball, roque, croquet, tennis nothing is omitted.\\nThe test of golf in Florida is worthy the player, if the professionals are\\nto be believed. The very best of the Northern players who go to Florida\\nfind the courses over which they compete not to be of a type which affects\\ntheir game adversely. They find also abundance of competition, as there is\\nscarcely a tournament but enlists someone of prominence from the North\\nfor competition. Florida brings together golfers from the Middle West and\\nthe East who enjoy the novelty of meeting in competition, and both improve\\nby the rivalry of play. Wlien the active Northern season is on, local golfers\\noiften can ill afford the time to play in tournaments, and thus do the bulk\\nof their work on home links. In the South, where the players of two sec-\\ntions are bent on vacation and play combined, there is opportunity for\\nthem to meet on common ground under conditions new to both.\\nFlorida is very accessible because of the much improved railroad service.\\nIt is true that the high railroad tariffs are unpleasant and that they are\\nvig(\u00c2\u00bbrously criticised by travelers, but they are not likely to be readjusted\\nat once. The compensation for the high tariff cannot exactly be said to", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0143.jp2"}, "144": {"fulltext": "138 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nexist in the improved railroad service, because the improved service existed\\nbefore the high tariff was decreed and permitted. Were it not for the\\nimproved train service it would have been impossible for Florida to have\\nbecome such an attractive winter playground for at least half of the United\\nStates. Even as that declaration is made it is perhaps best to supplement\\nit by adding that the automobile has done its share to make Florida of\\nbetter access. At first the residents of the state were slow to meet the\\ngood roads necessity, perhaps for lack of funds, but the local acquisition\\nof automdbiles, as well as the travel which poured into the state by auto-\\nmobile, changed the local idea. Wherever possible the roads have been\\nimproved so that Florida can be traversed comfortably and quickly, as\\nagainst the days when the wheels of cars buried almost to their hubs in\\nloose sand, through which progress was made as if through thick and well\\npacked snow.\\nIt is something of a lark to make a trip through the state by automobile,\\ngolfing by the way, as the spirit moves. True, it will be advisable to be\\nsure that hotel accommodations are arranged in advance, but that does not\\nprevent the trip from being made. Young men will enjoy it, and there are\\nsome men who do not profess scarcity of years, who probably will have\\ntheir fun out of it, as well as the younger igeneration. Starting in at Jack-\\nsonville, good roads can be had to the south, to the west and to the north-\\nwest. It is mostly to the south that the travelers turn, looking ever for\\nwarmth. After a trip half way down the state, those who are inclined to\\ngo to the west coast can traverse Florida by good roads, and since the com-\\npletion of good roads out of Tampa to the southeast, those who are at the\\nextreme southern end of the peninsula can cross over to the west coast on\\ngood roads.\\nAll the way along there are golf links, and the temptation to remain in\\nFlorida all of the winter is great, if one be expert or novice with the driver\\nand the brassie.\\nBelleair Tournament.\\nL. B. Dickerson of Clearwater, Fla., a former Centre College foot ball\\nplayer, won the Belleair tournament at Belleair, Fla., January 21, 1921, by\\ndefeating Grantland Rice of Englewood, runner-up, by 3 and 2. Dickerson\\nled in the first eighteeen holes by 4, increasing thei lead to 5 at the second\\nbole in the afternoon. Rice won the fifth, sixth and seventh, but at the\\ntenth the Clearwater golfer regained his lead of 4. A. R. Horr, Englewood,\\nwon the qualifying round with 83.\\nKENTUCKY AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nOver the course of the Fort Mitchell Country Club at Covington, June\\n26. Henry B. Heyburn won the state championship from John Marshall. Jr.,\\non the thirty-seventh green. It was the fourth time that Marshall had been\\nrunner-up in the state competition. The thirty-six holes open contest was\\nwon by Robert Craigs, an Audubon amateur, with 150, six strokes better\\nthan John Brophy of Fort Mitchell.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0144.jp2"}, "145": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL (U)LF GIIIDK. 139\\nALABAMA AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nOn the links of the Montgomery (Ala.) Country Club, in September, the\\nstate championship was won by Files Crenshaw, Jr., a sixteen-year-old boy.\\nThe final was played with W. T. Seibels. In the morning round the latter\\nled by one hole. In the afternoon Crenshaw took the lead at the fifth, lose\\nit at the seventh, then won five holes in succession, scoring four pars aud\\na birdie. On the thirteenth, after Crenshaw had laid his second dead frr a\\n3 the match was conceded. Crenshaw also defeated Robert Gregory, c .iam-\\npion of 1919, in his march to the championship. C. A. Petrey won juali-\\nfying medal with 77.\\nCountry Club of Montgomery (Ala.) Invitation.\\nReuben Bush of New Orleans, former Southern champion, won the Coun-\\ntry Club of Alabama invitation tournament by 1 up on the nineteenth hole\\nfrom I. J. Osburn of Birmingham. Bush also won the qualifying round\\nwith score of 76.\\nMISSISSIPPI AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nOn the links of the Hattiesburg Country Club, W. E. Waro of the Green-\\nATOod Country Club won the championship of Mississippi. Otto Herwig of\\nthe Laurel Country Club was runner-up. Mr. Ware was champion in 1915.\\nPaul F. Allen of Hattiesburg won the qualifying round.\\nMississippi Women s Championship.\\nMrs. J. W. Armstrong of Jackson won the championship of Mississippi\\nfor women over the Hattiesburg Country Club course. She successfully\\ndefended a title which she has held for three years. She alsj won the medal\\nin the qualifying round. Mrs. E. H. Buckner of Hattiesburg was runner-up.\\nLOUISIANA STATE CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nJ. K. Wadley of the Shreveport Golf and Country Club won the state\\nchampionship of Louisiana at Shreveport by defeating J. Merriweather of\\nShreveport, 6 and 4. Jack Taylor of Shreveport won the open championship.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0145.jp2"}, "146": {"fulltext": "1. Ray Ball, Sunny Side Golf riub, Fro^no. 2. Mortie Dutro, Pebble Beach\\nGolf Club. 3, Donald McPlun ^on, S;nit:i l{osa Golf Club. 4, Earl Nagel, San\\nFrancisco. 5, A. O. Espiiioza, Oakland. 6, Peter Soutar, Beresford Country\\n(Uub, San Mateo. 7, Ian Macdonald, Stockton Golf and Country Club.\\nGROUP OF CALIFORNIA PROFES SIONALS.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0146.jp2"}, "147": {"fulltext": "si .\\\\j i)i.\\\\(;s oKFiciAL ;(tr.i (juidk. 141\\nGolf on the Pacific Coast\\nCALIFORNIA AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nI KEVIOUS WINNERS.\\nYoiir. Winner. Year. Winner.\\n1908\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Douglas Grant. San Francisco. 1914\u00e2\u0080\u009411. K. B. Davis, San Francisco.\\n1909 Campbell Wliyte, San Francisco. 1915 E. S. Armstrong, Midwick.\\n1910 Frank Newton, Claremont. 1910 Lawrence owing, JA)a Angeles.\\n1911\u00e2\u0080\u0094 E. S. Armstrong, Midwick. 1917\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Dr. C. H. Walter, San Jose.\\n1912 J. F. Neville, Claremont. 1919\u00e2\u0080\u0094 J. F. Neville, Claremont.\\n1913\u00e2\u0080\u0094 J. F. Neville, Claremont.\\nDr. Paul M. Hunter of the Midwick Country Club won the amateur\\nchampionship of California over the Pebble Beach course, at Del Monte,\\nSeptember 12, by defeating Ervin S. Armstrong, 6 to 4. After the twenty-\\nseventh hole Dr. Hunter won three holes in a row, virtually deciding the\\nmatch.\\nCalifornia Junior Championship.\\nE. B. Osborne, a 16-year-old boy of San Francisco, won the second annual\\nCalifornia junior championship over the Del Monte course, defeating Ashton\\nStanley, the first junior champion, in the final, 6 up and 5 to play. Osborne\\nwon the qualifying medal with 87 for eighteen holes.\\nSOUTHERN CALIFORNIA GOLF ASSOCIATION.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\n1900 C. E. Orr, Los Angeles C. C. 1910\u00e2\u0080\u0094 W. Frederickson. Los Angeles C. C.\\n1901 W. Fairbanks, Los Angeles C. C. 1911 Norman Macboth, Los Angeles 0. C.\\n1902 H. M. Sears, Los Angeles C. C. 1912 E. S. Armstrong. Annandale C. C.\\n1903 W. Fairbanks, Los Angeles C. C. 1913 Norman Macl etli. Los Angeles 0. C.\\n1904 W. K. Jewett, Los Angeles C. C. 1914 Carlton Wright. Annandale C. C.\\n1905 W. Fairbanks. Los Angeles C. C. 1915 E. S. Armstrong. Midwick C. C.\\n1906 W. Frederickson, Los Angeles C. C. 191fi Harold B. Lamb. Midwick C. C.\\n1907 Sterling Lines. Los Angeles C. C. 1917 W. W, Walton. Lo^i Angeles C. C.\\n1908 Paul Hnnter. Annandale C. 0. 1919 Douglas Grant. Burlingamo C. C.\\n1909 Paul Hunter, Annandale 0. 0. 1920\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Everett H. Seaver, Los Ang. C.C.\\nNORTHERN CALIFORNIA CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\nYear. Winner and Runner-up.\\n1910\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Dr. D. P. Fredericks (A. A. Cutlibertson).\\n1911\u00e2\u0080\u0094 F. A. Kales (John F. Neville).\\n1912\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Campbell D. Whyle (Dr. D. P. Fredericks).\\n1918\u00e2\u0080\u0094 John F. Neville (F. A. Kales).\\n1914\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Harry K. B. Davis (John F. Neville).\\n1915\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Robin Y. Hayne (H. Warner Sherwood).\\n1916 Douglas Grant (Roger D. Lapham).\\n1917 Douglas Grant (John F. Neville).\\n1918 Dr. D. P. Fredericks (Vincent Whitney).\\n1919 Robert L. Colfiiiiin. Jr. (Vincent Whitney).\\n1920\u00e2\u0080\u00948. L. Conliii, Jr. (Joliii F. Neville).\\nSan Francisco Women s Championship.\\nMrs. Hubert E. Law w\u00c2\u00ab)n the woinen .s rhanipionship of .San Francisco\\nover the IJnroln Park course, August 20, from Miss Alice flaiicliett, 6 and\\n.S. Mrs. Law. in the senii-final round, made a new course record with 76,\\nout in 34 and home in 42. Mrs. A. B. Swinnerton won the medal round\\nwith 82, one sttoke belter than Miss Hanchett.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0147.jp2"}, "148": {"fulltext": "142 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nPACIFIC NORTHWEST CHAMPIONSHIPS.\\nPREVIOUS WINNERS.\\nYear. Winner and Runner-up. Year. Winner and Runner-up.\\n1906\u00e2\u0080\u0094 C. K. Magill (J. Gillison, Jr.). 1912\u00e2\u0080\u0094 R. N. Hincks (I. F. Arbuckle).\\n1907\u00e2\u0080\u0094 T. S. Lippy (J. Gillison, Jr.). 1913\u00e2\u0080\u0094 A. V. Macan (B. J. Barker).\\n1908\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Geo. Ladd Munn (D. Gillespie). 1914\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Jack Neville (H. C. Bgan).\\n1909\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Douglas Grant (J. Gillison, Jr.). 1915\u00e2\u0080\u0094 H. C. Egan (Paul Ford).\\n1910\u00e2\u0080\u0094 R. H. Macley (H. S. Griggs). 1916\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Russell Smith (Paul Ford).\\n1911\u00e2\u0080\u0094 W. B. Mixter (R. D. Lapham). 1917\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Rudolph Wilhelm (H. A. Fleager).\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2Records previous to 1906 were not kept. 1919\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Claire Griswold (Clark Speirs).\\nIn the twentieth annual Pacific Northwest championship, held at Van-\\ncouver, two courses were used, those of the Shaughnessy Heights Golf Club\\nand the Vancouver Golf and Country Club. Davie Black of the Shaugh-\\nnessy Heights Club, playing both courses, which was compulsory, won the\\nopen championship with 296. Neil Christian, Tacoma Club, was the run-\\nner-up with 305. H. Chandler Egan, former American amateur champion,\\nfinished tenth with 311.\\nIn the amateur event Mr. Egan was more fortunate, as he won, 2 and 1,\\nfrom Rudolph Wilhelm of Portland, Ore. Paul Hunter of Pasadena, Cal.,\\nwon the qualifying round with 149.\\nThe ladies championship was won by Mrs. C. S. Sweeney of Vancouver\\nby 4 and 2 from Miss Frances Phepoe, runner-up. Mrs. Sweeney won the\\nqualifying round with 89. The new champion, formerly Miss Violet Pooley,\\nhad much golf experience in England. In one famous match Miss Cecil\\nLeitch barely defeated her by one hole.\\nOREGON AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nRudolph Wiilhelm of the Portland Golf Club again won the amateur cham-\\npionship of Oregon on the course of the Waverly Golf Club, at Portland.\\nThe field was large and included the best golfers of the Northwest. The\\ntournament took place in June, 1920. Russel Smith of Waverly, a former\\nholder of the Pacific Northwest championship, was runner-up. Wilhelm\\nwon by 9 and 8 in thirty-six holes. His morning round was 71. Dr. 0. F.\\nWilling of the Portland Golf Club won the qualifying round with 153 for\\nthirty-six holes. The Portland Golf Qub won the John G. Clemson trophy.\\nOREGON WOMEN S CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nMiss Phoebe Nell Tidmarsh of the Seattle (Wash.) Country Club won\\nthe women s championship of Oregon, 5 and 4, by defeating Mrs, Ilsa Del-\\nbruck on the course of the Waverly Golf Club. Mrs. Delbruck won the\\nqualifying round with a total of 107.\\nINLAND EMPIRE CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nClubs from the cities of Spokane, Walla Walla, Yakima, Moscow, Lewis-\\nton and Coeur d Alene comprise the Inland Empire circuit. At their\\ntournament, which was medal play for seventy -two holes, Dr. Harvey 5.\\nSmith of Spokane was winner, with Frank Sweeney, Spokane Country Clib,\\nrunner-up. Dr. Smith won on the second extra hole.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0148.jp2"}, "149": {"fulltext": ".S1 ALD1N(; S (H-M I( IA!, ;(U F GUIDLI. 143\\nGolf in Canada\\nCANADIAN AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS CHAMPIONS.\\nYear Winner, Runner-up and Where Held,\\n1895 T. H. Harley. Kingston A, Simpson, Ottawa, at Ottawa.\\n1896 Stewart Gillespie, Quebec, 4 and 3; W. A. Griffith, Quebec, at Quebec.\\n1897 W. A. H. Kerr, Toronto, 5 and 4 R. T. Henderson, Royal, at Montreal.\\n1898 Geo. S. Lyon, Rosedale, 12 and 11 P. G. H. Pattlson, Hamilton, at Toronto.\\n1899 Vere C. Brown. Rosedale, 5 and 3 Stewart Gillespie, Quebec, at Ottawa.\\n1900 Geo. S. Lyon, Rosedale, 1 up. 38 holes; G. W. MacDougall, Royal, at Montreal.\\n1901 W. A. H. Kerr. Toronto. 1 up. 38 holes; J. Percy Taylor. Royal, at Toronto.\\n1902 P. R. Martin, Hamilton, 1 up, 36 holes R. O. H. Cassels, Toronto, at Montreal.\\n1903 Geo. S. Lyon, Lambton. 10 and 8 M. 0. Cameron, Toronto, at Toronto.\\n1904 J. Percy Taylor, Montreal, 3 and 1 Geo. S. Lyon, Lambton, at Montreal.\\n1905 Geo. S. Lyon, Lambton, 12 and 11 Robt. S. Strath, Toronto, at Toronto.\\n1900 Geo. S. Lyon, Lambton, 6 and 4 Douglas Laird, Toronto, at Ottawa.\\n1907 Geo. S. Lyon, Lambton, 3 and 2 Prltz Martin. Hamilton, at Lambton.\\n1908 A. Wilson. Jr.. Montreal. 1 up; Prlta Martin, Hamilton, at Montreal.\\n1909 B. Legge. Toronto, 1 up G. P. Ross. Ottawa, at Toronto.\\n1910 Fritz Martin, Hamilton, 1 up, 37 holes; Geo. S. Lyon. Lambton, at Lambtoa.\\n1911 G. H. Hutton, Montreal, 1 up, 39 holes; A. E. Austin, Toronto, at Ottawa.\\n1912 Geo. S. Lyon. Lambton, 6 and 6; A. Hutcheson. Montreal, at Montreal.\\n1913 Geo. H. Turpln. Montreal. 1 up; Gerald Lees. Ottawa, at Toronto.\\n1914 Geo. S. Lvon. Lambton: Brice S. Evans, at Ottawa.\\niai9 William MeLuckie, Kanawaki; Geo. H. Turpln, Royal Montreal, at Lambton.\\nThe amateur championship of Canada for 1920 was won by C. B. Grier\\nof the Royal Montreal Club, on the Beaconsfield course, July 3, from T.\\nGillespie of the Calgary Golf and Country Club. The match was dormie 5\\non the thirty-first hole. The thirty-second was split in 5 and the Montreal\\nplayer acclaimed the winner of the title. William MeLuckie, winner of the\\nchampionship in 1919, was defeated by George S. Lyon in the second round.\\nIn the qualifying round W. J. Thompson of Mississauga was winner with a\\nscore of 153.\\nEntries were not quite so numerous as they had been in the previous\\nyear, but the list included the highest type of amateur golfers in the\\nDominion. Play started at top standard and continued high throughout the\\ntournament. There were players from the United States as well as from\\nthe Canadian clubs. Beaconsfield, with the largest club in Canada, has a\\nmost thoroughly interesting course of 6,000 yards.\\nSemi-finalists were J. Hubert McCulloch, Beaconsfield, and G. H. Turpin,\\nRoyal Montreal. Mississauga won the team trophy and, for the inter-\\nprovincial cup, Ontario beat Quebec. In the final Ontario beat the West.\\nThe most interesting round w\u00c2\u00abs the third, in which J. H. McCulloch\\ndefeated two former champions in one day George S. Lyon in the morning\\nand F. R. Martin of Hamilton in the afternoon. McCulloch is only eighteen\\nyears of age and Canadians expect him to be one of the star golfers of\\nDominion history. In the morning round Grier was pitted against J. T.\\nCuthbert. both of wlioin were fancied for the championship, and Grier won\\nthe match. 1 Tip. on the twentieth hole.\\nOn the following day McCulloch played a stiff game against Gillespie of\\nCalgary, but Vfh defeated. Gillespie was dormie 2 on the thirty-fourth", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0149.jp2"}, "150": {"fulltext": "K\\nCHARLES B. GRIER,\\nRoyal Montreal.\\nCanadian Amateur Champion.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0150.jp2"}, "151": {"fulltext": "Sl ALDINGS OBM MCIAL fJOLF GUIDK.\\n145\\nhole. MoCulIoch lost the next by making liis poorest play of the day,\\nimbedding his ball in the mud.\\nIn the finals Grier steadily played a little better than Gillespie from the\\nstart. The latter seemed to be affected by the heat, the atmosphere being\\nhumid and thick. The match ended on the thirty-second hole. The new\\nchampion was born in Montreal and is 32 years of age. At 17 he took his\\nfirst golf lessons from C. R. Murray of the Wesl mount Club. He has been\\na good golfer for the last ten years, but in 1920 came to his game more\\neffectively then ever.\\nUNITED STATES SENIORS vs. CANADIAN SENIORS.\\nIn the annual match between the United States and Canadian Seniors,\\nwhich was played over the course of the Royal Ottawa Club, September 10,\\nthe seniors from the United States won by the score of 20 to 15. William\\nClark, the United States Seniors champion, was pitted against George S.\\nLyon, and lost by 3 down. C. G. Heintzman defeated W. E. Truesdell,\\nformer United States champion, by 1 up. The results of the matches were\\nas follows:\\nUNITED STATES.\\nFrank Presbrey.. 1\\nWilliam Clark...\\nW. S. Kinnear...\\nW. E. Truesdell.\\nFred Snare 3\\nI). P. Kingsley..\\n(ieorge P. Hart.\\nFrank Wright... 2\\nC. G. W^aldo\\nE. .T. Hasse 3\\nFrancis Bacon... 3\\nA. M. Revell b\\nI. P. Prentiss 1\\n{;ol. J. E. Smith. 1\\nA. M. Wood 3\\nJ. E. Lancaster.\\nHugh Halsdell...\\nTotal\\nW. R. Baker....\\nGeorge Lyon 3\\n.T. L. Waller\\nG. Heintzman. 1\\nJ. H. McGregor.\\nDr. J. Courtenay\\nHon. M. Barrel.. 1\\nJoseph Wilson...\\nJudge Weir l\\nC. A. Bogart\\nRobert Gamble., ft\\nT. G. Poplar\\nC. T. Hollan\\nW. G. Ross\\nDr. McKendrick.\\nA. B. Evans 3\\nJ. E. Caldwell... :i\\nT..tal\\n.15\\nCANADIAN OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nPREVIOUS CHAMPIONS,\\nyear. Winner, Runner-up and Where Held.\\n1904\u00e2\u0080\u0094 J. H. Oke, Ottawa, 156; P. F. Barratt, at Montreal.\\n1905 G. Gumming, Toronto, 148 P. F. Barratt, at Toronto.\\n1906 C. Murray, Montreal, 170; Mr. T. B. Relth, G. Gumming and Alec Robertson\\ntied at 171, at Ottawa.\\n1907 P. F. Barratt, Lambton, 306; G. Gumming. Toronto, at Lambton.\\n1908\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Albert Murray. 300; Geo. Sargent, at Montreal.\\n1909 K. Keflfer, 309 G. Gumming, at Toronto.\\n1910 Daniel Kenny, 303 Mr. Geo. S. Lyon, at Lambton.\\n1911 C. R. Murray. 314; D. L. Black, at Ottawa.\\n1912 G. Sargent, 299; J. M. Barnes, at Rosedale.\\n1913 A. Murray, 295; Nicol Thompson and J. Burk. tied, at Montreal.\\n1914 K. Keffer. 300; fj. Gnraralne. at Toronto.\\nimO J. Douglas Edgar. 278; R. T. Jones (amateur), Karl Keffer and James Barnes,\\ntied, at Hamilton.\\nIn the thirteenth open championship of Canada, which was played on the\\nRivermead links at Ottawa, August 26 and 27, J. Douglas Edgar of Atlanta,\\nGa., repeated his victory of 1919. There were sixty-seven entries. Among\\nthem were C. B. Grier, Canadian amateur champion of 1920; George S.\\nLyon, the father of golf in Canada; Davis Black, the Pacific Coast cham-\\npion of Vancouver; the Messrs. Thompson of Toronto, and T. D. Armour\\nof Edinburgh, who won the French amateur championship from Cyril", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0151.jp2"}, "152": {"fulltext": "GBORJGiE S. LYON,\\nLambton.\\nCanadian Seniors Ciiampion.\\nL-evick, N. Y., Plioto.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0152.jp2"}, "153": {"fulltext": "Sl ALDlNt; S OFIK lAL GOLF GUIDK. 147\\nTolley. Mr. Armour was the first representative player, amateur or profes-\\nsional, from the United Kingdom to enter a Canadian tournament.\\nAt the end of the fourth round there was a triple tie of 298 between J.\\nDouglas Edgar, C. R. Murray of the Royal Montreal Club and T. D. Armour\\nof Edinburgh. In the play-off the largest gallery that ever had witnessed\\ngolf at Rivermead was present. Strangely enough, the result of the play-off\\nwas exactly in order as the start of the tournament, Edgar, with 73 on two\\nrounds; Murray, with 74, and Armour, with 75.\\nIn the first day s play George Ayton, Regina, led the field by two strokes.\\nBack of him was Armour with 72 for the morning and 76 for the afternoon.\\nThe latter score was attributed to carelessness in putting on the thirteenth\\ngreen, where he should have had a 5 but took 7. He missed a putt, play-\\ning with one hand, and critics thought this cost him the championship.\\nThe scores are as follows:\\nJ. D. Edgar, Atlanta, Ga... 151 147\u00e2\u0080\u0094298 W. J. Brazier, Stratford 164 157\u00e2\u0080\u0094321\\nC. R. Murray, Royal Mont.. 150 148\u00e2\u0080\u0094298 A. Desjardins, Oiitremont.. 164- 157\u00e2\u0080\u0094321\\nT. D. Armour, Edinburgh.... 149 149\u00e2\u0080\u0094298 George S. Lyon, Lambton.. 158 163\u00e2\u0080\u0094321\\nD. L. Black, Vancouver 157 144\u00e2\u0080\u0094301 J. B. Kinnear. Winnipeg.... 161 163\u00e2\u0080\u0094324\\nGeorge Ayton, Regina 147 155\u00e2\u0080\u0094302 F. P. Grant, Whitlock 168 156\u00e2\u0080\u0094324\\nKarl Keffer, Royal Ottawa.. 152 151\u00e2\u0080\u0094303 T. B. Reitli, Beaconsfleld.... 165 160\u00e2\u0080\u0094325\\nF. Adams, Winnipeg 158 147\u00e2\u0080\u0094305 V. B. Grier, Royal Montreal. 162 163\u00e2\u0080\u0094325\\nG. P. Shaw. Weston 152 153\u00e2\u0080\u0094305 J. Pritchard, Mississauga.. 166 159\u00e2\u0080\u0094325\\nN, Thompson, Hamilton 149 156\u00e2\u0080\u0094305 A. D, Desjardins, Laval 167 160\u00e2\u0080\u0094327\\nL. Tellier, Boston 156 159\u00e2\u0080\u0094305 G. H. Turpin, Royal Mont.. 159 168\u00e2\u0080\u0094327\\nK. Marsh, London 153 153\u00e2\u0080\u0094306 F. Freeman, Rosedale 166 162\u00e2\u0080\u0094328\\nW. J. Thompson, Mississauga 152 154\u00e2\u0080\u0094306 J. E. Caldwell, Rivermead.. 164 166\u00e2\u0080\u0094330\\nG. Gumming, Toronto 151 157\u00e2\u0080\u0094308 James Black, Beaconsfleld... 163 168\u00e2\u0080\u0094331\\nS. Thompson, Mississauga... 150 159\u00e2\u0080\u0094309 H. S. Foley, Sennevile 166 167\u00e2\u0080\u0094333\\nW. MeLuckie, Kaniwaki 153 156\u00e2\u0080\u0094309 B. L. Anderson. Lambton.... 173 160\u00e2\u0080\u0094333\\nF. Thompson. Mississauga... 155 155\u00e2\u0080\u0094310 S. K. Sinclair, Brockville... 166 172\u00e2\u0080\u0094338\\nA. H. Murray. Kanawaki.... 154 156\u00e2\u0080\u0094310 H. C. Monk, Royal Ottawa.. 168 171\u00e2\u0080\u0094339\\nR. McKenzie, Outremont 160 151\u00e2\u0080\u0094311 F. P. Glass, Mount Bruno... 173 168\u00e2\u0080\u0094341\\nG. C. Meikle, Halifax 160 151\u00e2\u0080\u0094311 W. H. Firstbrook, Lambton. 169 172\u00e2\u0080\u0094341\\nN. A. Bell. Toronto Hunt.... 151 162\u00e2\u0080\u0094313 J. M. Skead, Rivermead 166 179\u00e2\u0080\u0094345\\nA. Keeling, Sandwich 159 155\u00e2\u0080\u0094314 W. G. Wood, Toronto 177 174\u00e2\u0080\u0094351\\nJ. Newman, Kingston 160 154\u00e2\u0080\u0094314 W. Mulligan, Royal Ottawa. 177 176\u00e2\u0080\u0094353\\nF. E. Locke. Quebec 159 157\u00e2\u0080\u0094316 H. Towelson. Ottawa Hunt.. 183 170\u00e2\u0080\u0094353\\nF. Rickwood, Toronto 161 155\u00e2\u0080\u0094316 J. H. Clay, Rivermead 167 187\u00e2\u0080\u0094354\\nC. C. Fraser, Kaniwaki 154 163\u00e2\u0080\u0094317 G. P. Bropliy, Rivermead.... 175 179\u00e2\u0080\u0094354\\nW, Freeman, Lambton 160 158\u00e2\u0080\u0094318 K. Archibald. Rivermead.... 179 178\u00e2\u0080\u0094357\\nJ. Land. Royal Ottawa 161 157\u00e2\u0080\u0094318 H. S. Coulson, Toronto 176 182-358\\nD. Cuthbert, Grand Mere.... 161 158\u00e2\u0080\u0094319 Alf. Sims, Midland 182 179\u00e2\u0080\u0094361\\nP. Barrett. Weston 162 158\u00e2\u0080\u0094320 B. Tew, Lambton 188 180\u00e2\u0080\u0094368\\nR. Holden. Oshawa 156 164\u00e2\u0080\u0094320 H. Mulligan, Royal Ottawa. 191 186\u00e2\u0080\u0094377\\nA. S. Russell. Toronto 160 160\u00e2\u0080\u0094320\\nIn the play-off foj the triple tie the results were as follows:\\nJ. D. Edgar\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out.... 44344335 4\u00e2\u0080\u009434 In.... 35364365 4\u00e2\u0080\u009439\u00e2\u0080\u009473\\nR. Murray\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out.. 46444354 3\u00e2\u0080\u009437 In.... 5 5 3 4 4 3 4 5 4\u00e2\u0080\u009437\u00e2\u0080\u009474\\nT. D. Armour\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Out.. 44444444 6\u00e2\u0080\u009438 In.. ..44335337 5\u00e2\u0080\u009437\u00e2\u0080\u009475\\nCANADIAN PROFESSIONAL GOLFERS TOURNAMENT.\\nDavid L. Black of Shaughnessy Heights, Vancouver, captured the profes-\\nsional Canadian golfers title and the P. D. Ross Cup, for the third time in\\nsuccession, August 29, playing over the Royal Ottawa course. His total\\nwas 135, which was ten strokes better than that of the runner-up, G. Ayton\\nof Regina. Joe Land, one of the competitors, is an Indian boy. The scores\\nfollow", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0153.jp2"}, "154": {"fulltext": "^^U .y tva\\na^\u00c2\u00bbi^ if i\u00c2\u00bb^\\nlifffiiT\\nWlii\\nJ. DOUGLAS, EDGAR,\\nAtlanta, Ga.\\nCanadian Open Champion.\\nF. W. KENNEDY,\\nNew York.\\nPietzcker. St. Louis, Photo", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0154.jp2"}, "155": {"fulltext": "SrAT.lJINGS OFFIOIAIi GOI.F GUIDE.\\n149\\nly. Black. Vancouver 68 67\u00e2\u0080\u0094135 F.\\nAyton. Kegina 73 72\u00e2\u0080\u0094145 F.\\nMarsh, London Hum 70 78\u00e2\u0080\u0094148 A.\\nJ. Brazier. Stratford 72 76\u00e2\u0080\u0094148 F.\\nA. Bell. Toronto Hunt 75 74\u00e2\u0080\u0094149 A.\\nLand, Royal Ottawji 76 7;{\u00e2\u0080\u0094 149 A.\\nKeffer, Royal Ottawa 76 74\u00e2\u0080\u0094150 .1.\\nAdams, Winnipeg 77 73\u00e2\u0080\u0094150 .1.\\nF. Barrett, Weston 80 71\u00e2\u0080\u0094151 1).\\nThompson, Hamilton 75 77\u00e2\u0080\u0094152 F.\\nGumming, Toronto 78 74\u00e2\u0080\u0094152 F.\\nH. Murray. Kanawaki 76 76\u00e2\u0080\u0094152 H.\\nKealing, Sandwich 76 77\u00e2\u0080\u0094153 A.\\nNewman. Kingston 76 77\u00e2\u0080\u0094153 W.\\nM. Freeman, Lambton 80 77\u00e2\u0080\u0094157 H.\\nFreedman, Rosedale 78 91\u00e2\u0080\u0094159 *W.\\nB. Kinnear, Winnipeg 80 79\u00e2\u0080\u0094159 R.\\nRolden, Oshawa 82 77\u00e2\u0080\u0094159 \u00e2\u0080\u00a2H.\\nProfessionals assistants, disqualified.\\nP. Glass. Mount Bruno 82 77\u00e2\u0080\u0094159\\nRifkwood, Summitf 83 76-159\\nDespardin, L. Sur le Lac 79 81\u00e2\u0080\u0094160\\nSiuL-lair, Brockville 78 83\u00e2\u0080\u0094161\\nS. Russell, Lakeview 82 79\u00e2\u0080\u0094161\\nDesjardiu, Outremont 76 86\u00e2\u0080\u0094162\\nA. Black, Beaconsfield 79 83\u00e2\u0080\u0094162\\nPritchard, Mississauga 82 80 162\\nCutlibert, Grand Mere 85 87\u00e2\u0080\u0094172\\nLocke. Quebec 85 78-163\\nGrant, Whitlock 81 84\u00e2\u0080\u0094165\\nS. Foley, Senneville 82 84\u00e2\u0080\u0094166\\nSims, Midland 84 83\u00e2\u0080\u0094167\\nMulligan, Royal Ottawa... 86 82\u00e2\u0080\u0094168\\nTowlson, Ottawa Hunt. 85 85\u00e2\u0080\u0094170\\nMullen, Rivermead 88 84\u00e2\u0080\u0094172\\nTew, Lambton 88 92\u00e2\u0080\u0094180\\nMulligan, Royal Ottawa... 90 90\u00e2\u0080\u0094180\\nCANADIAN LADIES CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nMiss Alexa Stirling of Atlanta, Ga., invaded the Dominion, playing in the\\nCanadian ladies amateur championship, over the course of the Hamilton\\nGolf and Country Club, September 21 to 25, and winning the title by 5\\nand 3 from Miss Kate Robertson of Beaconsfield, runner-up. Miss Ada\\nMackenzie, former champion, led with the best gross score of 86. Miss\\nMackenzie lost in the semi-finals to Miss Robertson.\\nIn the final it was Canada against the United States, and a record gal-\\nlery followed the Misses Stirling and Robertson. The latter took the first\\nhole with a cleverly played 4. She over-approached the second and lost it,\\n6 to 5. The difficult third was also won by the United States champion\\nwith a perfectly played 4; the long fourth fell to the Canadian represent-\\native with a snappy 5; Miss Stirling, after a superb drive, took the fifth\\nwith a 4; at the short sixth Miss Robertson again squared the match, run-\\nning down a difficult putt for a 3; the seventh was halved in 5, and then\\ncame the tragedy. The eighth at Ancaster is one of the best one-shot holes\\nin Canada. Miss Robertson, having the honour, took wood and landing on\\nthe green, just rolled off the far edge beyond the flag. Miss Stirling fol-\\nlowed with an iron shot which was badly timed, landing her ball in the\\nformidable ravine guarding the green. Her second was just on the edge of\\nthe green and her third still left her a long putt. Miss Robertson s pitch-up\\nshot was a trifle strong, but hitting the back of the cup, rested some three\\nfeet from the hole. Her opponent, playing 4, missed the cup, but laid her\\na half stymie. With two for a win. Miss Robertson had only to play safe\\nand register an easy 4. Instead she went for 3, and knocking Miss Stir-\\nling s ball into the cup, the hole was halved. The ninth was halved, the\\nUnited States champion won the tenth, eleventh and twelfth: she halved\\nthe thirteenth, and winning the fourteenth and fifteenth (the latter with a\\nwonderful 3), for the first time in the history of the Canadian ladies golf\\nchampionship the title crossed the border to the tune of 5-3 victory.\\nIn the ladies team match, which is a part of championship week, the\\nToronto team, composed of Miss Sidney Pepler, Miss Joyce Hutttin. Miss\\nMarjory Fellows and Miss Marion Elmsley, won with 370. Teams from the\\nRoyal Montreal, Royal Ottawa, Beaconsfield, Kanawaki, Hamilton Nos. 1", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0155.jp2"}, "156": {"fulltext": "150 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nand 2, Lambton Nos. 1 and 2, St. Charles, Rosedale, London Hunt and\\nCountiy Club, Brantford Nos. 1 and 2 and Toronto No. 3 also competed.\\nRoyal Ottawa finished second with 395 and Beaconsfield third with 400.\\nCANADIAN SENIORS CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nFor the third time the Canadian Seniors tournament was won by George\\nS. Lyon, Lambton Golf and Country Club of Toronto. His score for the\\nbest gross, thirty-six holes, was 77,80 157. In 1919 he won the champion-\\nship at Lambton with 157, reversing the order of his going, taking 80 the\\nfirst day and 77 the second. The tournament was played over the Royal\\nOttawa course at Ottawa, which is not so long as that of Lambton. For\\nthe third time the Lord Shaughnessy Cup was won by Mr. Lyon. The\\nrunner-up in the tournament was J. L. Weller, St. Catharines, O nt., Hamil-\\nton Golf and Country Club, with 80,80^160.\\nToronto and District Championship.\\nW. J. Thompson, the well-known Mississauga Club player, won the\\nToronto and District championship over the course of the Toronto Golf\\nClub, June 18 and 19. George Cumming won the professional event. The\\nrecord in competition, both amateur and professional, was broken by Frank\\nThompson with a score of 72.\\nProvince of Quebec Championship.\\nFor the first time a championship was held for the Province of Quebec\\nin 1920. It was played over the course of the Country Club of Montreal,\\nJune 18 and 19. The women s championship was won by Mrs. Frank j\\nAhearn of the Royal Ottawa Club; the men s amateur championship by T. 1\\nB. Reith of the Beaconsfield Club; the professional championship by I\\nArthur Woodward, professional of the Country Club of Montreal. Mrs.?\\nAhearn s winning score of 90 was the lowest ever made by a woman on the\\nCountry Club course. Miss Kate Robertson, Beaconsfield, was runner-up.\\nMaritime Provinces Championship.\\nThe eighth annual championship of the Maritime Provinces, held on the]\\nlinks of the Riverside Golf and Country Club, St. John, N. B., August 3, 4,i\\n5 and 6, resulted in a victory for Gerald C. Meilke of the Brightwood Golf]\\nClub of Halifax, by 9 and- 8. J. M. Murphy was runner-up. Mr. Meilke\\nmade a new record for nine holes of 33. A. KeUie, AmJierst, won the\\n36-hole professional contest with 163 at thirty-six holes.\\nMaritime Provinces Ladies Championship.\\nFor the first time since 1913 the Maritime Provinces conducted a cham-\\npionship for ladies at the course of the Halifax Golf Club, beginning\\nAugust 23. The winner was Miss Edith Bauld of the Halifax Golf Club,\\nwith Mrs. Des Brisa of the Riverside Golf Club, St. John, N. B., runner-up.\\nMiss Bauld won, 6 and 5 to go. Miss Bauld had lowest gross score with 88,\\nten strokes better than her nearest competitor.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0156.jp2"}, "157": {"fulltext": "SI ALDINGS OFFICIAL (JOLF OITIDF. 151\\nAlberta Amateur Championship.\\nIn the annual championships for Alberta, which were played September\\n3-7 over the course of the Calgary Golf and Country Club, at Calgary, J.\\nMunro Hunter of Edmontt)n was winner by 5 and 4, with T. C. Morrison\\nof St. Andrews, Calgary, runner-up. Mr. Hunter and Bobby Mair, profes-\\nsional for the Bowness Club, Calgary, tied for the open with 157 strokes,\\nMair winning by 3 in the play-off.\\nMiss Esther Gardiner of St. Andrews won the ladies championship by\\n6 and 5, and the runner-up was Mrs. H. K. Reed of the Calgary Golf and\\nCountry Club.\\nManitoba Amateur Championship.\\nDouglas Laird of the St, Charles and Elmhurst Golf Club won the Mani-\\ntoba amateur championship by defeating H. E. Gow of the Norwood Club\\nat the thirty-eighth hole over the Elmhurst course. Thfe match was all\\nsquare at the thirty-sixth. The thirty-seventh was halved and the thirty-\\neighth went to Laird.\\nFrank Adams, professional of the St. Charles Country Club, Winnipeg,\\nwon the open cJiampionsiliip, September 11, over the courses of the St.\\nCharles, Elmhurst and Winnipeg clubs, with 231 strokes. The runner-up\\nwas Hugh Fletcher of the Elmhurst Club, three strokes behind the winner.\\nMrs. K. C. Allen of the St. Charles Country Club won the women s\\nchampionship of Manitoba, September 7, over the Elmhurst course by\\ndefeating Mrs. George T. Koester of the Elmhurst Club, 4 and 3.\\nSaskatchewan Championship.\\nThe winner of the Saskatchewan championship, held on the course of the\\nRegina Club, August 2-6, was A. A. Weir of Weyburn. He won by 4 and\\n2. J. P. Runciman of the Regina Club was runner-up. For five years Weir\\nhad been runner-up or semi-finalist.\\nIn the ladies championship Mrs. Parry of Regina regained the title\\nwhich she lost in 1914. Miss MacDonald of Regina, champion in 1919,\\nwas runner-up.\\nVancouver Championship.\\nE. Mountfield won the Vancouver championship from W. A. Wand by one\\nstroke over the Shaughnessy Heights course, June 5. His first round was\\nmade in 79 and his second in 77, a total of 156 for thirty-six holes. Forty-\\none players teed off. R. Symes was third with 158. the first three players\\nbeing separated in regular order by one stroke each.\\nBritish Columbia Championship.\\nR. Symes of the Shaughnessy Club won the championship of British\\nColumbia and the Bostock Cup, which is the championship trophy, over\\nthe links of the Shaughnessy Heights Club, at the thirty-seventh hole, April\\n3. The runner-up was H. P. Gardner of the Vancouver Golf and Country\\nClub. Messrs. Gardner and Mountefield, the latter of Burquitlam, tied for\\nthe medal with 78.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0157.jp2"}, "158": {"fulltext": "MISS CiECIL LEITCH,\\nBritish Ladies Champion.. 1914 and 1920, no championship having\\nbeen lield in the intervening years.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0158.jp2"}, "159": {"fulltext": "Sl ALl lNf;S OFIMCIAL (JOLF GTJIDH. 153\\nGolf in Great Britain\\nBRITISH AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nRobert A. Gardner of Cliicago. 