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Golf Travel Case:

Golf Travel Case golf travel case's appeal is universal. There are golf travel case courses below sea level and at elevations of more than 14,000 feet, on deserts and in forests, within the Arctic Circle and inside equatorial jungles. Of about 20 million persons throughout the world who play golf travel case, half are Americans. In the early 1970's the United States alone had more than 10,000 golf travel case courses. The rules of golf travel case are determined jointly by the Royal and Ancient golf travel case Club (R. & A.) of St. Andrews, Scotland, established in 1754, and the United States golf travel case Association (USGA), formed in 1894. The former organization rules the game throughout most of the world, the latter in the United States.

In the United States, golf travel case may first have been played in North Carolina in the 18th century. The oldest golf travel case club for which there is unimpeachable evidence was the South Carolina golf travel case Club, established by British planters in Charleston in 1786. It ceased to exist about 1812 but was rechartered in 1969 by the Sea Pines Plantation on Hilton Head Island. The first permanent golf travel case club in the United States was established by a transplanted St. An-drean named John G. Reid near Yonkers, N. Y., in 1886. Reid called the club the St. Andrews golf travel case Club. Although this club has moved its site several times since its founding, it is still in existence—in Mt. Hope, N. Y.


SELECTIVE TRAVEL PAYS BIG DIVIDENDS I know a charmingly incompatible couple—each derides and accepts the other's "follies," so they hit it off well—both of whom love travel, in their respective fashions. They sometimes ask my advice about a proposed trip. Donning my wisest possible look I reply, just for instance, "Why don't you visit Portugal and then maybe fly down by Aquila Airways from Lisbon to Madeira and the Canaries?" Or, if the journey is to be made in summer, "How about the Benelux countries? And maybe top them off with a visit to Scotland, for the Edinburgh Festival?" In either case and any case the husband promptly replies, "Done. Agreed. Sounds perfect. No need to look further." The wife then says, "Hold on, Bert. It does sound nice, but on the other hand ."
 
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