In Winter Quarters 



on the tees and through the fairways 

 every Saturday during the summer 

 months than a greenskeeper can renew 

 in a month of painstaking replace- 

 ment. Just the same he gets his 

 money's worth with the biggest inter- 

 est rate upon it of any investment he 

 ever makes. 



You see it is like this: You take a 

 wooden club modeled on the lines of 

 the old-fashioned "shinny" stick, a 

 small white ball that is more sensitive 

 than a drop of quick-silver on a hard- 

 wood floor, and you are to drive it two 

 or three hundred yards straight down 

 the line of play toward a goal objec- 

 tive a tiny cup imbedded somewhere 

 in supposedly velvety grass upon a 

 putting green but you probably will 

 not. Rather you will look up too quick- 

 ly and "top" or "slice" or "pull" the 

 ball into a sand-trap, a stream of water, 

 tall weeds or clover, brush or gravel 

 pit, conveniently placed to catch 

 dubbed shots. Then after looking for 

 [i94l 