111., failed to win the British amateur\\nchampionship, June 11, 1920, by losing the extra hole the thirty-seventh\\nto Cyril Tolley of Oxford University, over the course at Muirfield, Scotland,\\nin a sensational match which was witnessed by 3,000 persons.\\nThe match was a battle royal. At the end of the first round Gardner\\nwas 2 up. In the second round Tolley forged ahead and was 3 up, with\\nonly 4 to play. Gardner fought on doggedly, and with the spectators fairly\\nholding their breath, evened the match at the thirty-sixth hole. Then he\\nlost in playing off the next hole. An extended account of this tournament\\nwas published in the Golf Guide of 1920, this brief report being added\\nhere to complete the records of the year.\\nBRITISH OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nWalter Hagen and Jim Barnes were entrants from the United States in\\nthe British open championship, played over the course at Deal in June.\\nGeorge Duncan won with a total of 303. Hagen did not play up to his\\nstandard. He averaged 82 for the four rounds. Barnes played a much\\nstronger game. His average was 77. The runner-up in the tournament was\\nAlex Herd with a total of 305. Duncan went to the front by doing the\\nthird round in 71 and the final round in 72, giving him an aggregate of\\n303. His card on the last and decisive round was as follows:\\nOut 4 4 5 3 4 5 4 3 4\u00e2\u0080\u009435\\nIn 4 4 4 4 3 4 5 4 5\u00e2\u0080\u009437\u00e2\u0080\u009472\\nBarnes play in the third round was steady on the outward half, his first\\nmistake being at the seventh, where he pitched his third over the green\\ninto the long grass, but chipped back dead to the pin and got a 5. Going\\nto the ninth his second landed in ground under repair and he lifted with-\\nout penalty.\\nComing home, Barnes missed a yard putt at the sixteenth and again at\\nthe seventeenth. At the eighteenth he was twelve vards away in 3, but put\\nthe next down with perfect confidence. His card follows:\\nOut 4 4 5 3 4 4 5 3 5\u00e2\u0080\u009437\\nIn 4 4 4 4 4 5 6 5 4\u00e2\u0080\u009440\u00e2\u0080\u009477\\nAmerican hopes were mainly pinned on Barnes, who ended the second\\nround tied with the former champion, Alexander Herd, for second place,\\nwith a score of 153.\\nGeorge Duncan was thirteen strokes back of Abe Mitchell on the first\\nday. On the second day s test he picked up those thirteen strokes and\\ncollected four more a total of seventeen strokes in one day from one of\\nthe greatest golfers in the world. Mitcheirs sudden shift from 73 and 74\\nto an 84 shows how suddenly the tide turned. Barnes play was sound all\\nthe way through. In a 72-hole test he was only five strokes back of first\\nplace, which is ao wide margin over a long route. Barnes had every round", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0159.jp2"}, "160": {"fulltext": "154 SPALDING S OFFICIAL OOLF GUIDE.\\nunder 80. He had no bad round, but he failed to turn in any brilliant\\nround in the low 70 s, 74 being his best. As the conditions were extremely\\ntrying, with a blend of wind and rain, his four rounds of 79, 74, 77 and 78\\nrepresent an even, steady march, a faster pace than Vardon, Braid and\\nTaylor could follow.\\nGeorge Duncan is one of the most finished golfers in the world. In 1910\\nat St. Andrews, with a 73, 77 and 71, the latter the record for the course,\\nhe came a cropper on the fourth round with an 83, Braid and Herd win-\\nning first and second, respectively. In 1912 he won the open championship\\nof Belgium and in 1913 the French championship. He is thirty^seven years\\nold and was born in Aberdeenshire.\\nBRITISH LADIES* CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nThe British ladies tournament of 1920 was won by Miss Cecil Leitch on\\nMay 14, over the links of the Newcastle Golf Club on the east coast of\\nIreland, about an hour s ride from Belfast, Of the four American women\\ngolfers who entered the tournament. Miss Marion HoUins lasted longest.\\nShe was defeated in the fourth round. The four Americans competing\\nagainst the best of the English women golfers were Miss Hollins, Miss\\nMildred Caverly, Mrs. Clarence H. Vanderbeck and Miss Rosamond Sher-\\nwood. Miss Molly Griffiths was runner-up to Miss Leitch. A detailed\\nreport of this tournament was published in the 1920 Golf Guide, mention\\nbeing made here to complete the records of last year.\\nNEWS OF THE WORLD TOURNAMENT.\\nWith Ted Ray and Har^ Vardon playing in the United States, Abe\\nMitchell had two less formidable golfers to face in the 1920 News of the\\nWorld tournament over the course at Mid-Surrey. In the final match at\\nthirty-six holes he defeated Josh Taylor, a brother of J. H. Taylor, one of\\nthe greatest of Britain s old guard, lay 3 and 2. One surprise of the tour-\\nnament was the excellent playing of J. Ockenden, professional at Raynes\\nPark, In his first match Ockenden defeated James Braid, five times winner\\nof the open title, by 1 up. He won his second match from a younger player\\nand then faced George Duncan, the open champion, Duncan led by 2 up\\nat the turn, Ockenden took the lead at the seventeenth green, which\\nDuncan reached on his second with his opponent some distance to the left\\nin the rough. Ockenden pitched to within four feet of the cup and won\\nthe hole when Duncan took three putts. On the home hole Ockenden made\\na brilliant recovery from the rough to within a few feet of the edge of the\\ngreen and halved the hole to win, 1 up. In the next round he lost to\\nMitchell by 2 and 1.\\nThe defeat of Braid in the first round was but one of the surprises. J.\\nH. Taylor, another five times winner of the open championship, was toppled\\nover by Rowland Jones in his first match. Alex Herd, another former\\nchampion, survived the first round, but was put out in the second round on\\nthe nineteenth hole by F. Robson. This defeat of Herd meant the elimina-\\ntion of the three players who won the News of the World trophy the first", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0160.jp2"}, "161": {"fulltext": "\u00c2\u00abi Ai i\u00c2\u00bbi.\\\\ ;s (tFi ici.M. )LF cm DM. 155\\nsix times it was put in competition, beginning in 1903, Braid and Taylor\\nbeing the other two to share in the six former victories.\\nIn the final between Taylor and Mitchell, the former led by three holes\\nin the first six. Mitchell then began to strike his stride. For the second\\nnine he required only thirty-five strokes and they were even at the finish\\nof eighteen holes. Mitchell was out in 37 in the afternoon, wliich \u00e2\u0080\u00a2:ave\\nhim a lead of three holes. He held this to the finish.\\nUnited States Golfers Lose.\\nIn an inter-team match, over the course of the Sunningdale Club, Eng-\\nland, Robert A. Gardner of Chicago and Nelson Whitney of New Orleans\\nwere beaten by Angus Hanbrow and Guy Campbell by one hole. The total\\nresult was four matches to one in favor of the English golfers.\\nInternational Four-ball Match.\\nA four-ball match between Walter Hagen and Jim Barnes, representing\\nthe United States, and George Duncan and Abe Mitchell,, representing\\nGreat Britain, played over the Addington course, June 10, was won by the\\nAmericans by 3 and 2.\\nHagen and Barnes Lose.\\nIn a foursome played at Deal, which brought together Walter Hagen and\\nJim Barnes of the United States against Harry Vardon and Tom William-\\nson of Great Britain, the American golfers were beaten by 3 and 1. The\\nscore were Vardon 71, Williamson 74, Barnes 74, Hagen 78. A huge crowd\\nfollowed the match.\\nBRITISH CHAMPIONS.\\nAMATEUR.\\nYear. Winner. Runner-up. Where Played\\n1886 Horace Hutchinson H. A. Lamb St. Andrew*\\n1887 Horace Hutchinson John Ball, Jr\\\\ Hoylake\\n1888 John Ball, Jr J. E. Laidlay Prestwlck\\n1889 J. E. Laidlay L. M. Balfour St. Andrew*\\n1890 John Ball, Jr J. E. Laidlay Hoylake\\n1891 J. E. Laidlay H. H. Hilton St. Andrew*\\n1892 John Ball, Jr H. H. Hilton Sandwich\\n1893 Peter Anderson J. E. Laidlay Prestwlck\\n1894 John Ball, Jr S. M. Ferguson Hoylake\\n1895 L. Balfour Melville John Ball. Jr St. Andrews\\n,1896 F. G. Talt H. H. Hilton Sandwich\\n1897 A. J. T. Allan James Robb Muirfleld\\n1898 F. 0. Talt S. M. Ferguson Hoylake\\n1899 John Ball, Jr F. G. Tait Prestwlck\\n1900 H. H. Hilton James Robb Sandwich\\n1901 H. H. Hilton John L. Low St. Andrews\\n1902 Charles Hutchings S. H. Fry Hoylake\\n1903 Robert Maxwell H. G. Hutchinson Muirfleld\\n1904 W. J. Travis Edward Blackwell Sandwich\\n1905 A. G. Barry Hon. O. Scott Prestwlck\\n1906 J. Robb C. C. Llngen Hoylake\\n1907 John Ball, Jr C. A. Palmer St. Andrews\\n1908 E. A. Lassen H, E. Taylor Sandwich\\n1909 R. Maxwell Capt, Hutchinson Muirfleld\\n1910 John Ball. Jr C. Aylmer Hoylake\\n1911 H. H. Hilton E. A. Larseii ...Prestwlck\\n1912 John Ball, Jr Abe Mitcbell Westward Ho\\n1913 H. Hilton R. Harrlg. St. Andrews\\n1814 J. L. Jfenklns C. L. Hezlet Sandwich", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0161.jp2"}, "162": {"fulltext": "156 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nPROFESSIONAL.\\nYear. Winner. Where Played. Score.\\n1860 Willie Park, Sr., Musselburgh Prestwlck 174\\n1861 Tom Morris, Sr., Prestwick L restwick 163\\n1862 Tom Morris, Sr., Prestwick Prestwick 163\\n1863 Willie Park, Sr. Musselburgh Prestwick 168\\n1864 Tom Morris, Sr., Prestwick Prestwick 167\\n1865 A. Strath, St. Andrews Prestwick 162\\n1866 Willie Park, Sr., Musselburgh Prestwick 169\\n1867 Tom Morris, Sr., St. Andrews Prestwick 170\\n1868 Tom Morris, Jr., St. Andrews Prestwick 154\\n1869 Tom Morris, Jr., St. Andrews Prestwick 157\\n1870* Tom Morris, Jr., St. Andrews Prestwick 149\\n1872 Tom Morris, Jr., St. Andrews Prestwick 166\\n1873 Tom Kidd, St. Andrews St. Andrews 179\\n1874 Mungo Park, Musselburgh Musselburgh 159\\n1875 Willie Park, Sr., Musselburgh Prestwick 166\\n1876 R. Martin, St. Andrews St. Andrews 176\\n1877 Jamie Anderson, St. Andrews Musselburgh 160\\n1878 Jamie Anderson, St. Andrews Prestwick 157\\n1879 Jamie Anderson, St. Andrews St. Andrews 170\\n1880 R. Ferguson, Musselburgh Musselburgh 162\\n1881 R. Ferguson, Musselburgh Prestwick 170\\n1882 R. Ferguson, Musselburgh St. Andrews 171\\n1883t Willie Pernie, Dumfries Musselburgh 159\\n1884 Jack Simpson, Carnoustie Prestwick 160\\nIfiSft R. Martin, St. Andrews St. Andreww 171\\n1886 D. Brown. Musselburgh Musselburgh 157\\n1887 Willie Park, Jr.. Musselburgh Prestwick 161\\n1888 Jack Burns, Warwick St. Andrews 171\\n1889t Willie Park. Jr., Musselburgh Musselburgh 155\\n1890 John Ball. Royal Liverpool Prestwick 164\\n1891\u00c2\u00a7 H. Kirkaldy. St. Andrews St. Andrews 166\\n1892 H. H. Hilton, Royal Liverpool Muirfield 305\\n1893 W. Auchterlonie, St. Andrews Prestwick 322\\n1894 J. H. Taylor, Winchester Sandwich 326\\n1895 J. H. Taylor, Winchester St. Andrews 322\\n1896 Sarry Vardon, Ganton Muirfield 316\\n1897 H. H. Hilton, Royal Liverpool Hovlake 314\\n1898 Harry Vardon, Ganton. Prestwick 307\\n1899 Harry Vardon, Ganton Sandwich 310\\n1900 J. H. Taylor, Richmond St. Andrews 309\\n1901 James Braid. Romford Muirfield .H09\\n1902 A. Herd. Huddersfleld Hoylake r^n-\\n1903 Harry Vardon. Totteridee Prestwick 300\\n1904 Jack White. Sunnlngdnle Sandwich 296\\n1905 James Braid. Walton Heath St. Andrews 318\\n1906 James Braid. Walton Heath Muirfield 300\\n1907 A. Massy, La Boulie Hovlake 312\\n1908 .Tames Braid, Walton Heath Prestwick 29]\\n1909 J. H. Taylor, Richmond Deal 295\\n1910 James Braid, Walton Heath St. Andrews 299\\n191111 Harry Vardon, Totteridge Sandwich 303\\n1912 Ed Ray. Oxhey Muirfield 295\\n1913 J. H. Taylor. Richmond Hoylake 304\\n1914 Harry Vardon Prestwick 306\\nBelt won outright and replaced by cup after a year s interval, t After a\\ntie with R. Ferguson, Musselburgh. After a tie with Andrew Kirkaldy.\\nS Extended to seventy-two holes after this year. Vardon tied with J. Tl.\\nTaylor; these competitors played two extra deciding rounds when the scores\\nwere: Vardon 157. Taylor 161. If After a tie with A. Massy.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0162.jp2"}, "163": {"fulltext": "Sl ALDlNcrs OIFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 157\\nBRITISH LADY CHAMPIONS.\\nwinners and Runner-up Since the Institution of the Open Championship\\n1893 Lady Margaret Scott (winner), at St. Annes (38 entries).\\nMiss Issette Pearson runner-up\\n1894 Lady Margaret Scott (winner), at LIttlestone (64 entries).\\nMiss Issette Pearson (runner-up).\\n1895 Lady Margaret Scott (winner), at Portrush (85 entries).\\nMiss E. Lythgoe (runner-up).\\n1896 Miss Amy Pascoe (winner), at Hoylake; (82 entries).\\nMiss L. Thomson (runner-up).\\n1897 Miss Edith Orr (winner), at Gullane; (101 entries)\\nMiss Orr (runner-up).\\n1898 Miss L. Thomson (winner), at Yarmouth; (77 entries).\\nMiss E. Nevlle (runner-up).\\n1899 Miss May Hezlet (winner), at Newcastle, Ireland; (77 entrle8\\nMiss Maglll (runnet-up).\\n1900 Miss Rhona Adair (winner), at Westward Ho! (79 entries).\\nMiss Nevlle (runner-up).\\n1901 Miss M. Graham (winner), at Aberdovey (44 entries).\\nMiss Rhona Adair i runner-up).\\n1902 Miss May Hezlet (winner after a tie), at D^al (110 entries).\\nMiss B. Nevlle (runner-up).\\n1903 Miss Rhona Adair (winner), at Portrush; (76 entries).\\nMiss Walker-Leigh (ninner-up).\\n1904 Miss Lottie Dod (winner), at Troon; (95 entries).\\nMiss May Hezlet (runner-up).\\n1905 Miss Bertha Thompson (winner), at Cromer; (137 entries).\\nMiss M. E. Stuart (runner-up).\\n1906 Mrs. Kennlon (winner), at Burnham (111 entries).\\nMiss Bertha Thompson (runner-up).\\n1907 Miss May Hezlet (winner), at Newcastle, Ireland; (110 entries).\\nMiss Florence Hezlet (runner-up).\\n1908 Miss Titterton (winner after a tie), at St. Andrews; (148 entries).\\nMiss Dorothy Campbell (runner-up).\\n1909 Miss Dorothy Campbell (winner), at Blrkdale; (143 entries).\\nMiss Florence Hezlet (runner-up).\\n1910 Miss E. Grant-Suttle (winner), at Westward Ho! (120 entries).\\nMiss L. Moore (runner-up).\\n1911 Miss Dorothy Campbell (winner), at Portrush; (114 entries).\\nMiss Violet Hezlet (runner-up).\\n1912 Miss G. Ravenscroft (winner), at Tumberry (118 entries).\\nMiss S. Temple (runner-ap).\\n1918 Miss Muriel Dodd (winner), at St. Annes; (127 entries).\\nMiss Chubb (mnner-np).\\n1914 Miss Cecil Leitch (winner), at Hunstanton; (166 entries).\\nMiss G. Ravenscroft (runner-up).", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0163.jp2"}, "164": {"fulltext": "158 Kl ALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nForeign Championships\\nFRENCH AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nThomas D. Armour of Edinburgh won the French amateur championship\\nover the famous course at La Boulie by 3 and 2. The runner-up was Cyril\\nTolley of England, British amateur champion. In the final the first hole\\nwas an odd affair. Each of the players hit three balls from the tee.\\nArmour s first shot apparently was out of bounds and he immediately hit\\nanother ball, which actually did go out of bounds. Tolley also hit two out.\\nSubsequently Armour s first ball was discovered on the course, with the\\nresult that he won the hole with ease.\\nFRENCH OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nWalter Hagen, the United States entrant, won the French open cham-\\npionship on the links of La Boulie, July 7, by defeating Lafitte of Biarritz\\nin a play-off for the title. Hagen s total score for the two rounds of the\\nplay-off was 150, while Lafitte took 154. The tournament proper had\\nfinished with a total score of 298 for each of them.\\nAUSTRALIAN AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nFor the first time a resident of New South Wales won the amateur golf\\nchampionship at Sydney. In one of his rounds he made 70 over the Ken-\\nsington course. This card read: Out 4 4 4 4 5 3 3 3 4 34. In 5 3 4\\n4 5 3 3 4 5\u00e2\u0080\u009436.\\nSOUTH AFRICAN CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nL. B. Waters won the South African championship at Johannesburg with\\nrounds of 76, 77, 75 and 76\u00e2\u0080\u0094 total 304. He was champion in 1903, 1904\\nand 1907. H. Gordon Stewart, Cape Town, won the amateur championship\\nwith 82. 76, 79 and 78 total 315. Amateur championships in South Africa\\nare decided by medal instead of match play.\\nPHILIPPINES CHAMPIONSHIP.\\nT. C. McGregor won the Philippines championship for 1920. He was a\\ncontender for the British golf championship in 1913, being eliminated in an\\neariy round by Francis Ouimet. He had low score on the course of the\\nManila Golf Club with a total of 313 in seventy-two holes medal play. W.\\nZ. Smith was second to McGregor, with 315. He broke the Manila record\\nfor eighteen holes with a 71. He led the field by seven strokes at the end\\nof the first thirty-six holes, but fell off in the last thirty-six holes and lost\\nthe title by two strokes. Par for the course is 68,", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0164.jp2"}, "165": {"fulltext": "yi ALDINGS OFFICIAL (iOLF GUIDE.\\n159\\nCalkins System of HandicappincJ\\nUsed by the United States Golf Association\\nReport of Club,\\nI. DIRECTIONS FOR COMPUTING PAR.\\nHoles up to 250 yards inclusive,\\npar is 3\\nHoles 251 to 445 yards inclusive,\\npar is 4.\\nHoles 44G to 600 yards inclusive,\\npar is 5.\\nHoles 601 yards and upwards, par\\nis 6.\\nPar means perfect play without flukes and under ordinary weather condi-\\ntions, always allowing two strokes on each putting green.\\nThe above figures are not arbitrary, because some allowance should be\\nmade for the configuration of the ground and any other difficult or unusual\\nconditions. So also should be considered the severity of the hazards,\\nespecially on a hole where the par is doubtful. If on any hole the par is\\nmore or less than the length of the hole would indicate, state the reason\\nunder Remarks.\\nEach hole should be measured from the middle of the ^ee to the center\\nof the green, following an air line as nearly as possible.\\nII.\\nPAR TABLE FOR THE COURSE.\\nHole\\nYards\\nU.^G.A.\\nRemarks Concerninsr\\nNature of Hole\\nHole\\nYards\\nU.S^.A.\\nRemarks Concerning\\nNature of Hole\\n1\\n10\\n2\\n11\\n3\\n12\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n17\\n9\\n18\\nTotal\\nTotal\\nTotal\\nOut\\nTotal\\n18 Ho\\nAmateur Record Made by Date.\\nProfessional Recofd Made by Date.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0165.jp2"}, "166": {"fulltext": "160 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nIII. HOW TO HANDICAP PLAYERS.\\nHaving fixed the par of your course as indicated, and having ascertained\\nthe best average score of your players, obtained by taking the average of a\\nplayer s best three scores, you can, by referencie to the Calkins table, easily\\nascertain the handicap which each player should properly have. For ex-\\nample If John Smith s best average score on your course is 76 and the par\\nof your course is 75, then John Smith should receive a handicap of 1.\\nCALKINS SYSTEM FOR CALCULATING HANDICAPS\\nBASED ON PAR.\\nThe principal feature of this system is that not only is the good player\\nhandicapped because he is a good player, but the bad player is also handi-\\ncapped because he is a bad player. The reason is this The object of handi-\\ncapping is to put all players on the same level, and if an allowance of a\\ncertain number of strokes is to be made to the less skillful player because\\nhe cannot play as well, some allowance ought to be made to the more skillful\\nplayer because he cannot improve as much. The old method of handicapping,\\nin all cases on the exact difference between the Par for the links and the\\naverage of a player s best three scores, takes into consideration only the\\nadvantage held by the good player, namely, his superior skill. It overlooks\\nthe advantage held by the bad player, namely, a greater possibility of im-\\nprovement. Theoretically, a club handicap list should be so made up that\\neach player has as good a chance to win as any other but no better, whenever\\na competition is held. But, as handicaps cannot be readjusted daily, it is\\nevident that the chances will not really be equalized unless some measure is\\ntaken of relative probabilities of improvement in play.\\nThe original Handicap Table placed at scratch a player whose Best Score\\nAverage, i. e., average best play, was par at his home course. This of course\\nmade it necessary for an Association Handicap Committee to raise (from\\none to five strokes) the handicaps as returned from clubs having short\\ncourses the reason being that the shorter the course the greater the pre-\\ndominance of short holes and of easy holes, and the easier to play in par\\nfigures. By his revision of 1910, Mr. Calkins makes an allowance for this\\nwell recognized fact in the Handicap Table itself. Courses having a par of\\n74 or 75 and 76 are regarded as standard courses, and those who can play\\nin par figures are placed at scratch. But on all other courses the scratch\\nplayer must do better than par. It will be seen that a Best Score Average\\nof par gives a handicap of one stroke where the par of the course is 72 or 73\\ntwo strokes, where the par is 70 or 71 three strokes, where it is 68 or 69\\nfour strokes, where it is 66 or 67 and five strokes, where it is 65. By this\\nnew feature, players handicapped according to the Table at any club, will\\nprobably be able as a general rule to play with the same handicap, or nearly\\nso, at any other club.\\nIn Applying the System, Follow These Directions\\n(1) The first thing to do is to ascertain each player s Best Score Average.\\nThis does not mean his average game, but his average best game. No player\\nshould have any chance to win a handicap event, except when playing in his\\nbest form. For example, a scratch man is sometimes off his game, playing\\nperhaps six or eight strokes above his true form. But it is evident that a\\nhandicap list will be worse than useless if it attempts to make any allowance\\nfor the tendency common to all players to fall off, at one time or another,\\nfrom true form. If such an allowance were to be made it would be impera-\\ntive to provide machinery for the automatic reduction of the handicap of a\\nplayer upon his sudden and unexpected arrival at his real form. For the\\nsame reason a club handicapper should never raise a player s handicap, unt l\\nhe proves by constant competition through the whole or greater part of a\\nseason that his play is permanently inferior to what it was and not that io\\nis only temporarily off his game.\\nf", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0166.jp2"}, "167": {"fulltext": "SrAI.DING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\n161\\nThe Best Score Average means a player s average hest game. If, for\\nexample, the Par of jour links is 72, aiul a player made last season a 75, a\\n76 and a 77, his Best Score Average would Ite 76. The same would he true\\nif he also made a 72 once, since an e.xceptionally low score, not duplicated,\\nmay he disregarded. In general, this liest Score Average is ohtained hy tak-\\ning the average of a player s hest three scores.\\n(2) We suggest that you mail at once reply-postals to your memhers,\\nasking them to state their hest live scores, in competition and in practice\\nrounds during the past season. This is necessary if you have not preserved\\nyour cluh records and even if you have, it is advisahle, since it will give you\\npractice-rouud scores. We suggest this form of request Members of this\\nHANDICAP TABLE.\\nBest\\nHaiidi\\ncaps\\nScore\\nAverage\\nPar 65 66\\n67\\n68 69\\n70\\n71\\n72\\n73\\n74\\n75\\n76\\n62\\n63\\n1....\\n64\\nJ.... 1.\\n65\\nJ.... 3.\\n..1..\\n66\\ni.... 4.\\n..3..\\n1\\n67\\n7.... 5.\\n4.\\n1..\\n.+1\\n68\\ni\\ni.... 6.\\n..5..\\nL\\n2..\\n0..\\n-f 1\\n69\\nJ\\nI.... 7.\\n..6..\\n4\\n3..\\n1..\\n0..\\n+1\\n70\\n7.\\n..7..\\n5... 4..\\n.2..\\n1..\\n+1.\\n4-1\\n71\\n....1(\\n8.\\n..7..\\n6... 5..\\n3\\n..2..\\n0..\\n+1..\\n+2\\n72\\n...1\\nI 9.\\n..8..\\n6.... 6..\\n4.\\n..3..\\n1.\\n0..\\n.+1..\\n+2\\n73\\n....1\\nI. ...10.\\n9..\\n7.... 6..\\n..5..\\n..4..\\n2.\\n1..\\n.-fl..\\n.+2\\n74\\nIJ\\nI. ...10.\\n..10..\\n8.... 7..\\n5.\\n..5..\\n3\\n2,.\\n0..\\n+1..\\n.-1-1\\n75\\n...K\\nJ 11.\\n..10..\\n9.... 8..\\n6..\\n6\\n..4..\\n.3..\\n1..\\n0..\\n.+1\\n76\\n...U\\nL...12.\\n..11.\\n9... 9.\\n7.\\n..6..\\n..5..\\n4.\\n.2..\\n1..\\n77\\n1^\\nL...13.\\n..12..\\n.10. 9.\\n8..\\n..7..\\n..5..\\n.5..\\n.3..\\n2.\\n78\\n...u\\n)....13.\\n..13..\\n.11... .10.\\n..8..\\n8..\\n..6..\\n5..\\n..4..\\n3.\\n2\\n79\\n...1(\\nJ. ...14.\\n..13..\\n..12... .11..\\n..9..\\n..8..\\n7..\\n6..\\n..4..\\n..4..\\n3\\n80\\n.1\\nr....i5.\\n..14..\\n.\u00e2\u0080\u00a2.12. ..12.\\n.10..\\n..9..\\n8..\\n..7..\\n5.\\n4.\\n4\\n81\\nr\\nr....i6.\\n..15..\\n..13.. .12.\\n..11..\\n..10..\\n8..\\n..8..\\nC.\\n..5..\\n4\\n82\\nAi\\ni....l6.\\n..16..\\n..14. ...13.\\n..11..\\n..11..\\n..9..\\n..8..\\n7.\\n..6..\\n5\\n83\\n...li\\n)....17.\\n..16..\\n..15 14.\\n..12..\\n..11..\\n..10..\\n9..\\n7.\\n7..\\n6\\n84\\n...2(\\n)....18.\\n..17..\\n15 15\\n..13..\\n..12..\\n..11..\\n..10..\\n8..\\n7..\\n7\\n85\\n...2\\nL....19.\\n..18.\\n..16 15.\\n14\\n..13..\\n..11..\\n..11..\\n9..\\n8..\\n7\\n86\\n.2\\n1....20.\\n..19..\\n.17 16.\\n..14..\\n..14..\\n..12..\\n..11..\\n..10..\\n9..\\n8\\n87\\n...21\\n2... 20.\\n..20..\\n..18.. ..17.\\n15\\n..14..\\n13\\n..12..\\n..10..\\n..10..\\n9\\n88\\n..21\\nJ. ...21.\\n..20..\\n.19 18.\\n..16..\\n..15..\\n..14..\\n..13..\\n.11..\\n..10..\\n.10\\n89\\n.2-\\n1....22.\\n..21..\\n.19 19.\\n..17..\\n..16..\\n..14..\\n..14..\\n-.12..\\n..11..\\n.10\\n90\\n...2.\\n....23.\\n..22..\\n.20 19.\\n..18..\\n..17..\\n..15..\\n..14..\\n..13..\\n..12..\\n.11\\n91\\n.2.\\n....24.\\n..23..\\n.21\\n....20.\\n..18..\\n..18..\\n..16..\\n..15..\\n..13..\\n..13..\\n..12\\n92\\n..2(\\n....24.\\n..24..\\n.22 21.\\n..19..\\n..18..\\n..17..\\n..16..\\n..14..\\n13\\n.13\\n93\\n.2\\nr....25.\\n..24..\\n.23.... 22\\n..20..\\n..19..\\n..18..\\n..17..\\n..15..\\n14\\n.13\\n94\\n....26.\\n..25..\\n.23... 23..\\n..21..\\n..20..\\n..18..\\n..18..\\n..16..\\n..15..\\n.14\\n95\\n....27.\\n..26..\\n.24 23.\\n.22..\\n..21..\\n..19..\\n..18..\\n..17..\\n..16..\\n15\\n96\\n..27..\\n.25... 24..\\n..22..\\n..22..\\n..20..\\n..19..\\n..17..\\n..17..\\n.16\\n97\\n..26.. .25.\\n..23..\\n..22..\\n..21..\\n..20..\\n..18..\\n..17..\\n.17\\n98\\n..27.... 26.\\n..24..\\n..23..\\n..22..\\n..21..\\n..19..\\n..18..\\n..17\\n99\\n27.\\n..25..\\n..24.\\n..22..\\n.22..\\n..20..\\n..19.\\n..18\\n100\\n..26..\\n..25..\\n..23..\\n..22..\\n..21..\\n..20..\\n..19\\n101\\n..26..\\n..26..\\n..24..\\n..23..\\n..21..\\n..21..\\n..20\\n102\\n..27..\\n.26..\\n..25..\\n..24..\\n..22..\\n..21..\\n..21\\n103\\n..27..\\n..26..\\n.25..\\n..23..\\n..22.\\n.21\\n104\\n..26..\\n..26..\\n.24\\n.23\\n.22\\n105\\n..27..\\n..26..\\n..25..\\n..24.:\\n..23\\n106\\n..27..\\n25\\n25\\n.24\\n107\\n.26\\n..25..\\n..26..\\n25\\n108\\n..27..\\n..25\\n109\\n27\\n2fi\\n110\\n.27", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0167.jp2"}, "168": {"fulltext": "^I ALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\ncird thlii^iest\\\\vl- shorts duv^^^^ on the reply\\nwere made in competition or during pr^acticl ?oSSds ?f^ 7^^^^^^\\nseis ok b^tTnol^U\u00c2\u00b0:2eJSfnTab?u? h^fm^^froVSo^^f^^^^ P-t\\nhaps justified in calculating his Best IJoreXe^raJifr^^ *^e per-\\nedge as to his game, though it i? well to cut nff f ^fL general knowl-\\non the safe side^ You should use TnusuardutlS frsucJ a ^as e\\nhiii^i hfndSp ^To SS e ial rnfSJrel!? L ^^o ld not give\\ntheoretically, should stan at scratch -the hnfiV%^ handicap. All playTrs!\\nplayer to show that he is entftlJd tA n hP^^^^\u00c2\u00b0 ^^nPJ always on the\\nand unfair handicapping if the ve^ygeJJrarSi i.f^^^ 9H \u00c2\u00abf bad\\nmember with a high handican nff^^^^\u00c2\u00bb,f v^I ^^^i^^ of starting a new\\ndown at his own co?ven1?ncef fefnTup a few nH.^e^^o.^V\\nthat you should allot no handicaps whfch von ^l^^^ 7^?- submit\\nmuch better to leave such playe?s S vou? S^?^ not know to be safe. It is\\ncan obtain them by furnishLg you with data f^nm whT.w ^^^y\\n(5) You are sometimes justified in takinTnfhTfr- P\\nsuch as a man s age. With a youn? plavef whn h*oc\u00c2\u00b0P consideration,\\nIt IS sometimes well to reduce his BfSt Wo 7^2 b?? coming on fast\\ntwo below that which is produced by yoS?|viJaS^nf^h?i^h^\\nIn the case of a man beyond middle n^p^if J i^^^ bis best three scores,\\nskill which he has never been able Vo lmr.7^ attained a degree of\\nng his actual Best Score Ave^all to XTc^r^t cllculat-\\nthat he has little or no chalce to improve\\nof ^ti;^ TesftS sc^^re^f i/dTh^en^?/1f a^^v^d JSK^\\n?rS?er^Be1rl?o?e^i-Vg^e^\\nrnemL! S ^L S.^% u ^rlZ^ ^^P^^betical list of the\\nplayer s name his Best Score Average asPi i\u00c2\u00ab+-S^^\\n^t^er data, and in accordance witrdirections 1 o^ T and\\nthe Handicap Table will show in each else thi ri.^A A 5 glance at\\nTable for the Best Score Average and ?hpn I^^J handicap. Look at the\\nvertical column headed by fiie pfr wh^Vh look for the handicap in the\\nlinks. (The Table gfves handicaps un f o S?Zl^ P^^ for you?\\nclub events.) The nameV XmVui ^iP.J u ^iH And useful for\\ngroup to eo4ist o^f K^rs t^o^^aV^^ Ve%SSr5fa^nlU\\nonVh\\\\b?sisTf arub1e ri^u^ d?^L^ ^rS5ltfpt^ th\\\\%??^\\nffiicl^pSl^* ^^-^^--bole^P-^^^^\\n0/ Bogey, the foregoing Tau! can he u,fd Sll p handicap on the haHx\\nm such case the iroper table can PnSlA^^i^^^ ^o^^ ^aw 76\\nWhenever a player improZs htrgZelt m^Z\\nAverage will come down, and a nlance at th. %^f ^h\\nreduced handicap. To get the lest result, ?L ^rt/i?^^!,. P -oper\\nkeep a card index showing tjtc records nf^\\nThis will enable the committee tlkJ^Pn n^ii^l^J competitions.\\nAverage. Club committeeT are alio advised tn nfnlf^ i^^^ ^f.\\nwho do not return cards in tfrnlZ nnJli^-t^ adopt a rule penalizing players\\nhar such players troTplZnnln\\\\hrnlTS^ ^1\\noftener a player competes at Ms home club fh^l;. IV general, the\\nhandicapped in accordance with fh^l^nJ^fl the more exactly may he be\\nquently he competes Ze greatr the T/lZl-^^^^^^ ^O ^^f^c-\\nsomewhat below\\\\hai whichT^rod^ceTbTth^^^^^ ^^^P", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0168.jp2"}, "169": {"fulltext": "Sl .vr.DTNr.S OFFiriAL OOT.F GUIDE. 163\\nShort Hole and Lond Hole Handicapping\\nHOLES OF START.\\nBy B. R. Abbott.\\nReprinted from Golf, April 1914.\\nAs is well known, no common method is followed by golf clubs in selecting\\nthe holes at which strokes are granted in Handicap Match Play.\\nIn forming their stroke-tables, some clubs for example, a well-known\\nMetropolitan club assign the strokes to the long holes first, proceeding\\nthrough tJie holes of medium length to the short holes and allotting the\\nstrokes to the first and second halves of the course alternately.\\nOther clubs select the holes in the same manner, but pay little heed to\\nthe equal division of the strokes between the two halves of the course.\\nAnother club will give the first stroke on the longest hole, the second stroke\\non the shortest hole, the third stroke on the second longest hole, the fourth\\nstroke on the second shortest hole, and so on for a few more strokes, finally\\nchoosing the holes apparently at random.\\nStill other clubs consider primarily, not the length or difl3culty of the\\nholes, but the equal division of the strokes between the two halves of the\\ncourse. In short, every club adopts its own theory in forming its stroke-\\ntable.\\nWhat does such diversity of method indicate? How far do the statistics of\\nall the handicap matches played by a club in its tournaments during an\\nentire season, or, better, for many seasons, bear out the truth of the theory\\nadopted by the club in the formation of its stroke-table?\\nThe purpose of handicapping is to put on an equal footing all the players\\nin a club who have any title whatever to win matches. With perfect handi-\\ncapping of individual players, that theory of selecting the holes in the forma-\\ntion of a stroke-table would seem best according to which the matches won\\nduring a season or during many seasons are divided most evenly between\\nthe inferior players (all receiving strokes) and the superior players (all\\ngranting strokes), due regard being paid to the results at dififerent allow-\\nances. The excellence of the theory can be determined in the long run only\\nby actual statistics. Here is no room for nineteenth hole vagaries.\\nSo far as I have been able to ascertain, such a prolonged test of a stroke-\\ntable by the use of actual statistics has never been made but, of course, in\\nthis matter I may be mistaken.\\nHowever, such a test for three years, 1911, 1912 and 1913, has been car-\\nried on in the New York Golf Club of Van Cortlandt Park. In the year\\n1911 a new stroke-table was adopted, in which the strokes were assigned\\nfirst to the shortest holes and then to the medium and the longer holes, due\\nregard being paid both to the position of the holes In the first and the second\\nhalves of the course and to their relative difiiculty. The theory upon which\\nthe table was based is that, since in the system of equalizing the playing of\\ntwo men by means of strokes granted at certain holes to the inferior player,\\nthe inferior is given not a positive advantage such as he is given in the holes\\nof start system, but merely an additional chance, that is. as he must either\\nwin or halve the hole by means of the stroke granted In order that the stroke\\nmay be of advantage to him, the strokes should be granted first on the\\neasiest, that Is. In general, on the shortest holes, then on the medium, and\\nfinally on the long.\\nThus the short hole system resembles slightly the holes of start system.\\nBy the latter system the Inferior player is givt-n a positive handicap by being\\ngranted one, two, three, etc., holes up at the beginning of the match. Con-\\nsequently, in the short hole system, even if the inferior player were conceded\\nthe one or two^ shortest holes outright, he would be only slightly better off\\nthan in the holes of start system. Tn the latter system the superior player", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0169.jp2"}, "170": {"fulltext": "164\\nSPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nTABLE 1.\\n2\\n1^\\n1!\\nShort Hole System 1\\nMatches won b7\\nLong Hole Systeml\\nMatches won by\\nHoles of Start System\\nMatches won by\\nTear\\nj\\n1\\n1\\nJ\\ni\\nc\\n6a\\n1\\n1\\nj\\n50\\n1\\n1\\n1\\n1\\n1\\n31\\n23\\n35\\n89\\n22\\n22\\n27\\n5\\n4\\n6\\n15\\n34\\n87\\n22\\n23\\n27\\n72\\n6\\n3\\n1\\n1\\n34\\ni\\n94\\n20\\n1912\\n4\\n1913\\n10\\nTotals at\\n18\\n2\\n2\\n2\\n2\\nu\\n22\\n62\\n51\\n23\\n64\\n2\\n4\\n10\\n16\\n25\\n00\\n20\\n27\\n25\\n72\\n10\\n1\\n1\\n14\\n25\\n20\\n23\\nif\\n1912\\n4\\n\\\\lii\\ns\\nTotals at\\n13\\n1911\\n3\\n3\\n2\\n2\\nIt\\n16\\n50\\n17\\n17\\n24\\n58\\n2\\n7\\n9\\n.13\\n20\\n16\\n61\\n2\\n2\\n11\\n16\\n16\\nIt\\n1913\\nTotals at\\n\\\\l\\n1911\\n4\\n3\\n3\\n17\\n13\\n45\\n16\\n13\\n11\\n40\\n5\\n1\\n14\\n15\\n12\\n^1\\n18\\n15\\n14\\n47\\n13\\n2\\n2\\n16\\n15\\n13\\n44\\nJ8\\n44\\n4-\\n1912\\n1913\\n2\\nB\\nTotals at\\n11\\n1911\\n5\\n4\\n4\\n11\\nII\\n11\\n14\\n38\\n3\\n1\\n7\\n13\\n14\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a215\\n42\\n14\\n36\\n6\\n3\\n12\\nIt\\n42\\n11\\n31\\n-4-\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a21912\\nH\\nTotals at\\n11\\n1911\\n6\\n6\\n5\\n15\\n16\\n14\\n8\\n2I\\n4\\n3\\n3\\n10\\n14\\n17\\n3I\\n15\\n7\\n2I\\n4\\n3\\n17\\n40\\n14\\n1\\n27\\n1912\\n1913 t.\\nTotals at\\n6\\n1911\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a27\\n7\\n5\\n5\\nr\\n16\\n9\\n12\\n2I\\n2\\n2\\n4\\n7\\n7\\n,1\\n1^4\\n7\\n30\\n2\\n2\\n9\\n8\\n2\\n.19\\n7\\n11\\n.1\\n1912\\n2\\nTotals at\\n1\\n1911\\n8\\n8\\n6\\n6\\n1\\n20\\n5\\n4\\n7\\n16\\n2\\n1\\n3\\nt\\n4\\n15\\nt\\n7\\n20\\n2\\n6\\n6\\n4\\n16\\ni\\n7\\n18\\n1\\n1913\\n2\\nTotals at\\n5\\n1911\\n9\\n9\\n7\\n7\\n5\\n15\\n8\\nI\\n12\\n3\\n5\\n5\\n1\\n14\\n7\\ni\\n12\\n7\\n5\\n7\\n19\\n7\\n4\\n12\\n1\\n1913\\nTotals at\\n1\\n1911\\n10\\n10\\n8\\n8\\n5\\n5\\n1\\n13\\n1\\nf\\n4\\n3\\n2\\n2\\n7\\n8\\n1\\n18\\n4\\ni\\n9\\n6\\n1\\n15\\n1\\ni9i2\\n1\\n1913 r\\nTotals nt\\n2\\n1911\\n11\\n11\\n8\\nS\\n1\\n1\\nI\\n2\\n2\\nI\\n1\\n1\\n2\\n4\\n2\\n2\\nt\\n4\\n2\\n2\\n4\\n8\\n1912\\n1913\\nTotals at\\n1911\\n12\\n12\\n9\\n9\\n1\\n1\\n2\\n3\\n3\\n1\\n7\\n1\\n1\\n2\\n1\\n2\\n8\\n4\\n2\\n6\\n1\\n1\\n2\\n2\\n2\\n4\\n8\\n2\\n6\\nI\\n3913^\\nKtaisai\\n1\\nJ911\\n13\\n13\\n10\\n10\\n1\\nI\\n3\\n1\\n2\\n6\\n1\\n3\\n2\\n5\\n1\\n1\\n3\\n3\\n2\\n5\\n1913\\nTotals at\\n1911\\n14\\nn\\n11\\nI\\n1\\n1\\n4\\n1\\na\\n1\\n1\\nI\\n1\\n3\\n4\\n1\\n1\\n4\\nI\\n1913\\nTotals at\\n1911\\n15\\n15\\nIL\\n11\\n1\\n1\\n1\\n1\\nI\\n1\\n1\\n1\\n1\\nI\\n1912\\n1913\\nTotals at\\n1911\\n18\\n16\\n12\\n12\\n1\\nI\\n1\\n1\\n1\\n1\\n1\\n1\\n2\\nX\\n1\\n1812\\n1913\\nTotals at\\nIB-\\nIS\\n14\\n14\\n1\\n1\\n2\\n1\\n1\\nI\\n1\\n1\\n1\\n1\\n1912\\n1913\\nTotals at\\n1911\\n19\\n19\\n14\\n14\\n2\\n2\\n1\\n1\\n1\\n1\\ni\\n2\\nIs\\ns\\n1912\\n1913\\nrouu at", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0170.jp2"}, "171": {"fulltext": "RPALDING-.S OFFICIAL \u00c2\u00abOLF GUIDE. ir.5\\nhas the full eighteen holes In which to win back the holes granted to the\\ninferior, while in the short hole system he would have only one or two holes\\nfewer than eighteen to win back the holes conceded to the inferior player.\\nHowever, according to the statistics, the inferior player by no means wins\\nall of the shortest holes to say nothing of the rather short holes.