Show w The B st t Golf Golfer of f leis liis Age gein in the W World orl I I I 1 T 1 T fr f r V r I t ty J- J y 1 V r t r F I. I s. I C 4 f- f fE EI E- E a 1 1 4 e. e A AL L I 4 I P F you want to lo be be bea a perfect golfer goUer begin carl early in life Or Or better in to 4 the footsteps of Master Alfred AUred lIa It who began to swing s golf l clubs when he heas was as hardly out o 1 of pinafores and who at years of is ling many amateur golfers goUers three four five six and even seven t times tS t'S older than he is l Hayhurst who o Is the son sonI f of oi Alfred Hayhurst o of New Tor York Cit City has defeated n numbers bers of or good amateurs who play playon on tho the links at Van I Cortlandt Park and andall all he demands from those who play playa a really excellent game is a Do stroke a hole bola This towI towheaded towheaded tow- tow 1 headed golf phenomenon wet weighs s 1 60 pounds lIe Ho has he been n playing laying golf gOl for three years rears lie He has made tho the six m I holes at Van Cortlandt known as tic the e hills in 33 Ho has s gone gono tho the entire course of eighteen holes in a 96 36 Any up grown-up who can complete those 18 holes bolos in anything under a a. hundred strokes is playing goo good golf y His drives average over yards he approaches like a a. veteran and putts faultlessly Ho lie uses an nn abbreviated set of ot clubs but those these are azo be becoming too light for him r Elmer Loving professional proCessional of ot the Quaker Golf GoIt Club of ot Mamaroneck N. N Y the first golfer goUer to play pIny 18 boles holes in 66 saw Master Jaster Hayhurst in action for the first time recently and pronounced him the tho best golfer for his age ago he ho had ever over seen or heard of Mr Loving says of him that his form is as nearly port perfect ct as pos pea l t tI I I j sible sable Next year young oung Ua Hayhurst's father will attempt to lo enroll his son on as a no member of ot a a. golf club BO so that 1 r rF F the tho little fellow may be able to lo play in tournaments I I I I Sleeping Margaret was TOU conscious of herself and Margaret Being Doing con con- conscious I scions of Margaret argaret she was conscious conscious con con- on- on I of ot Margarets Margaret's consciousness I which Included Sick Doris Doris' and Real Heal i Doris She bad had tho the psychical point of vantage it seemed being able to observe observe observe ob ob- ob- ob serve all the tho others without being herself observed Sleeping Real Doris seemed to hold bold an extraneous position at one ono side of ot this chain with communication lines knes open to Doris and Sick Doris How this quintette lived together In the same physical structure and how bow tho the Real Doris eventually emerged triumphant through years ears of patient effort on the part of a Protestant Protest Protest- ant Episcopal clergyman that clergyman that is the psychic drama which Is now making many learned scientists gasp The Tho third volume volum on the case has baa Just been published by the American Society for Psychical Research Research- It is not c 1 a L. L I written for the tho popular understand Understand- understanding tand- tand ing and the newspaper notices have been generally misleading It Is just justa justI a record a stenographic record in largo large part of tho the actual phenomena a record of mysteries which have havo not BO so far been explained by any scientific pronouncement L LA A Clergyman Takes Up Her Case From New York there came to Pittsburgh PIttsburgh Pittsburgh Pitts PItts- burgh a clergyman of unusual attainments attain attain- ments Highly educated a doctor of ot philosophy he be had made a special study of at abnormal psychology Unlike Unlike Unlike Un Un- like most clergymen he ministered not only to souls but to minds diseased diseased diseased dis dis- eased not after the tho fashion of the ordinary ordinary ordinary or or- faith healers but In tn cooperation cooperation op co w with wilh Ith the beet medical ties It was wu Dr Walter F. F Prince now director of ot Emmanuel healing at St 51 Marks Mark's New York whore whore- he be devotes most of ot his hiis time Ume to curing seemingly hopeless cases of 10 drunkenness and bringing mental peace and strength to tho the disconcerted and despairing Within too the bounds of tho the Pittsburgh diocese lived tho the unfortunate Doris Mrs Prince the doctors doctor a wife wire became interested in her ber She visited tho the squalid homo home and brought the girl to Sunday school Mrs Prince discovered discor- discor ered Gred that it was impossible for this girl to sleep Bleep and brought her again and again to the rectory to try to soothe her into slumber She Sho soon divined that the he trouble was something something some some- thing deeper than ordinary hysteria and asked the doctor to take a hand Dr Prince was amazed at his first observations This ThIll was clearly a case of multiple personality only a a. few rare raTe instances Instance of which have ever been ben attested in the whole history of pathology and this one was so complex complex com coin plex plan that it seemed almost t impossible impossible impossible sible to dissociate the different 1 for intelligent observation Ho Ile had no theories to 0 maintain He Its had everything to discover By patient pa pa- tient observation month after month ho he made himself acquainted with each of ot the tho manifestations taking endless notes The Tho girl talked as freely asleep as she sho did awake sometimes In tn QUO ono personality sometimes In another Sho She talked about her ber being asleep Who talked Who slept Nothing but Infinite In tn- finite observations might tell Her ller Complicated Mental Meanderings Now she he Is 18 sleeping a a. voice rolco would sa say She the doctor finally derided decided w was ai Sick Doris but for a a. long Jong ong time ho he supposed otherwise Ho lie supposed that She Sho was the e primary personalIty personal personal- Ity nv and had he attempted to develop her the tho outcome might have hare been dl disastrous 1 i ll I Iw w l. b t J fa n r. r r. r I 11 iIi |