6 WINNETKA WEEKLY TALK, SATURDAY, AUGUST 4, 1923 On North Shore Golf Links Tribune Expert Tells of Busy Week at Local Golf Clubs Y WALLACE ABBEY North Shore golf followers turned their eyes on Mayfield Country club, Cleveland, last week, as several of their number struggled in the fastest field which has ever competed for the west- ern amateur title. Although the winner, Chick Evans, of Edgewater, is not from the region north of Howard street, sev- eral of the boys who made the tourna- ment interesting are. Ira Couch, of Glen View, carried the laurels of the north shore farthest when he qualified with 149 and later elimi- nated Capt. E. F. Carter, former Irish champion well known along the shore, 2 and 1. Couch also played on the Chi- cago district team which won the Olym- pic cup. He fell before W. H. Gardner, of Buffalo, 12 and 9, but Gardner was a tough job even for Evans in the final. Ed Hart, of Indian Hill, got away to a good start the first day with 42-37-79, but failed to qualify, his second day's total amounting to 163. 157 was the lowest to qualify. Dexter Cumings, Onwentsia's national intercollegiate champion, made a valiant fight, but went down before the mighty Jess Sweetser, 4 and 3. Evanston Community now boasts a champion in th person of Matt Jans, who waded through the entire field of municipal golfers last week and won the championship of Cook County Mu- nicipal Golf association. Jans' final ob- stacle was Art Patterson, of Jackson Park, but the north shore player dis- posed of him handily in the final at Edgebrook, 5 and 3. Jans shot three par holes among the final thirty-six, his final card being 36-36-72. Patterson turned in a 38-41-79. Other players from the Evanston course competing in the meet were E. and A. Meyers, G. E. Packard and H. Nilles. Earle O. Robbins gave himself and the Evanston Community course fame by shooting the sixteenth hole, 145 yards, in one stroke. The shot cleared the canal. John A. Mosgrove, Ray D. Brown and William E. Claussen, all north shore residents, were in Robbin's foursome. Skokie members turned out en masse last Saturday for the first round of the Indian Summer tournament, an annual club event which attracts much interest along the shore. Competition was in five flights, for the Mohawk, Oneida, Seneca, Onondaga and Cayuga trophies. M. C. Shope and Warren C. Agry fin- ished all seven. Scores in the five flights were: MOHAWK TROPHY--J. Magnus de- feated D. R. Kimbark, 5 and 4; D. F. Stillings defeated G. E. Haskin, 1 up; B Schnur defeated G. E. Schnur, 3 and 2; M C. Shope vs. Warren C. Agry, all even; J. V. Rathbone defeated J. F. Pole, 5 and 3. ONEIDA TROPHY--A. S. Webster defeated H. C. Mershon, 1 up; J H. Bullen defeated F. S. Grant, 4 and 3; E. J. Hicks defeated H. C. Fairchild, 1 up; J. D. Cunningham defeated F. M. De Beer ,3 and 2; Dr. Frank Brawley defeated Kenneth D. Steere, 2 up SENECA TROPHY--A. G. Frost de- feated E. J. Bowers, 3 and 2; C F. Pearce defeated De Courcey Llovd, 4 and 2; C. F. Weed defeated L.. Moore, 4 and 3; A. R. Small won by default from R. W. Hall; E. R. Johnston won by default from I. J. Shuart; Dr. J. A. Burrill defeated William R. Watson, 2 and 1. ONONDAGA TROPHY--H. T. Smith defeated H. H. Curtis, 2 and 1; W. XK. Child defeated G. Harper, 3 and 2; H. E. Boyack defeated W. J. Cham- pion, 1 up; C. D. Brandriff defeated L. Hopkins, 3 and 1; M. A. Bassett de- feated S. A. Willmarth, 3 and 2; H. B. Phillips won by default from G. W. Tracey; W. E. Burch defeated C. E. Ustick, 1 up. CAYUGA TROPHY--L. C. Mowry de- feated Fred C. Spinney, 4 up; J. A. Francouer defeated F. M. Chaffee, 5 up; A. G. Mills won by default from BE. R. Hopkins; L. T. Barnett defeat- ed FF. E. Compson, 7 and 6; J. D. Gal- braith won by default from J. C. Car- penter; L.. J. Osborn defeated S. Murch, 2and 1; J. L. Lane defeated F. A. Brown, 1 up. Leadership in the North Shore Inter- club Golf league changed hands last week, when Exmoor ran over West- moreland, 3 to 0. Evanston really gave the Highland Parkers the lead by de- feating Onwentsia, 2 to 1. Onwentsia and Exmoor had been tied for first