\\nIf it would seem illogical in the case ofa large number of strokes granted\\nto the inferior player to defer the strokes on the longest holes to the last,\\nthe fallacy is only apparent, not real, inasmuch as a single stroke granted\\non a hole of five hundred yards or more would not be of the least advantage\\nto a poor player. He probably could not win such a hole with even two\\nstrokes. Also, the number of matches played with large allowances of strokes\\nis probably very small, since, in most clubs, the players are divided into\\nclasses A, B and C, or into first, second and third sixteens.\\nOn the other hand, in the long hole system, in the case of a player receiv-\\ning say fifteen or sixteen strokes, not to grant him strokes on the two very\\nshort holes found on the majority of courses is to take away from him, or,\\nat least to decrease, his chances of winning what may be for him the easiest\\nholes on the course.\\nA record was carefully kept during 1911, 1912, and 1913 of all the matches\\nplayed with handicaps in which the bye holes were played out, a total of\\n883. The matches were played by the short hole system, but the results were\\ntabulated also according to the long hole and the holes of start systems.\\nIn the case of the latter system the table used by a well-known Metropolitan\\nclub was followed. According to this, in the case of a difference between the\\nhandicaps of the two players of 1 or 2, the inferior player starts 1 hole up\\nwith a difference of 3 or 4, 2 holes up 5 or 6, 3 holes 7 or 8, 4 holes 9 or\\n10, 5 holes 11 to 14, 6 holes 15 to 18, 7 holes 19 to 25, 8 holes 26 to 36,\\n9 holes.\\nThe handicaps of the individual players were fixed in accordance with\\nthe Calkins system and were carefully revised each month. The allowance\\nof strokes granted the inferior player was equal to three-fourths of the dif-\\nference between the handicaps of the two players.\\nThe results of the 883 matches are as follows\\nBy the short hole system, the inferior won 395 matches, the superior 398\\nmatches, and 90- matches were tied, a balance of 3 matches in favor of the\\nsuperior.\\nBy the long hole system, the inferior won 384 matches, the superior 420\\nmatches, and 79 matches were halved, a balance of 36 matches in favor of\\nthe superior.\\nBy the holes of start system, the inferior won 414 matches, the superior\\n382 matches, and 87 matches were tied, a balance of 32 matches in favor of\\nthe Inferior.\\nThe differences between handicaps ranged from 1 to 19 the allowance of\\nstrokes in the short and the long hole systems from 1 to 14 the allowances\\nof holes in the holes of start system from 1 to 8.\\nAlthough the results for the period of three years In the case of the short\\nhole system are remarkable, the superior winning only three more matches\\nthan the inferior and 90 matches being halved, the results for each year\\nbeing fairly uniform, no claim is made for the general excellence of the short\\nhole system. In fact, all of the systems are faulty when the various dif-\\nferences are taken by themselves. To some extent, this faultiness is due to\\nthe fact that fractions of ^4 or more count as 1, and fractions of less than\\nare rejected.\\nThus, with a difference of 1 between handicaps, the inferior receives V4\\nof a stroke more than the of a stroke to which, strictly speaking, he is\\nentitled. With a difference of 2, he receives 2 strokes, or 2-4 of a stroke in\\nexcess. With a difference of 3. he receives 2 strokes, or of a stroke less\\nthan what he is entitled to. With a difference of 4, he receives exactly three\\nstrokes. This series is repeated with the following four differences of 5, 6, 7\\nand 8, and so on.\\nThere is a remarkable gain for the inferior noticeable In both the short\\nhole and long hole systems, up to a difference of ten. when he receives more\\nthan his exact ftactional allowance and a corresponding loss when he loses", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0171.jp2"}, "172": {"fulltext": "166\\nSPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nthe stroke to which he is entitled. This same varying loss and gain lo\\nnoticeable in the holes of start system. In all three systems it would prob-\\nably be more just not to grant the one stroke in the case of a difference\\nbetween handicaps of one. Nearly always the inferior wins more than his\\nfair share of the matches, and by a comfortable margin. The statistics, not\\nhere printed, show that it would be more just not to grant the single stroke,\\nor at least a full stroke.\\nThe majority of the holes on the Van Cortlandt course are of medium\\nlength very few are what may be termed long holes. In view of the fact\\nthat the superior won by the long hole system 36 matches more than the\\ninferior and by the short hole system only 3 matches more, it seems likely\\nthat on courses containing several very long holes, a considerable number of\\nlong holes and few medium holes, such as is the case generally on courses\\nof 6,000 yards, the inferior player would have by the long hole system still\\nless chance against the superior than on the course of 5,340 yards on which\\nthe matches here recorded were played.\\nTABLE 2\\nIHfferencti\\nShort Hole System\\nMatches woo by\\nLong Hole System\\nMatches won by\\n.2\\n1 1\\nHoles of Start System\\nMatches won by\\n1 1\\n5 05 S\\nTotals at 1\\n2 and Jess\\n3\\n89 71 15*\\n151 ISo 31\\n201 19.3 40\\n246 233 54\\n87\\n147\\n194\\n233\\n72 16\\n252 48\\n94\\nIII\\n252\\n63\\n1.31\\n182\\n226\\n!3\u00c2\u00ab1\\nit\\n5\\n6\\n7\\n8\\n285 271 61\\n322 297 71\\n.338 325 la\\n3.- 8 341 79\\n275\\nM4\\n3\u00c2\u00ab0\\n345\\n288 54\\n314 62\\n344 64\\n364 68\\n294\\nin\\n369\\n2.%7\\n284\\n307\\n325\\n78\\n83\\n10\\n11\\n12\\n373 353 83\\n382 366 87\\n385 375 87\\n387 382 89\\n3T 9\\n\u00e2\u0096\u00a0MO\\n37.3\\n376 74\\n394 75\\n402 75\\n408 77\\n388\\n397\\n401\\n405\\n337\\n352\\n360\\n30C\\n84\\n86\\n86\\nS7\\n13\\n14\\n15\\n16\\n389 388 89\\n390 394 89\\n391 395 89\\n393 396 S9\\n376\\n379\\n380\\n382\\n413 77\\n417 77\\n417 78\\n418 78\\n408\\n409\\n377\\n378\\nK7\\nn-\\n8-\\n1\u00c2\u00ab\\n19\\n395 306 89\\n395i 398 90\\n3S3\\n3S4\\n\u00e2\u0096\u00a0^18 79\\n420 79\\nt\\\\t\\n.370\\n382\\n87\\n87\\nExcess in favor of\\n3\\n36\\n32-\\nA grand total of 883 matches.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0172.jp2"}, "173": {"fulltext": "SI AT.DIXr.S OFF iriAL OOT.F GUIDE. 167\\nGlossary of Technical Terms Employed\\nin the Game of Golf\\nAddressing the ball Putting one s self in position to strike the ball.\\nApproach When the player is sufficiently near the hole to be able to drive\\nthe ball to the putting green his strolie is called the approach shot,\\nAway Ball to be played first.\\nBaff\u00e2\u0080\u0094 To strilje the ground with the sole of the club-head in playing, and\\nso send ball in air.\\nBaffy A wooden club to play lofting shots.\\nBeoat Rush, bent-grass.\\nBirdie One under par for a hole.\\nBisque A handicap with a stipulated number of strokes to be taken at the\\noption of the recipient.\\nBogey Usually given the title of colonel, A phantom who is credited with a\\ncertain score for each hole, against which score each player is\\ncompeting.\\nBone A piece of ram s horn inserted In the sole of the club to prevent It\\nfrom splitting.\\nBrassie A wooden club with a brass sole,\\nBreak-cluh An obstacle lying near a ball of such a nature as might break the\\nclub when striking at the ball.\\nBulger A club with a convex face.\\nBunker Generally any rough, hazardous ground more strictly, a sandpit.\\nBye Any hole or holes that remain to be played after the match la finished.\\nThey are played for singly, unless the sides agree to make another\\nmatch of them.\\nCaddie\u00e2\u0080\u0094 A person who carries the golfer s clubs, and who can usually give him\\nadvice in regard to the game.\\nCleek An Iron-headed club of considerable driving power, and sometimet used\\nfor putting.\\nClub The implement with which the ball is struck. The heads are of three\\nkinds wood, wood with a brass sole, and Iron only.\\nCourse That portion of the links on which the game ought to be played,\\ngenerally bounded on either side by rough ground or other hazard.\\nCup\u00e2\u0080\u0094 A small hole In the course, usually one made by the stroke of some\\nprevious player.\\nDead A ball is said to be dead when It lies so near the hole that the\\nputt Is a dead certainty. A ball is said to fall dead when It does\\nnot run after alighting.\\nDormy One side is said to be dormy when It Is as many holes ahead as\\nthere remain holes to play. CThls word is probably derived from the\\nFrench, like many Scottish terms.)\\nDraw To drive widely to the left hand. (Identical in its results with\\nHook and Screw.)\\nDriver See Play-Club.\\nEagle Two under par for a hole.\\nFace First, the slope of a bunker or hillock; second, the part of the club-\\nhead which strikes the ball.\\nFairway Short, cut grass between the tee and the green.\\nFlat A club is said to be flat when Its head is at a very oDTose ancM\\nto the shaft.\\nFog Moss, rank grass.\\nFore! A warning cry to any person in the way of the stroke. (Cov^racted\\nfrom before,\\nFoursome A match in which two play on each side.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0173.jp2"}, "174": {"fulltext": "168 {SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GTIIDF.\\nGobble A rapid, straight putt Into the hole, such that, had the ball not\\ngone in. It would have gone some distance beyond.\\nGrassed Said of a club whose face is slightly spooned or sloped backward.\\nGreen First, the whole linlis; second, the putting-ground around the different\\nholes.\\nGrip\u00e2\u0080\u0094 First, the part of the handle covered with leather, by which the club\\nis grasped; second, the grasp Itself.\\nHalf-one A handicap of a strolce deducted every second hole.\\nHalf-shot Less than a full swing.\\nHalved A hole Is said to be halved when each side taices the same number\\nof strokes. A halved match is a drawn game that is, the players\\nhave proved to be equal.\\nHanging A hanging ball is one which lies on a downward slope.\\nHazard A general term for bunker, long grass, road, water, whin, molehill,\\nor other bad ground.\\nHead This word Is a Ptrlkirg specimen of incongruity and mixed metaphor.\\nA head is the lowest part of a club, and possesses, among other mys-\\nterious characteristics, a sole, a heel, a toe or nose, a neck and a face.\\nHeel First, the part of the head nearest the shaft; second, to hit from this\\npart, and send tht ball to the right hand.\\nHole First, the four and one-quarter-inch hole lined with Iron; the holes\\ngoing out are marked with white, and those coming in, with red flags.\\nSecond, the whole space between any two of these.\\nHole-Out Final stroke.\\nHonor The right to play off f rst from the tee.\\nHook See Draw.\\nHose The socket in Iron-headed clubs, into which the wooden shaft flts.\\nIron A club made of the material Its name implies, with the head more or\\nless laid back to loft a ball. A most deadly weapon in a good player s\\nhands.\\nJerk In Jerking, the club should strike with a quick cut behind the ball,\\nand stop on reaching the ground.\\nLie First, the inclination of a club when held on the ground in a natural\\nposition for striking; second, the situation of a ball, good or bad.\\nLike See under Odds.\\nLike-as-we-Iie When both sides have played the same number of strokes.\\nLinks The open downs or heath on which golf is played.\\nLoft To elevate the ball.\\nLong odds When a player has to play a stroke more than his adversary, who\\nis much farther on that is, nearer the hole.\\nMade A player, or his ball, is said to be made when his ball is sufficiently\\nnear the hole to be played on the putting green next shot.\\nMashie A club which, both in Its make and Its uses, is a compromise\\nbetween the niblic and the Iron.\\nMatch First, the sides playing against each other; second, the game Itself.\\nMatch Play Competition by hole.\\nMedal Play Competition by strokes.\\nMiss the globe To fail to strike the ball, either by swinging right over the\\ntop of it, or by hitting the ground behind it, is counted a stroke.\\nNeck The crook of the head where it joins the shaft.\\nNassau Best score out; best score in; best score of the match.\\nNiblic A small, narrow-headed, heavy Iron club, used when the ball lies in\\nbad places, as ruts or whins, etc.\\nNose The point or front portion of the club-head.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0174.jp2"}, "175": {"fulltext": "Sl ALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDK. 169\\nOdds First, means the handicap given by a strong player to a weaker In a\\nsingle match, consisting of either one, two, three or more holes to\\nstart with, or one stroke oer hole, or every alternate hole, or at\\nevery third hole, etc.; Second, to have played the odds Is to have\\nplayed one stroke more than your adversary. Some other terms used In\\ncounting the game will be most easily explained here altogether. If\\nyour opponent has played oue stroke more than you that Is, the\\nodds your next stroke will be the like; If two strokes more that\\nIs, the two more your next stroke will be the one off two;\\nIf three more, the one off three, and so on.\\nOne-off-two, One-off-three, etc. See under Odds.\\nPar Perfect score for a hole.\\nPlay-club A wooden-headed club, with full-length shaft, more or less supple;\\nwith It the ball can be driven to the greatest distance. It Is used\\nwhen the ball lies well.\\nPress To strive to recover lost ground by special hard bitting a very dan-\\ngerous thing to attempt.\\nPutt To play the delicate game close to the hole. (Pronounced u as\\nIn but.)\\nPutter An upright, stiff-shafted, wooden-headed cluD (some use iron beads),\\nused when the ball is on the putting green.\\nRind A strip of cloth under the leather to thicken the grip.\\nRough Long grass on either side of the course.\\nRub on the green A favorable or unfavorable knock to the ball, for which\\nno penalty is imposed, and which must be submitted to.\\nScare The narrow part of the club head by which it is glued to the handle.\\nSclaff When the club-head strikes the ground behind the ball and follows on\\nwith a ricochet.\\nScruff Slightly razing the grass in striking.\\nSet A full complement of clubs.\\nShaft The stick or handle of the club.\\nSlice Ball cut so as to give left to right spin which veers sharply to the\\nright In a curve after It has transversed the larger portion of its ulti-\\nmate distance.\\nSole^The flat bottom of the club-head.\\nSpoons Wooden-headed clubs of three lengths long, middle and short; the\\nhead is scooped, so as to loft the ball.\\nSpring The degree of suppleness in the shaft.\\nSquare\u00e2\u0080\u0094 When the game stands evenly balanced, neither side being any boles\\nahead.\\nStance The position of the player s feet when addressing himself to the ball.\\nSteal To hole an unlikely putt from a distance, but not by a gobble.\\nStroke The act of hitting the ball with the club, or the attempt to do so.\\nStymie When your opponent s ball lies \\\\u the line of your putt.\\nSwing\u00e2\u0080\u0094 The sweep of the club In driving.\\nSwipe\u00e2\u0080\u0094 A full driving stroke.\\nTee\u00e2\u0080\u0094 The pat of sand on which the ball is placed for the first stroke\\neach hole.\\nThird A handicap of a stroke deducted every third hole.\\nThreesome One playing his own ball against two playing one ball as in a\\nfoursome.\\nToe Another name for the nose of the club.\\nTop To hit the above its center.\\nTwo-more, Three-more, etc. See under Odds.\\nUpright rliib is said to be upright when its head is not at a very obtuse\\nangle to the shaft.\\nWhins Furze or gorse.\\nWTiipping The pitched twine uniting the head and handle.\\nWriit ahot Less then half shot, generally played with an iron club.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0175.jp2"}, "176": {"fulltext": "170 SPALUINGS OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nGolf History at a Glance\\nLANDMARKS IN THE PROGRESS OF THE GAME.\\n1457 Parliament ordains that golf be utterly cryit doune, and nocbt usit.\\n1491 Another law to the same effect.\\n1503 King playing golf extensively.\\n1552 Earliest reference to golf being played at St. Andrews.\\n1608 Present Royal Blackheath Golf Club founded.\\n1735 Present Edinburgh Burgess Golfing Society founded.\\n1744 Present Honorable Company of Edinburgh Golfers founded.\\n1754 Present Royal and Ancient Golf Club founded.\\nFirst Royal and Ancient Club competition.\\n1787 Glasgow Golf Club founded.\\n1818 Manchester Golf Club founded.\\n1829 Calcutta Golf Club founded.\\n1834 Royal and Ancient Club given that title.\\n1837 Royal and Ancient King William IV. medal first competed for.\\n1848 Gutty ball came in Featheries previously).\\n1840 Famous foursome, Allan Robertson and Tom Morris vs. Brothers Dunn.\\nFormer couple won.\\n1853 Willie Park, Sr., played Tom Morris twice for \u00c2\u00a3100 stake each time.\\nPark won both.\\n1854 Royal and Ancient Club s club house completed.\\n1859 Allan Robertson died.\\n1860 Open Championship established (Willie Park, Sr., winner).\\n1863 King Edward VII. (then Prince of Wales), captain of the Royal and\\nAncient Club.\\n1864 Present Royal North Devon Golf Club founded.\\n1865 London Scottish Golf Club founded.\\n1867 Tom Morris, Sr., won Open Championship for the fourth time.\\n1869 Present Royal Liverpool Golf Club founded.\\n1870 Tom Morris, Jr., won Open Championship for third time in succession\\nand became owner of the belt.\\n1871 No championship.\\n1872 Tom Morris, Jr., won Open Championship for fourth time.\\n1873 Open Championship first played for at St. Andrews.\\n1874 Open Championship first played for at Musselburgh.\\n1875 Tom Morris, Jr., died.\\nWillie Park, Sr., won Open Championship for fourth time.\\n1878 Oxford and Cambridge University Match first played.\\n1879 Jamie Anderson won Open Championship for third time in succession.\\n1882 Bob Ferguson won Open Championship for third time in succession.\\n1886 Amateur Championship established (H. G. Hutchinson winner).\\n1887 Royal St. George s Golf Club founded.\\n1888 John Ball won Amateur Championship for the first time.\\n1889 Open Championship last played for at Musselburgh.\\n1890 John Ball won both Open and Amateur Championships.\\n1891 Parliamentary Handicap established.\\n1892 Championship of India established.\\nOpen Championship first played for at Mulrfleld (H. H. Hilton winner).\\nEdward Blackwell drove 366 yards from seventeenth tee at St. Andrews.\\nAmateur Championship first played for at Sandwich.\\n1893 Ladies Championship established.\\n1894 J. H. Taylor won bis first Open Championship.\\nOpen Championship first played for at Sandwich.\\nRight Hon. A. J. Balfour captain of the Roval and Ancient Club.\\nOrganization of the United States Golf Association.\\n1895 American Open and Amateur Championships established.\\n1896 Harry Vardon won his first Open Championship.\\nP. G. Talt won bis first Amat^qf P|iamplou8hlp^", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0176.jp2"}, "177": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 171\\n1897 Open Championship flrst played for at Hoylake (H. H. Hilton winner).\\n1888 Coburn Haskell flrst experimented with Haskell rubber-cored ball io\\nAmerica.\\n1898 H. Vardon defeated Willie Park In a seventy-two hole match.\\nWestern Golf Association founded, Chicago 111.\\n1900 F. G. Talt killed in South Africa.\\nJ. H. Taylor won his third Open Championship.\\n1801 H. H. Hilton won Amateur Championship for the second time.\\nJames Braid won his first Open Championship.\\n1802 Rubber-cored ball introduced into Great Britain.\\nAmateur International Match first played.\\n1803 Harry Vardon won his fourth Open Championship.\\nNews of the World Tournament established.\\nProfessional International Match flrst played.\\n1904 Walter J. Travis (America) won British Amateur Championship.\\n1906 James Braid won his third Open Championship. International four-\\nsome over four courses St. Andrews, Troon, St. Annes, and Deal\\nfor \u00c2\u00a3400, J. H. Taylor and H. Vardon vb. James Braid and A.\\nHerd. Taylor and Vardon won by 13 and 12.\\n1807 John Ball won his sixth Amateur Championship.\\nA. Massy (France) won the Open Championship.\\nDeal added to list of Open Championship courses.\\nAppeal for patent In rubber-cored ball rejected by House of Lords.\\n1808 Tom Morris, Sr., died.\\nJames Braid won bis fourth Open Champlonablp In the record score\\nof 281.\\nNew code of rules adopted.\\n1808 J. H. Taylor won bis fourth Open Champlonsbip.\\n1810 John Ball won his seventh Amateur Cbamploasbip.\\nJubilee of Open Championship, James Braid winning for the fifth time.\\nNew Rules passed, excluding center-shafted clubs.\\n1811 H. H. Hilton won the British and American Amateur Championships.\\nHarry Vardon won his flfth Open Championship.\\n1812 Jerome D. Travers came back. Won the American Amateur Cham\\npionsbip a third time.\\nHarry Vardon won the News of the World Champlonsbip.\\n1813 Francis Oulmet. a Boston amateur, twenty years of age. defeated the\\nprofessional golfing world of America, including Vardon, Ray, Tel-\\nlier and Reid, from Great Britain and France, in the Open C^ham-\\npionsblp of the United States, at Brookllne.\\nMiss Ravenscroft of England won the Women s Championship of America.\\nJerry Travers won Amateur Championship of America for the fourth\\ntime.\\n1814 Francis Oulmet captured the American Amateur Championship.\\nHarry Vardon for the sixth time won the British Open Championship.\\nMiss Cecil Leitcb won the British Ladles Ohampionship.\\n1915 Championships of Great Britain discontinued during the war with\\nGermany.\\nJerry Travers won the American Open Championship.\\n1916 Charles Evans, Jr., won both Amateur and Open Championships of\\nAmerica.\\n1917 No National Championships held, due to the participation of the United\\nStates in the world war.\\n1919 All championships revived after termination of war. S. Davidson\\nHerron won the Amateur, Miss Alexa Stirling the Women s, and\\nWalter Hagen the Open.\\n3920 Robert A. Gardner, Chicago, 111., was runner-up to Cyril Tolley in the\\nBritish Amateur Championship, played at Muirfield. Scotland, 37\\nholes.\\nTed Ray. Great Britain, won tlie Open Championship of the United\\nStates.\\nMisf? Alexa Girling won tlie Women s Championship the third time in\\nsuccession, also the championship of Canada.\\nCharles Evans, Jr., won liis second AmafMir Championship.\\nRules revised by a Joint committee of R. and A. and United States\\ngolfera.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0177.jp2"}, "178": {"fulltext": "172 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nGolf Diversions for Special Occasions\\nClubs are often put to it for novelties for special days and the following\\nare oflfered as having been successful in helping to create interest.\\nOBSTACLE GOLF.\\nThe game is generally played around the clubhouse, and consists of six,\\nnine, or more holes placed on suitable turf where golf is possible. The\\nclubs required are mashie or mashie niblick and a putter. From the first\\ntee to the last hole numerous hazards are placed throughout the entire\\nshort course and in such a manner that no player can sneak around with-\\nout going out of bounds, but must go over or through them. The hazards\\nmay consist of a tennis net stretched across the fair green, a tree trunk,\\nsand traps, water hazards, even a twelve-inch drain pipe laid lengthwise in\\nthe middle of the fair green, through which every player must send the\\nball. Even the hole itself may be placed on the top of a little mound or\\nin a miniature basin putting green, made by surrounding the hole with a\\nwall of sod about a foot high and, say, a twelve-foot diameter green.\\nAnother kind of hazard can be made with little privet cuts stuck in the\\nground like a small hedge and close enough not to let a ball through. None\\nof the hazards should be very high, the tennis net perhaps the highest of\\nall, so as not to discourage the beginner. The good players will find end-\\nless fun in some of the unique and eccentric hazards, and give endless\\nmirth and laughter to the onlookers watching the attempts to negotiate the\\ndifferent obstacles.\\nFLAG (OR TOMBSTONE) GOLF.\\nFlag or Tombstone Golf is played on the regular golf course. Every\\nplayer, from scratch to the highest handicapped, can join in this. The\\nonly extra item required is a small flag.\\nA scratch player rated at seventy-five strokes starts from the first tee and\\nplays on until his seventy-4ive strokes are used up, wherewith he plants his\\nflag where the ball rests, and is through, and so on with the handicap\\nplayer. Say he has twenty; then he plays on until his ninety-five strokes\\nare all used up. If there should be any strokes left over after completing\\nthe round, the player goes to the first tee and plays on till all the strokes\\nare exhausted, then sticks in his flag before lifting his ball up.\\nThe winner, of course, is the one who goes farthest. To add more\\ninterest, it is usual for the player to write some epitaph on his demise\\nthis sometimes causing great merriment when read by the players passing,\\nand ultimately when the flags are gathered up at tha finish and read in the\\nclubhouse.", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0178.jp2"}, "179": {"fulltext": "Sl ALDIXdS OFFICIAL GOLF CJUIDE. 173\\nCLOCK GOLF.\\nFor Clock Golf, all that is required is sufficient space on a lawn to\\ndescribe the circle to form the clock face. The lawn must be smooth, but\\nnot necessarily level.\\nThe circle is marked out preferably in white, with the help of peg,\\nstring, brush and whitening, and may be of any such convenient size as\\nthe lawn will admit. A circle of from 20 to 24 feet in diameter will gen-\\nerally be found to be large enough. Having described the circle, divide it\\ninto twelve equal parts, placing a mark on the circle line at those points,\\nwhich are called the figurepoints. To complete the clock face, the plates\\nare pressed into place at the various figure points, outside (or inside) the\\nline of the circle. And, lastly, a putting hole is made, four inches in diam-\\neter and about four inches deep, in any selected spot between the center\\nof the circle and the circumference. It will thus be seen that the distances\\nfrom each figure point to the hole will differ in length.\\nThe object of the player is to hole out from each successive figure point\\nin order, commencing with 1, in the fewest possible strokes.\\nOnly a golf ball and putter are required further to play the game.\\nFor practise in putting Clock Golf is unrivalled, and the demand for the\\ngame and the interest it excites at garden parties, shows it also to be,\\nsocially, a pojpular game for drawing people together.\\nWhen a number of persons desire to play, sides may be chosen, or play\\nmay be against all.\\n1. Players may play singly. Each player, in his turn, may complete the\\nround of the clock, playing from each figure point in order, and counting\\nevery stroke he takes.\\n2. Or, partners and opponents may play together. Each player, in turn,\\nholing out from each figure point, counting his strokes.\\nGame by Strokes.\\nThe game is won by that player or side which holes out from all the\\nfigure points successively in the fewest strokes.\\nGame by Holes.\\nWhen the game is to be decided by holes, each hole, in turn, is won by\\nthat player who holes out in the fewest strokes, and the game is won by the\\nplayer who wins the greater number of holes from his opponent.\\nN. B. Whenever the ball is struck so as to move appreciably from its\\nposition, the stroke must be counted.\\nThe circle line forms the boundary, and when a ball is struck so as to\\npass beyond this, it must be returned to and played from the point where\\nit crossed the line, counting one stroke as penalty.\\nAll rules which apply to putting and to playing with partners in ordi-\\nnary golf may, when applicable, hold good also in the game of Clock Goll.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0179.jp2"}, "180": {"fulltext": "174 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDK.\\nTHE GAME OF SIX-PIN PUTT.\\nn\\nThis is one of the most interesting and scientific games that can be\\nintroduced in a clubhouse, requiring very accurate putting to make a low\\nscore. The necessary requirements are a carpet or artificial green, about\\nfifteen feet long and not less than three feet broad, with a regulation\\nputting hole in the middle about eleven feet from one end.\\nThe teeing ground should be in about one foot, making the length of the\\nputt ten feet and in a dead line for the hole. The teeing mark is a\\nstraight line across the middle of the carpet and is nine inches long. No\\nball is to be putted outside the mark.\\nSix light wooden pins, seven-eighths of an inch in diameter and 41-2\\ninches long, tapered to a point at one end (small flag tops are admirable)\\nare set up in triangular form, nine inches each away. The bottom center pin\\nis 4 1-2 inches from the hole. The pins will be found to form a triangle,\\neach pin being 4 1-2 inches from center to center of each one. The apex\\nwill look towards the teeing ground. The six places for the pins to stand\\non should be marked in round black spots so that the pins will always be\\nput on the exact spots.\\nThe object of the game is to knock down all the pins and by careful\\nand judicious putting get into the hole in the least number df strokes.\\nWhile the gross score might go up to 70, the hole has to be made in 0.\\nThe rules are that every putt has to be from the tee and within the nine-\\ninch limit of the line.\\nAll putts are to be holed out. All putts oflF the carpet or green are out\\nof bounds, the penalty being two strokes more.\\nIf, in making return putts, the pins interfere, they may be lifted up and\\nreplaced after the putt is made. If, in making a putt to the hole from the\\ntee, a pin, or all of them, falls down and the ball does not go into the\\nhole, then the ball has to be holed out.\\nIf, in making a putt to the hole, one pin or more are knocked down,\\nthese pins are then removed and the player continues playing from the tee\\nuntil all the pins are knocketf^down.\\nIf, in making a putt from the tee, the ball holes out, that is one stroke.\\nIf, in hitting, one or more pins fall down and the ball goes into the hole,\\nthat stroke does not count on the score. If this is done so that all the pins\\nare knocked down and each putt is holed off the pin, then the score is 0.\\nAs long as one pin is left standing, the player must continue playing\\nuntil it falls. If he does not go into the hole in knocking the last down,\\nthen his return putt or putts are added to the score. If a ball touches the\\npin and holes out and the pin does not fall, that counts as one stroke. On\\nall out of bounds, the player counts three and plays from the tee again.\\nIf a player knocks down one or more pins and holes out until all the\\npins have fallen and the ball is in off each time, then the score is 0. If,\\nin so doing, he takes three strokes and another player takes two or one\\nonly, then the fewest putts counts the winner. If a ball touches the pin\\nand shifts it from its original position and does not fall, that is a rub of\\nthe green. _ _..__ ,.,...^_^j_i:,j_ULitl", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0180.jp2"}, "181": {"fulltext": "S: ALIMNCS OFFICIAL COLF (JllDi:.\\n175\\nThe Compact Putting Course\\nA golf putting course on the lawn of a country club or a private home\\nis practical and a pleasure. Herewith is a plan for one which may be fol-\\nlowed in its entirety or be modified to meet the local conditions of ground.\\nThe golf enthusiast whose estate will permit its construction will be sure\\nto enjoy its use, and the country club or golf club which undertakes to\\nbuild it will find that it\\nis an innovation of popu- U_\\nlarity, gratifying to the\\nmembers.\\nIts primary purpose is\\nto practice putting at\\ndifferent distances. The\\noriginal angle to the cup\\nis, of course, always the\\nsame, the nearest way\\nfrom the lie of the ball\\nto the mouth of the cup\\non the first putt. If it\\nis a miss, variety enters.\\nIt is possible to play a\\nputting game on the\\ncourse, and golfers who\\nare a little less skillful\\nwith the putter than\\nwith the driver are not\\na bit averse to whiling\\naway a few minutes,\\nwith putter in hand, to\\nendeavor to improve\\ntheir skill.\\nThe dimensions of the\\nputting course as out-\\nlined here are 23 yards\\nwide by 31 yards long\\nThis is about as small\\nan area as is consistent\\nwith the scope of the course,\\nto have it too large.\\nTo properly equip its nine hole rims, the Spalding Iron Hole Rim No. 20\\nis necessary. There should also be nine Spalding Marking Discs for th\u00c2\u00ab\\nholes. A third necessity is a Spalding Steel Hole Cutter. The total cost\\nof the fittings is about $30.00, the price being dependent upon the varying\\ncosts of production. That sum, however, will well provide the course with\\nnecessary requisites. One splendid feature about the particular plan which\\nis outlined herewith is that it provides well both for symmetry and\\ncompactness.\\nIt can be made larger, but it would be futile", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0181.jp2"}, "182": {"fulltext": "176 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nHints on Laying Out a Golf Course\\nVery little has been written on the subject of laying out golf\\ncourses, and rightly so, by the numerous scribes who have added to\\nthe large and ever increasing number of books on the subject of golf.\\nNo doubt, they all realized that it was a subject upon which more\\nmistakes could be made in a minute than could be remedied in years,\\nand very wisely refrained. Were conditions the same everywhere\\nthe task would be a comparatively easy one, but as they are not this\\nis what makes it almost impossible. We have no intention, therefore,\\nof laying down any hard and fast lines to go uipon, but merely give\\nsome general ideas of what is requisite.\\nThe acreage necessary for a nine-hole course of an average length\\nof about 3,000 yards is about 45 acres. This will give about two\\nor three acres space for club house and the amenities thereof. Of\\ncourse, for an 18-hoIe course, with the added attractions usually to\\nbe taken care of in a proposition of such magnitude, 100 acres is\\nnone too much. Understand, however, this is on land that is prac-\\ntically free from any large quantity of trees. Of course, if a park\\neffect is wanted in connection therewith the acreage will have to be\\nlargely increased.\\nThe ideal land for a golf course, be It a 9- or 18-hole one, is land\\nof an undulating nature, having some natural attractions in the\\nnature of a stream meandering through it, or some good elevations,\\nwhich can be all used to splendid advantage. The ideal soil is of\\nsandy loam with a gravelly subsoil, but as this cannot always be had,\\na good golf course may be laid out on nearly any kind of farm land.\\nOf course, the exercise of a little judgment is absolutely necessary\\nas to the placing of the greens to the best possible advantage.\\nIf the ground has been under cultivation there is no other course\\nopen but that the whole should be plowed up. Previous to the plow-\\ning, all fences and other lines of demarcation between fields should\\nbe thoroughly removed, as well as all stones and other debris, when\\nthe whole then can be thoroughly harrowed preparatory to seeding.\\nIf fertilizing of the soil is necessary the best thing that can be\\ndone is to spread some rotted stable manure on the ground before\\nthe plowing has been resorted to and seeing to it that the whole is\\nwell turned in.\\nWhen the harrowing has been done satisfactorily, the ground should\\nthen be seeded. As the seeding is a matter of the very greatest\\nImportance no chances should be taken, but the best advice obtain-\\nable on this subject should be had. False economy practiced at a\\ntime like this in the sparing of the quantity of seed sown will be a\\ndisappointment.\\nThis does not mean necessarily that you are to go and pay all kinds\\nof fancy prices for so-called imported mixtures that are being adver-\\ntised from time to time, and which, by the way, are not nearly as\\ngood as the native grasses produced in our own country. Why should\\nthey be, when climatic conditions and adaptability the two chief fac-\\ntors with regard to satisfactory growth are so vastly different. No\\nbut there Is an old axiom common to agriculturists which is to the\\neffect that If you do not put it on the ground you may never expect\\nto take it off, and when the right kind of seed has been procured suit-\\nable to the soil it should be sown at the rate of at least from 100 to\\n125 pounds per acre.\\nIf the ground, however, has been lying fallow, or In pasture of any\\nkind, there Is no need for being so radical In the preparation of the\\nsoil, as it is infinitely better to keep what you have got in the way\\nof turf, however poor it may be, than go to the unnecessary expense\\nof undoing what Nature has taken probably years to do and which\\ncan, by little attention, be improved 100 per cent. A disc harrow\\nat a time like this will do wonders and the best thing to do Is to see\\nto It that the ground Is thoroughly disced, care behig taken that the\\nalscs are not set at such an angle that the turf is displaced, the", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0182.jp2"}, "183": {"fulltext": "SI AM)1.