AN UNCERTAIN GAME
The delightful uncertainties of golf were exemplified at Paekakariki during a match in the captain's trophy between G. Parkhouse and -' N. Ewart. They were all square at the eighteenth, and to save a replay went on to the nineteenth,, where Ewart missed a putt to win the match. At the twentieth, a bogey 5 hole, Parkhouse duffed his drive and put his second to where he could' just see the green. Playing a full brassit:, which curled round with the wind, he holed a 220-yard shot for a win in 3. Ewart was only fifteen yards from the green in two nice shots, but lost the match. . ,-■
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXXIII, Issue 100, 29 April 1937, Page 23
Word Count
110AN UNCERTAIN GAME Evening Post, Volume CXXIII, Issue 100, 29 April 1937, Page 23
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