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THORNYCROFT

Jose 1. Hornyckory & Co., Limited,

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Manager for China

TER HONGKONG

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"North Boochow Rood]

DAILY PRESS. FRIDAY, JULY SOTB,

SCOTTISH SPORT. THE NEW GOLF AMATEUR

CHAMPION....

IR. TOLLEY'S GREAT VICTORY.

[FROM OUR OWN-CORRESPONDENT.

AN UNUSUAL INCIDENT, »

120.

In their semi-final, Mr. Tolley outplayed THEATRE SEN ROYAL,

MR. T. DANIEL FRAWLEY

PRESENTS THE

COMPANY

FRAWLEY

In Repertoire of the Latest London and. New York Successes,

The MONDAY,

TUESDAY.

Avg. 3xd:

WEDNESDAY.

Ara. 4TH

Mr. Mellin both through and on the green. A most remarkable thing, probably un- heard of in the Amateur Championship. occurred. Mr. Mellin was bunkered, play- ed a shot, could not get out, and smoothed,, June 16th the hocl-marks he had made; but as the ball Mr. Cyril Tolley's place in galing this was still in the bunker, Mr., Tolley claimed sory is by circumstances well marked, the hole. Mr. Tulley was quite within the success must rank as one of the most dis-letter of the law. Indeed, hai he nat tinguished in the history of the Amater claimed the hole, under rule of match play Championship frymu its national and inter- Mr. Mellin could have claimed it. national aspects The ability to produce incident serated to affect Mr. Mellin, but the best kind of golf is not good enough. Mr. Talley deserved his win of 5 and 4. of itself to wiu championships. If it were, THE GREAT FINAL. certain disappointing omissions in the list"] It was a great final, and by far the bat af champions would have been repaired part of the meeting. It was a strange long agm. Allied with high executive skill fate that a championship which, taken all THURSDAY, there must be stamina and a tour heart. over, has produced golf decidedly below the As an auxiliary there istitually required pre-war standard, should conclude with one. at eart a little luck. But en fit the keenest struggles in the history of Mr. Tolley had possessed all the others, the event. There was a great différence | the triumph would have eluded him but for between the finalists-Mr. Tolley, big and his pluck and nerve. Al' he won mars breely, the man of action all the time, who by ner than by anything vise.

puita plenty of power behind his strokon; THE ATH AND STH ROUNDS.

and Mr. Gardner, who gets the distance without any effort at all apparently, who doesn't utter half-a-dozen words in the course of a round, and who wore his collar up because he felt the nip of the wind.

** 1

J

With his teeth clenched

In last week's Scottish Letter it was told how former Amateur Champions had gone down like ninepins; in the fourth round the remaining three champions were also seng into the cold shade of defeat. Mr. The first round was comparatively quiet. Jenkins, of Tron, the holder, was defeated both men playing is a practical normal by Mr. Bernard Wragg, who belongs to fashion, But the odds were with the Ameri- a Sheffield golfing family, but has never can. He finished with two holes in his packel, done anything particular in the game as and there did not seem to be anything that yet." He is a sound golfer, with a fine free could ups, him. Te a player of so much style, and smoking a pipe all the way, experiente surely that was a wife position weems to have the temperament for the against a young man inknown in the golf. "gamen Another exzhampion, Major Ajing world a year ago? But those who G Harry was beaten by Mr. A. V. thought a reckoned without the young Hambro; as the last of the champious, mau. It was a different Mr. Tolley who Mr. Hilton, went down to a Hendon Sopt, came out in the afternoon. It seemed as Mr. R. H. Howie. Mr. Hilton played it in the interval he had retired to a quiet steady rind, but he is not getting his old corner and thought the matter out with distance, Mr. Howie is an Arbroathi ua, hiniself. The beaming smile had gone from but has beeh in London for 3 years. He his bronzed face:

well-known soccer player and firmly, and his chia stuck out, he was a cricketer, and had no golf for it years indispensable pipe, faithful companion of veritable John Bull. Even the apparently after, he went south. Mr. Gordon Lock. ius prevus rounds, was discarded. And bart had a great" fight with Mr. Nelson then he went at it; not playing very wod Whitney, the second-best of the America thire, but relentlessly pursuing his um, dertul golf making a mistake here and i comingent, and pulled off the match For fourteen holes we saw Mr. Tolley's other West of Scotland golier, Mr. Jackstar gradually rise. That little luck that M'Intyre of Cardross was not so sicces made a slip, the American also made one, a champion needs was there, for when he fal with ir. Robert A. Gardner. There ap had four to play it seemed all gulf a gallant effort, however, and had over, and one of the tension disappeared he putted better he might well have won

from the Oxford man's face; But it wa the American's turn to get the luck. And in the fifth round Mr. Lockhart had an. lets they came to the 37th they were all other great fight. His opponent, Mr.are. Both were on the green with their

sbots.