\\\\\u00c2\u00ab;S il~l n i.\\\\l, (.(iLI- liiK. 177\\nobject belug tnorely to cut It. This will have the effect of breaking\\nup the soil and stimulating in it chemical action, thereby making avail-\\nable a great many properties which are natural to the soil Itself. When\\nthis has been done, then some good commercial fertilizer can be used,\\nafter which seeding and rolling may be Indulged in. Seeding on grounu\\nso treated should be at the rate of 50 pounds to the acre.\\nThe staking out of the course should be the next thing that should\\noccupy the attention of the committee in charge of this work, and we\\nwould strongly advise here again that the best advice possible should\\nbe got on this subject having an expert who has been accustomed\\nto do this kind of work for years, and not any Tom, Dick or Harry\\nwho perhaps has not laid out a golf course in his life but who may\\nhave pretensions to be able to play the game in a capable manner\\nyet, when it comes to utilizhig ground to the best possible advantage\\nhe is fairly at sea. See to it that the length of the holes should be\\nsuch as will call for the best efforts of the golfer and that the holes\\nare of such playing length that credit is given to good playing and\\nthat the mediocre player will find himself exactly in the class to\\nwhich he belongs in other words, that the holes will be of such a\\nlength that there will be no possibility whatever of a man making a\\nmistake and being able to catch up to his opponent iwithout being\\npenalized for his misplay. The object of the expert who is laying\\nout your grounds should be to start in with a hole of considerable\\nlength and continue with the same idea in mind so as to avoid con-\\ngestion and to allow the players to get very well spread out before\\nhe comes to shorter holes. A good hole to start in with is probably\\none about 460 yards, not bringing in any short holes until probably\\nabout the sixth or seventh. This will give a field a chance to be\\nthoroughly well spread out and preclude in a very great measure\\nthe possibility of congestion occurring at the first tee. If it is an\\n18-hole course that is needed, it is a good idea always to bring back\\nthe ninth hole to the club house, starting out again at the tenth\\ntee and bringing back the eighteenth to the club bouse again.\\nWe would strongly advise, however, for those who intend to have\\na golf course laid out in connection with any club, that the services\\nof an expert be got and that the matter be placed unreservedly in\\nhis hands, as it will certainly save a great deal of money to the club\\ncontemplating such action. It is false economy to suppose that any\\nman can do this kind of work simply because he happens to play\\ngolf, and clubs have proven this to their discomfiture many a time.\\nTO THE GREEN COMMITTEES.\\nWishing to be of some assistance to you, as many times Green\\nCommittees are at a loss to find out where they may be able to find\\nsomeone who will give them information relative to the care and\\nmaintenance of their golf course in general, we wish to say that we\\nshall be only too pleased, upon application, to answer questions that\\nmay arise with you from time to time in connection with the care of\\nputting greens or fair greens.\\nOur experience in this department is certainly very extensive, and as\\na result of long, practical experience, we are in a position to give the\\nverv best advice possible.\\nWe are probably responsible for 50 per cent of the golf courses In\\nthe United States of America, if not a greater number than that, and\\nwe can save you money by assuring you that when work Is done by us\\nIt Is the result of years of attention given to this particular depart-\\nment of the game.\\nThere are many who essay this task, who have no earthly Idea of\\neconomy, and who are entirely regardless of the exorbitant charges\\nthey saddle on clubs who have sought their services, yet are loud in\\ntheir attestations of their ability to do better than anyone else. A\\ngood golf course Is largely a matter of evolution, and It Is foolish to\\ngo to work and spend tens of thousands of dollars upon a golf course\\nin its inception in this part of the world, when the resultant condi-\\ntions make a good deal of the work done of no value later. Many do", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0183.jp2"}, "184": {"fulltext": "178 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nthis, with other people s money, who are placed on Green Committees\\nfor a short term, for they know their responsibility ends with their\\nterm in office. Remember climatic conditions are vastly different on\\nthis broad continent. What does for one part of the country will cer-\\ntainly not do for another. Soils vary also, and adaptation must ever\\nbe taken into account. Remember you have as fine grasses in your\\nown country as can be found anywhere. Don t imagine you require to\\ngo abroad to get grass that will give you perfect greens, and for that\\nreason pay exorbitant prices for the same. Exercise a little common\\nsense in this matter the same as you do in the running of your busi-\\nness, for you know that when your books are wrong in your account-\\ning department you naturally look for the services of not an ordinary\\nbookkeeper, but an expert. It will save you money In the long run by\\ngetting the very best and we can assure you we can provide it. Never\\nmind the many reasons that advertisers of grass seed are using for\\ntheir unprecedented prices of grass seed, owing, some claim, to drought\\nin Europe, and thereby charge twice as much as the seed is worth.\\nYou have all the grass seed at your own door for this purpose with-\\nout paying such fancy prices. Never mind the seed doctor stunt, which\\nis an ad gotten up to pull wool over your eyes. No grass seed is\\npassed on a perpetually moving belt before the sharp eyes of girls\\ntrained to the work, who have the ability to fasten on intruding\\nweeds. This may be all right for beans and peas, etc., but not for grass\\nseed. Yet this sort of literature is gotten up to create the impression\\namong those who do not know that this Is the modus operandi pur-\\nsued by some as a pretext for charging such exorbitant prices for grass\\nseed. Such a course is never pursued. It s impossible commercially.\\nWe can demonstrate to you, if you are interested, quicker results\\nderived from grass seed, stripped from grasses grown in the country,\\nin various parts, than has ever been gotten from Imported seed yet.\\nWrite to us for prices. You will find them right.\\nIf you have any wish to remodel your course, or are thinking of\\nseeking new grounds and would need the services of an expert to lay\\nout your new grounds for you, or remodel the old one, we wish to state\\nthat we are in a position, second to none in the country, to give you\\nthe best service in this particular line.\\nOur experience embraces a period in this country of over twenty\\nyears, doing work in practically every State of the Union. Our charges\\nare moderate indeed, and if we can serve you in any shape or way\\neither in laying out new golf courses, remodeling old ones, looking\\nover land with a view to proving its adaptability for this purpose,\\ntelling you what seed to sow, how to sow ft, and supplying you with\\nit at a reasonable cost, or, as to the maintenance of your course,\\nbunkering the same, etc., etc., we shall be well satisfied.\\nROLLING OF GREENS.\\nDevereux Emmet of Garden City some time ago had an article in\\nGolf, which many of our green committee men would do well to heed.\\nAdvice along this line can rarely ever be general in this country owing\\nto its size and the variety of adaptation and climatic condition that pre-\\nvails, yet the condition that many of our golf courses are found in\\nfrom time to time after a torrid spell, or after a severe winter,\\nimpels one to ask the question. Is there not a cause? We believe there\\nis, and from our observation, Mr. Emmet strikes the keynote of\\nthe whole matter when he says that our fair greens are becoming root\\nbound, hermetically sealed, and waterproof, thereby making it almost\\nImpossible for nature to be at all favorably disposed toward us. In\\nshort, they are rolled altogether too much. At one of the Chicago\\ncourses, where a heavy cutter is constantly employed on one part of\\nthe golf course and the ordinary horse mowers on the other, that end\\nof the golf course where the heavy mower is not used shows con-\\nclusively its superiority in the nature and texture of the turf, and Is\\ncertainly more free from weeds, and the soil is certainly in much\\nbetter shape. This result can be seen any day on any of the courses", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0184.jp2"}, "185": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OB FICIAL GOLF GUIDK. 179\\nround the city of Chicago, r.lthough sometimes the comparison Is not\\nquite so apparent.\\nAs Mr. Emmet points out, for a new course the use of a heavy\\nroller or automower is a perfect Godsend up to a certain point, yet\\nit has been our experience that if the ground of a new Kolf course\\nhas been properly prepared the use of an automower or a roller should\\nbe limited to a matter of a week or ten days. A sure way to\\ninjure the soil Is by packing to exclude the air, for the reason\\nthat the activities of the chemical agents in the soil is thereby\\nlessened, and thus the making of plant food available is in great\\nmeasure retarded. On the other hand, when the soil is maintained\\nIn a more friable state, and the air is allowed entrance, oxygen\\nbeing such an active element and combining freely with elements in\\nall sorts of substances, It naturally follows that chemical action and\\nchange more actively take place. Hence reasons for good and bad\\nfair greens In very many instances. Withal, nature is more kind\\nto us than we are to it, and many times we see conditions exist of\\na splendid nature on a fair green, not because of what is being done,\\nbut in spite of It.\\nThe nature of the soil on fully 90 per cent of the golf courses in\\nthe western country will not permit of this packing, and if one keeps\\nhis eyes open evidences of this can be seen any day almost on any\\ncourse that is visited. On courses where grass grew a few years ago\\nIn luxuriance, and free from weeds, one is shocked to see that more\\nweeds exist In many instances than grass and Infinitely more than In\\nthe rough and upon which no work of this kind has been done. The\\nreason Is not far to seek. In the rough, the water fall Is conserved,\\nnot only because of the ranker growth, but because the soil was In a\\nbetter state of receptivity to take It In, the rain fall being better\\nabsorbed and thus augmenting the water reserves, and providing the\\nmoisture necessary to give vigor to the grass growth and eliminating\\nIn great measure the propagating of weed life. On the other hand, the\\nmethod pursued of constantly rolling and cutting the fair green has\\npractically raised a surface almost as hard as asphalt through which\\nonly a small percentage of the rainfall ever percolates, but running\\noff Into low places sours the ground, kills the grass and makes a\\nsplendid place for the germination of every weed that Is blown on to\\nIt. Weeds with large tap roots, unlike the rhizomes of grass, bore\\ndown and thrive where It Is Impossible for grass to do so. Who has\\nnot seen evidences of this kind on almost every course he has played\\nupon, yet how slow are those In charge of affairs willing to use common\\nsense methods in the pursuit of the end they have In view.\\nWater Is of so much Importance to the life of the grass that we see\\nthousands of dollars spent annually In the piping of putting and fair\\ngreens all over the country and yet by the methods pursued of packing\\nand caking the soil the object sought to be gained Is In great measure\\nnullified. When It is considered that water Is the most essential food\\nof plant life It is easily seen why all this expenditure. The water\\nacts upon the plant food In the ground by turning all food materials\\nInto solution, thus making them available for absorption. Hence It\\nshould be the aim of those looking after the golf course to see that\\nthe ground Is kept In as friable a shape as Is possible that the\\nporosity of both fair and putting greens is always maintained, when we\\nare sure that the amount of water necessary for their maintenance\\nwill never be so great as under the present method so prevalent of\\ncontinually rolling: and the textures of the grass will be better.\\nPUTTING GREENS.\\nAs often happens, owing to the vagaries of the winter In the west-\\ntern hemisphere, putting greens suffer extensively from winterkill.\\nThere are many reasons that can be brought forward to account for\\nthis, one of the most apparent being lack of a snow covering the\\nsnowfall not being sufficient to allow the protection necessary to pre-\\nserve the turf against repeated thaws and frosts.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0185.jp2"}, "186": {"fulltext": "180 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nOne thing that should make itself apparent to the average Green\\nCommittee man or greenkeeper is that tne only way to overcome this\\noccurring winter by winter in this western country, where such\\nextremes in temperature usually prevail, is to see to it that, in the\\nbuilding of new putting greens or in remodeling old ones, a perfect\\nsystem of drainage is installed. Rarely, if ever, do you find greens\\nsufiCering from winter-kill where the subsoil is sand or gravel, the\\nreason being no doubt that the porosity of the soil is suflicient in\\nitself to carry ofiC all the moisture, thereby lessening the effects of\\nJack Frost s work upon the roots and making it possible for his oppo-\\nnent, King Sol, to find it quite an easy task, through his beneficent\\nrays, to offset but in all neavy soils where the subsoil is clay and\\nwhere such porosity is limited, means will have to be adopted to pre-\\nclude the possibility of gravitational water standing, else a repetition\\nof what has occurred in other years in the western country will be a\\nsure result, namely, winter-killed putting greens.\\nOf course to accomplish the making of greens similar to those which\\nobtain on the links in Scotland or on the sandy soils of the Atlantic\\nseaboard, a good deal of expense is entailed which would probably be\\nmore than the average club would be willing to expend. It certainly\\nwould be quite an item, but when one considers that the creative power\\nof country club life is practically the game of golf, and looks at the\\nelaborate club houses that are being built, there is no reason why the\\ngame which creates the whole thing should be relegated into such a\\nsmall corner and only a small percentage of the income devoted to the\\nbuilding up and maintenance of the same. It can readily be argued\\nthat because of the greater distances to travel to the club in this coun-\\ntry it is necessary that more elaborate club houses be built and main-\\ntained than on the other side, which no doubt in measure is quite true,\\nbut it should not be done at the expense of the golf course.\\nWith many years experience in the game of golf and its require-\\nments, one would think much would have been learned in that time,\\nbut it seems after all that there is a sad lack of knowledge in many\\nof the rudimentary principles. In the economy of the management of\\nclubs we usually find a new Green Committee coming in with each\\nsucceeding year and no wonder the greens, as a rule, suffer. The men\\nwho are usually appointed to these duties are perfectly willing to\\nadmit that their knowledge of agronomy and agrostology Is, at the\\nmost, academical, but that they are willing to learn and if, perchance,\\nthrough interchange of thought and observation, they have learned\\nanything in the course of the year, another year sees a new committee\\nin place of the old one, and once again there is a new beginning.\\nWhen we look at some of the clubs, however, that have pursued a more\\nBane policy and have had Green Committees serve for a term of from\\nfive to ten years, we find a different state of things prevalent. We\\nfind intelligent management, greens in better shape than anywhere\\nelse, and it is only rightly so that this should be, as they have a chance\\nto commence each succeeding year where they left off in the previous\\none, and the knowledge so acquired is invaluable to them and to others\\nIf they will only see it. A good golf course is a matter of evolution,\\nand unless one can profit by past experience there can be no benefit.\\nIn the building of a putting green on an inland course, one should\\nseek to imitate nature as nearly as possible. By this is meant the soil\\ncondition that obtains where we consider the best greens are to be\\nfound.\\nOn the links in Scotland, where the best golf courses are said to be,\\nthere is Just enough loam on the top of pure sand to give nourishment\\nto a short, crisp and curly grass, which makes the best kind of a\\nputting green that can be found anywhere. Of course such a grass\\ncannot be grown here with success. It is practically Indigenous to\\nthat soil and the climatic conditions which exist over there.\\nAt one of the clubs around Chicago the method was tried, I under-\\nstand, a few years ago, but as to whether It was persevered in I can-\\nnot say. I was told that the idea was abandoned. However, for the\\nbenefit of those who would wish to have greens that would give them", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0186.jp2"}, "187": {"fulltext": "SPALDING-.S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 181\\na minimum of worry the following directions may be acceptable. It\\nwill be evident at once that a putting green that is well drained is a\\nbetter place for grass roots to spread in than one that is often wet\\nfrom standing water not on the surface but unseen to the eye at\\nthe water table. The reasons are that the plant foods are more easily\\nsecured, there is more warmth in the soil and more air can be used,\\nconsequently a better condition all around that is conducive to growth.\\nDig out your green to a depth of eighteen inches, then throw in\\nabout six inches of broken stone and cinders mixed. Roll down thor-\\noughly, after which put on the same quantity of lake or sea sand,\\nwnich will leave another six inches for the soil. Great care should be\\nusea in the selection of this top soil, and sand should be thoroughly\\nmixed with it, according to its density. Well rotted stable manure\\nsnould also be used to add humus to the soil. A thorough mixing of\\nthis manure and sandy soil would thus make for a splendid green,\\nwhen one would have just as fine a bed as could be found anywhere\\nfor the propagation of the grasses best suited to the climatic condi-\\ntions which exist. Of course the initial cost of such greens would be\\nconsiderable, but would it not pay, in the matter of larger organiza\\ntions that are just commencing, to have the work done in this way?\\nThe drainage would be perfect, the freedom from gravitational water\\nstanding and worm casts would be something to be thankful for and\\nthe nature of the grass which could be grown thereupon would be\\nrefined to a remarkable degree.\\nThe care of the greens would be a good deal simplified, as with the\\nmania for rolling, which seems to possess some of our Green Commit-\\ntees, little harm could be done on a green built-up In this fashion.\\nThere would be so little soil to pack that even this could be done with\\nimpunity, although we never approve of it that Is, too much rolling\\nunder any conditions.\\nOne might think also that the amount of water necessary to water\\nthese greens would add very much to the cost of maintenance. That\\nmight be true, but if a little judgment was exercised in the cutting of\\nthe gi eens there need be no extra cost added. There is a very perni-\\ncious habit in vogue in this country, which we consider a very foollsb\\none, and that is cutting greens while the dew Is on the grass. Always\\nremember that ilka blade of grass bauds its ain drap o dew and\\nthis Is one of nature s most beneficent aids in the nourishment of\\ngrass life and yet we see the mowers at worb early In the morning\\ncutting off blades of grass with the dew upon them, which under the\\nheat of the sun is evaporated in a short time. It not only is taking\\naway a great deal of the very best nourishment of plant life, but it\\nnever makes a good Job in cutting the grass at such a time. Why not\\ndefer the cutting of the grass until the dew has been absorbed, say,\\nuntil after 10 o clock in the morning? This could be done without\\nany trouble, except probably at exceptional times during the tourna-\\nments. If the dews were left to be absorbed naturally there would\\nnot be so much water required upon any putting green. Where this\\npointer has boon given and attended to greens were in much better\\ncondition than where this was not done previously.\\nNaturally, on many of our courses methods so radical will never be\\nattempted, yet a method of draining them by tiling should be resorted\\nto if the desire is to have greens in good shape after the repeated\\nthaws and frosts of a hard winter. A little judgment exercised by\\nthe greenkeeper during a wet spell will determine where the gravita-\\ntional water stands on a rolling green, and his desire should be to\\nlead the water off by means of a drain tile to another point where Its\\npresence will be less Injurious. A judicious expenditure of money\\nIn this direction would give the quietus to many of the kicks one is\\naccustomed to hear every spring leveled at the Green Committee when\\nthey take up the reigns of government.\\nThere is no doubt about it, we have a great deal to learn In the\\nbuilding and care of putting greens, but we feel convinced if we just\\nstop and think Tor a few moments, there are many common sense ldp\u00c2\u00ab\u00c2\u00bb\\nthat would appeal to us which should work for better conditions\\nprevalent In this connection all around.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0187.jp2"}, "188": {"fulltext": "^S^Ke THE SPALDING\\nITRADE MARK ^^i\\nSPALDING GOLF BALLS, 1921\\nWe have so many balls in our line because it takes not a few to cover the varying conditions of\\nplay air resistance in their flight, controllability around the green, season of year, condition\\nof turf, the man behind the club and we therefore respectfully call your attention to the\\nconstruction details of each ball shown. Catalogue showing complete line of Spclding Golf\\nClubs and Equipment sent on request to any A. G. Spalding Bros. Store.\\nSPALDING FIFTf. The\\nFitty requires no introduction\\nto the golfers of either this\\ncontinent or Britain. During\\nthe season of 1920 it won,\\npractically speaking, every\\nmajor tournament of impor-\\ntance throughout the world.\\nFor the season of 1921 it will\\ncarry a new and improved\\nmarking, thus eliminating any\\npossible confusion between it\\nand the Fifty of the preced-\\n1st for use in\\ning year, whi\\nillegal after May\\ntournament play. It is the most\\nhigh powered ball that is per-\\nmitted under the new stand-\\nardization or limitation of the\\nball and a very long carry in-\\ndeed may be secured from it.\\nWe have endeavored to sup-\\npress its roll as far as possible\\nas in the past, and hence it\\nwill be found controllable for\\nthe fine work around the\\ngreen. Weight 1.62 ounce;\\nsize 1 .630 inch.\\nEach, $1.00-Dozen, $12.00\\nSPALDING FIFTY\\nV SPALDING THIRTY\\nSPALDING FORTY. The Forty is in all respects like the Fifty as regards its internal construction.\\nIt is also a high powered ball built for carries, and its chief difference from the Fifty lies in the\\nfact that it is somewhat larger in fact a medium size ball and is marketed by us for this reason.\\nWeight 1.62 ounce; size 1 .665 inch Each, $1.00\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Dozen, $12.00\\nSPALDING THIRTY. The Thirty in appearance will be precisely like our Thirty of a year ago.\\nOur Thirty also as regards weight will approach the limit allowed under standardization, but its\\ninternal construction is of such a nature as to make it possible to secure great durability from it.\\nIn fact, it is the dmable ball of our line, and though there may not be quite as much carry in it as\\nthe Forty and Fifty, yet this to a certain extent will be made up by an increased run. Avery\\nsweet feeling ball, and one that is comparatively more responsive to lighter blows than either the\\nForty or the Fifty. Weight 1 .62 ounce; size 1.630 inch. Each, $1.00\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Dozen, $12.00\\nPHOMPTHnENTIONBIVENTOl\\nANY COMMUNICATIONS\\nKDDIiESSED TO US\\nA.G.SPALDING BROS.\\nSTORES IN ALL- Large cities\\nI FOR COMPLETE LIST OF STORES\\nS\u00c2\u00a3\u00c2\u00a3 INSIDE FRONT COVER\\nOF THIS BOOK\\nPRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOLT NOTICE. For c\u00c2\u00ab.di\u00c2\u00bbn price. .pecUl Un\u00c2\u00abi\u00c2\u00abn CtJo^\u00c2\u00ab", "height": "3263", "width": "2251", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0188.jp2"}, "189": {"fulltext": "fSiK THE SPALDING\\nTRADE-MARK ^rA^rf\\nSPALDING GOLF BALLS, 1921\\nAll Spalding Golf Balls are manufactured by A. G. Spalding Bros.\\nComplete Golf Ball Descriptive Folder Sent on Request.\\nBABY DIMPLE GL\\nBABY DIMPLE. (Reg. U. S. Pat. Off.) The Baby Dimple has been so long before the American\\npublic, and will remain for the next year entirely unchanged, that it requires no explanation. We\\nrefer you to the details of its construction under the listed detail of specifications. Weight 1 .52\\nounce size 1 .655 inch Each, 75c. Dozen, $9.00\\nGLORY DIMPLE. (Reg. U. S. Pat. Off.) The Glory Dimple is simply, as in the past, the finest\\nfloating ball made. Weight 1.44 ounce; size 1 .710 inch Each, 75c. Dozen, $9.00\\nX\\nBLACK DOMINO\\nRED DOT MESH\\nBLACK DOMINO. The Black Domino is a full sized ball, with its weight also to the limit allowed\\nunder standardization\u00e2\u0080\u0094 a very fine all around ball, and one with an extremely reputable past.\\nWeight 1.62 ounce; size 1.710 inch Each, 65c.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Dozen, $7.80\\nRED DOT MEISH. The Red Dot Mesh we believe to be as good a ball for the rt/oney as is made,\\nthough we cannot guarantee the same degree of uniformity in it as in our other balls which we\\nback to the limit in this regard. Weight not exceeding 1.62 ounce. Each, 65c.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Dozen, $7.80\\n1 PROMPT AHENTION GIVEN TO\\n1 ANY COMMUNICATIONS\\nA.G.SPALDfNG BROS.\\nSTORES IN ALL LARGE CITIES\\nFOR COMPLETE LIST OF STORES\\n^RICE3 SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. Per c\u00c2\u00abMdi\u00c2\u00abn priM* tpacUl C\u00c2\u00abii\u00c2\u00abiiMi C\u00c2\u00abtaiofu\u00c2\u00ab", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0189.jp2"}, "190": {"fulltext": "fuSUHE SPALDING\\nTRADE-MARK Sn\\nSPALDING MEDAL\\nDriver\\nMedal Driver\\nor Brassie\\nwith Steel Face\\nEach. $7.00\\nModel No. 7RV\\nMedal Driver\\nBuliter Face\\nEach $6.00\\nFiber Face 50 cents Extra bn\\nAny Medal Club\\nIvory Face $3.00 Extra on any\\nMedal Club\\nSteel Face $1 .00 Extra on any\\nMedal Club\\nPROMPT mENTION GIVEN TO I\\nANY COMMUNICATIONS\\nADDRESSED TO US\\nA. G.SPALDING BROS.\\nSTORES IN ALL LARGE CITIES\\nFOR COMPIETE LIST OF STORES\\nSEE INSIDE FRONT COVEJi\\nOF THIS BOOK\\nPRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. For Canadian price, see .pecial Canadian Catalogue", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0190.jp2"}, "191": {"fulltext": "ACCEPT NO\\nSUBSTITUTE\\nE9E\\nGUARANTEES\\nQUALITY\\nSPALDING CADDY BAGS\\nSpalding Duck Caddy Bags\\nNo. WS. Best quality white or brown duck; tan or\\nblack leather trimmings white leather lacing rein-\\nforcing steel strips, leather covered umbrella attach-\\nment brass patent buckle lock to fasten waterproof\\nhood; brass trimmings. Diam., 7 or 8 in. Ea., $22.00\\nSpalding Corduroy Caddy Bags\\nNo. 800. Bestquality tan English corduroy, reinforcing\\nstrips of steel, leather covered black leather trim-\\nmings. 1 unnel hood w^ith padlock fastening. Diam-\\neter. 7J inches Each, $20.00\\nNo. 800W. Same as No. 800, but without hood; diam-\\neter, 5 inches Each, $15.00\\nSpecial Sewed Off-\\nset Bottom used on\\nall Spalding Caddy\\nBags listed on this\\npage. This style\\nbottom (Pat d May\\n5, 1914) more than\\ntriples ordinary life\\nof bag. We also use\\nthe reinforcing bot-\\ntom ring and the\\nbrass drag plate to\\nincrease life of bag.\\nDuck and Canvas Covered Caddy Bags\\nNo. AH. Best quality white or brown duck; tan leather\\ntrimmings complete with hood to coyer clubs equipped\\nwith good quality buckle lock brass trimmings reinforcing\\nsteel strips, leather covered white leather lacing umbrella\\nattachment. Diameter, 6 inches Each, $19.00\\nNo. 300. White canvas black leather trimmings steel rein-\\nforcing ribs leather covered. Patent offset leather bottom.\\nDiameter, 6 inches Each, $15.00\\nPROMPT AHENTION GIVEN TO\\nANY COMMUNICATIONS\\nADDRESSED TO US\\nA. G.SPALDING BROS.\\nSTORES IN ALL LARGE CITIES\\nFOR COMPLETE LIST OF STORES\\nSEE INSIDE FRONT COVER\\nOF THIS BOOI\\nPRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. F\u00c2\u00ab c\u00c2\u00ab\u00c2\u00bbdi\u00c2\u00bb price. .pcuaI CM.*d\u00c2\u00bb\u00c2\u00ab. c\u00c2\u00abt.l\u00c2\u00abg\u00c2\u00abe", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0191.jp2"}, "192": {"fulltext": "Stu?e THE SPALDING\\nSPALDING GOLF SHOES\\nNo. 8. High cut, tan calf; English swing last, box|\\ntoes, Blucher cut. Extra heavy fine soles, sewe\\nwelt. Heavy enough to attach hob nails.\\nNo. 6. Low cut, ton caH English swing last, box toes.i\\nBlucher cut. Exlia hetxy fine soles, sewed welt;|\\nheavy enough to attach hob nails.\\nNo. 5. Low cut, tan calf leather, reinforced across?\\ninstep; sewed welt; blunt spikes; plain toes, no\\ncap.\\nNo. 4. High cut, tan calf leather, reinforced across!\\ninstep, blunt spikes. Plain toes, no cap. The\\neasiest fitting and most comfortable golf shoes\\nmade.\\nNo. XI. Fine tan calf, with fancy toe.\\nenough to attach hob nails.\\nSoles heavy\\nSpalding Rubber Sole Golf Shoes\\nNo. GB. Low cut, with plain rubber soles; sewed\\nwelt. Light drab calf Laced very low.\\nSpalding Special Women s Golf Shoes\\nNo. WGT. Low cut, tan calf. Fancy wing tips;\\nplain spliced rubber soles, leather reinforced toe\\nrubber heels, leather backed.\\nPrices on shoes listed above range from\\n$8.50 to $14.95 per pair.\\nNo. WGT\\nAn application every couple of weeks of Spalding Dri-Foot will be found very beneficial to\\nleather soles of Golf Shoes. Can, 10 cents.\\nPROMPT AHENTION GIVEN TO\\nANY COMMUNICATIONS\\nA.G.SPALDING BROS,\\nSTORES IN ALL LARGE CITIES\\nFOR COMPIHE LIST OF STORES\\nSEE INSIDE FRONT COVEB.\\nWCES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. r\u00c2\u00ab", "height": "3268", "width": "2236", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0192.jp2"}, "193": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Athletic Library\\nThe Rules of Golf\\nAs Approved by the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St. Andreivs,\\nSeptember, 1912, and as Adopted by the United States\\nGolf Association, January 11, 1913\\nREVISED\\nand in eiFect January 7, 1921\\nAs adopted with amendments concurred in by the Royal and\\nAncient Golf Club and the United States Golf Association\\nTOGETHER WITH\\nRecommendations y Form and Make of Golf Clubs, Etiquette,\\nSpecial Rules for Match Play Competitions, Rules for\\nThree Ball, Best Ball and Four Ball Matches,\\nSpecial Rules for Stroke Competition\\nand Interpretations\\nAs passed by the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews\\nand the United States Golf Association\\nInstructions for Players\\nIn Convenient Detachable Form tor Ready Reference", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0193.jp2"}, "194": {"fulltext": "1\\nIn connection with Spalding stores in a\\nnumberof cities A.G.Spalding Bros.\\nhave opened special departments fea-\\nturing SPORT-CLOTHING- for\\nGolf, Tennis, and the Out-of-doors\\nin general for Men and Women.\\nSPORTWEAR\\nand\\nSPORTGEAR\\nfor\\nSPORTSMEN\\nand\\nSPORTSWOMEN\\nNew York\\n(523 Fifth Avenue)\\nPhiladelphia\\nSyracuse\\nAtlanta\\nNew Orleans\\nChicago\\nCleveland\\nSt. Louis\\nDenver\\nSalt Lake City\\nSan Francisco\\nOakland\\nLos Angeles\\nPortland\\nSeattle", "height": "3248", "width": "2090", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0194.jp2"}, "195": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nThe Rules of Golf\\nDEFINITIONS.\\nSide.\\n(1) A side consists either of one player or\\nof two players. If one player play against an-\\nother the match is called a single. If two play\\nagainst two, each side playing one ball, the\\nmatch is called a foursome. If one play\\nagainst two playing one ball between them, the\\nmatch is called a threesome.\\n(2) Advice is any counsel or suggestion Advice,\\nwhich could influence a player in determining\\nthe line of play, in the choice of a club, or in\\nthe method of making a stroke.\\nA player may ask anyone to indicate the line to the\\nhole before the shot is played. (R, A.)\\n(8) The Course is the whole area within Course,\\nwhich play is permitted more particularly, it is\\nthe ground between the holes which is specially\\nprepared for play.\\n(4) The teeing-ground is the starting\\nplace for a hole. The front of each teeing-\\nground shall be indicated by two marks placed\\nin a line as nearly as possible at right angles to\\nthe line of play, and the teeing-ground shall in-\\nclude a rectangular space of the depth of two\\nclub lengths directly behind the line indicated\\nby the two marks.\\n(5) Through the green is all ground on\\nwhich play is permitted, except hazards and\\nthe putting-green of the hole that is being\\nplayed.\\n(6) A hazard is any bunker, water (ex-\\ncept casual water), ditch (unless excepted by\\nLocal Rule), bush, sand, path, or road. Sand\\nblown on to the grass, or sprinkled on the\\nTeeing.\\nGround.\\nThrough\\nthe green.\\nHazard.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0195.jp2"}, "196": {"fulltext": "2 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nHazard, course for its preservation, bare patches, sheep\\ntracks, snow, and ice are not hazards.\\nHeather is not a hazard. (R. A.)\\nBent is not a hazard. (R. A.)\\nLong grass is not a hazard unless within the boundaries\\nof a hazard. (R. A.)\\nA Bunker is a depression in the ground where the\\nnatural soil is exposed, and sometimes top dressed with\\nsofter soil or sand. It is the duty of the authorities in\\ncharge of the golf course to define its hazards by Local\\nRules. (R. A.)\\nCasuaL (7) Casual water is any temporary accu-\\nWater. mulation of water (whether caused by rain-\\nfall, flooding, or otherwise) which is not one of\\nthe ordinary and recognized hazards of the\\ncourse.\\nThe definition of water in the term casual water is\\nany water which interferes with the lie of the ball or\\nthe stance of the player. (R. A.)\\nOut of (8) Out of bounds is all ground on which\\nbounds, play is prohibited.\\nBall, (9) A ball is out of bounds when the\\nout of bounds, greater part of it lies within a prohibited area.\\nPutting green. (10) The putting green is all ground, ex-\\ncept hazards, within twenty yards of the hole.\\nHole. (11) The hole shall be 41/4 inches in diam-\\neter, and at least 4 inches deep. If a metal\\nlining be used, it shall be sunk below the lip of\\nthe hole, and its outer diameter shall not ex-\\nceed 4^/4 inches.\\nLoose (12) The term loose impediments denotes\\nimpediments, any obstructions not fixed or growing, and in-\\ncludes dung, wormcasts, molehills, snow and\\nice.\\nLoose stones are loose impediments. (R. A.)\\nRocks embedded in the ground come under the head of\\nthings fixed. Rule 15. (R. A.)\\nA sand box placed at a teeing-ground is a loose im-\\npediment. (R. A.)\\nA live worm is a loose impediment and may be lifted.\\n(R. A.)", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0196.jp2"}, "197": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section I\\nj (13) A stroke is the forward movement of Stroke.\\n:he club made with the intention of striking the\\n3all, or any contact between the head of the\\nilub and the ball, resulting in movement of the\\npall, except in case of a ball accidentally\\n^nocked off a tee. (Rule 2^\\nIf a ball leaves its original position when the player has\\ntaken his stance in addressing the ball and moves in the\\nslightest degree and does not merely oscillate, it has\\nmoved, and the movement constitutes a stroke, not a\\npenalty stroke. (R. A.)\\n(14) A penalty stroke is a stroke added Penalty\\n:o the score of a side under certain rules, and stroke,\\nioes not affect the rotation of play.\\n(15) The side which plays off first from a Honour.\\n:eeing ground is said to have the honour.\\n(16) In teeing, the ball may be placed on Teeing.