WILMETTE LIFE June 29, 1928 ChamPionship Courses Two Golfers Pickwick Offers ----------------------------------------------------------I HAS ~YOUT EQUAL TO BEST PRIVATE CLUBS Tees, Greens, Traps Embody Moat Modern Ideas; Euy to Reach Out in the neighborhood of the private golf clubs some twenty minutes west by auto is the Pickwick Suburban daily fee course. Her.e is the one public fee course in the Chicago area which rates as a championship course equal to the best in the metrppolitan district and better than many private courses. Its tees green!>, . fairw~ys and even the rough stamp 1t as unusual. An observer knowing nothing about the course would, no doubt, think it a private club. Its tees notably, that ever distinguishing mark between the bankers' and the salesmen's coune would deceive. All of them ar~ of good turf, creeping bent, in fact. And the player does not feel he is pushing his tee into rock as is the case on the crowdeu courses where so many hundred use each tee. Well Laid Out Greens . Greens also are carpeted· with creepmg bent. As is true in standard golf courses, they vary in size _and shape, most of them are elevated and all are trapped according to the distance of the shot or pitch necessary to reach the green. Fairways and rough as welt are kept in good condition, and trees are not too numerous, though there are several dog-leg holes caused by clumps of trees. Best features of modern golf course architecture have been incorporated throughout the course by that expert, · }. A. Roseman, who has laid out so many courses in the district. Excdlence of the course extends to everv inch of its acreage, as the most moder~ treatment of the ground foundation has been given. Pickwick is located just far enough west to benefit by the rolling land and slight hills which start a distance from here. It is in a country atmosphere awaY from distracting noises, out where the air is clean, and a general freshness pervades to make a round of golf a real enjoyment. Two Eighteen-Hole Courses Located at Lake and Shermer avenues, on the west edge of the village of Glenview, it covers 325 acres. Two courses of 18 holes each are maintained, the one more difficult than the other. The first, the south course, measures 6,595 yards and is trapped and turfed like that of the average private club. This course is not difficult to the player who shoots under 100. The north course, however, is built as a real test of golf and to PLAYER GETS CHANCE_ TO LEARN REAL GAME Ideal Surroundings Prepare Him for Using the Finest Courses The player on Pickwick enjoys advantages which are not offered by publicly owned fee . courses within reach of the north shore. He learns to play a game of real golf, such as is his ambition if he ever joins a private g-olf club. He gets the benefit of the :1pen. uncrowded spaces of the quiet countryside, which are denied him on most cramped, congested public : ourses. And though he pays a slightly high~r fee, his actual expense is 1uite certain to be less. At Pickwick have been developed the best facilities for learning the game. If the golfer expects to join a private club it is advisable for him to learn the ~arne at Pickwick. H.e will thus not only learn the rules and actual conditions of the game, but he will have experience on a course that is as well designed and perhaps more difficultly tra,pped than the club he will eventually join . The small added cost of playing on Pickwick is more than offset by the advantage of playing a game of real golf in ideal surroundings. In just the one item of golf balls the saving is greater than the fee. There are no d i t c h e s, rivers, canals or tangled roughs in whieh to lose $1.50 to $3 worth of balls in a round of play. The Pickwick player has the assurance that his ball will not easily be lost. The rough is rough, but it is well kept and always clean. Water hazards also have part of their danger subtracted, because caddies are present to retrieve balls landing in them. This airplane view shows the water hazards at the eighteenth hole of each course and gives a good idea of its well-trapped, turfed and varied character. There are other water hazards on the courses. attract the pl(!yer who shoots under 90. It measures 6,710 yards. Its builders assert that it is more difficult than any other course in the Chicago district except two which are known a~ the ultra extreme or professional type courses. Par on the }:larder, the north, course is 72. For the out nine, which measures 3,45 · yards, par is 37, and for the in nine, measuring 3,255 yards, perfect figures are 35. Long and short holes are well placed and evenly balanced. With ten par 4'.; there are f_our par 5's and as many par 3's. The in nine while shorter, hqs more hazards tha~ the first nine, including two water holes, the thirteenth and eighteenth. The first of these is a 140-yard shot over the pond placed directly in front of the green. A Teat for Any Professional The water hazard on the eighteenth is in a similar position and is enough of a te.;t for any professional, coming at the green of a 600 vard hole which starts in a dog-leg with the bend at 200 yard~ . Cards shvw the great variety .in length on the various holes. That fact might be taken for granted, but analysis shows that special effort has been made on Pickwick in building the course to draw out a real game of golf from a player. Traveling either of. the two eighteens requires playing wtth more than two sticks as the opportunities for all kinds of strokes are numerous. AU the par 4's require two full shots, a wood and an iron and some r~quire two wooden shots t~ reach the green. Pickwick Short Auto Drive for the North Shore Golf Players Pickwick is just a few minutes drive from the north shore towns and busses connect it with nearby railwav stations. Autoists will take the mo-st convenient road to Glenview and then west on the Glenview road to Shermer avenue, on the wes-tern edge of the village. Pickwick is one block north. Busses from the club meet lrains at the Glenview station of the Chicago Milwaukee & St. Paul road and the Glenayre ·station of the Chicago Milwauk~e Electric Skokie Valley line. : Three Starting Tees at Pickwick Speed Players Operating three starting tees at Pickwick expedites the h~ndling of crowds Saturdays and Sundays especially and avoids congestion. All starting times are reserved and the foursomes leave the tees at intervals of four and five minutes on the two courses. This year, the second of the existence of the course, has seen a~ average of between 700 and 900 players using the two eighteens each weekend. Many North Shore Clubs Play the Pickwick Course Several large clubs and trade organizations of Chicago and the · north shore have recognized the caliber of the Pickwick course and are making use of it for their tournaments. Kiwanians of Evanston are among its most enthusiastic users, assembling there in a golf day for _the entire playing membership once a month and engaging in many practice rounds. The Evanston Commercial league also play their matches at Pickwic_ k. SP·ECIAL VACATION RATES Pickwick's week day rate is $1.50, TWO PUTTING CLOCKS but it is now offering special vacation For acquiring that "touch" which rates for men 1 women and juniors. decides so many championships, Pick- Ten-play tickets are obtainable for wick provides two eighteen-hole put- men at $10, and for women and ting clocks. juniors at $7.50. ·I 1 z 3 4 ILLINOIS 5 t' PICKWICK GOLF CLUB GLENVIEW - Year - 1928 WOMEN AND JUNIOR Week Day Golf · Card This Individual prhUege card entitles To ten rounds or week day golf subject to club regulations. Not valld on Saturdays, Sundays or Holidays. 6 Pickw~ek, as may be seen from the above picture. 7 8 9 10 . Cl~mps of trees, rolling stretches of velvet turf, water and sand hazards abound at (Adver~isement) This ticket entit 1es the holder to ten rounds of golf at a special vacation rate.