Mr. Gartner laid his rus-up Angus Hamile, the back, marker of the patt dead; Mr. Tolley was left with a Parliamentary golfers and a tremendous patt of eight feet for a 1, the hole, and swiper, is a hard man to, bit, and in change, and it ran down:

the Championship.-he gave it every winning the niateli 31r. Lockhart accom- plished something of a fent. When he got them straight his drives went quite as far THE STANDARD GOLF BALL., “ as those of Mr. Hambro; but he had a abari mane will be born." For all the The mounains will be in Inbour: an tendency to pull, and over and over again pother woich the standardisation con was badly punished. Mr. W. J. Hunter,troversy aroused, the result, so far as the the won of a gend Scutsman, Harryented a result, is very molest. Practic resolution of the special committee may be Hunter; the green-keeper at Deal, had aally what it mounts to is that the present sensational win over Mr. Jenkins' victor 30 dat, ball is to be the maximum in weight He was five down at the turn to Mr. and one or two of the longest and harder and the minimum in size. Mitchell, Ray, Wragg playing vers wildly Then pull fitters may be slightly ing himself together-not, as he afterwards not all even of the leading up, hat said, to try and win, but to save his use a 31 ball. Taylor, in fact, plays with professionals father's feeling-he steadied down, and, a 20, and great many golfers of" much an it happened, Mr. Wragg went just low account who use a 31 would probably a little oil. Mr. Hunter won three out of fare much better the next four, and oner agais it was two proposal minimum size of 1.82 in, is so with a lighter ball. The up and Ave to go. Two holes were halved, near to the present small ball that the then Mr. Hunter running off with the fractional difference is hardly worth speak. last three holes, scored a highly creditable ing about," win. Mr. G. C. Manford, the only sur slightly less than the present 30-ball, ang So we have got something vivor of the Edinburgh contingent, also practically identical in size. -won his match. And Mr. Gordon Simpson THE STYMIE.

beat the young Hoylake crack, Mr. T. F. Ellison.

·THE SCOTS "ALL"DOWN."

He

When the fifth round opened six of the sixteen players were Scats; when play ceased for the day the last eight included four Sente; but is the sixth round all the Ecots went down.

June 3rd,

Then the stynie is to remain-here, al any-rate. Those who value the traditions easy to make out a plausible case for its of the game are thankful for that, it is abolition, The historie match which the abolitionists delight to quote is that be- tween Wilfred Reid and J. D. Edgar for £30 a side, in which Reid was laid eight Mr. Lockhart's play lacked his usualsts mies in the course of one round, Incasive manner against Mr. Gardner. Gleneagles, Tom Fernie was laid three by At That he gave the American chances too Duncan, and he lost all three holes, Aud often was bad enough. but that be made Mr. Tolley was laid two strmies in the nothing of the low he had from Mr. asal at Muirfield. Mr. Tolley has quite Gardner was rather worse. He did not obviously studied the art of putting, and. stem to be quite keyed up. On that score from the way he negotiated one of the the American had the advantage. Carry stymies and so narrowly missed the other, ing the look of a keen athlete, Mr. Gardnerit may be inferred that he has also assidu went thragh his match with quiet com ensly practised the stymie stroke. Not ons fidence. His putting was for the most part player in Sifty ever thinks of doing so.. relentlessly good on greens which, under THE LOST BALL. sun and wind, have been troubling some of

the competitor His winning putt was on ball penalty. There will be general agree The biggest legislative change is the lost the last green, where he boted out teen gent that equity has been met in suify. yards. "

It was another Mr. Gardner we saw in ing the penalty for a lost ball; a ball cut. af bounds, and an unplayable bail. It was the semi-final He won bis match with always an anomaly that a ball played Str. Lockhart on the greens, it was not not of bounds should be less severely so in his round with the Hon. Michael punished than a ball perfectly well played Scott--who bad rather easily disposed of perhaps, which kept on the course, but was Mr. Hunter. Indeed Mr. Gardner putted either lost or was found in an unplayabla Just like an ordinary golfer. Time and position. Still the committee have to some again be missed putt of two yards and extent nullified their own action by giving under. Mr. Scott, who usually plays with permission for a local rule in the matter machine-like precision, was far from being of the out-of-bounds' penalty, at his best; "and his" failure was due to Inst chances

Taking them all in all, nothing very re but considering how auch was threatened, volutionary is embodied in the rewolutions,

INTER-UNIVERSITY SPORTS.'.'.

It was a good match between Mr. Tolles -and-Mr-Eimpson With the exception of we ought to be thankful for the videra

one or two holes, the Best played by totion. means poorly but's brilliant spell on the part of the Dark Blue from the eighth Bole to the fifteenth was more then he could stand up to

To meet the Oxonian, Mr. Mellin

young had to beat Mr. Maasford, and to his su cean in that venture Mr. Manaford himself contributed. The Edinburgh man had lost touch with his driver; he missed no fewer than eight of his drives, and found it neces anry to take wood for a second stroke where an iron would ordinarily have been his club.

Edinburgh had overwhelming superiority 160-the University Sports, Ecing -fimt-in eleven events; Glasgow had three firsts and Aberdeen one: No records were made, but the competition was quite kosen. The most prominent figure was W. L. Hunter, of Edinburgh, the jump champion, who on all three events for which boas entered without being seriously troubled. And next to him was T. B. Bell, of (}}asgow University.

Ara, 51b:

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