\\n;he ground, or on sand or other substance, in\\n)rder to raise it off the ground.\\nThere is no specified method of placing a ball, and the\\nplayer is at liberty to drop it. (R. A.)\\n(17) A player has addressed the ball Addressing\\nvvhen he has taken his stance and grounded his the ball.\\n:ilub, or, if in a hazard, when he has taken his\\nstance preparatory to striking at the ball.\\n(18) A ball is in play as soon as the In play,\\nplayer has made a stroke at a teeing ground,\\nand it remains in play until holed out, except\\nwhen lifted in accordance with the rules.\\n(19) A ball is deemed to move if it leave Ball\\n:ts original position in the least degree; but it deemed to\\ns not considered to move if it merely oscil- move,\\nlate and come to rest in its original position.\\n(20) A b^ill is lost if it be not found with- Ball, lost,\\nin five minutes after the search for it has be-\\n^un.", "height": "3195", "width": "2152", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0197.jp2"}, "198": {"fulltext": "4 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nTerms used (21) The reckoning of strokes is kept by\\nin reckoning the terms the odd, two more, three\\ngame, more, etc., and one off three, one off two,\\nthe like. The reckoning of holes is kept by\\nthe terms so many holes up, or all even,\\nand so many to play.\\nA side is said to be dormie when it is as\\nmany holes up as there are holes remaining to\\nbe played.\\nUmpire. (22) An Umpire decides questions of fact;\\na Referee decides questions of Golfing Law.\\nReferee. (23) When either ball is on the putting\\ngreen, the player may remove the opponent s\\nball the opponent shall then be deemed to have\\nholed in his next stroke.\\nWeight of (24) The weight of the ball shall be not\\nball, greater than 1.62 ounce and the size not less\\nSize of than 1.62 inch in diameter. The Rules of\\n_ ball. Golf Committee and the Executive Committee\\nof the United States Golf Association will take\\nwhatever steps they think necessary to limit\\nthe power of the ball with regard to distance,\\nshould any ball of greater power be introduced.\\nThis limitation to become effective as of the\\ndate of May 1, 1921.\\nGENERAL AND THROUGH THE GREEN.\\nRULE I.\\nMode of (1) The Game of Golf is played by two\\nplay, sides, each playing its own ball, with clubs\\nmade in conformity with the directions laid\\ndown in the clause on the Form and Make of\\nGolf Clubs.\\nThe game consists in each side playing a\\nball from a teeing ground into a hole by sue-\\ncessive strokes. The hole is won by the side\\nwhich holes its ball in fewer strokes than tie", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0198.jp2"}, "199": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section 5\\nopposing side, except as otherwise provided for.\\nin the rules.\\nThe hole is halved if both sides hole out in\\nthe same number of strokes.\\n(2) A match consists of one round of the Conditions\\ncourse unless it be otherwise agreed. A match of match,\\nis won by the side which is leading by a number\\nof holes greater than the number of holes re-\\nmaining to be played.\\nA match is halved if each side win the same\\nnumber of holes.\\nMatches constituted of singles, threesomes, Priority on\\nor foursomes shall have precedence of and be the course,\\nentitled to pass any other kind of match.\\nA single player has no standing, and shall\\nalways give way to a match of any kind.\\nAny match playing a whole round shall be\\nentitled to pass a match playing a shorter\\nround.\\n]f a match fail to keep its place on the green,\\nand lose in distance more than one clear hole\\non the players in front, it may be passed, on re-\\nquest being made.\\nTwo pla^^ers playing a single ball are treated as a single\\nplayer. (R. A.)\\nRULE II.\\n(1) A match begins by each side playing a Priority on\\nball from the first teeing ground. teeing ground.\\nA ball played from outside the limits of the\\nteeing ground may be at once recalled by the\\nopposing side, and may be re-teed without\\npenalty.\\nIf a ball, when not in play, fall off a tee, or\\nbe knocked off a tee by the player in addressing\\nit, it may be re-teed without penalty if the ball\\nbe struck when so moving, no penalty shall be\\nincurred.", "height": "3226", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0199.jp2"}, "200": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nPENALTY. In Stroke Competition if a competitor play his first\\nstroke from outside the limits of the teeing ground, he\\nshall count that stroke, tee a ball, and play his second;\\nstroke from within these limits. The penalty for a\\nbreach of this Rule shall be disqualification. (R. A.)\\nOption of (2) The option of taking the honour at the\\ntaking first teeing ground shall, if necessary, be de-\\nhonour, cided by lot.\\nA ball played by a player when his opponent\\nshould have had the honour may be at once re-\\ncalled by the opposing side, and may be re-teed\\nwithout penalty.\\nThe side which wins a hole shall take the\\nhonour at the next teeing ground. If a hole hasi\\nbeen halved, the side which had the honour at\\nthe previous teeing ground shall retain it.\\nOn beginning a new match, the winner of the\\nlong match in the previous round shall take the\\nhonour if the previous long match was halved,\\nthe side which last won a hole shall take the\\nhonour.\\nRULE III.\\nIn a threesome or foursome the partners\\nshall strike off alternately from the teeing\\ngrounds, and shall strike alternately during the\\nplay of each hole.\\nIf a player play when his partner should have\\nplayed, his side shall lose the hole.\\nIn Stroke Competition violation of this rule is disqualifi-\\ncation. (R. A.)\\nIn Match Play, loss of the hole. (R. A.)\\nA penalty stroke does not affect the rotation of play.\\n(K. A.)\\nRULE IV.\\nAsking (1) A player may not ask for nor willingly\\nadvice, receive advice from any one except his own\\ncaddie, his partner or his partner s caddie.\\nOrder of play\\nin Threesome\\nand Foursome.\\nPENALTY.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0200.jp2"}, "201": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section 7\\n(2) A player is entitled at any time during Information\\nthe play of a hole to ascertain from his op- as to strokes\\nponent the number of strokes the latter has played,\\nplayed; if the opponent give wrong informa-\\ntion as to the number of strokes he has played,\\nhe shall lose the hole unless he correct his mis-\\ntake before the player has played another\\nstroke.\\nAn exception to this rule is that anyone can indicate\\nthe line to the hole. (R. A.)\\nIn Stroke Competition the penalty is disqualification PENALTY.\\n(R. A.)\\nIn Match Play the penalty is the loss of the hole. (R.\\nA.)\\n(3) A player may employ a forecaddie, but Advice from\\nmay not receive advice from him.\\nIn Match Play the penalty for a breach of this Rule\\nshall be the loss of the hole.\\nIn Stroke Competition the penalty for a breach of this\\nrule shall be disqualification.\\n(4) When playing through the green, or\\nfrom a hazard, a player may have the line to\\nthe hole indicated to him, but no mark shall\\nbe placed, nor shall anyone stand on the pro-\\nposed line, in order to indicate it, while the\\nstroke is being made.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the loss\\nof the hole in Match Play.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule in Stroke Compe-\\ntition shall be the loss of two strokes.\\nforecaddie.\\nPENALTY.\\nIndicating\\nline of play.\\nPENALTY.\\nRULE V.\\nThe ball must be fairly struck at with the\\nhead of the club, not pushed, scraped nor\\nspooned.\\nBall to be\\nfairly struck at.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the loss PENALTY,\\nof the hole in Match Play.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule in Stroke Compe-\\ntition sl\\\\^ll be two strokes.", "height": "3211", "width": "2147", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0201.jp2"}, "202": {"fulltext": "8\\nSpalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nBall may\\nbe lifted.\\nPENALTY.\\nBall farther\\nfrom hole\\nplayed first.\\nRULE VI.\\nA ball may be lifted from any place on the\\ncourse under penalty of stroke and distance.\\nIf a player lift a ball in accordance with this\\nrule he shall play his next stroke as nearly as\\npossible at the spot from which the ball was\\nplayed.\\nIf the ball so lifted was played from the tee-\\ning ground the player may tee a ball for his\\nnext stroke in every other case the ball must be\\ndropped.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the loss\\nof the hole in Match Play.\\nRULE VII.\\nWhen the balls are in play, the ball farther\\nfrom the hole shall be played first. Through\\nthe green, or in a hazard, if a player play when\\nhis opponent should have played, the opponent\\nmay at once recall the stroke. A ball so re-\\ncalled shall be dropped as near as possible to\\nthe place where it lay, without penalty.\\nFor Teeing Ground, see Rule 2 for Put-\\nting Green, see Rule 31\\nRULE VIII.\\nHow to A ball shall be dropped in the following man-\\ndrop a ball. Tier\\nThe player himself shall drop it. He shall\\nface the hole, stand erect, and drop the ball be-\\nhind him over his shoulder.\\nPENALTY. The penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the loss\\nof the hole in Match Play, and the loss of two strokes\\nin Stroke Competition.\\nIf, in the act of dropping, the ball touch the\\nplayer, he shall incur no penalty, and, if it roll y\\ninto a hazard, the player may re-drop the balln\\nwithout penalty.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0202.jp2"}, "203": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nBall not to\\nbe touched,\\nexcept in\\naddressing, for\\nidentification.\\nPENALTY.\\nRULE IX.\\n(1) A ball in play may not be touched be-\\nfore the hole is played out, except as provided\\nfor in the Rules.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule shall be one stroke\\nin Match or Stroke Competition.\\nThe player may, without penalty, touch his\\nball with his club in the act of addressing it,\\nprovided he does not move the ball. A ball in\\nplay may, with the opponent s consent, be lifted\\nfor the purpose of identification, but it must be\\ncarefully replaced.\\nIf in searching for a ball a player or his caddie move it, PENALTY,\\nthe penalty is the loss of one stroke in Match or Stroke\\nPlay. (R. A.)\\n(2) if the player s ball move the opponent s Ball moved\\nball through the green, or in a hazard, the op- by opponent s\\nponent, if he choose, may drop a ball, without bail,\\npenalty, as near as possible to the place where\\nhis ball lay, but this must be done before an-\\nother stroke is played by either side.\\nRULE X.\\nIn playing through the green, irregularities Removal of\\nof surface which could in any way affect the irregularities\\nplayer s stroke shall not be removed nor of surface,\\npressed down by the player, his partner or\\neither of their caddies; a player is, however,\\nalways entitled to place his feet firmly on the\\nground when taking his stance.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the loss PENALTY,\\nof the hole in Match Play, and the loss of two strokes\\nin Stroke Competition.\\nRULE XL\\nAny flag stick, guide flag, movable guide Removal of\\npost, wheelbarrow, tool, roller, grass cutter, obstructions,\\nbox, vehicle or similar obstruction may be re-", "height": "3185", "width": "2137", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0203.jp2"}, "204": {"fulltext": "10 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nRemoving moved. A ball moved in removing such an\\nobstructions, obstruction shall be replaced without penalty.\\nA ball lying on or touching such an obstruction,\\nor lying on or touching clothes, or nets, or\\nground under repair or covered up or opened\\nfor the purpose of the upkeep of the course,\\nor lying in one of the holes, or in a guide flag\\nhole, or in a hole made by the greenkeeper,\\nmay be lifted and dropped without penalty as\\nnear as possible to the place where it lay, but\\nnot nearer to the hole. A ball lifted in a haz-\\nard under such circumstances shall be dropped\\nin the hazard.\\nIf a ball lie on or within a club s length of a drain-\\ncover, water-pipe or hydrant, located on the course, it\\nmay be lifted and dropped without penalty, as near as\\npossible to the place where it lay, but not nearer the\\nhole as near as possible shall mean within a club s\\nlength. If it be impossible for want of space or other\\ncause for a player to drop the ball in conformity with\\nthis interpretation, he shall place the ball as nearly as\\npossible within the limits laid down in this interpreta-\\ntion, but not nearer the hole. (U. S. G. A.)\\nA pile or mound of cut grass resulting from the mowing\\nof the course or any other material piled for removal\\nis considered to be upkeep. A ball lodging in or lying\\non such an obstruction may be lifted and dropped with-\\nout penalty. (U. S. G. A.)\\nRULE XII.\\nRemoval of (1) Any loose impediment lying within a\\nloose club length of the ball and not being in or\\nimpediments, touching a hazard may be removed without\\npenalty; if the ball move after any such loose\\nimpediment has been touched by the player, his\\npartnei;, or either of their caddies, the player\\nshall be deemed to have caused the ball to\\nPENALTY, move and the penalty shall be one stroke in\\nboth Match and Stroke Competition.\\n(2) A loose impediment lying more than a\\nclub length from the ball may not be moved", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0204.jp2"}, "205": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golfi Guide Rules Section 11\\nunder penalty of the loss of the hole in Match penalty.\\nPlay and the loss of two strokes in Stroke Com-\\npetition, unless the loose impediment lie on the\\nputting-green. (See Rule 28(i\\n(3) When a ball is in play, if a player, or Ball\\nhis partner, or either of their caddies, acci- accidentally\\ndentally move his or their ball, or by touching moved,\\nanything cause it to move, the penalty shall be\\none stroke in both Match and Stroke\\nCompetition.\\n(4) If a ball in play move after the player Ball moving\\nhas grounded his club in the act of addressing after\\nit, or, if a ball in play being in a hazard move grounded.\\nafter the player has taken his stance to play\\nit, he shall be deemed to have caused it to move,\\nand the penalty shall be one stroke in both penalty.\\nMatch and Stroke Competition.\\nNote. If the player has lifted a loose im-\\npediment, see Rules 12^1^ and 28 and the\\nball has not moved until the player has\\ngrounded his club, he shall only be deemed to\\nhave caused the ball to move under Section\\n(4) of this rule, and the penalty shall be one penalty.\\nstroke in both Match and Stroke Competition.\\nA mole-hill or mole-track may be removed from the fair\\ngreen in any way which will not unnecessarily interfere\\nwith the surface of the green. (U. S. G. A.)\\nRULE XIII\\nA player shall not play while his ball is mov-\\ning, under the penalty of the loss of the hole in\\nMatch Play and the loss of two strokes in\\nStroke Competition, except in the case of a teed\\nball (Rule 2) or a ball struck twice (Rule 14)\\nor a ball in water (Rule 26).\\nWhen the ball only begins to move while the\\nplayer is making his backward or forward\\nswing, he. shall incur no penalty under this rule.\\nPlaying\\na moving\\nball.\\npenalty.", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0205.jp2"}, "206": {"fulltext": "12 Spalding s Golf .Guide Rules Section\\nbut he is not exempted from the provisions of\\nRule 12(i or Rule 28(^ and of Rule 12(3. 4).\\nRULE XIV.\\nStriking If a player, when making a stroke, in both\\nball twice. Match and Stroke Competition, strike the ball\\nPENALTY, twice, tlie penalty shall be one stroke, but he\\nshall incur no further penalty by reason of\\nhis having played while his ball was moving,\\nRULE XV.\\niMoving or Before striking at a ball in play, a player\\nibending fix-ed shall not move, bend, nor break anything fixed\\n.or ;^rowing or growing, except so far as is necessary to en-\\npbjects. able him fairly to take his stance in address-\\ning the ball, or in making his backward or for-\\nward swing. The club may only be grounded\\nlightly, and not pressed on the ground.\\nPENALTY. The penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the loss\\npi the hole in Match Play, and the loss of two strokes\\nii.li Stroke Competition.\\nA player may take a practice swing or swings after the\\nbail is in play, more than a club s length from the balL\\n(U. S. G. A.)\\nIn grounding a club, player may only ground his club\\nlightly. Drawing it back and forward across the line of\\nplay is illegal and entails a penalty of the loss of the\\nhole in Match Play and a penalty of two strokes in\\nStroke Competition.\\nUndue pressure in grounding a club entails a like pen-\\nalty. (R. A.)\\nRULE XVL\\nBalls Wh within a club length of\\nwithin a earh oi^^^ through the green or in a hazard,\\nclub length the ball .lying nearer to the hole may, at the\\nof each option of thither the player or the opponent, be\\nother, lifted until c^ he other ball is played, and shal\\nthen be replav ^^d as near as possible to th\\nplace where it k ^y-", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0206.jp2"}, "207": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golfi Guide Rules Section\\nIf either ball be accidentally moved in com-\\nplying with this rule, no penalty shall be in-\\ncurred, and the ball so moved shall be re-\\nplaced.\\nIf the lie of the lifted ball be altered in play-\\ning the other ball, the lifted ball may be placed\\nas near as possible to the place where it lay and\\nin a lie similar to that which it originally oc-\\ncupied.\\nRULE XVII.\\n(1) If a ball in motion be stopped or de-\\nflected by any agency outside the match, or by a\\nforecaddie, it is a rub of the green, and the ball\\nshall be played from the spot where it lies.\\nTJie penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the loss\\nof the hole in Match Play, and the loss of two strokes\\nin Stroke Competition.\\n(2) If a ball lodge in anything moving, a\\nball shall be dropped, or if on the putting green,\\nplaced, as near as possible to the place where\\nthe object was when the ball lodged in it, with-\\nout penalty.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the loss\\nof the hole in Match Play, and the loss of two strokes\\nin Stroke Competition.\\n(3) If a ball at rest be displaced by any\\nagency outside the match, except wind, the\\nplayer shall drop a ball as near as possible to\\nthe place where it lay, without penalty, and if\\nthe ball be displaced on the putting green, it\\n3hall be replaced without penalty.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the loss\\nof the hole in Match Play, and the loss of two strokes\\nin Stroke Competition.\\n13\\nWhen no\\npenalty.\\nMoving ball\\nstopped.\\nPENALTY.\\nBall\\nlodging I**\\nanything\\nmoving.\\nPE-NALTY,\\nBall at rest\\ndisplaced by i\\noutside\\nagency.\\nPENALTY.\\nRULE XVIII. B^jl\\nIf a player s ball, when in motion, be inter- interfered with\\nf ^red with jn any way by an opponent, or his by opponent.", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0207.jp2"}, "208": {"fulltext": "14\\nSpalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nPENALTY, caddie, or his clubs, the opponent s side shall\\nlose the hole.\\nIf a player s ball, when at rest, be moved\\nby an opponent, or his caddie or his clubs, the\\nException, opponent s side shall lose the hole, except as\\nprovided for in Rules 9^- 16, 22^^\\\\ 3V^\\\\ S2^^\\\\\\nand 33.\\nRULE XIX.\\nBall If a player s ball strike, or be stopped by\\nstriking the himself, or his partner, or either of their cad-\\nplayer, etc. dies or their clubs, his side shall lose the hole\\nPENALTY Match Play, and the loss of one stroke in\\nStroke Competition, except as provided for in\\nStroke Rule 13(i).\\nRULE XX.\\nPlaying (1) If a player play the opponent s ball his\\nopponent s Side shall lose the hole in Match Play unless\\nball. (a) The opponent then play the player s ball,\\nin which case the penalty is cancelled in Match\\nExceptions. Play and the hole shall be played out with the\\nballs thus exchanged.\\n(b) The mistake occur through wrong infor-\\nmation given by an opponent or his caddie, in\\nwhich case there shall be no penalty in Match\\nPlay; if the mistake be discovered before the\\nopponent has played, it shall be rectified by\\ndropping a ball as near as possible to the place\\nwhe)-e the opponent s ball lay.\\nPENALTY.\\nIn Stroke Competition, if a competitor play a stroke\\nwith a ball other than his own, he shall incur no pen-\\nahy, provided that he then plays his own hall, but if he\\nplays two consecutive strokes with a wronji ball, he shall\\nhe disqualified.\\nIn a hazard, if a conii)etilor play more than one stroke\\nwith a ball other than his own, and the mistake be dis-\\ncovered before he has played a stroke with the wrong\\nball from outside the limits of the hazard, he shall incur", "height": "3258", "width": "2215", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0208.jp2"}, "209": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\n15\\nno penalty provided he then plays his own ball. The PENALTY,\\npenalty for a breach of this rule shall be disqualification.\\n(See Rule 8, Rules for Play in Stroke Competition.)\\nOn the putting-green the hall shall he re-\\nplaced.\\n(2) If a player in Match Play play a stroke Playing\\nwith the ball of anyone not engaged in the ball outside\\nmatch, and the mistake be discovered and in- the match,\\ntimated to his opponent before his opponent\\nhas played his next stroke, there shall be no\\npenalty if the mistake be not discovered and so\\nintimated until after the opponent has played\\nhis next stroke, the player s side shall lose the penalty.\\nRULE XXI.\\nIf a ball be lost, except in water, casual Ball lost,\\nwater, or out of bounds, the player shall return\\nas nearly as possible to the spot from which the\\nball was played and drop another ball, with a penalty.\\npenalty of one stroke. If the lost ball be played\\nfrom the teeing ground the player may tee a\\nball for his next stroke.\\n^ote A provisional ball may be played.\\nRULE XXII.\\n(1) If a ball lie in fog, bent, bushes, long Looking\\ngrass, or the like, only so much thereof shall be for ball in\\ntouched as will enable the player to find his bent, etc.\\nball.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the loss PENALTY,\\nof a stroke in both Match Play and Stroke Competition.\\n(2) If a ball be completely covered by sand, in sand,\\nonly so much thereof may be removed as will\\nenable the player to see the top of the ball if\\nthe ball be touched in removing the sand, no\\npenalty shall be incurred.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the loss PENALTY,\\nof the hole in Match Play, and the loss of two strokes\\nin Stroke Competition.", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0209.jp2"}, "210": {"fulltext": "16 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nBall (3) If a player or his caddie when searching\\naccidentally for an opponent s ball accidently touch or move\\nmoved by j^^ j^q penalty shall be incurred, and the ball,\\nopponent in jf nioved, shall be replaced.\\nsearch.\\nPENALTY. penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the loss\\nof a stroke in Match Play and the loss of two strokes\\nin Stroke Competition.\\nRULE XXIII.\\nBall (1) If a ball lie out of bounds, the player\\nout of shall play his next stroke as nearly as possible\\nbounds, at the spot from which the ball which is out of\\nbounds was played under penalty of stroke and\\ndistance. If the ball was played out of bounds\\nfrom the teeing ground, the player may tee a\\nball for his next stroke, in every other case the\\nball shall be dropped.\\nPENALTY. (2) ji^Q penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the loss\\nof the hole in Match Play and disqualification in Stroke\\nCompetition.\\nIf it is doubtful that a ball be out of bounds the player\\nwho played it is not entitled to presume that it is out of\\nbounds until he has made a search of five minutes for it.\\nMeanwhile his opponent may make a search of five\\nminutes for the ball within bounds, and if the ball is not\\nfound within that time the player who struck the ball\\nshall be given the benefit of the doubt, and the ball shall\\nbe considered out of bounds.\\n(2) In the case of a ball out of bounds, permission be\\ngiven for Clubs to alter this by a Local Rule, f6r dis-\\ntance only.\\nProvisional (2) In order to save delay, if a player after\\nball played, making a stroke be doubtful whether his ball\\nis out of bounds or not, he may play another\\nball as provided for in part (1) of this Rule, but\\nif it be discovered that the first ball is not out\\nof bounds, it shall continue in play without\\npenalty.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0210.jp2"}, "211": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section 17\\nOn reaching the place where the first ball is Search must\\nlikely to be, if the player or his opponent be still be made\\nin doubt, the player is not entitled to presume\\nthat the first ball is out of bounds till he has\\nmade a search of five minutes.\\n(3) A player has the right at any time of Ascertaining\\nascertaining whether his opponent s ball is out location of\\nof bounds or not before his opponent can compel ball.\\nhim to continue his play.\\n(4) A player may stand out of bounds to play Standing\\na ball lying within bounds. out of bounds.\\nRULE XXIV.\\nIf a ball split into separate pieces, another Ball\\nball may be dropped where any piece lies. If unfit for play,\\na ball crack or becomes unfit for play, the player\\nmay change it on intimating to his opponent his\\nintention to do so. Mud adhering to a ball shall\\nnot be considered as making it unfit for play.\\nCleaning a ball when in play entails a penalty of dis- PENALTY,\\nqualification in Stroke Competition and the loss of the\\nhole in Match Play, except under special rulings of\\nLocal Rules by Committee in charge. (U. S. G. A.)\\nHAZARDS AND CASUAL WATER.\\nRULE XXV.\\nWhen a ball lies in or touches a hazard, Conditions\\nnothing shall be done which can in any way im- of play\\nprove its lie the club shall not touch the in hazards,\\nground, nor shall anything be touched or\\nmoved, before the player strikes at the ball, sub-\\nject to the following exceptions:\\n(1) The player may place his feet firmly on\\nthe ground for the purpose of taking his stance.", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0211.jp2"}, "212": {"fulltext": "18\\nWhen\\naddressing\\nball.\\nSteps or\\nplanks may\\nbe moved.\\nLoose\\nimpediments.\\nPENALTY.\\nBall\\nmoving in\\nwater.\\nPENALTY.\\nSpalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\n(2) In addressing the ball, or in the back-\\nward or forward swing, any grass, bent, bush,\\nor other growing substance, or the side of a\\nbunker, wall, paling, or other immovable ob-\\nstacle may be touched.\\n(3) Steps or planks placed in a hazard by\\nthe Green Committee for access to or egress\\nfrom such hazard, or any obstruction mentioned\\nin Rule 11, may be removed, and if a ball be\\nmoved in so doing, it shall be replaced with-\\nout penalty.\\n(4) Any loose impediment may be lifted\\nfrom the putting-green.\\n(5) The player shall be entitled to find his\\nball as provided for by Rule 22.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the loss\\nof the hole, and the loss of two strokes in Stroke Com-\\npetition.\\nA recognized water hazard cannot be out of bounds.\\n(R. A.)\\nRULE XXVI.\\nWhen a ball is in water, a player may, with-\\nout penalty, strike at it while it is moving, but\\nhe must not delay to make his stroke in order\\nto allow the wind or current to better the\\nposition of the ball, under penalty of the loss of\\nthe hole in Match Play, and the loss of two\\nstrokes in Stroke Competition.\\nRULE XXVU.\\nBall\\nin water (1) If a ball lie or be lost in a recognized\\nhazard, water hazard (whether the ball lie in water or\\nBall not) or in casual water in a hazard, the player\\nin casual niay drop a ball under penalty of one stroke in\\n^hlz^ard Mat^^h Play or stroke Competition, either (a)\\nbehind the hazard, keeping the spot at which\\nPENALTY, the ball crossed the margin of the hazard be-", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0212.jp2"}, "213": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\ntween himself and the hole, or {b) in the\\nhazard, keeping the spot at which the ball en-\\ntered the water between himself and the hole.\\nwt- Ice on the putting-green or through the green is consid-\\nW ered casual water. (R. A.)\\n(2) If a ball lie or be lost in casual water\\nthrough the green, the player may drop a ball\\nwithout penalty within two club lengths of the\\nmargin, as near as possible to the spot where\\nthe ball lay, but not nea,rer to the hole.\\nIf a ball when dropped roll into the water,\\nit may be redropped without penalty.\\n(3) If a ball on the putting-green lie in\\ncasual water, or if casual water intervene be-\\ntween a ball lying on the putting-green and the\\nhole, the ball may be played where it lies, or it\\nmay be lifted without penalty and placed by\\nhand, either within two club lengths directly\\nbehind the spot from which the ball was lifted,\\nor in the nearest position to that spot which is\\nnot nearer to the hole and which affords a putt\\nto the hole without casual water intervening.\\n(4) A ball lying so near the casual water\\nthat the water interferes with the player s\\nstance may be treated as if it lay in casual\\nwater, under the preceding Section of this\\nRule.\\n(5) If it be impossible, from want of space\\nin which to play, or from any other cause, for a\\nplayer to drop a ball in conformity with Sec-\\ntions (1) and (2) of this rule, or to place it\\nin conformity with Section (3), he shall drop\\nor place as nearly as possible within the\\nlimits laid down in these sections, but not\\nnearer to the hole.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the loss\\nof the hole in Match Play, and the loss of two strokes\\nin Stroke, Competition.\\n19\\nWhen player\\nmay drop\\nball.\\nBall\\nin casual\\nwater\\nthrough\\nthe green.\\nBall\\nin casual\\nwater on the\\nputting green.\\nWater\\ninterfering\\nwith stance.\\nWant of\\nspace to\\ndrop.\\nPENALTY,", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0213.jp2"}, "214": {"fulltext": "20\\nSpalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nPENALTY.\\nRemoval of\\ndung, etc.\\nPENALTY.\\nPUTTING GREEN.\\nRULE xxvni.\\nRemoval (1) Any loose impediment may be lifted\\nof loose from the putting-green, irrespective of the po-\\nimpediments. sition of the player s ball. If the player s ball,\\nwhen on the putting-green, move after any\\nloose impediment lying within six inches of it\\nhas been touched by the player, his partner, or\\neither of their caddies, the player shall be\\ndeemed to have caused it to move and the pen-\\nalty shall be one stroke, in both Match Play and\\nStroke Competition.\\n(2) Dung, wormcasts, snow and ice may be\\nscraped aside with a club, but the club must\\nnot be laid with more than its own weight upon\\nthe ground, nor must anything be pressed down\\neither with the club or in any other way.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule in Match Play is\\nthe loss of the hole, and in Stroke Competition the loss\\nof two strokes.\\nUnder Rule 28 (1) the hand may in all cases be used\\nto lift Loose Impediments. In the case of certain\\nLoose Impediments specified in Rule 28 (2), it is also\\npermissible to make use of a club in order to scrape\\nthem aside. As loose leaves are not among these impedi-\\nments specified in Rule 28 (2), they must be lifted.\\n^R. A.)\\nTouching (3) The line of the putt must not be\\nline to putt, touched, except by placing the club immediately\\nin front of the ball in the act of addressing it,\\nand as above authorized.\\nPENALTY. The penalty for a breach of tliis rule shall be the loss\\nof the hole in Match Play, and the loss of two strokes\\nin Stroke Competition.\\nIt is not permissible to touch the ground behind the\\nhole in order to point out the line of a putt. (R. A.)\\nRULE XXIX.\\nDirection 1 When the player s ball is on the putting-\\nfor putting, green, the player s caddie, his partner, or his", "height": "3258", "width": "2153", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0214.jp2"}, "215": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\n21\\npartner s caddie may, before the stroke is\\nplayed, point out the direction for putting, but\\nin doing this they shall not touch the ground\\non the proposed line of the putt. No mark\\nshall be placed anywhere on the putting-green.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the loss PENALTY,\\nof the hole in Match Play, and the loss of two strokes\\nin Stroke Competition.\\n(2) Any player or caddie engaged in the\\nmatch may stand at the hole, but no player or\\ncaddie shall endeavor, by moving or otherwise,\\nto influence the action of the wind upon the\\nball.\\nA player is, however, always entitled to send\\nhis own caddie to stand at the hole while he\\nplays his stroke.\\nEither side may refuse to allow a person who\\nis not engaged in the match to stand at the hole.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the loss\\nof the hole in Match Play, and the loss of two strokes\\nin Stroke Competition.\\nRULE XXX.\\nWhen the player s ball lies on the putting\\ngreen, he shall not play until the opponent s ball\\nis at rest.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the loss\\nof the hole in Match Play, and the loss of two strokes\\nin Stroke Competition.\\nRULE XXXL\\n(1) When the balls lie within six inches of\\neach other on the putting-green (the distance\\nto be measured from their nearest points) the\\nball lying nearer to the hole may, at the option\\nof either the player or the opponent, be lifted\\nuntil the other ball is played, and the lifted ball\\nshall then be replaced as near as possible to the\\nplace where it lay.\\nIf either ball be accidentally moved in corn-\\nShielding\\nball from\\nwind.\\nPENALTY.\\nOpponent s\\nball to be\\nat rest.\\nPENALTY.\\nBall\\nwithin six\\ninches lifted.\\nSTYMIE", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0215.jp2"}, "216": {"fulltext": "22 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nplying with this rule, no penalty shall be in-\\ncurred, and the ball so moved shall be replaced.\\nStymie player is laid a stymie if on the putting-green the\\nopponent s ball lies in the line of his putt to the hole,\\nprovided the balls be not within six inches of each other.\\nPlaying (2) On the putting-green, if a player play\\nout of turn, when his opponent should have played, the\\nstroke may be at once recalled by the opponent,\\nand the ball replaced.\\nNote. For a ball which is displaced on a\\nputting-green see Rule 17 and ^^K\\nFor a player playing the opponent s ball on\\nthe putting-green see Rule 20\\nCasual water. For casual water on a putting-green see Rule\\n27(3).\\nRULE XXXII.\\nRemoval of (1) Either side is entitled to have the flag-\\nflag-stick, stick removed when approaching the hole; if\\na player s ball strike the flag-stick, which has\\nbeen so removed by himself, or his partner,\\nPENALTY, or either of their caddies, his side shall lose the\\nhole in Match Play, and the loss of two strokes\\nin Stroke Competition.\\nIf the ball rest against the flag-stick which\\nis in the hole, the player shall be entitled to\\nremove the flag-stick, and, if the ball fall into\\nthe hole, the player shall be deemed to have\\nholed out at his last stroke.\\nPENALTY. I Stroke Competition when a ball lying within 20 yards\\nof the hole is played and strikes, or is stopped by the\\nflag-stick or the person standing at the hole, the penalty\\nshall be two strokes. (R. A.)\\nDisplacing (2) If the player s ball knock the opponent s\\nand replacing ball into the hole, the opponent shall be deemed\\nof balls, to have holed out at his last stroke.\\nIf the player s ball move the opponent s ball,\\nthe opponent, if he choose, may replace it, but\\nii", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0216.jp2"}, "217": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf) Guide Rules Section\\n23\\nBall\\non lip of\\nhole.\\nPENALTY.\\nthis must be done before another stroke is\\nplayed by either side.\\nIf the player s ball stop on the spot formerly\\noccupied by the opponent s ball, and the op-\\nponent declare his intention to replace his ball,\\nthe player shall first play another stroke, after\\nwhich the opponent shall replace and play his\\nball.\\nSee Rule 13, Rules for Stroke Competitions for penalty PENALTY,\\nin Stroke Competitions.\\n(3) If the player has holed out and the op-\\nponent then plays to the lip of the hole, the\\nplayer may not knock the ball away, but the\\nopponent, if asked, shall play his next stroke\\nwithout delay. The penalty for a breach of this\\nRule shall be the loss of the hole.