place. Glen View retained third place by defeating Indian Hill, 2 to 1, while Bob O'Link, Indian Hill, Evanston, Skokie and Westmoreland remain in the ranking in the order named. A sum- mary of the play last week was: AT EXMOOR--D. B. MacMurray and W. B .Fitch, Exmoor, defeated Dr. E. H. Raedel and A. C. Hammond, Westmoreland, 1 up. L. Gordon and Ww 3 Egan, Exmoor, defeated L. Lancaster and C. T. Ripley, Westmore- land, 2 and 1. W. Egan and H. C. Gifford ,Exmoor, defeated F. C. Stiles, Jr, and E. J. Nichols, Westmoreland, 4 and 3. Points--Exmoor, 3; Westmore- land 0. AT EVANSTON--H. Isham and O. Johnson, Onwentsia, defeated L. Sa- varia and Dr. Combs, Evanston, 5 and 4. C. Murray and H. Ray- mond, Evanston, defeated D. B. Douglas and F. C. Letts, Onwentsia, 2 and 1. W. Alschlager and J. Rend, Evanston, defeated Mason Phelps and G. Blossom, Jr.,, Onwentsia, 1 up, 19 holes. Points--Evanston 2; Onwent- sia, 1. AT GLEN VIEW--R. O. Lord and H. A. Gardner ,Indian Hill, defeated K. H. Burns and G. Henneberry, Glen View, 8 and 1. R. W. Keyes and P. Berkey, Glen View, defeated C. L. Stacey and E. M. Cummings, Indian Hill, 3 and 2. K. P. Edwards and K. L. Ames, Glen View, defeated G. Romth and F. Blossom, Indian Hill, 3 and 2. Points--Glen View 2; Indian Hill, 1. ; AT BOB OLINK--J. .T. Ling and F. Brawley, Skokie, defeated C. S. Wil- liams and C. A. Irwin, Bob O' Link, 1 up; 20 holes. J. Huston and F. W. Hill, Skokie ,defeated D. A. Matteson and E. A. Maginnis, Bob 0' Link, 2 and 1. E. J. Osler and R. H. Ritchie, Bob o' Link, defeated Husted Meyer and C. F. Pearce, Jr., 4 and 3. Total Points--Skokie, 2; Bob o" Link, 1. A lone representative of north shore clubs, James A. Delaney of Evanston Golf club, tramped 25 miles necessary to finish in the novel 72-hole-in-day tour- nament held over the four courses of Olympia Fields last Wednesday. De- laney turned in a 341 for the day's work, Bill Rathenbush of Briergate win- ning the meet with 309. About 160 com- peted. The purpose of the event was to show the possibilities of such a scheme. E. L. Strobel and H. V. O'Brien tied in the special 18-hole medal handicap event at Indian Hill last Saturday with low gross of 71. Strobel made the course in 81 with a handicap of 10, while O'Brien took one more stroke, but had an 11 advantage. more to the good qualified Saturday for the Maturity cup, T. S. Noyes, 85-2-83, turning in the lowest score. An allow- ance of one stroke was given for each year over sixty and E. C. Carter, the oldest member competing, came in fourth with 97-9-88. Other qualifiers with neat scores were J. J. Charles, 92-7-85; H. B. Riley, 88-1-87; R. A. Kayes, 100-8-92; W T. Dwight, 106-7-99; and E. G. Paulding, 115-4-111. On the same day the Fellowship Cup IIT went to C. R. Latham, who defeated J R. Guilliams, 2 up © K. L. Ames and J. N. Welter tied in the club handicap event with 70-scrath-70 and 77-7-70. Staver Moulding is now in possession of the president's trophy at Westmore- land, as the result of his victory over N. C Taylor Saturday in the final round. The vice-president's cup went to C. V. Burghart when he defeated J. M. Boggs. C. R. Naylor won the weekly fellowship cup on the same day with a card of 84-13-71. A five cornered tie resulted in the blind bogey event, C. W. Wrigley, R. A. Worstall, R. C. Mc- Kay, J. C. McKinley and O. Kirk re- turning to the club house with net scores of 88. Naylor, loser in the president's cup meet, led in the ball sweepstakes with 82-9-73. Sixteen members also qualified for the Angus cup with cards below 77, C. R. Naylor leading with 84-13-71. ~JANGLEFOOT x SN ie Sticky Fly Paper Most effective and sanitary fly destroyer known. Collects and holds flies. Easily disposed of. No dead or paralyzed flies fall- ing everywhere. Sold by grocers and druggists. THE O. & W. THUM CO., GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. len View members with 60 years or; : G gy ! school, however, the firemen ran into a MEDICAL ELECTRICITY | | Call or Write for Free Booklet. Chronic Cases that fail to respond to the treatments especially solic- ited But why wait for your