\\nIf the opponent s ball lie on the lip of the\\nhole, the player, after holing out, may knock the\\nball away, claiming the hole if holing at the\\nlike, and the half if holing at the odd, provided\\nthat the player s ball does not strike the oppo-\\nnent s ball and set it in motion if the player\\nneglects to knock away the opponent s ball, and\\nit fall into the hole, the opponent shall be\\ndeemed to have holed out at his last stroke.\\nRULE XXXIII.\\nWhen a player has holed out and his op-\\nponent has been left with a stroke for the half,\\nnothing that the player who has holed out can\\ndo shall deprive him of the half which he has\\nalready gained.\\nPenalty of\\nloss of hole\\nqualified by\\nhalf previously\\ngained.\\nGENERAL PENALTY.\\nRULE XXXIV.\\nWhere no penalty for the breach of a rule Loss of the\\nis stated, the penalty shall be the loss of the hole,\\nhole.", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0217.jp2"}, "218": {"fulltext": "24 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nDISPUTES.\\nRULE XXXV.\\nDuties of An Umpire or Referee (see Definition 22),\\nUmpire or when appointed, shall take cognizance of any\\nReferee, breach of Rule that he may observe, whether\\nhe be appealed to on the point or not.\\nRULE XXXVL\\nClaims, If a dispute arise on any point, a claim must\\nwhen and be made before the players strike off from the\\nhow made, next teeing ground, or, in the case of the last\\nhole of the round, before they leave the putting\\ngreen. If no umpire or referee has been ap-\\npointed, the players have the right of deter-\\nmining to whom the point shall be referred, but\\nshould they not agree, either side may have it\\nreferred officially through the secretary of the\\nclub, to the Executive Committee of the United\\nStates Golf Association, whose decision shall be\\nfinal. If the point in dispute be not covered by\\nthe Rules of Golf, the arbiters shall decide it\\nby equity.\\nIf the players have agreed to an Umpire or\\nReferee, they must abide by his decision.\\nRECOMMENDATIONS FOR LOCAL\\nRULES.\\nSpecial When necessary, Local Rules should be made\\nhazards or for such obstructions as rushes, trees, hedges,\\nconditions, fixed seats, fences, gates, railways, and walls,\\nfor such difficulties as rabbit scrapes, hoof\\nmarks and other damage caused to the course\\nby animals, for such local conditions as the\\nexistence of mud which may be held to inter-\\nfere with the proper playing of the game and\\nfor the penalty to be imposed in the case of a\\nball which lies out of bounds.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0218.jp2"}, "219": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nWhen a ball is lifted under a local rule, as in\\nthe case of a ball lifted from a putting green\\nother than that of the hole which is being\\nplayed, the Rules of Golf Committee recom-\\nmends that if it is to be played from through\\nthe green it should be dropped; if it is to be\\nplayed on the putting-green of the hole that is\\nbeing played, it should be placed.\\nFORM AND MAKE OF GOLF CLUBS.\\nThe Ignited States Golf Association will not\\nsanction any substantial departure from the\\ntraditional and accepted form and make of golf\\nclubs, which, in its opinion, consists of a plain\\nshaft and a head which does not contain any\\nmechanical contrivance, such as springs. It\\nalso regards as illegal the use of such clubs as\\nthose of the mallet-headed type, or such clubs\\nas have the neck so bent as to produce a sim-\\nilar effect.\\nThe shaft of a putter may be fixed at the heel or at\\nany other point in the head.\\nThe term mallet-headed, as above used, when applied to\\nputters does not embrace putters of the so-called Schen-\\nectady type. (U. S. G. A.)\\n25\\nBall:\\nwhen dropped.\\nBall\\nwhen placed.", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0219.jp2"}, "220": {"fulltext": "26\\nSpalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nWhen player\\nis making\\na stroke.\\nPlayer who\\nhas honour.\\nWhen to\\nplay.\\nTrying\\nputts over.\\nWhen\\nlost ball.\\nReplace\\ndivots.\\nFill up\\nholes.\\nWhen ground\\nis soft.\\nNotify\\nopponent of\\npenalty stroke.\\nPrizes\\nforfeited.\\nEtiquette of Golf\\nNo one should stand close to or directly be-\\nhind the ball, move, or talk, when a player is\\nmaking a stroke.\\nOn the putting-green no one should stand\\nbeyond the hole in the line of a player s stroke.\\nThe player who has the honour should be\\nallowed to play before his opponent tees his ball.\\nNo player should play from the tee until\\nthe party in front have played their second\\nstrokes and are out of range, nor play up to\\nthe putting-green till the party in front have\\nholed out and moved away.\\nPlayers who have holed out should not try\\ntheir putts over again when other players are\\nfollowing them.\\nPlayers looking for a lost ball should allow\\nother matches coming up to pass them; they\\nshould signal to the players following them\\nto pass, and having given such a signal, they\\nshould not continue their play until these play-\\ners have passed and are out of reach.\\nTurf cut or displaced by a player should be\\nat once replaced and pressed down with the\\nfoot.\\nA player should carefully fill up all holes\\nmade by himself in a bunker.\\nPlayers should see that their caddies do not\\ninjure the holes by standing close to them\\nwhen the ground is soft.\\nA player who has incurred a penalty stroke\\nshould intimate the fact to his opponent as\\nsoon as possible.\\nPlayers who do not continue in the match\\nplay rounds of a tournament should be con-\\nsidered to have forfeited any prizes they may\\nhave won in the qualifyiny round U. S. G. A.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0220.jp2"}, "221": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\n27\\nRules for Bo^ey Competitions\\nA Bogey competition is a series of Stroke (Bogey)\\nCompetitions in which play is against a fixed Definition,\\nscore at each hole of the stipulated round or\\nrounds, and the winner is the competitor who\\nis most successful in the aggregate of these\\ncompetitions. The rules for stroke competi-\\ntions shall apply with following exceptions:\\n1, Any hole for which a competitor makes When a\\nno return shall be regarded as a loss. The loss,\\nmarker shall be only responsible for the mark-\\ning of the correct number of strokes at each\\nhole at which a competitor makes a score\\neither equal to or less than the fixed score.\\n2 Any breach of rule which entails the pen- Regarding\\nalty of disqualification shall only disqualify the disqualifica-\\ncompetitor for the hole at which the breach tions.\\noccurred; but a competitor shall not be\\nexempted from the general disqualification\\nimposed by Stroke Rules 2^^\\\\ 4^2) and 5 i),\\nand (2).\\nNote A scale showing the handicap allow-\\nance and indicating the holes at which strokes\\nare to be given or taken, shall be printed on\\nthe back of every scoring card.\\nThe United States Golf Association recom- Handicap\\nmends that clubs continue to follow the cus- allowance,\\ntom of allowing each competitor three-quarters\\nof his full handicap.", "height": "3221", "width": "2239", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0221.jp2"}, "222": {"fulltext": "28\\nSpalding s Golf Guide Rules SectioH\\nBall must\\nbe replaced.\\nPENALTY.\\nSpecial Rules for Match Play\\nCompetitions\\nRULE I.\\nOn the putting-green, if the competitor whose\\nball is the nearer to the hole play first, his ball\\nshall be at once replaced.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the dis-\\nqualification of both competitors.\\nRULE IL\\nPenalty A competitor shall not waive any penalty\\nmust not be incurred by his opponent, under penalty of the\\nwaived, loss of the hole.\\nRULE in.\\nRules Competitors shall not agree to exclude the\\nmay not be ^operation of any Rule, or Local Rule, under\\n-suspended, penalty of disqualification.\\nPutts should The Rules of Golf Committee recommends\\nnot be that players should not concede putts to their\\nconceded, opponents.\\nThe Executive Committee of the United\\nHandicap States Golf Association recommends that in\\nallowance. Match Play singles, three-fourths of the dif-\\nference between the handicaps be allowed, and\\nthat in Match Play foursomes, three-eighths\\nof the difference of the combined handicaps be\\nallowed.\\nI", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0222.jp2"}, "223": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\n29\\nThree-ball\\nmatch.\\nBest-ball\\nmatch.\\nFour-ball\\nmatch.\\nRules for Three-Ball, Best Ball\\nand Four-Ball Matches\\nDEFINITIONS.\\n(1) When three players play against each\\nother, each playing his own ball, the match is\\ncalled a three-ball match.\\n(2) When one player plays his ball against\\nthe best ball of two or more players, the match\\nis called a best ball match.\\n(3) When two players play their better ball\\nagainst the better ball of two other players,\\nthe match is called a four-ball match.\\nGENERAL.\\nRULE I.\\nAny player may have any ball in the match\\nlifted or played, at the option of its owner,\\nif he consider that it might interfere with or\\nbe of assistance to a player or side, but this\\nshould only be done before the player has\\nplayed his stroke.\\nRULE II.\\nIf a. player s ball move any other ball in the\\nmatchj the moved ball must be replaced as near\\nas possible to the spot where it lay, without\\npenalty.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule is the loss of the PENAI^TY\\nhole in Match Play and disqualification in Stroke Com-\\npetition.\\nRULE III.\\nThrough the green a player shall incur no\\npenalty for playing when an opponent should\\nihave done so, and the stroke shall not be\\nrecalled.\\nWhen ball\\nmay be\\nlifted.\\nBall must be\\nreplaced.\\nRecalling\\nstroke.", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0223.jp2"}, "224": {"fulltext": "30 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nOn the putting-green the stroke may be re-\\ncalled by an opponent, but no penalty shall be\\nincurred.\\n[f THREE-BALL MATCH.\\nRULE IV.\\nOrder of During a three-ball match if no player is\\nplay, entitled at a teeing-ground to claim the honour\\nfrom both opponents, the same order of strik-\\ning shall be followed as at the last teeing-\\nground.\\nRULE V.\\nWhen In a three-ball match, if a player s ball strike,\\nopponent or be stopped, or moved by an opponent or an\\nloses hole, opponent s caddy, or clubs, that opponent shall\\nlose the hole to the player. As regards the\\nPENALTY, other opponent the occurrence shall be treated\\nas a rub of the green.\\nBEST BALL AND FOUR-BALL MATCHES.\\nRULE VI.\\nOrder of Balls belonging to the same side may be\\nplay, played in the order the side deems best.\\nRULE VII.\\nLoss of If a player s ball strike, or be stopped, or\\nhole, moved by an opponent or an opponent s cad-\\ndie, or clubs, the opponent s side shall lose the\\nhole in Match Play.\\nPENALTY. In Stroke Competition it is a rub of the green, and the\\nball shall be played from where it lies except as provided\\nfor in Stroke Rule 13 (1). See Stroke Rule 10 (1).\\nRULE VIII.\\nPlayer jf a player s ball (the player being one of\\ndisqualified, a side) strike or be stopped by himself, or his\\npartner, or either of their caddies or clubs, only\\nPENALTY, that player shall be disqualified for that hole.", "height": "3258", "width": "2241", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0224.jp2"}, "225": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golfi Guide Rules Section\\n31\\nRULE IX.\\nIf a player play a stroke with his partner s Playing\\nball, and the mistake be discovered and inti- partner s\\nmated to the other side before an opponent has ball by\\nplayed another stroke, the player shall be dis- mistake,\\nqualified for that hole, and his partner shall penalty.\\ndrop a ball as near as possible to the spot\\nfrom which his ball was played, without pen-\\nalty. If the mistake be not discovered till If mistake\\nafter the opponent has played a stroke, the not\\nplayer s side shall lose the hole in Match Play discovered,\\nand the player who violated this rule shall be\\ndisqualified for that hole in Stroke Competition, penalty.\\nRULE X.\\nIn all other cases where a player would by Disqualifica-\\nthe Rules of Golf incur the loss of the hole, he tion does not\\nshall be disqualified for that hole, but the dis- apply to\\nqualification shall not apply to his partner. partner.", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0225.jp2"}, "226": {"fulltext": "32 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nSpecial Rules\\nfor Stroke Competitions\\nCommittee Wherevei the word Committee is used in\\ndefined, these Rules, it refers to the Committee in\\ncharge of the Competition.\\nRULE I.\\nThe winner. 1 In Stroke Competitions the competitor\\nwho holes the stipulated round or rounds in\\nthe fewest strokes shall be the winner.\\nThe Rules of Golf Committee is of opinion that it is\\nhardly possible to play Match and Score Play at the\\nsame time in a satisfactory manner, or without infring-\\ning rules. (R. A.)\\nOrder of play. (2) Competitors shall play in couples; if\\nfrom any cause there be a single competitor,\\nthe Committee shall either provide him with a\\nplayer who shall mark for him, or select a\\nmarker for him and allow him to compete alone.\\nThe order and times of starting should, when\\npossible, be determined by ballot.\\nStroke Rule 1 (2) does not permit more than two com-\\npetitors to play together. (R. A.)\\nRULE II.\\nMust play 1 Competitors shall start in the order and\\nin bad at the times arranged by the Committee. They\\nweather, shall not discontinue play nor delay to start\\non account of bad weather, or for any other\\nreason whatever, except such as the Committee\\nmay consider satisfactory.\\nPENALTY. The penalty for a breach of this rule shall be disqualifi-\\ncation.\\nIf course (2) If the Committee consider that the\\nunplayable, course is not in a playable condition, or that", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0226.jp2"}, "227": {"fulltext": "Deciding\\nties.\\nSpalding s Golf Guide Rules Section 33\\ninsufficient light renders the proper playing of\\nthe game impossible, it shall at any time have\\npower to declare the day s play null and void.\\nRULE III.\\nIf the lowest scores be made by two or more\\ncompetitors, the tie or ties shall be decided by\\nanother round to be played on the same day;\\nbut if the Committee determine that this is\\ninexpedient or impossible, it shall appoint a day\\nany time for the decision of the tie or ties.\\nShould an uneven number of competitors tie,\\ntheir names shall be drawn by ballot and\\nplaced upon a list; the competitors shall then\\nplay in couples in the order in which their\\nnames appear. The single competitor shall be\\nprovided for by the Committee, either under\\nRule 1^^\\\\ or by allowing three competitors\\nto play together, if their unanimous consent\\nhas been obtained.\\nRULE IV.\\n(1) New holes should be made on the day New Holes,\\non which Stroke Competitions begin.\\n(2) On the day of the competition, before Practice on\\nstarting, no competitor shall play on, or on to, ^ay of\\nany of the putting-greens, nor shall he inten- competition,\\ntionally play at any hole of the stipulated\\nround which is within his reach, under penalty penalty.\\nof disqualification.\\nWhen a competition is continued on two or more days,\\ncompetitors who practice on the second or following\\ndays cannot be deemed to have infringed Stroke Rule 4\\n(2), which refers to play before starting, i.e., before\\nthe player starts in the competition. (R. A.)\\nRULE V.\\n(1) The score for each hole shall be kept by Scores:\\na marker or by each competitor noting the How kept.", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0227.jp2"}, "228": {"fulltext": "34 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nother s scoie. Should more than one marker\\nkeep a score, each shall sign the part of the\\nscore for which he is responsible. The scores\\nshould be called out after each hole. On com.-\\npletion of the stipulated round the card shall\\nbe signed by the person who has marked it,\\nand the competitor shall see that it is handed\\nPENALTY, in as soon as reasonably possible. The penalty\\nfor a breach of this Rule shall be disqualifi-\\ncation.\\nScoring Scoring cards should be issued with the date\\ncards, and the player s name entered on the card.\\nA caddie cannot be considered a marker. Under\\nurgent and exceptional conditions, however, the Com-\\nmittee may alter this interpretation. (R. A.)\\nMarking (2) Competitors must satisfy themselves\\nand addition before the cards are handed in that the scores\\nof scores; for each hole are correctly marked, as no altera-\\ntion can be made on any card after it has been\\nreturned. If it be found that a competitor\\nhas returned a score lower than that actually\\nPENALTY, played, he shall be disqualified. For the addi-\\ntions of the scores marked the Committee shall\\nbe responsible.\\nCommittee (3) If, on the completion of the stipulated\\nto decide round, a player is doubtful whether he has\\ndoubtful incurred a penalty at any hole, he may enclose\\npenalties, his scoring card with a written statement of\\nthe circumstances to the Committee, who shall\\ndecide what penalty, if any, has been incurred.\\nRULES FOR PLAY IN STROKE\\nCOMPETITIONS.\\nRULE VI.\\nAdvice. A competitor shall not ask for nor willingly\\nreceive advice from anyone except his caddie.\\nPENALTY. The penalty for a breach of this rule shall be disquali-\\nfication.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0228.jp2"}, "229": {"fulltext": "Spalding^ s Golf Guide Rules Section\\n35\\nRULE VII.\\n(1) Competitors should strike off from the Order of\\nfirst teeing ground in the order in which their play,\\nnames appear upon the starting list. There-\\nafter the honour shall be taken as in match The\\nplay, but if a competitor, by mistake, play out honour,\\nof turn, no penalty shall be incurred, and the\\nstroke cannot be recalled.\\n(2) If at any hole a competitor play his\\nfirst stroke from outside the limits of the tee-\\ning ground, he shall count that stroke, tee a\\nbail, and play his second stroke from within\\nthese limits.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule shall be disqualifi-\\ncation.\\nRULE VIIL\\n(1) A competitor must hole out with his\\nown ball at every hole. The penalty for a\\nbreach of this rule shall be disqualification.\\n(2) If a competitor play a stroke with a ball\\nother than his own he shall incur no penalty\\nprovided he then play his own ball but if he\\nplays two consecutive strokes with a wrong\\nball, he shall be disqualified.\\n(3) In a hazard if a competitor play more\\nthan one stroke with a ball other than his own,\\nand the mistake be discovered before he has\\nplayed a stroke with the wrong ball from out-\\nside the limits of the hazard, he shall incur no\\npenalty provided he then play his own ball.\\nThe penalty for a breach of this rule shall be disqualifi-\\ncation.\\nRULE IX.\\nIf a competitor s ball strike or be stopped by\\nhimself, his clubs, or his caddie, the penalty\\nshall be one stroke, except as provided for m\\nStroke Rule 13 (0-\\nPlaying\\noutside limits\\nof teeing\\nground.\\nPENALTY.\\nMust hole\\nout with\\nown ball.\\nPENALTY.\\nPlaying two\\nconsecutive\\nstrokes with\\nwrong ball.\\nPENALTY.\\nException\\nin hazards.\\nPENALTY.\\nBall\\nstriking\\nplayer.\\nPENALTY.", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0229.jp2"}, "230": {"fulltext": "36 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nRULE X.\\nBall (1) If a competitor s ball strike or be\\nstriking or stopped by another competitor, or his clubs, or\\nmoved by his Caddie, it is a rub of the green, and the\\ncompetitor, ball shall be played from where it lies, except\\nas provided for in Stroke Rule 13 If a\\ncompetitor s ball which is at rest be acci-\\ndentally moved by another competitor, or his\\ncaddie, or his clubs, or his ball, or any outside\\nagency except wind, it shall be replaced as\\nnear as possible to the spot where it lay.\\nPENALTY. The penalty for a breach of this rule shall be disqualifi-\\ncation.\\nAllowed (2) A competitor may have any other\\nto lift player s ball played or lifted, at the option of\\ncompetitor s its owner, if he finds that it interferes with\\nball, his play.\\nRULE XL\\nBall (1) A ball may be lifted from any place on\\nmay be the course Under penalty of stroke and distance.\\nlifted. If a player lift a ball in accordance with this\\nrule, he shall play his next stroke as nearly\\nas possible at the spot from which the ball\\nwas played.\\nIf the ball so lifted was played from the\\nteeing ground the player may tee a ball for\\nhis next stroke; in every other case the ball\\nmust be dropped.\\nPENALTY. The penalty for a breach of this section of the rule shall\\nbe disqualification.\\nLifting for (2) For the purpose of identification, a corn-\\nidentification, petitor may at any time lift and carefully re-\\nplace his ball in the presence of the player\\nwith whom he is competing.\\nPENALTY. The penalty for a breach of this section of the rule\\nshall be one stroke.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0230.jp2"}, "231": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide, Rules Section\\n37\\nRULE XII.\\nIf a ball lost, except in water, casual water Ball\\nor out of bounds, the player shall return as lost,\\nnearly as possible to the spot from which the\\nball was played, and drop another ball, with\\na penalty of one stroke. If the lost ball be\\nplayed from the teeing ground, the player may\\ntee another ball for his next stroke.\\nNote A provisional ball may be played.\\nUnder this Rule a ball shall only be considered lost,\\nwhen it has not been found after a search of five\\nminutes.\\nIt is usual to frame Local Rules for Special Hazards\\nin the following way, viz: If a ball lie or be lost in,\\netc., or to treat the hazard as out of bounds.\\n(R. A.)\\nRULE XIII.\\n(1) When a competitor s ball lying within\\ntwenty yards of the hole is played and strikes\\nor is stopped b^^ the flag-stick or the person\\nstanding at the hole, the penalty shall be two\\nstrokes.\\nNeglect on the part of the person standing at the hole\\ndoes not exempt the competitor from incurring the pen-\\nalty. R. A.)\\n(2) When both balls are on the putting\\ngreen, if a competitor s ball strike the ball of\\nthe player with whom he is competing, the\\ncompetitor shall incur a penalty of one stroke,\\nand the ball which was struck shall be at once\\nreplaced; see Stroke Rule 10^^).\\n(3 The competitor whose ball is the farther\\nfrom the hole may have the ball which is nearer\\nto the hole lifted or played at the option of its\\nowner. If the latter refuse to comply with\\nthis rule when requested to do so, he shall be\\ndisqualified.\\nPlay within\\n20 yards of\\nhole.\\nPENALTY.\\nBall\\nstriking\\ncompetitor s\\nball.\\nPENALTY.\\nNearer ball\\nmay be lifted.\\nPENALTY,", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0231.jp2"}, "232": {"fulltext": "38 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nBall nearer (4) If the competitor whose ball is the\\nhole of nearer to the hole consider that his ball might\\nassistance \\\\yQ of assistance to the player with whom he is\\nto player, competing, he should lift it or play first.\\nBall lifted (5) If the competitor whose ball is the\\nwhen player s nearer to the hole lift his ball while the player s\\nball is in b^ll is in motion, he shall incur a penalty of\\nmotion, oj^g stroke.\\nPENALTY. (g) If r^ competitor or his caddie pick up his\\nBall lifted ball from the putting green before it is holed\\nbefore out (except as provided for above), he shall,\\nholed out. before he has struck off from the next tee, or,\\nin the case of the last hole on the ground,\\nbefore he has left the putting-green, be per-\\nPENALTY. mitted to replace the ball under penalty of\\ntwo strokes.\\nRULE XIV.\\nGeneral Where in the Rules of Golf the penalty for\\npenalty, ^^le breach of any rule is the loss of the hole,\\nPENALTY, jj^ stroke Competitions the penalty shall be the\\nloss of two strokes, except where otherwise\\nprovided for in these Special Rules.\\nRULE XV.\\nGeneral The Rules of Golf, SO far as they are not at\\nrules, variance with these Special Rules, shall apply\\nto Stroke Competitions.\\nRULE XVI.\\nDisputes, If a dispute arise on any point it shall be\\nhow decided, decided by the Committee, whose decision shall\\nbe final, unless an appeal be made to the\\nExecutive Committee, as provided for in\\nRule 36.\\nRULE xvn.\\nBall If a ball lie out of bounds, the player shall\\nout of bounds, play his next stroke as nearly as possible at the", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0232.jp2"}, "233": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nspot from which the ball which is out of hounds\\nwas played under penalty of stroke and dis-\\ntance. If the ball was played out of bounds\\nfrom the teeing ground the player may tee a\\nball for his next stroke. In every other case\\nthe ball shall be dropped.\\n1 Tlie penalty for a breach of this rule shall be the\\nloss of the hole in Match Play and a disqualification in\\nStroke Competition.\\nIf it is doubtful that a ball be out of bounds, the player\\nwho played it is not entitled to presume that it is out\\nof bounds until he has made a search of five minutes\\nfor it. Meanwhile his opponent may make a search of\\nfive minutes for the ball within bounds, and if the ball\\nis not found within that time, the player who struck the\\nball shall be given the benefit of the doubt, and the\\nball shall be considered out of bounds.\\n2\u00e2\u0080\u0094 In the case of a Ball out of Bounds, permission be\\ngiven for Clubs to alter this by a Local Rule, for dis-\\ntance only.\\nNote A provisional ball may be played.\\n39\\nBall\\nout of bounds.\\nPENALTY.\\nPENALTY.\\nFive\\nminutes\\nsearch\\nallowed.", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0233.jp2"}, "234": {"fulltext": "40 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nDefinition of\\nProfessional and Amateur\\nWhat A professional golfer is one who, after at-\\nconstitutes a taining the age of sixteen years, has\\nProfessional Carried clubs for hire\\nih) Received any consideration, either di-\\nrectly or indirectly, for playing or for teaching\\nthe game, or for playing in a match or tourna-\\nment\\n(c) Played for a money prize in any com-\\npetition.\\nNote The U. S. G. A. Executive Committee\\nshall have the right of declaring ineligible to\\ncompete in the Open Tournaments under its\\njurisdiction, anyone who, in its opinion, has\\nacted in a manner detrimental to the best in-\\nterests or to the spirit of the game.\\nAn An Amateur Golfer is one who, after attain-\\nAmateur ing the age of sixteen years, has not\\nGolfer. Carried clubs for hire;\\n(6) Received any consideration, either di-\\nrectly or indirectly, for playing or for teach-\\ning the game, or for playing in a match or\\ntournament.\\nNote The U. S. G. A. Executive Committee\\nshall have the right of declaring ineligible to\\ncompete in any amateur tournament under its\\njurisdiction any amateur who, in its opinion,\\nhas received any consideration because of his\\nskill at the game, or who has acted in a man-\\nner detrimental to the best interests or to the\\nForfeiture ^P^^ i* game.\\nof amateur The committee rules that the following con-\\nstanding, stitute a forfeiture of amateur standing:\\n1", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0234.jp2"}, "235": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\n41\\n1. Lending one^s name or likeness for the Forfeiture\\nadvertisement or sale of anything except as a of amateur\\ndealer, manufacturer or inventor thereof in the standing,\\nusual course of business.\\n2. Permitting one s name to be advertised\\nor published for pay as the author of books or\\narticles on golf of which one is not actually\\nthe author.\\nThe following resolution in regard to rein-\\nstatement was adopted:\\nThe Professional holds an advantage over the\\nAmateur by reason of having devoted himself\\nto the game as his profession. He does not\\nlose this advantage merely by deciding no\\nlonger to earn money by playing or teaching\\ngolf.\\nEvery application for reinstatement shall be Application\\nconsidered on its own merits, as it is impossible for\\nto lay down hard and fast rules that would be reinstatement,\\njust in all cases.\\nIn considering applications for reinstate-\\nment the following principles shall be observed\\n1. A player may not be reinstated more than\\nonce.\\n2. Any applicant for reinstatement must\\nhave acted so as to come within the definition\\nof an Amateur golfer for a period of three\\nconsecutive years immediately preceding the\\ndate of application.\\n3. A player who has acted for five years or\\nmore so as not to come within the definition\\nof an Amateur golfer shall not be eligible for\\nreinstatement.\\nAny club can elect professionals to its mem- clubs\\nbership, and this does not affect either the may elect\\nstatus of those professionals or the amateur professionals\\nstatus of otjier members. to membership", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0235.jp2"}, "236": {"fulltext": "42\\nSpalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nIndex of Rules\\nAddressing Ball\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Rule\\nDefinition ^Tago 3 (17).\\nBall moving In act of 12 (4)\\nId hazard 25 (2)\\nMoving off tee 2 (1)\\nTaking stance fairly 16\\nTouching In act of 9 (1)\\nAdvice\\nDefinition Page 1 (2).\\nAsking and receiving 4 (1)\\nAsking and receiving* 6\\nAppeals from Decisions 36\\nAppeal to Rules of Golf Com-\\nmittee* 16\\nAscertaining number of strokes\\nplayed by opponent 4 (2)\\nBad Weather-\\nDiscontinuing play* 2 (1)\\nBall-\\nAccidentally moved 12 (8)\\nBy another competitor, etc.* 10 (1)\\nIn measuring 16\\nOpponent s in searching.... 22 (3)\\nTouching loose impediment. 12 (1)\\nAddressing\\nIn hazard 25 (2)\\nMoving off tee 2 (1)\\nTouching with club 9 (1)\\nAt rest, moved, etc 18\\nBushes, long grass, etc 22 (1)\\nCasual water 27 (2, 3)\\nIn hazard 27 (1, 4, 6)\\nInterfering with stance 27 (4)\\nPutting-green 27(3,4,5)\\nThrough the green 27 (2, 4, 6)\\nClub length from other 16\\nCovered by sand 22 (2)\\nCracked 24\\nDisplaced\\nOn putting-green 32 (2)\\nOutside agency 17 (3)\\nDropping\u00e2\u0080\u0094\\nHow to drop 8\\nWant of space for 27 (6)\\nExchanging balls 20 (la)\\nFairly struck 5\\nPalling into hole 32 (1)\\nFalling off tee 2 (1)\\nFarther from hole 7\\nThe rcfcrciicfs with an asterisk apj\\nBall\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued. Bnl\u00c2\u00ab\\nHoling out-\\nKnocking away opponent s. 32 (3)\\nOpponent, without delay... 32 (3)\\nResting against flag-stick... 32 (1)\\nWith own ball* 8 (1)\\nIdentification of 9 (1)\\nIdentification of* 11 (2)\\nId hazard 26\\nId motioD, stopped, etc 17 (1)\\nIn plaj\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Definition\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Page 3 (18).\\nInterfering with stroke* 10 (1)\\nKnocked off tee 2 (1)\\nKnocking opponent s in hole. 82 (2)\\nLie of\u00e2\u0080\u0094\\nAltered by play 1\u00c2\u00ab\\nImproving in hazard 26\\nLifted\u00e2\u0080\u0094\\nFor identification 9 (1)\\nFor identification* 11 (1)\\nGround under repair 11\\nIn hazards 11\\nInterfering with stroke*... 10 (t)\\nLie altered by play 16\\nLodging In anything mov-\\ning 17 (J)\\nNearer to hole* 13 (S)\\nObstructions, etc 11\\nOf assistance to player*.... 13 (4)\\nPlayer s in motion* 13 (6)\\nStroke and distance p\u00c2\u00ab n-\\nalty* 11 (1)\\nWithin six Inches\u00e2\u0080\u0094 putting-\\ngreen 81 (1)\\nWithin club length 16\\nLip of hole 32 (8)\\nIx)dging in moving object.... 17 (2)\\nLong grass 22 (1)\\nLost 21\\nLost* 12\\nDefinition\u00e2\u0080\u0094 I age 4 (20).\\nIn casual water 27 (2)\\nIn casual water (hazard).. 27 (1)\\nIn water hazard 27 (1)\\nMoved\\nI e linition -Page 3 (19).\\nAccidentally by player s\\nside 12 (I)\\nAccidentally in lifting 16\\nAccidentally In searching\\nfor 22 (8)\\nBy another competitor* 10 (1)\\nBy fellow-competitor s ball* 13 (2)\\nBy opponent, etc 18\\nBy opponent s ball 9 (2)\\nly to Rules for Stroke Competitions.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0236.jp2"}, "237": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\n43\\nBaU\u00e2\u0080\u0094Oontlnned. Role\\nBy opponent s ball on put-\\nting-green 32 (2)\\nIn hazard 25 (3)\\nIn measuring 16\\nIn removing obstruction.... 11\\nLifting on putting-green... 31 (1)\\nMoving-*\\nAfter grounding club 12 (4)\\nAfter lifting loose impedi-\\nments 28 (1)\\nDuring swing 13\\nIn water 26\\nOff tee 2 (1)\\nPlaying at a 13\\nMud adhering to 24\\nObstructions, etc 11\\nOpponent s ball\u00e2\u0080\u0094\\nMoved by player s ball 9 (2)\\nTo be at rest\u00e2\u0080\u0094 putting-green 30\\nTouched, etc., in searching\\nby player, etc 22 (3)\\nOat of bounds 23\\nOut of Bounds* (17)\\nDefinition ^Page 2 (9).\\nLocating opponent s 23 (3)\\nOut of turn 2 (2)\\nPutting-green 31 (2)\\nThrough the green and haz-\\nards 7\\nOutside match 20 (2)\\nOutside teeing-ground 2 (1)\\nOutside teeing-ground* 7 (2)\\nPicked up before holing out* 13 (6)\\nPlayed out of turn (see also\\nOut of Turn) 7\\nPlayed to where it lies 6\\nPlayer s moving opponent s. 9 (2)\\nPlaying a moving 13\\nPlaying opponent s 20 (1)\\nPlaying when partner should\\nhave played 3\\nPushed 6\\nResting against flag-stick... 32 (1)\\nScraped 6\\nShielding from wind 29 (2)\\nSplit 24\\nSpooned 6\\nStopped or Interfered with\u00e2\u0080\u0094\\nBy another competitor,\\netc.* 10 (1)\\nBy opponent, etc 18\\nBy outside agency 17 (1)\\nBy player, etc 19\\nStriking\u00e2\u0080\u0094\\nAnother competitor* 10 (1)\\nFellow-competitor s ball*... 13 (2)\\nFlag-stick 32 (1)\\nFlag-stick 20 yards from\\nhole* 13(1)\\nThe referen ^s with an asterisk\\nBall Continued. Role\\nStriking\\nOpponent, etc 18\\nPerson at hole* 13 (1)\\nPlayer, etc 19\\nPlayer, etc* 9\\nStruck twice 14\\nTouched 9 (1)\\nTouching hazard 25\\nUnfit for play 24\\nUnplayable 6\\nWater hazard. In 27(1,5)\\nWrong 20\\nWrong* 8(2,8)\\nWrong hole. In 11\\nWeight of 24\\nBalls-\\nBoth lost 21\\nExchanged 20 (la)\\nWithin club length 18\\nWithin Biz Inches SI (1)\\nBallot for starting* 1 (2)\\nBent, touching t2 (1)\\nBest ball and four-ball matches\u00e2\u0080\u0094\\nDefinition-^age 29.\\nLifting ball 1\\nMoved ball 2\\nOut of turn S\\nOrder of play 6\\nStriking opponent, etc 7\\nStriking self, partner, etc... 8\\nPlaying partner s ball 9\\nPenalties limited to player.. 10\\nBogey Competitions-\\nDefinition (Page 27.\\nCompetitor not making re-\\nturn for hole (1)\\nDisqualification (2)\\nBounds, out of 23\\nBreach of Rules, umpire s du-\\nties 36\\nBushes, touching 22 (1)\\nCaddie\u00e2\u0080\u0094\\nAccidentally moving ball 12 (S)\\nAdvice from 4 (1)\\nAdvice from* 6\\nBall moved by another com-\\npetitor s* 10 (1)\\nOpponent s\u00e2\u0080\u0094 struck by ball... 18\\nPicking up ball not holed\\nout* 18\\nPlayer s ball striking own... 19\\nPlayer s ball striking own*.. 9\\nPointing line of putt 29 (1)\\nPressing dovjrn irregularities. 10\\napply to Rules for Stroke Competitions.", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0237.jp2"}, "238": {"fulltext": "44 Spalding s\\nCaddie\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Continued Rule\\nShielding ball from wind 29 (2)\\nStanding at hole 29 (2)\\nStriking another competitor s* 10 (1)\\nStriking flag-stick removed by 32 (1)\\nTouching loose impediments. 12 (1)\\nTouching loose impediments\\n(putting-green) 28 (1)\\nTouching opponent s ball in\\nsearching 22 (8)\\nWrong information from op-\\nponent 20 (lb)\\nCasual Water 27\\nDefinition\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Page 2 (7).\\nInterfering with stance 27 (4)\\nHaBard 27 (1, 4, 5)\\nPutting-green 27 (8,4,6)\\nThrough the green 27 (2,4,5)\\nClaims, when made 36\\nClubs\u00e2\u0080\u0094\\nForm and make of Page 25.\\nGrounding in hazard 26\\nGrounding lightly 16\\nStriking player s 19\\nStriking opponent s 18\\nConditions of Match 1 (2)\\nCommittee defined* Pago .32.\\nCourse Definition\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Pago 1\\nCourse, unplayable* 2 (2)\\nDelaying to start* 2 (1)\\nDelaying stroke\\nBall moving in water 26\\nOpponent\u00e2\u0080\u0094 on lip of hole 32 (8)\\nDiscontinuing play, bad\\nweather* 8 (1)\\nDisplacing ball\\nAt rest outside agency 17 (3)\\nPutting-green 32 (2)\\nDisputes, how decided 36\\nDisputes, how decided* 16\\nDormic\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Definition\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Page 4 (21).\\nDropping ball-\\nMode of 8\\nWant of space for 27 (5)\\nDung, removal on putting-green 28 (2)\\nExchanging balls 20 (la)\\nEquity, disputes decided by... 36\\nEtiquette\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Pago 20.\\nFixed objects, moving of 15\\nThe references with an asterisk\\nGolf Guide Rules Section\\nFlag-stick\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Rule\\nBall resting against 32 (1)\\nRemoving 32 (1)\\nStriking, within 20 yards of* 13 (1)\\nStruck, when removed 32 (1)\\nFog, touching 22 (1)\\nForecaddie\\nAdvice from 4 (2)\\nBall stopped, etc., by 17 (1)\\nFoursomes, order of play 3\\nPlaying when partner should\\nhave played 8\\nFour-ball Matches, see also\\nP.ost Kail\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Page 23.\\nGame, description of 1(1)\\nGeneral penalty 34\\nGeneral penalty* 14\\nGeneral Rule, stroke competi-\\ntion* 15\\nGreenkeeper, tools, etc., ob-\\nstructing 11\\nGround under repair 11\\nGrounding club, ball moving\\nafter (4)\\nGrowing objects, moving of... 16\\nHalved hole 1 (1)\\nBoth balls lost 21\\nHonour after 2 (2)\\nPlayer retains half 33\\nHalved match 1 (2)\\nHonour after 2 (2)\\nHazard\\nDefinition Page 1 (6).\\nAddressing ball in 26 (8)\\nBall lost from* 12\\nBall moved after taking\\nstance 12 (4)\\nBall moved by opponent s.... 9 (8)\\nBall moving in water 26\\nCasual water in 27(1,4,6)\\nConditions of play In 25\\nDropped ball rolling into 8\\nGrounding club in 25\\nImproved lie in ..26\\nIndicating line of play 4 (8)\\nLoose impediments in or near 12 (1)\\nObstructions in 11\\nPlaying out of turn in 7\\nPlaying wrong ball in* 8 (8)\\nSteps and planks removable. 25 (3)\\nSwinging club in 25 (8)\\nTaking stance in 26 (1)\\nTouoliing, etc., anything in. 25\\nWant of space to drop 27 (6)\\nWater 27 (1, 6)\\nipply to Rules for Stroke Competitions.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0238.jp2"}, "239": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide-\\nHolo -Definition\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Page 2 (11). Rule\\nHoles, new for eompetltions*. 4 (1)\\nHoling out 32 (2)\\nBall lifted before* 13 (6)\\nWith own ball* 8 (1)\\nHonour-\\nDefinition Page 3 (15).\\nStroke competitions* 7 (1)\\nTaking of 2(2)\\nIce, removal of\u00e2\u0080\u0094 putting-green 28 (2)\\nIdentification of ball 9 (1)\\nIdentification, lifting for* 11 (2)\\nImpediments, loose (see loose\\nimpediments^ 12\\nInformation as \u00c2\u00abo strokes\\nplayed 4 (2)\\nInsufficient light* 2(2)\\nIrregularities of surface 10\\nLie of ball-\\nAltered by play 16\\nPlayed wherever lying 6\\nLifting ball\u00e2\u0080\u0094\\nFor identification...... 9 (1)\\nFor identification* 11 (2)\\nInterfering with stroke* 10 (2)\\nNearer to hole* 13 (3)\\nPlayer s in motion* 13 (5)\\nTwo-strokes penalty* 11 (1)\\nUnder local rule Page 24.\\nWithin club length 16\\nWithin six inches 31 (1)\\nLight insufficient* 2(2)\\nLine of play, indicating 4 (3)\\nLine of putt, indicating 29 (1)\\nLine of putt, touching 28 (8)\\nLocal rules, recommendations\\nfor\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Page 2i,\\nLong grass, touching 28 (1)\\nLoss of hole, penalty qualified 33\\nLoose impediments\u00e2\u0080\u0094\\nDefinition^Page 2 (12).\\nLifted on putting-green 28 (1)\\nLifted on putting-green 26 (4)\\nOutside club length 12 (8)\\nWithin club length 12 (1)\\nLost ball 21\\nCasual water in hazard 27 (1, 5)\\nCasual water through the\\ngreen 27 (2, 5)\\nWater hazard 27 (1,6)\\nThe references with an asterisk\\n-Rules Section 45\\nRule\\nMarking and addition of scores* 6 (2)\\nMarkers, for scoring* 6 (1)\\nMatch, beginning 2(1)\\nMatch, conditions of i (2)\\nMatch, halved i (2)\\nMatches, priority of various... 1 (2)\\nMatches, playing whole round 1 (2)\\nMatches, losing place on green 1 (2)\\nMatch play competitions-\\nConceding putts S\\nExcluding rules 8\\nPlaying out of turn, putting-\\ngreen 1\\nRecommendation of Ex. (Com-\\nmittee iPage 28.\\nWaiving penalties 2\\nMode of play i (i)\\nMoved ball-\\nAccidentally 12 (3)\\nAfter grounding club 12 (4)\\nAfter touching loose impedi-\\nment 12 (1)\\nBy another competitor, etc.* 10 (1)\\nBy fellow-competitor* 13 (2)\\nBy opponent, etc 18\\nBy opponent s ball 9 (2)\\nIn hazard 12 (4)\\nIn hazard, steps or planks... 25 (3)\\nIn measuring 16\\nLifting loose impediments,\\nputting-green 28 (1)\\nLifting, within six inches.... 31 (1)\\nOpponent s\u00e2\u0080\u0094 in searching for. 22 (3)\\nOpponent s ball\u00e2\u0080\u0094 on putting-\\ngreen 88(2)\\nOutside agency 17 (3)\\nMoving ball\u00e2\u0080\u0094\\nDuring swing 13\\nIn water 26\\nOff tee 2 (1)\\nPlaying a 13\\nStruck twice 14\\nMoving, etc., fixed or growingr\\nobjects 16\\nMoving object, ball lodging In 17 (8)\\nMud, adhering to ball 84\\nNew holes for competitions*.. 4 (1)\\nObstructions, removal of 11\\nOpponent s ball-\\nDisplaced by player\u00e2\u0080\u0094 putting-\\ngreen 32 (2)\\nKnocked into hole 32 (2)\\nLip of hole 32 (3)\\napply to Rules for Stroke Competitions.", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0239.jp2"}, "240": {"fulltext": "46 Spalding s\\n(tppoiioiit s l)all KJoiiUmied Rule\\nLocating\u00e2\u0080\u0094 out of bounds 23 (8)\\nMoved by player s ball 9 (2)\\nPlaying an 20 (1)\\nTo be at rest\u00e2\u0080\u0094 putting-green. 30\\nTouched, etc., in searching\\nfor 22 (3)\\nOrder of play 7\\nOrder of play* 1 (2)\\nOrder of play, threesome and\\nfoursome S\\nOrder of starting* 7(1)\\nOut of bounds 23\\nDefmilion\u00e2\u0080\u0094 ^Page 2 (S).\\nDoubtful whether 23 (2)\\nLocating opponent s ball 23 (3)\\nPlaying next stroke 23 (1)\\nStance 23 (4)\\nTime limit for search 23 (2)\\nOut of tarn\u00e2\u0080\u0094\\nFoursomes S\\nMatch play competitions\u00e2\u0080\u0094 put\\nUng green 1\\nOpponent s honour 2 (1)\\nPutting-green 31 (2)\\nStroke competitions* 7 (1)\\nThrough the green and haz-\\nards 7\\nThreesomes S\\nOutside Agency-\\nBall displaced by* 10 (1)\\nBall displaced by 17 (8)\\nBall In motion stopped by... 17 (1)\\nPenalty, competitor in doubt*. 5 (3)\\nPenalty, general 34\\nPenalty, waiving match play.. 2, 8\\nPenalty stroke-\\nDefinition\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Page 3 (14).\\nPlanks, removable 26 (3)\\nPlay, mode of 1 (1)\\nPlaying moving ball 13\\nPlaying outside teeing-ground* 7 (2)\\nPractice strokes* 4 (2)\\nRemoving obstruction 11\\nPressing down irregular surface 10\\nPriority on course 1(2)\\nPutting-green\\nDofinition\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Page 2 (10).\\nBall displaced\u00e2\u0080\u0094 outside agency 17 (3)\\nFalling into bole 32 (1)\\nThe references with an asterisk\\nGolf Guide Rules Section\\nI litling green on tinned Bui*\\nIxtdging in anything mov-\\ning 17 (2)\\nOn lip of hole 32 (3)\\nBalls within six inches 31 (1)\\nCasual water 27 (8. 4. 1)\\nConceding putts S\\nDung\u00e2\u0080\u0094 removal of 28 (2)\\nFlag-stick\u00e2\u0080\u0094 removal of 32 (1)\\nHoling with own ball* 8 (1)\\nIce 28 (2)\\nLifting ball nearer hole*.... 13 (3)\\nLifting loose impediments... 28 (1)\\nLifting\u00e2\u0080\u0094 player s ball in mo-\\ntion* 13 (5)\\nLine of putt\u00e2\u0080\u0094 touching 28 (8)\\nMark\u00e2\u0080\u0094 placing 29 (1)\\nOpponent s ball-\\nDisplaced by player s 82 (2)\\nKnocked into hole 32 (1)\\nTo be at rest SO\\nOut of turn 31(2)\\nOut of turn, match play\\ncompetitions 7\\nPlaying opponent s ball 20 (1)\\nPointing out line 29(1)\\nPractice before competition* 4 (2)\\nPressing with club 28 (2)\\nResting against flag-stick.... 32 (1)\\nShielding ball from wind 29 (2)\\nSnow\u00e2\u0080\u0094 removal of 28 (2)\\nStanding at hole 29(2)\\nStriking fellow-competitor s\\nball* 13 (2)\\nStriking flag-stick removed... 32 (1)\\nStriking flag-sUck* 13 (1)\\nStymie, definition of 81\\nTouching line of putt 29 (1)\\nWormcasts 28 (2)\\nPushing ball B\\nPutting, direction for 29 (1)\\nReferee\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Definition\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Page 4 (22).\\nDuties of 86\\nRemoving loose impediments.. 12 (1)\\nIrregular surface 10\\nObstructions U\\nBub of the Green 17 (1)\\nRub of the Green* 10 (1)\\nSand, ball covered by 22 (2)\\nScores, how kept* 6 (1)\\nSheltering* 2 (1)\\nSide\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Definition\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Page 1 (1).\\nSides 1\\nSingle competitor* 1 (2)\\nSingle competitor In ties* 3\\napply to Rules for Stroke Competitions.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0240.jp2"}, "241": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide\u00e2\u0080\u0094\\nRule\\nSingle player 1 (2)\\nSnow, removal of 28 (2)\\nScraping ball 5\\nSpooning ball 6\\nStance, casual water Interfer-\\ning with 27 (4)\\nStance, in hazard 25 (1)\\nStance, taking 10\\nStarting, order of* 1 (2)\\nSteps, removable 25 (3)\\nStopping ball, another competi-\\ntor* 10 (1)\\nStopping ball, opponent, etc... 18\\nStopping ball, player, etc 19\\nStopping ball in motion 17 (1)\\nStriking\u00e2\u0080\u0094\\nAnother competitor* 10 (1)\\nBaU twice 14\\nFlag-stick* 13 (1)\\nFlag-stick removed 32 (1)\\nOpponent, etc 18\\nPlayer, etc 19\\nStroke\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Definition\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Page 3 (13).\\nStroke, how made 6\\nStrokes played by opponent... 4 (2)\\nStymie 31\\nTee, preparing after lifting*.. 11 (1)\\nTeeing ^Definition\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Page 3 (16).\\nTeeing-ground Definition Page 2 (4).\\nBall moving off tee 1 (1)\\nBall out of bounds from 23 (1)\\nBeginning match 2 (1)\\nHonour 2 (2)\\nOut of turn 2(2)\\nPlaying outside limits S (1)\\nPlaying outside limits* 7 (2)\\nTerms used in game\\nDefinition\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Page 4 (21).\\nRules Section 4il\\nThree-ball matches\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Rule\\nDefinitions Page 29.\\nHonour 4\\nLifting ball 1\\nMoved ball 2\\nOut of turn I\\nStriking opponent, etc B\\nThreesomes, order of play t\\nPlaying when partner should\\nhave played S\\nTies, how decided* 8\\nThrough the green-\\nDefinition Page 1 (5).\\nTouching ball\\nFor identification 9 (1)\\nOpponent s in searching 22 (3)\\nRemoving sand 22 (2)\\nTouching line of putt 28 (3)\\nTouching long grass, etc 22 (1)\\nUmpire\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Definition\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Page 4 (22).\\nDuties of 36\\nUnplayable ball 6\\nVehicle, removal of 11\\nWater-\\nBall moving in 26\\nCasual 27 (1, I)\\nCasual interfering with\\nstance 27 (4)\\nHazard 27 (1, S)\\nWaiving penalties match play. 2\\nWaiving Rules match play.... 3\\nWind-\\nDisplacing ball 17 (8)\\nShielding ball from 29 (2)\\nWinner 1\\nHonour 2 (2)\\nStroke competitions* 1 (1)\\nWorm casts, putting-green 28 (2)\\nWrong ball, opponent s 20 (1)\\nWrong ball, outside match.... 20 (2)\\nWrong ball, outside match*.... 8 (2, t)\\nWrong hole, ball lying in 11\\nWrong information from oppo-\\nnent, etc 20 (lb)\\nThe references with an asterisk apply to Rules for Stroke Competitions.", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0241.jp2"}, "242": {"fulltext": "48 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nGolf Interpretations\\nCompiled by A. H. Gilbert, former Secretary of the Massachusetts\\nGolf Association, and originally printed in the Boston Transcript.\\nWith Revision by Captain J. A. Scott.\\nOne of the unfortunate features of the rules of golf is\\ntheir complexity. There are different rules bearing on the\\nsame thing, and it may seem as if they do not always con-\\ncur. For the guidance of golfers, particularly those new\\nat the game or those who perhaps have been playing for\\nsome time but with little regard to the rules, the writer\\nhas prepared a series of paragraphs originally printed in\\nthe Boston Transcript which, from his experience, are\\nmost likely to need explanation.\\nIt is not intended that the following should be a com-\\nplete discussion of the rules of golf and their interpreta-\\ntion, but merely a suggestion of the principal points to\\nwhich the rules refer, arranged in the order in which these\\npoints occur in actual play, together with an easy reference\\nto the rules which apply to these points.\\nIt must be understood that the rules govern both match\\nand ^^medal or stroke play, the difference being that in\\nmedal play or in a stroke competition the score of strokes\\nis kept for the complete round, the object being to secure\\nthe lowest total score; while in match play account is\\nsimply taken of the strokes for the separate holes, each\\nhole being won by the player making the lowest score for\\nthat hole, and the player winning the largest number of\\nholes winning the match. There are numerous differences\\nbetween the rules governing these two kinds of play and\\nin the penalties incurred by violating them.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0242.jp2"}, "243": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section 49\\nON THE TEE.\\n(1) You and your companion (who is Obtaining\\ncalled your opponent if you are play- the right\\ning match play, or your f ellow-competi- to start,\\ntor if you are playing medal play)\\nobtain your turn to play according to the\\nclub rules, either by placing a golf ball\\nin a rack and playing when the balls\\nahead of your ball have been removed by\\ntheir owners as they start, or by regis-\\ntering with the caddie master or other\\nperson in charge, who will notify you\\nwhen it is your turn. On some courses\\nit is necessary to register in advance or\\nto draw a time by lot.\\n(2) While waiting your turn you will Preliminary\\nprobably take out your clubs for a few practice,\\nswings, but you must stay far enough\\naway from the first tee not to annoy the\\nplayers who are driving off. Strict eti-\\nquette forbids you to move or speak dur-\\ning another player s stroke (a).\\nIf you are going to compete in a stroke\\ncompetition you must avoid the putting\\ngreens altogether, when waiting your\\nturn to drive, because if you putt on any\\nof the greens or play an approach shot\\non to any of them, or even intentionally\\nplay a shot toward any of the holes when\\nyou are within range you will be dis-\\nqualified (b) This is on the theory that\\nnew holes have been cut and everyone\\nmust start without practice in playing\\nthem in their new positions (c)\\nIf you are only going to play in a\\nmatch, however, there is no penalty for\\npractising approaches and putts.\\n(a) Etiquette 1. (b) Stroke Rule 4 (2).\\n(c) Stroke Rule 4 (1).\\n(3) At the first tee you and your Order of\\nopponent (Jecide which shall play first, or starting.", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0243.jp2"}, "244": {"fulltext": "50 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\ntake the honor (a). If you cannot\\ndecide readily, you match for it, or other-\\nwise decide by lot (b). If you are play-\\ning in a stroke competition you should\\nfind out the order in which your name\\nand that of your fellow-competitor ap-\\npear on the starting list, and drive off in\\nthat order (c).\\n(a) Definition 15. (b) Rule 2 (2).\\n(c) Stroke Rule 1 (3).\\nTeeing up. (4) On the teeing ground you will\\nfind two discs, making a line at right\\nangles to the line of play (a). In the\\nspace within two club lengths behind\\nthese discs you tee your ball by placing\\nit in a favorable spot on the ground or\\non a sand tee, or an artificial tee of\\npaper or some other material (b) This\\nis so as to give you as favorable a start\\nas possible.\\nIf your opponent has the honor, do not\\ntee your ball or make your tee until he\\nhas driven, even if the teeing ground is\\nlarge enough for you to do so (c).\\n(a) Definition 4. (b) Definition 16.\\n(c) Etiquette 2.\\nWhen (5) Do not drive your ball until the\\nto drive, players of the party ahead of you are\\nall out of range, no matter how many\\nstrokes they may have played (a). It is\\ncustomary also to let these players play\\ntheir second shots, no matter if their\\ndrives are far beyond any possibility of\\nyour driving.\\nIf the players ahead have lost a ball,\\nhowever, you have a right to play\\nthrough them. If they know the rules\\nthey will signal you to go through, and\\nafter that you have the right of way and\\nthey must not play until you are out of\\nrange (b). If they do not offer to let\\n(a) Etiquette 3. (b) BUqoett\u00c2\u00ab ft.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0244.jp2"}, "245": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section 51\\nyou through, it is proper for you to call\\nfore and attract their attention to the\\nfact that you wish to pass through them.\\n(6) When the players ahead are out Addressing\\nof range, you take your position to strike the ball,\\nthe ball, bringing your club face up be-\\nhind it and resting the head of the club\\nlightly on the ground. This is known as\\naddressing the ball (a). If in address-\\ning the ball you move it or knock it off\\nthe tee, or it falls off before you hit it,\\nthere is no penalty, and you tee it again\\n(b) But if, when you make your stroke,\\nyou are so unfortunate as not to hit the\\nball, the ball is nevertheless in play, and\\nafter that must not be moved in address-\\ning it (c).\\n(a) Definition 17. (b) Rule 2 (1).\\n(c) Definition 18.\\n(7) If you tee your ball outside the If you tec\\ndiscs, or more than two club lengths be- outside the\\nhind them, your opponent may make you teeing ground,\\ntee up again and drive another ball from\\nwithin proper limits (a). In this case\\nyou simply have the first ball picked up\\nand do not lose any strokes. But if you\\nare playing in a stroke competition and\\ndrive your ball from anywhere outside\\nthe proper teeing ground, you must tee\\nup again inside the limits and play an-\\nother stroke, which will count as your\\nsecond stroke; otherwise you will be\\ndisqualified (b).\\n(a) Rule 2 (1). (b) Stroke Rule 7 (2).\\n(8) If you drive out of bounds from If you drive\\nthe tee, you may tee another ball at once out of bounds,\\nand play again, this counting as your\\nsecond stroke (a). If you are not sure\\nthat your drive actually went out of\\nbounds, you are not allowed to presume\\n(a) Rule 28 (1).", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0245.jp2"}, "246": {"fulltext": "52\\nSpalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nthat it is out of bounds until you have\\nmade a search for five minutes. The\\nopponent may make a search of five min-\\nutes for the ball v^ithin bounds, and if\\nthe ball is not found v^^ithin that time\\nthe player w^ho struck the ball receives\\nthe benefit of the doubt and the ball is\\nconsidered out of bounds. The next\\nstroke is played as nearly as possible at\\nthe spot from w^hich the ball v^hich is\\nout of bounds v^as played (b).\\nOut of bounds is defined as all\\nground on v^hich play is prohibited/ and\\nis described on the score card or indi-\\ncated by signs placed about the course\\n(c).\\n(b) Rule 23. (c) Definition 8.\\nON THE FAIR GREEN.\\nWhen you have driven, you will find\\nthat your ball has either landed safely in\\nthe fair green or has gone into some of\\nthe difficulties about the course. We will\\nassume for the present that it is lying in\\nthe fair green, and that you are about to\\nmake your second shot, first being sure\\nthat the players ahead are again out of\\nrange.\\nBall to (1) The ball must be fairly struck at\\nbe fairly with the head of the club, not pushed,\\nstruck at. scraped nor spooned (a),\\n(a) Rule 5.\\nWhose turn\\nto play.\\n(2) You should, before playing, find\\nout where your opponent s ball is, for the\\none whose ball is farther from the hole\\nmust play first. If you play when your\\nopponent s ball is farther away, he may\\nrecall your stroke and make you play\\nanother (b). If he does so, you must\\n(b) Rule 7.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0246.jp2"}, "247": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section 53\\ndrop the second ball as near as possible\\nto where you played the first, but there\\nis no penalty.\\n(3) If the rules require you to drop a if you\\nball, you must stand erect, facing the have to drop\\nhole, and drop the ball over your shoulder\\nbehind your back not from the back of\\nyour head (a). The loll must he\\ndropped and not tossed over your\\nshoulder. This dropping the ball seems\\nsimple, but if you fail to do it properly\\nthe penalty is the loss of the hole in\\nmatch play, or two strokes in medal play.\\nIf the ball, in dropping, hits you, there\\nis no penalty, and if it falls or rolls into\\na hazard you need not play it there but\\nmay drop again (b) There are various\\noccasions during the round when you\\nmay have to drop a ball, and the rule\\nsays it is to be dropped as near as pos-\\nsible to the place where it lay. In case\\nthe ball lie on or within a club s length\\nof a drain cover, water pipe or hydrant\\nlocated on the course, it may be lifted\\nand dropped without penalty, as near as\\npossible to the place where it lay, but\\nnot nearer the hole as near as possible\\nshall mean within a club s length (c)\\nThe rules provide, under certain con-\\nditions, such as ball in a water hazard,\\nin casual water in a hazard, ice on the\\nputting green, or through the fair green,\\nthat the ball may be dropped, not nearer\\nthe hole and within two clubs lengths.\\nGolfers should study carefully Rule 11\\nand Rule 27, so they may know when to\\ndrop within one club s length and when\\nto drop within two clubs length, as the\\npenalty is the loss of hole in match play\\n(a) Rule 8. (b) Rule 8.\\n(c) Rule 11, interprf^tation U. S. G. A.", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0247.jp2"}, "248": {"fulltext": "54 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nand two strokes in stroke competition\\nfor violating these rules (d).\\n(d) Rule 27.\\nReplacing (4) Whenever the rules provide for\\nthe ball, replacing the ball, it shall be done by\\nplacing the ball carefully in the exact\\nspot it occupied before lifting or being\\nothervv^ise disturbed. A ball which the\\nrules says must be replaced, must not be\\ndropped, nor must a ball which is to be\\ndropped, be replaced. Failure to follow\\nthe rule in either case will result in dis-\\nqualification in medal play and loss of\\nthe hole in match play (e).\\n(e) Rule 8 and 16.\\nIf you (5) You should also make sure that\\nplay the the ball which you are about to play is\\nwrong ball, your own. If you cannot tell, without\\npicking up the ball, you must ask your\\ncompanion for his consent before you\\npick it up, and must replace it carefully\\nwhere it lay (a)\\nIf you play your opponent s ball by\\nmistake, you lose the hole in match play\\nunless he then plays with your ball (b).\\nIf you are told by your opponent, how-\\never, or his caddie, that a certain ball is\\nyours, and it turns out to be his, you aye\\nnot liable to any penalty for playing it.\\nYou play your own ball and your oppo-\\nnent drops another in place of the one\\nwhich you played by mistake (c).\\nIf you play a stroke with an outsider s\\nball, and then discover your mistake,\\nthere is no penalty; if the mistake be\\nnot discovered and so intimated until\\nafter your opponent has played his next\\nstroke, you lose the hole (d). This rule\\nalso applies in medal play, with regard\\n(a) Rule 9, Stroke Rule 11 (2). (b) Rule 20\\n(1-a).\\n(0) Rule 20 (1-b). (d) Rule 20 (2).", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0248.jp2"}, "249": {"fulltext": "Spalding^ s Golf Guide Rules Sect\\nion\\n55\\nto playing any ball except your own,\\nwhether it belongs to a fellow-competitor\\nor an outsider. There is no penalty for\\nplaying one stroke, but if you play two\\nstrokes you are disqualified (e), except\\nin a hazard, as will be explained later.\\n(e) stroke Rule 8 (2).\\n(6) When you are sure that the ball is If opponent s\\nyours, you may proceed to play it. If ball interferes,\\nyou wish to make a practice swing, you\\nmust be sure that you are more than a\\nclub length away from the ball. If your\\ncompanion s ball lies within a club length\\nof yours, you may require him to lift it\\nwhile you play your stroke. After you\\nhave played, he will replace his ball and\\nplay it. If, when he comes to replace his\\nball, he finds that your stroke has cut\\nthe turf or changed the lie of his ball, he\\nmay replace as near as possible, in a fair\\nlie. When he picks up his ball, if he\\nmoves yours, there is no penalty. The\\nball is simply replaced (a)\\nIn medal play, if your fellow-com-\\npetitor s ball interferes with your stroke,\\nregardless of distance, you may require\\nhim to lift his ball, or play first (b) In\\nmatch play, however, he has not the op-\\ntion of playing, but must lift, if you ask\\nhim to and his ball is within a club\\nlength of yours.\\n(a) Rule 16. (b) Stroke Rule 10 (2).\\n(7) If there is any loose object within Removing\\na club length of your ball, like a twig impediments.\\nor a stone, leaf or anything that is not\\nfixed or growing, you may move it, or\\nhave your caddie do so. You must be\\ncareful, however, that your ball does not\\nmove, or it will cost you a stroke. If you\\nare near a hazard, and part of the object\\nwhich you wish to move is in or touch-", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0249.jp2"}, "250": {"fulltext": "56\\nSpalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nTaking advice.\\nIf the\\nball moves.\\ning the hazard, you must consider it part\\nof the hazard and not move it (a).\\nIf you move an impediment which is\\nmore than a club length from the ball,\\nyou lose the hole in match play, or two\\nstrokes in medal play (b)\\n(a) Rule 12 (1). (b) Rule 12 (2).\\n(8) If you are in doubt as to the\\ndirection of play, you may ask for ad-\\nvice but you are not allowed to ask any-\\none except your caddie (or your partner,\\nor his caddie if you are playing a match\\nwhere you have a partner) what club to\\nuse or how to play a stroke. If you do\\nso in match play you lose the hole, or in\\nmedal play you are disqualified (a). The\\nsame penalty is incurred if you ask ad-\\nvice from your f orecaddie (b)\\nYou may have the direction of the hole\\npointed out, but whoever does this must\\nnot stand in the line of play while you\\nplay your stroke or leave any mark to\\nshow it. If he does, you lose the hole in\\nmatch play, or two strokes in medal\\nplay (c).\\n(a) Definition 2. Rule 4 (1). Strolie Rule 6.\\n(b) Rule 4 (3). (c) Rule 4 (4).\\n(9) You must be careful and you must\\nsee that your caddie is careful not to\\nmove your ball accidentally, or cause it\\nto move, except of course, when you pick\\nit up for identification, or when the balls\\nare within a club length of each other,\\nas already mentioned. If you or your\\ncaddie move the ball or cause it to move,\\nit costs you a stroke (a).\\nA ball is deemed to move if it leaves\\nits original position in the least degree;\\nbut it is not considered to move if it\\nmerely oscillate and come to rest in its\\noriginal position. (Definition 19.)\\n(a) Rule 12 (3).", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0250.jp2"}, "251": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section 57\\nIn addressing the ball, you may\\nground your club lightly behind the ball,\\nand may touch it without penalty, pro-\\nviding you do not move the ball. The\\nabove definition covers moving the\\nball (b).\\nOccasionally when you are addressing\\nthe ball it will move, apparently of its\\nown accord. If it does this, after you\\nhave grounded your club, you are sup-\\nposed to have caused it to move and must\\nadd a stroke to your score (c)\\n(b) Rule 9, Definition 19, (c) Rule 12 (4).\\nIf the ball moves, you must not touch\\nit with the club until it comes to rest.\\nFor example, a player, playing up a hill,\\nmay see his ball start to move, and will\\nplay it hurriedly, so as not to have to\\nfollow it down the hill again. The pen-\\nalty for this is two strokes in medal play,\\nor the loss of the hole in match play. But\\nif he has started to swing and the ball\\nbegins to move, he may hit the ball as he\\nintended, without penalty, even if it is\\nmoving, unless some action of his own\\nhas caused the ball to move (d).\\n(d) Rule 13; Rule 12 (1, 3, 4) 28 (1).\\n(10) You must not press down the Improving\\nground or the grass behind your ball or the lie.\\nin any way improve its lie, either with\\nyour club, or your foot or hand, and you\\nmust not allow your caddie to do so;\\notherwise, you lose the hole in match\\nplay, or two strokes in medal play (a).\\n(a) Rule 10.\\n(11) When you play your stroke, do Replacing\\nnot cut or scar the turf with your club, the turf.\\nYou must put the spot in as nearly its\\noriginal condition as possible, by replac-\\ning any pieces or shreds of turf, and\\npressing them down, or if there is no", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0251.jp2"}, "252": {"fulltext": "58 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nturf that can be replaced, by pressing\\ndown the edges of the scar and making\\nthe place as smooth as you can (a)\\n(a) Etiquette 6.\\nStriking the (12) It does not happen often that a\\nball twice, player strikes his ball twice. But occa-\\nsionally, in making a stroke, the club will\\nfollow through and strike the ball a sec-\\nond time. If this occurs, the player must\\nadd a stroke to his score (a).\\n(a) Rule 14.\\nIN DIFFICULTIES.\\nLooking for (1) We will now assume that instead\\nthe ball. being favorably placed on the fair\\ngreen, your ball has been driven into\\nsome one of the difficulties of the course.\\nIf it is not in plain sight, you will try\\nto find it in the place where you think it\\nlies; but this may be in long grass or\\nunderbrush, and careful search may fail\\nto reveal it. You have five minutes to\\nlook for the ball and then, if you have\\nnot found it, it must be considered a lost\\nball (a).\\nWhile you are looking for the ball you\\nshould remember to signal the party be-\\nhind you to pass you, if they wish to do\\nso, and if they decide to play through,\\nyou should not play until they are out of\\nrange, even if you find your hall immedi-\\nately after you signal them (b)\\n(a) Definition 20. (b) Etiquette 5.\\nA lost ball. (2) If you do not find your ball\\nwithin five minutes it must be consid-\\nered lost, as stated above. In this event,\\nyou return as nearly as possible to the\\nspot from which the ball was played and\\ndrop another ball, with a penalty of one\\nstroke. If the lost ball be played from\\nthe teeing ground the player may tee a", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0252.jp2"}, "253": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section 59\\nball for his next stroke. A provisional\\nball may be played (a).\\n(a) Rule 21.\\nIf you are in a stroke competition and\\nlose your ball, the rule is the same.\\nWhen you go back to drive your sec-\\nond ball, you will probably get in a\\nmixup with the players behind, who are\\nnot always pleased to wait while you\\nplay your stroke and get out of range\\nagain. There does not seem to be any\\nestablished etiquette covering this point.\\nIf they are considerate, they will prob-\\nably have sufficient sympathy with your\\nmisfortune to let you go ahead. If they\\nare impatient it is usually better to let\\nthem go ahead and get out of the way.\\n(3) If your ball goes into water which Ball in\\nis permanent, like a brook or a pond, you water,\\nmay drop a ball behind the water, keep-\\ning the spot where the ball went in be-\\ntween you and the hole. This may be\\nthe ball which you played, if you recover\\nit, or another ball if you do not. In\\neither case it costs you one stroke. That\\nis, if it was your drive that went into\\nthe water, you drop a ball and play three,\\ninstead of playing two (a).\\nYou may play the ball from the water\\nif you prefer, but if the ball should be\\nfloating on the water and the wind or\\nthe current is carrying it toward the\\nhole, you must not delay your stroke so\\nas to get in a more favorable position, or\\nyou will lose the hole in match play, or\\ntwo strokes in medal play (b)\\nIf the water into which your ball goes\\nis merely casual, such as a pool, or any\\ntemporary accumulation, you may drop a\\nball as near as possible to where the ball\\n(a) Rule 27 (1). (b) Rule 26.", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0253.jp2"}, "254": {"fulltext": "60 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nlay (within two club lengths of the edge\\nof the water, but not nearer the hole).\\nIn this case there is no penalty. If your\\nball rolls into the water when you drop\\nit, you may drop it again. You also have\\nthe privilege of dropping without pen-\\nalty if the casual water is so near as to\\ninterfere with your standing to play the\\nball (c).\\nThese rules apply to a ball in water\\neven if the ball cannot be found. That\\nis, a ball which disappears in water is\\nnot treated as a lost ball (but in accord-\\nance with the rules just stated)\\n(c) l) fiiiition 7: Ilule 27 (2); Rule 27 (4).\\nOut of bounds. (4) If your ball goes out of bounds\\nfrom any stroke, you play another from\\nwhere you played the first, as described\\nin driving from the first tee, except that\\nif any stroke after the drive goes out of\\nbounds, you must drop a ball instead of\\nteeing it (a) If the ball is apparently out\\nof bounds, but cannot be found, you must\\nhunt for five minutes before assuming\\nthat it is out of bounds; but it does\\nnot have to be found if it clearly went\\nout (b).\\nIf, when you find your ball, it is so\\nnear the line that it is doubtful whether\\nit is in or out, you must decide on which\\nside of the line the greater part of the\\nball lies, and decide accordingly whether\\nit is out of bounds or not (c).\\nThere is no restriction as to where you\\nshall stand, so that if you have to stand\\nout of bounds to play a ball on the course\\nyou may do so (d).\\nIf you think that your opponent has\\nplayed out of bounds you may wait until\\nhe finds out before you play your next\\n(a) Rule 23 (1). (b) Rule 23 (2).\\n(c) Definition 9. (d) Rule 23 (4).", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0254.jp2"}, "255": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section, 61\\nstroke, as you may wish to play diffe.r-\\nently if you know that he is penalized a\\nstroke (e).\\n(e) Rule 23 (3).\\n(5) Your ball may have gone into long In lon^^ grass,\\ngrass and not be in sight. In this case\\nyou may push aside the long grass until\\nthe ball is found, but only so much (of\\nthe grass) shall be touched as will en-\\nable the player to find his ball (a) You\\nmust be careful not to touch your own\\nball, but if, in looking for your oppo-\\nnent s ball you touch or move it, you are\\nnot subject to the usual penalty of the\\nloss of the hole. If you move his ball\\nunder these circumstances, the opponent\\nmust replace it (b).\\n(a) Rule 22 (1). (b) Rule 22 (3).\\n(6) It may be that the ball is in such If ball is\\ntrouble as to be absolutely unplayable, unplayabliu\\nand in match play a ball may be lifted\\nfrom any place on the course under pen-\\nalty of stroke and distance. If a ball is\\nlifted in accordance with this rule, the\\nnext stroke is played as nearly as possi-\\nble at the spot from which the ball was\\nplayed. If the lifted ball is played from\\nthe teeing ground the player may tee a\\nball for the next stroke, but in every\\nother case the ball must be dropped. In\\nmedal play the rule is identical (a).\\n(a) Stroke Rule 11.\\n(7) You may find that your ball has Hazards,\\nlodged in one of the difficulties known as\\nhazards. As there are special rules\\nfor play in hazards, it is important to\\nknow what a hazard is. It is defined\\nas any bunker, water (except casual\\nwater), s^iid, path, road, ditch, bush or\\nrushes.**", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0255.jp2"}, "256": {"fulltext": "62 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nA bunker is usually understood to\\nmean a sand or gravel pit, natural or\\nartificial. The words path and road\\nappear plain enough, but frequently the\\nlimits or boundaries of bunkers, paths\\nand roads are not altogether clear. It is\\nsupposed to be the duty of the green\\ncommittees to make these boundaries\\nplain, but as this is seldom done, it is\\noften necessary for a player to use his\\nown judgment. In such cases, he should\\nbe on the safe side, especially in medal\\nplay.\\nThe rule states that sand blown on to\\nthe grass, or sprinkled on the course for\\nits preservation, is not to come within\\nthe definition of a hazard much as the\\ndistinction is made between permanent\\nand casual water.\\nBare patches on the course are not to\\nbe regarded as hazards. On a course\\nwith a sandy soil the line is sometimes\\ndifficult to draw between bare patches\\nand sand, and here again the player\\nmust use his own judgment. Sheep\\ntracks, snow and ice are also not classed\\nas hazards. Long grass is not a hazard\\nunless it is within the boundaries of a\\nhazard (a).\\n(a) Definition 6.\\nPlay in (8) When your ball is in a hazard,\\na hazard must not move or touch anything in\\nthe hazard except in taking your posi-\\ntion to play (a) You must not lift any-\\nthing that interferes with your stroke\\nand you must not touch your club to the\\nground in addressing your ball. In ad-\\ndressing the ball, or in the backward or\\nforward swing, any grass, bent, bush, or\\nother growing substance, or the side of\\na bunker, wall, paling, or OTHER IM-\\nMOVABLE OBSTACLE, may be touched\\nwithout penalty, but the general prin-\\n(a) Rule 25 (1).", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0256.jp2"}, "257": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\n63\\nciple must be observed that you must not\\ndo anything to improve the conditions of\\nplay (b). If your ball is under or near\\nsteps or planks in the hazard, placed\\nthere to give access to or egress from\\nthe hazard, or any of the various arti-\\ncles mentioned in paragraph 9 of this\\nsection, you may move them, or if they\\nare immovable, you may drop your ball\\nin the hazard without penalty, not nearer\\nthe hole. If you disturb your ball in\\ndoing so, you may replace it without\\npenalty (c).