trouble to become chronic? Electrical treatments are especially recommended in high blood press- ure, nervous troubles, post operative adhesions, ulcers, abcesses and all female troubles. ELECTRO PHYSIOTHERAPY LABORATORY 1113 Capitol Bldg. 159 N. State St. Tel. Dearborn 9583 | A sunset tournament at Lake Shore was won by Mr. and Mrs. D. M Guth- man, 44-10-34, second going to T. B. Block and Mrs. A. Oppenheim, 43-6-37. Idlewild members competed Sunday in the first rounds of the president's and vice-president's trophies with some good matches featuring the day's competition. Evanston Golf club had a record breaking week. On Wednesday two women, Mrs. Louis Reinhart and Mrs. A. W. Douglas of Westmoreland shat- tered the feminine mark of 86 by turn- ing in cards of 80 and 81 respectively, while Robert Pirie, assistant to profes- sional Laurie Ayton, last Sunday shot the course in 69, two under men's par. Perfect scores for women are 84. On the same day J. J. Glenn and W. D. Hess tied for first in the blind bogey. Bob Gardner, veteran of many tourna- ments along the north shore and captain of the American Walker cup team, set a new course record at Onwentsia Satur- day when he negotiated the 18 holes in 32-35-67. Par for the Lake Forest course is 71. Chimney Fires Call Out Red Truck and Firemen Chimney fires are not very plentiful as a rule--but they did cause the Win- netka fire department considerable trouble this week. Felix W. Boldenweck, 823 Humboldt avenue, sent in a call to the department when he found his house full of smoke on Monday. The big truck rushed to the house, but close examina- tion disclosed nothing more than a leak- ing chimney. At the North Shore Country Day real chimney blaze. The draft producer on Leicester hall caught fire from a small hot water heater and the burn- ing soot produced so much smoke that the fire fighters could scarcely see across the street. Neither of the scares resulted in any damage to property. SUMMER DISCOUNT 20¢ discount on framing and unframed prints during the months of July and August. Gairing Fine Arts 1613 Orrington (Ave. EVANSTON, ILL. Bathing Caps The most stylish, original and practical models of the season. The very newest fashions in bathing millinery are cleverly expressed in these caps. Made of the finest rubber, and care- fully finished, they are as prac- tical as they are pretty, and serve their purpose exceedingly well. If you want something dis- tinctive--try one of our two color caps adorned with a rose or water lily. Numerous models from which to select. Also a fine line of bathing slippers and water wings. Smiling Service Community Pharmacy CHAS. R. PATCHEN 574 Phone Lincoln Ave. 164 --laza Jemeler-- Library Plaza Hotel Evanston HE finest jewelry shop on the North Shore, maintaining a repair depart- ment for watches, clocks and jewelry. Ham Doesn't that sound good these warm days when it's pretty hard to decide on just what kind of meat to buy for your meals? And it is good when you buy it here--sugar cured, fresh and of a most appetiz- ing flavor. Try it. PETERS MARKET A. PETERS, Prop. 734 Elm Street Phone Winn. 920-921-922 éé He has everything you need in ee Taylor First the line of household helps. He carries articles that give satisfactory service. prices are reasonable. So call him up at 9-9-9, and he'll send it right over. And his 17? b.laylor &(9 Phones 998-999 WINNETKA 546 Center St. "The place where Pleasant Pleasant meal. eating is a pleasure" Cameo Restaurant and Lunch Room 551 Lincoln Ave. Under New Management Surroundings surroundings al- ways add much to the pleas- ure one gets out of a good That is one reason you'll like to eat here. "NON-SINK" BATHING SUIT (Patented) FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN seif-filling air pocket which makes it im- Phone Stewart 7789 or at factory Has an 7133 So. Paulina St. invisible possible for wearer to sink. and see free demonstration of this wonderful suit. to 10 P. M. except Sundays. beautiful colors. Free booklet and samples. NON-SINK BATHING SUIT MFR. Open 8 A. M. 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