\\nAn exception to the rule about not\\ntouching anything in a hazard is the\\nprovision that if your ball is entirely\\nburied in sand you may brush away\\nenough to enable you to see the top of\\nthe ball, even if you touch the ball (d).\\nIf you play your ball from such a place,\\nand dig a hole in the sand, you should\\nfill it up again and also smooth over your\\nfootmarks (e).\\nIf there is casual water in the hazard, Ball in\\nand your ball lies in it, you may drop casual water\\nthe ball behind the casual water, under a in hazard,\\npenalty of one stroke, keeping the spot\\nwhere it entered the water between you\\nand the hole. In this case, you may drop\\nin the hazard, behind the casual water,\\nor behind the hazard, whichever you pre-\\nfer (f). If it is impossible for want of\\nspace to play, to drop it in accordance\\nwith these directions, you may drop it as\\nnear as possible to the proper place, but\\nin any case not nearer the hole (g)\\nReferring to the rule that in medal Playing\\nplay if you play with a ball not your own, wrong ball\\nyou incur a penalty if you play two sue- in hazard,\\ncessive strokes; there is a more liberal\\n(b) Rule 25 (2). (e) Etiquette (7).\\n(c) Rule 25 (3). (f) Rule 27 (1).\\n(d) Rule 22 (2). (g) Rule 27 (5).", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0257.jp2"}, "258": {"fulltext": "under repair.\\n64 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nrule about play in hazards, which pro-\\nvides that you do not incur any penalty\\nuntil you have played a stroke with the\\nwrong ball outside the hazard. That is,\\nyou are entitled to see the ball on the\\nfair green before discovering that it is\\nnot your own (h).\\n(h) Stroke Rule 8 (3).\\nTools, fixtures (9) You may find your ball under, or\\nand t round various obstructions pertain-\\ning to the course. These may be moved,\\nthough more than a club length away, if\\ndescribed under one of the following\\nheadings: Any flag stick, guide flag,\\nmovable guide post, wheelbarrow, tool,\\nroller, grass cutter, box, vehicle or simi-\\nlar obstruction. If you move your ball,\\nin moving the obstruction, you may re-\\nplace it without penalty.\\nIf your ball lies on or touches such an\\nobstruction, or clothes or nets, you\\nmay lift and drop your ball as near as\\npossible, but not nearer the hole, without\\npenalty.\\nYou may do the same if your ball is in\\nground under repair or covered up or\\nopened for the purpose of the upkeep of\\nthe course or if your ball is in one of\\nthe holes, or a guide flag hole, or in a\\nhole made by the greenkeeper. Only if\\nany of these obstructions is in a haz-\\nard, you must drop your ball in the\\nhazard (a).\\nThe general principle is that your play\\nis not to be interfered with by a tempo-\\nrary obstruction relating to the construc-\\ntion or upkeep of the course. A drain-\\ncover, water-pipe or hydrant comes\\nwithin this rule, and a pile of hay or cut\\ngrass. Leaves, or any other substance\\npiled by the greenkeeper for removal, is\\nsimilarly regarded (b).\\n(a) Rule 11. (b) Rule 11.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0258.jp2"}, "259": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section 65\\nTHROUGH THE GREEN.\\nPrevious sections have been intended\\nto cover the cases arising from the\\nposition of the ball after yonr drive.\\nThe same rules also apply to the other\\nstrokes through the green that is,\\nbetween the tee and the edge of the\\nputting green, i. e., your conduct in re-\\ngard to play as to any stroke in the fair\\ngreen, in hazards, and with regard to a\\nball out of bounds, a lost ball, etc., is\\nregulated by the same rules as have been\\nstated. There are also the following\\nrules which apply to play through the\\ngreen.\\n(1) It is possible that your ball while Ball m motion\\nin motion may strike your opponent or striking player\\nhis caddie or his clubs, or it may strike or caddie,\\nyou, or your caddie or your clubs. The\\ngeneral rule is in match play that which-\\never side is struck loses the hole and the\\nobvious principle is to avoid being struck\\nor interfering in any way with the course\\nof the ball (a).\\nIn medal play it costs you one stroke\\nto be struck by your own ball, or if\\nyour ball strikes your caddie or clubs\\n(b). If your ball strikes another com-\\npetitor or his caddie or clubs in medal\\nplay, however, it is considered a rub\\nof the green and the ball must be\\nplayed as it lies (c). It is also a rub\\nof the green if your ball strikes a fore-\\ncaddie or is stopped or deflected by any\\nagency outside the match and the ball\\nmust be played as it lies (d).\\nA rub of the green may be defined\\nas an occurrence outside your control,\\nthe consequences of which you are re-\\nquired to accept.\\n(a) Rule 18. (b) Stroke Rule 9.\\n(c) Stroke Rule 10 (1). (d) Rule 17 (1).", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0259.jp2"}, "260": {"fulltext": "66\\nSpalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\n[nformationas (2) A player is entitled at any time\\nto strokes during the play of a hole to ascertain\\nplayed, ^^om. his opponent the number of strokes\\nthe latter has played; if the opponent\\ngives wrong information as to the num-\\nber of strokes he has played, he shall\\nlose the hole unless he correct his mis-\\ntake before the player has played another\\nstroke (a).\\n(a) Rule 4 (2).\\nIf a ball at (3) If you or your caddie or clubs\\nrest is moved, move your opponent s ball while it is at\\nrest in match play, you lose the hole\\n(a). But in medal play you incur no\\npenalty for moving your fellow com-\\npetitor s ball, and he replaces it where\\nit lay (b). Similarly, in either match\\nor medal play, if your ball at rest is\\nmoved by any agency outside the match\\n(except wind), there is no penalty, and\\nthe ball is dropped at the same spot in\\nmatch play, or replaced in medal play\\n(c).\\n(a) Rule 18.\\n(b) Stroke Rule 10 (1).\\nStroke Rule 10 (1).\\n(c) Rule 17 (3)\\nIf a ball (4) If your ball lodges in anything\\nlodges in moving, such as a wagon passing across\\nanything course, which takes your ball along\\nmovine ^^^P without\\npenalty at the spot where the ball met\\nthe moving object (a).\\n(a) Rule 17 (2).\\nIf one ball (5) If your opponent s ball strikes\\nstrikes another, yours, through the green or in a hazard,\\nyou may, if you choose, drop your ball\\nwhere it originally lay, but this must be\\ndone before either of you play another\\nstroke (a).\\n(a) Rule (2).", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0260.jp2"}, "261": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section 67\\n(6) If your ball cracks or becomes Ball unfit for\\notherwise unfit for play, you may sub- play or covered\\nstitute another ball after telling your with mud\\nopponent of your intention. If the ball\\nactually splits in pieces, you may drop a\\nnew ball where any one of the pieces\\nlies.\\nMud on the ball, however, is not con-\\nsidered to make it unfit for play. If you\\nclean the mud from your ball, you lose\\nthe hole in match play, and in medal play\\nyou are disqualified (a), except under\\nspecial rulings of Local Rules by com-\\nmittee in charge, U. S. G. A.\\n(a) Rule 24.\\n(7) If there is a pair or party ahead The players\\nof you, you must wait until the players ahead.\\nare out of range before playing your\\nstrokes through the green, and must not\\nplay up to the putting green until the\\nplayers in front have holed out and\\nmoved away (a). But if in playing\\nthrough the fairgreen they are so slow\\nthat the players ahead of them have\\ngone ahead and left a space of a full\\nhole in front of the slow players, you\\nhave the right to pass through into the\\nvacant space and can require the slow\\nplayers to let you do so. If they do not\\noffer to let you through, it is proper to\\ncall FORE and attract their attention\\nto the fact that you wish to pass through\\nthem (b).\\n(a) Etiquette (3). (b) Rule 1 (2).\\nON THE PUTTING* GREEN.\\nThis brings us to the putting green\\nwhich is defined as the ground within\\ntwenty yards of the hole. Hazards with-\\nin this distance, however, are not consid-\\nered a part of the putting green. If you", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0261.jp2"}, "262": {"fulltext": "68\\nSpalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nare on this ground you are subject to\u00c2\u00bb\\ncertain special rules governing this part\\nof the game.\\nOrder of play. (1) When both balls are on the put-\\nting green, the one farther from the;\\nhole is played first, as in the rest of the-\\ngame. If your opponent is nearer the\\nhole, but plays first, you may recall hia\\nstroke and make him replace his ball\\nand wait until you have putted (a) In\\na tournament match this is obligatory\\n(b).\\n(a) Rule 31 (2). (b) Match Play Rule 1.\\nRemoving (2) Before putting you may clear\\nimpediments, away any loose impediment from any\\npart of the putting green (a), and you\\nmay do this whether your ball is on the\\ngreen or not, even if your ball is in a\\nhazard near the green (b). You are\\nsupposed to remove such impediment by\\nhand, except in the case of dung, worm-\\ncasts, snow or ice, which may be\\nscraped aside with a club, but the club\\nmust not press on the ground with more\\nthan its own weight (c). You must be\\ncareful, however, that your ball does not\\nmove, for if it does while you are re-\\nmoving any impediment from within six\\ninches you are supposed to be responsible\\nand are penalized one stroke in either\\nmatch or medal play (d).\\n(n^ Rule 28 (1).\\n(0) Rule 28 (2).\\n(b) Rule 28 (1) Rule 25 (4).\\n(d) Rule 28 (1).\\nTouching the (3) Except in clearing away impedi-\\nline of putt, ments as described above, the line of\\nyour putt must not be touched, although\\nit may be pointed out (a). You are al-\\nlowed, however, in addressing the ball\\nfor your putt, to rest your putter lightly\\non the ground in front of your ball, to\\n(a) Rule 29 (1).", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0262.jp2"}, "263": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section 69\\naid you in getting your direction. In\\nwalking from the ball to the hole and\\nvice versa, you must be careful to avoid\\nstepping on the line of your putt, as\\nthis would be a violation of the rules,\\nand would subject you to the penalties\\nprovided (b).\\n(b) Rule 28 (3).\\n(4) When you are approaching the Removing the\\nputting green it is the best plan to have flagstick.\\nthe flagstick removed and carried to a\\nsafe distance before you play. In match\\nplay there is no penalty for striking the\\nflagstick in the hole or for striking it\\n;after your opponent or his caddie have\\nitaken it out, but if you strike the stick\\n;after you or your caddie have taken it\\n(Out, you lose the hole (a)\\nIf your ball lodges against the flag-\\nstick in the hole you have to pull out the\\nstick in order to see if the ball will fall\\nin and save you a stroke. If it does not\\nfall in you have to putt again (b)\\nOn the other hand, in medal play if\u00c2\u00ab\\nyour ball played from within twenty\\nyards of the hole strikes the flagstick in\\nor out of the hole, or the person at the\\nhole as stated in the next paragraph,\\nit costs you two strokes (c)\\n(a) Rule 32 (1). (b) Rule 32 (1).\\n(c) Stroke Rule 13 (1).\\n(5) You may have someone stand at Having the\\nthe hole to mark it for you, and are hole marked,\\nentitled to have your own caddie do this,\\nand to refuse to allow a person not en-\\ngaged in the match to stand at the hole\\nwhen you putt (a). If your ball strikes\\nthe person at the hole you lose the hole\\nin match play and are penalized two\\nstrokes in medal play (b)\\n(a) Rule 29 (2). (b) Stroke Rule 13 (1).", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0263.jp2"}, "264": {"fulltext": "72 Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nBallon (11) It sometimes happens that a ball\\nthe edge of on the very brink of the cup may hesi-\\nthehole. tate for an instant and then fall in;\\nconsequently, there is a rule that if you\\nhave putted out, and your opponent putts\\nto the edge of the hole, you are not\\nallowed to knock his ball away, as there\\nis always the chance that it may fall in\\nafter all and give him the benefit of\\nholing out without taking another stroke.\\nOn the other hand, he is not allowed to\\ndelay in the hope that his ball may\\nfinally fall in, but must putt again at\\nonce if you ask him to do so (a).\\nBut if his ball is on the edge of the\\nhole, and you hole out, then you may\\nknock his ball away if you wish, unless\\nyour ball has struck his and set it in\\nmotion, so that there is a chance of its\\nfalling in (b).\\n(a) Rule 32 (3).\\n(b) Rule 32 (3).\\nEtiquette (12) It is part of the etiquette of golf\\non the that you should not stand near a player\\nputting green, while he is making a stroke, or move or\\ntalk. This is particularly true on the\\nputting green, and there is the additional\\npoint that you should not stand beyond\\nthe hole in the line of your companion s\\nputt (a).\\n(a) Etiquette 1.\\nLeaving the (13) When you and your companion\\nputting green ^^^e both putted out, you should move\\noff the green at once and see that the\\nflag is replaced in the hole. You should\\nnot linger on the green to put down your\\nscores or to try over your putts, to the\\ninconvenience of those behind you (a).\\nIn a medal round you should compare\\nscores with your fellow competitor after\\nevery hole, and should keep his score\\n(n) Etiqnetto 4.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0264.jp2"}, "265": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nand see that he keeps yours, unless the\\ncommittee has provided you with a\\nscorer (b).\\n(b) Stroke Rule 5 (1).\\nCOMPLETING THE ROUND.\\nThe foregoing rules cover the play of\\nan entire hole and apply equally to every\\nhole played.\\n(1) At the next tee whoever has won On the\\nthe hole (taken the fewer strokes) drives next tee.\\noff first or takes the honor. If you\\nhave halved the hole, the same player\\ndrives first as on the last tee (a). In\\nmatch play, if you drive when your op-\\nponent should have driven, he may recall\\nyour stroke and make you play again, in\\nturn, but without penalty (b). In a\\nmedal round there is also no penalty,\\nbut the stroke cannot be recalled (c).\\n(a) Rule 2 (2)\\n(b) Rule 2 (2). (c) Stroke Rule 7 (1).\\n(2) It is assumed that you will play Playing the\\nthe eighteen holes in order, but in a full round,\\nfriendly match if you decide to play a\\nshorter round you must give precedence\\nto any pairs or parties playing the full\\nround (a). In a stroke competition you\\nmust play the eighteen holes in their\\nproper order and are expected to play\\ncontinuously, not being allowed to dis-\\ncontinue on account of bad weather, or\\non any other account, unless the com-\\nmittee considers your reason satisfac-\\ntory (b).\\n(a) Rule 1 (2). (b) Stroke Rule 2 (1).\\n(3) In playing on a strange course, Local rule,\\nyou should give attention to the local\\nrules which are printed on the score\\ncard. You and your fellow competitor\\nmust abide by the local rules, and can-\\n73", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0265.jp2"}, "266": {"fulltext": "72\\nSpalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nBallon (11) It sometimes happens that a ball\\nthe edge of on the very brink of the cup may hesi-\\nthehole. tate for an instant and then fall in;\\nconsequently, there is a rule that if you\\nhave putted out, and your opponent putts\\nto the edge of the hole, you are not\\nallowed to knock his ball away, as there\\nis always the chance that it may fall in\\nafter all and give him the benefit of\\nholing out without taking another stroke.\\nOn the other hand, he is not allowed to\\ndelay in the hope that his ball may\\nfinally fall in, but must putt again at\\nonce if you ask him to do so (a).\\nBut if his ball is on the edge of the\\nhole, and you hole out, then you may\\nknock his ball away if you wish, unless\\nyour ball has struck his and set it in\\nmotion, so that there is a chance of its\\nfalling in (b).\\n(a.) Rule 32 (3).\\n(b) Rule 32 (3).\\nEtiquette (12) It is part of the etiquette of golf\\non the that you should not stand near a player\\nputting green, while he is making a stroke, or move or\\ntalk. This is particularly true on the\\nputting green, and there is the additional\\npoint that you should not stand beyond\\nthe hole in the line of your companion s\\nputt (a).\\n(a) Etiquette 1.\\nLeaving the\\nputting green,\\n(13) When you and your companion\\nhave both putted out, you should move\\noff the green at once and see that the\\nflag is replaced in the hole. You should\\nnot linger on the green to put down your\\nscores or to try over your putts, to the\\ninconvenience of those behind you (a).\\nIn a medal round you should compare\\nscores with your fellow competitor after\\nevery hole, and should keep his score\\n(a) Etiquetto 4.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0266.jp2"}, "267": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section 73\\nand see that he keeps yours, unless the\\ncommittee has provided you with a\\nscorer (b).\\n(b) Stroke Rule 5 (1).\\nCOMPLETING THE ROUND.\\nThe foregoing rules cover the play of\\nan entire hole and apply equally to every\\nhole played.\\n(1) At the next tee whoever has won On the\\nthe hole (taken the fewer strokes) drives next tee.\\noff first or takes the honor. If you\\nhave halved the hole, the same player\\ndrives first as on the last tee (a). In\\nmatch play, if you drive when your op-\\nponent should have driven, he may recall\\nyour stroke and make you play again, in\\nturn, but without penalty (b). In a\\nmedal round there is also no penalty,\\nbut the stroke cannot be recalled (c).\\n(a) Rule 2 (2\\n(b) Rule 2 (2). (c) Stroke Rule 7 (1).\\n(2) It is assumed that you will play Playing the\\nthe eighteen holes in order, but in a full round,\\nfriendly match if you decide to play a\\nshorter round you must give precedence\\nto any pairs or parties playing the full\\nround (a). In a stroke competition you\\nmust play the eighteen holes in their\\nproper order and are expected to play\\ncontinuously, not being allowed to dis-\\ncontinue on account of bad weather, or\\non any other account, unless the com-\\nmittee considers your reason satisfac-\\ntory (b).\\n(a) Rule 1 (2). (b) Stroke Rule 2 (1).\\n(3) In playing on a strange course. Local rule,\\nyou should give attention to the local\\nrules which are printed on the score\\ncard. You and your fellow competitor\\nmust abide by the local rules, and can-", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0267.jp2"}, "268": {"fulltext": "74\\nSpalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nnot agree to waive them (a) Neither\\ncan you and an opponent or fellow com-\\npetitor agree to waive the penalties pro-\\nvided in the Rules of Golf under pen-\\nalty of disqualification (b).\\n(a) Match Play Rule 3. (b) Match Play Rule 2.\\nSCORING.\\nScoring (1) As has been said previously,\\nmatch play and match play and medal play are scored\\nmedal play, differently. In match play you win the\\nhole if you make fewer strokes than\\nyour opponent, but as only the score in\\nholes counts in winning or losing, your\\ntotal score for the round is not im-\\nportant. You are not even required to\\nplay out a hole that you are sure to lose.\\nIn medal play, on the other hand, your\\nscoring must be continuous from the first\\ntee to the last green and you must have\\na score for every hole, no matter how\\nlarge or discouraging it may be.\\nYou should call the score of every hole\\nas soon as you have completed it at both\\nmatch and medal play. After playing\\nthe last hole in medal play, where you\\nhave been keeping your opponent s score,\\nyou should sign the card and hand it in\\nimmediately on leaving the last green.\\nYou are held responsible for the scoring\\nof the separate holes, but the committee\\nis responsible for the addition of the\\ntotal score (a).\\n(a) Stroke Rule 5 (1, 2).\\nUncertain (2) If a dispute arises on any point\\npoints yo^ must make a claim before going to\\nreferred to )cio\\\\Q, or if the dis-\\npute arises on the last hole, before leav-\\ning the last green. This claim should\\nbe laid before the committee in charg-^\\nof the competition immediately on com-\\npletion of the round (a)\\n(a) Rule 36.\\ncommittee.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0268.jp2"}, "269": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section 75\\nIf you are in doubt as to a penalty\\nwhich you may have incurred, you should\\ngive your card to the committee with a\\nfull statement of the circumstances. The\\nrules require such a statement to be in\\nwriting, and on the basis of this state-\\nment the committee will decide the point\\n(b).\\n(b) Stroke Rule (3).\\n(3) In match play you score the Terms used\\nmatch by holes won. If you lead your in scoring\\nopponent by any number of holes, you match play,\\nare said to be that number of holes up\\non him and he is the same number of\\nholes down to you. If you have won\\nthe same number of holes you are all\\neven. The score is usually reckoned\\nas so many holes up or down, and\\nso many to play. That is, after fin-\\nishing the thirteenth hole, if you have\\nwon four more holes than he has, you\\nare four up and five to play. A\\nmatch is over when you or your oppo-\\nnent are more holes up than remain\\nto be played. The remaining holes of\\nthe course are bye holes and may be\\nplayed or not as agreed. If you are as\\nmany holes up as remain to be played,\\nyou are said to be dormie (a).\\n(a) Definition 21.\\n(4) In scoring strokes on each hole. Calling\\nas the necessary thing is to know how the strokes in\\nyou stand in relation to your opponent, match play and\\na set of terms is used which is fre- medal play,\\nquently puzzling to those not used to\\nmatch play. Thus, if you and your oppo-\\nnent have played the same number of\\nstrokes you are both like as you lie.\\nWhichever then plays first plays the\\nodd. If the same player has to play\\nagain before the other plays, his stroke", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0269.jp2"}, "270": {"fulltext": "76\\nSpalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nis two more, if again, three more\\nand so on. His opponent then playing, if\\nthe first player has played three more,\\nplays one off three if two more, one\\noff two, and if the first player has mere-\\nly played the odd the opponent then plays\\nthe like. The whole system is based\\non a comparison of strokes.\\nIn medal play, however, the number\\nof the stroke is called as playing four,\\nplaying five and so on (a).\\n(a) Definition 21.\\nSettling a (5) In match play if you and your\\nhalved match opponent finish the match all even\\nor a tie. you play on hole by hole until one wins\\nthe match; but if you tie with another\\ncompetitor in a medal round, you and\\nhe must play the entire round again at\\na time appointed by the committee, the\\nmaker of the lowest score in the play-\\noff to be the winner. If you and he\\nagain tie in the play-off round, you and\\nhe must again play another full round.\\nTies in medal play cannot be decided by\\na single hole, under the Rules of Golf\\n(a).\\n(a) Stroke Rule 3.\\nNames of\\nmatches\\nincluding\\nmore than\\ntwo players.\\nMATCHES OF MORE THAN TWO\\nPLAYERS.\\n(1) When more than two players play\\na match, the name of the match varies\\nwith the arrangement of the players. If\\ntwo play on each side, but each side plays\\nonly one ball (the two players playing\\nalternately) it is a foursome. If one\\nplayer plays two others, but the two\\nplay only one ball, it is a threesome\\n(a). If three players play, each having\\nhis own ball, and each playing against\\nthe others it is a three ball match.\\n(a) Definition 1.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0270.jp2"}, "271": {"fulltext": "Spalding s Golf Guide Rules Section Xf\\nIf one of the playv^rs, however, malx^hes\\nhis own ball against the best bail of two\\nor more others, it is a best ball match.\\nIf four play, each playing his own ball,\\nbut divided, two on a .side, each side\\nscoring with the ball making the bettt r\\nscore, it is a four ball match (b)\\n(b) Rules for three-ball matches, etc. Deflnlr-\\ntions 1, 2, 3.\\n(2) A match playing two balls only] Order of\\nhas precedence over any other form of precedence.\\nmatch and is entitled to pass through.\\nThree ball and four ball matches must\\naccordingly give way whenevei*^ re-\\nquested. A single player has no stand-\\ning whatever and must give way to any\\nkind of a match, but a single player m iiist\\nnot be confused with a single which is\\na match of two players.\\nAs has been stated above, a match\\nplaying a shorter round loses its stand-\\ning and must let any match playing a\\nfull round pass through it (a).\\n(a) Rule 1 (2).\\n(3) Threesomes and foursomes are Lifting\\ngoverned by the ordinary rules of match a ball when\\nplay, except that partners are required *5irgibl\u00c2\u00a7,\\nto strike the ball alternately under pen-\\nalty of loss of the hole in match play or\\ndisqualification in medal play (a), but\\nthree ball, best ball and four ball matches\\nrequire certain additional rules.\\nFor example, as there are several balls\\nin play, it is provided that any player\\nmay have any ball lifted or played if he\\nthinks that the ball is either an inter-\\nference or an assistance (b).\\n(a) Rule 3. (b) Three ball match, etc. Rule 1.\\n(4) Similarly, as there are several BaO striking\\nballs, if one strikes another, the one an^hexball.\\nwhich is struck must be replaced with.Qiit\\npenalty (a).\\n(a) Three ball match, etc- Rule 2.\\n77", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0271.jp2"}, "272": {"fulltext": "8\\nSpalding s Golf Guide Rules Section\\nOrder of play. (5) The balls of a side may be played\\nin the order which the side thinks best\\n(a). If you play your ball when an\\nopponent should have played, there is\\nno penalty and the ball is not recalled,\\nexcept on the putting green where the\\nopponent may recall your stroke (b).\\n(a) Three ball match, etc. Rule 6.\\n(b) Three ball match, etc. Rule 3.\\nIf your ball (6) If your ball strikes an opponent\\nstrikes an or is stopped or moved by him or his\\nopponent. Cf^iddie or clubs, that opponent shall lose\\nthe hole to the player. As regards the\\nother opponent, the occurrence shall be\\ntreated as a **rub of the green, in a\\nthree-ball match (a). But if your ball\\nstrikes yourself or your partner or either\\nof your caddies or clubs, you are dis-\\nqualified for that hole, but your partner\\nmay continue to play (b).\\n(a) Three ball match, etc. Rule 5, 7.\\n(b) Three ball match, etc. Rule 8.\\nIf you play (7) You will be disqualified from play-\\nyour partner s ing a hole if you play a stroke with your\\nball, partner s ball, and your partner should\\ndrop a ball at the spot and continue to\\nplay. But if this mistake is not dis-\\ncovered until the other side has played,\\nyour side loses the hole (a)\\n(a) Three ball match, etc. Rule 9.\\nGeneral rule (8) Generally speaking, if a player in\\nfor penalties. three-ball, best-ball or four-ball match\\ndoes anything which would mean losing\\nthe hole in match play, he is disqualified\\nfrom finishing the hole, but his disquali-\\nfication does not affect his partner and\\napplies only to that hole (a).\\n^a) Three ball match, etc. Rule 10.", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0272.jp2"}, "273": {"fulltext": "SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE. 79\\nStandardization of the Golf Ball\\nWe believe that an explanation of the term standardization is\\ndue the golfing public. The golf ball has not been standardized in\\nthe strictest sense of that term, but a limitation in weight and size\\nhas been decided upon by the delegates representing the United\\nStates Golf Association and the Royal and Ancient in Britain.\\nIt is a two-fold limitation ^a maximum of weight and a minimum\\nof size. For tournament golf after May 1, 1921, the ball must not\\nexceed 1.62 ounce in weight nor measure less than 1.62 inch in\\ndiameter. Avoirdupois is the system of weights used, and to be\\nexact, the 1.62 ounce in connection with the weight limitation is\\nreally 29 1-2 pennyweights, not 30, as is the general belief. There\\nare, approximately speaking, 514 hundredths of an ounce to a\\npennyweight, though the hundredths-of-ounces method of weighing\\nis more accurate and descriptive and the one that we as manufac-\\nturers have always employed, and, it will be noted, has been officially\\nadopted by the respective associations.\\nIt is our opinion that the destinies of the game of golf are in safe\\ncustody with the governing bodies of the United States and Britain,\\nand it is of manifest importance that the manufacturers follow their\\ndictates. It is our purpose to confine ourselves to the manufacture\\nof golf balls which will conform to the above limitations. Any other\\ncourse of action would be inimical to the best interests of the game.\\nIt must be observed that the new ruling permits of balls of larger\\nsize and lighter weight being used, but does not interfere with the\\nmethods of construction or the characteristics of the different golf\\nball manufacturers. Individuality will still have free scope within\\nthe aforementioned limits. Golfers will retain the freedom of choice\\nin the matter of the selection of a ball to suit their game, and we\\nshall therefore, as in former years, manufacture a variety to meet\\nthese demands.\\nWe cannot agree, however, with some remarks that have been\\nmade in the press, particularly in Britain, that the manufacturers\\nwill cease competing with one another for addilional distance, even\\nunder this limitation. On the final analysis the makers of golf balls\\nmust be influenced by the man who buys the ball, and in our judg-\\nment competition undoubtedly will continue, even in this field,\\nthough be it said in our judgment also, with no resulting danger to\\nthe game. It is our emphatic intention to maintain the advantage\\nin this field that we have always possessed.\\n6n the other hand, there is an ever-increasing desire on the part\\nof all golfers that the ball shall be made of a more durable char-\\nacter. This firm is carrying on continual and exhaustive experimen-\\ntation along these lines, and we believe with some success.", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0273.jp2"}, "274": {"fulltext": "\u00c2\u00ab0 SPALDING S OFFICIAL GOLF GUIDE.\\nThe numbers 30, 40 and 50 which we use in connection with our\\nleading golf balls constitute a method of nomenclature and do not\\nstand for weight or size. The following specifications, if studied,\\nshould act as a valuable aid in the selection of a ball best suited to\\none s game.\\nFIFTY GOLF BALL.\\nThe Fifty requires no introduction to the golfers of either this\\nContinent or Britain. During the season of 1920 it won, practically\\nspeaking, every major tournament of importance throughout the\\nworld. For the season of 1921 it will carry a new and improved\\nmarking, thus eliminating any possible confusion between it and the\\nFifty of the preceding year, which becomes illegal after May 1 for\\nuse in tournament play. It is the most high-powered ball that is\\npermitted under the new standardization, or limitation, of the ball,\\nand a very long carry indeed may be secured from, it. We have\\nendeavored to suppress its roll as far as possible, as in the past,\\nand hence it will be found controllable for the fine work around\\nthe green. Its weight is 1.62 ounce or 291/2 pennyweights, and its\\nsize is 1.630 inch.\\nFORTY GOLF BALL.\\nThe Forty is in all respects like the Fifty as regards its internal\\nconstruction. It is also a high-powered ball built for carries, and\\nits chief difference from the Fifty lies in the fact that it is some-\\nwhat larger in fact, a medium size ball and is marketed by us\\nfor this reason.\\nTHIRTY GOLF BALL.\\nThe Thirty in appearance will be precisely like our Thirty of a\\nyear ago. Our Thirty also as regards weight will approach the\\nlimit allowed under standardization, but its internal construction is\\nof such a nature as to make it possible to secure great durability\\nfrom it. In fact, it is the durable ball of our line, and though there\\nmay not be quite as much carry in it as the Forty and Fifty, yet\\nthis to a certain extent will be made up by an increased run. A\\nvery sweet feeling ball, and one that is comparatively more respon-\\nsive to lighter blows than either the Forty or the Fifty.\\nThe other golf balls of Spalding manufacture Baby Dimple,\\nGlory Dimple, Black Domino and Red Dot mesh ^have been so\\nlong before the American public that they require no further detailed\\ninformation. Details of construction will be found in the advertising\\npages of the main section of the Guide,", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0274.jp2"}, "275": {"fulltext": "The Yoke that\\nNever Binds\\nSPALDING\\nSPORT\\nSPECIALTY\\nSHOPS\\nSee list on\\ninside front\\ncover of this\\nsection.\\nis why HARRY\\nVARDON described\\nthe FILMER\\nJacket as the best\\nhe had ever worn\\nfor Golfing.\\nLondon made, of\\nBritish Tweeds and\\nHomespuns.\\nWith Trousers or\\nKnickerbockers\\nSweaters\\nShirts\\nNeckwear\\nHosiery\\nShoes", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0275.jp2"}, "276": {"fulltext": "Spalding\\nGolf Balls\\nDurability\\nRetention of shape and color,\\ncombined with ideal flight,\\nreliability and controllability,\\nform a combination of attri-\\nbutes in Spalding Golf Balls\\nthat approaches perfection", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0276.jp2"}, "277": {"fulltext": "Spalding\\nKro-FIite Golf Irons\\nIt is no exaggeration to say that probably eighty\\nper cent, of golfers do not face their club right in\\naddressing the ball. The angles of the different blades are\\nmore or less confusing and off play or poor trajectory\\nresults. The Kro-Flite marking (patent applied for) is an index that\\ndirectly catches the eye the minute the ball is addressed, the index\\nline being a prolongation of the center line of the shaft. Squared to\\nthe line of play, the hands naturally fall to the right position\u00e2\u0080\u0094 the\\nblade lies right for the shot and direction is improved to a very con-\\nsiderable degree.\\nAnother point did you ever hit a base ball at the end of the bat\\nRemember the sting Well, a golf iron rounded too much at the nose\\nwill give exactly the same sensation. Therefore, by extending the nose\\na trifle and getting the weight beyond the point of contact, as in the\\nKro-Flite line, we secure that sweetness of feel that helps make\\ngolf a joy forever.\\nA prominent Western golfer, when shown the club, said: I con\\nsider that the greatest step forward in club construction in years.\\nTry it, and be convinced.\\nEvery golfer should read the latest Spalding Golf\\nCatalogue. It contains pictures and prices\\nof everything the latest in the game.\\nModel\\nNo. F3\\nMidMashie\\nModel Model\\nNo. F2 No Fl\\nMid Iron Driving Iron\\n^blub\\nfor Every Distance. Diagram Illustrating Trajectory or Line of Flight of Ball Played with\\nDifferent Kro-Flite Irons", "height": "3206", "width": "2203", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0277.jp2"}, "278": {"fulltext": "SPALDING GOLF BALLS\\nSTANDARD ALL\\nTHE SPALDING FIFTY\\nThe Spalding Fifty for 192 1 under its new standard speci-\\nfications, will continue to be our leading high powered\\nball, containing the limit of power possible to put in a golf\\nball under present restrictions.\\nThe performances of the Spalding Fifty during the past\\nyear, require no introduction to the golfers of either America\\nor Great Britain. The National Amateur, National Open,\\nWestern Open, Professional Golfers Canadian Amateur,\\nBritish Open, French Open and Belgian Open Champion-\\nships, are sufficient to indicate the variety of events and\\nw^ide extent of territory embraced, in which the whinner\\nused a Spalding Fifty.\\nTHE SPALDING THIRTY\\nThe Thirty, in w^eight and size the same as the Fifty,\\nemphasizes Durability, and is especially recommended for\\nplayers who desire a quicker response to a light impact.\\nAll Spalding Golf Balls are made in accordance with the new\\nstandard specifications. In the complete line will he found a suit-\\nable hall for every player and every course.\\nSEND FOR GOLF BALL BOOKLET", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0278.jp2"}, "279": {"fulltext": "i", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0279.jp2"}, "280": {"fulltext": "o 4\\nt\\nlift. O.\\no", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0280.jp2"}, "281": {"fulltext": ",X s^\\no V\\n.r^^;^\\n;-rTx4\\na/.s v* %Tr\\n\\\\J T^-^\\nA^^\\ne^\\no\\n0^\\no Uy\\nV 1 fl\\n.^^^^v.\u00c2\u00bb.\\n/r?p^", "height": "3221", "width": "2172", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0281.jp2"}, "282": {"fulltext": "LIBRARY OF CONGRESS\\n003 346 334\\nMh", "height": "3268", "width": "2184", "jp2-path": "spaldingsofficia16unit_0282.jp2"}}