PINEHURST OUTLOOK lHli
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FOR HIGH SCORES-USE A
Smith & Wesson
Single Shot Target Pistol
CHAMPIONSHIP TOURNEY
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Published Saturday Morning, Twenty-five
Weeks in the Year, November to May, at
Plnehorst, Moore County, North Carolina.
(Founded by James W. Tufts)
Htrbart L. Jlllson, - Editor
Th Outlook Publishing Co., - Pab's
One Dollar Annually, Five Cents a Copy.
Foreign Subscriptions Twenty-five Cents
Additional.
The Editor is always glad to consider contri
buttons of short stories, descriptive articles,
narratives and verse. Good photographs are al
ways available.
Advertising rate folder and circulation state
ment on request.
Make all remittances payable to
THE OUTLOOK PUBLISHING COMPANY.
Entered as second class matter at the Post
Office at Tinehurst, North Carolina.
DJLTUnDAY, MARCH IT, lOOG.
11111 Brown, Volcano.
Bill Brown of South Tehachipee
Come of a famous family,
Ills uncle preached, his father wrote,
His brother was a famous pote,
His sister's husband, bright by natur',
Ran seven times fer Legislatur',
And his third cousin, Andy Boggs,
Was lynched for stealiii' sheep and hogs.
And Billy? Oh, him he was a joke
His only trick was jeBt to smoke
And smoke aud smoke and say, by jings,
Ye simply should a-scen the rings
What Bill could blow the twirls and swirls,
The grapevine twists and corkscrew curls
What Bill, from plain plug-cut, could swipe
All day from his corn-cob pipe.
Bill didn't have no mind to soil
His lily hands with common toil;
He shied when ther' was wood to saw,
He hated preachin', theachin', law,
So lofty thoughts what others spoke
He lavished on the Gift of Smoke,
And some effects he done, I guess,
Was Architecture, nothin' less.
I've often seen Bill blow a ring
From here to Sawdust Mountain Spring,
Wher' it would bounce upon a tree
And float back to Techachipee;
And he could blow a chain of um
From 'Frisco to Jerusalem,
Then, jest to please his many friends,
He'd tie a bow-knot on the ends.
One day the bandit, Wildcat White,
He got a can o' dynamite
And laid it on the track, to try
And wreck the Flyer goin' by,
Then Bill, with char'cteristic nerve,
He seen the train around the curve
Unknownin' of the risk it run
Then what d'ye think that Willum done?
He blowed a ring in proper style
Which soared three-quarters of a mile
And settled right across a rail.
The Engineer, a-turnin' pale,
He seen it lyin' on the track,
Throwed on the breaks and hollered "Back !"
And everybody shook and shivered
When that explosive was discivered.
So Bill wp s famous from that day
And many years he smoked away,
Till onct a ring caught in his breath
And strangled him to death.
We wrote upon the grave of Bill
The touchln' motto, "Smoking Still,"
And rings is often Been to rise
From out the mound where Willum lies.
Wallace Irwin in N. Y. Globe.
TROKE for stroke con
tests brought the third
annual Club Champion
ship tournament .to a
close Saturday, both the
championship and conso
lation trophies being won on the home
green. Interest centered on the battle
for the chief trophy between J. D. Foot,
of Apawamis, and C. L. Becker of Wood
land, a large gallery following.
Mr. Hecker was one up at the turn, but
Mr. Foot evened matters on the eleventh,
the next six holes being halved, Mr. Foot
winning the eighteenth and the match,
56.
The cards :
foot.
Out 6 5 3 6 3 5 5 3 439
In -4 34 4 6 4 63 5-3978
BECKER.
Out-5 5 4 4 4 3 5 3 437
In 4 4446463 64176
The contest for the consolation trophy
between John M. Ward of Montclair,
and L. D. Pierce of Woodland, was fully
as keen, the score being even at the
t welf th,-the remaining holes being halved,
Mr. Ward winning by one up on the home
green, 45, and with a medal play score
of eighty to eighth-one for his opponent.
The surprises of the tournament were
the defeats of Mr. Ward by L. E. Ward
well of Camden, Maine, and Allan Lard
of Columbia, by William C. Freeman of
Montclair, in the first and second rounds,
both matches being close. Mr. Ward well
and Mr. Ward were even up on the
twelfth, the Camden player gaining a
lead on the fourteenth, the last four holes
being halved.
The match between Mr. Freeman and
Mr. Lard ended on the seventeenth green,
with a halved hole after Mr. Lard had
taken three holes in order, being dormie
five at the thirteenth.
Of other good matches there were
many as the summary will show :
MATCH PLAY SUMMARY.
CHAMPIONSHIP.
First Hound Louis E. Wardwell, Camden,
Me., beat John M.Ward, Montclair, 1 up; J. O.
II. Denny, Oakmont, beat Charles B. Price,
Salem, Mass., 5 and 4; C. B. Fownes, Jr., Oak.
mont, Pa., beat T. J. Royce, Rutland County,
Vt., 5 and 3; J. D. Foot, Apawamis, beat R. R.
Perkins, New York, 4 and 3; C. II. Rosenfeld,
New York, beat A. P.Thompson, Honesdale, Pa.,
5 and 4; C. L. Becker, Woodland, Mass., beat L.
D.Pierce, Woodland, 5 and 4; Allan Lard, Co
lumbia, Washington, beat W. C. Fowrnes, Oak
mont, 6 and 4; William C. Freeman, Montclair,
beat II. C. Fownes, Oakmont, 4 and 3.
Second Round Wardwell beat Denny, 2 up;
Foot beat Fownes, Jr., 6 and 4; Becker beat
Rosenfeld, 4 and 2; Freeman beat Lard, 2 and 1.
Semi-finals Foot beat Wardwell, 2 and 1;
Becker beat Freeman, 4 and 2.
Finals Foot beat Becker, 1 up.
consolation.
First Round Ward beat Price, 5 and 4; Per
kins beat Royce, 2 up; Pierce beat Thompson, 4
and 2; II. C. Fownes beat W. C. Fownes, 4 and 3.
Semi-finals Ward beat Perkins, 5 and 4;
Pierce beat Fownes, 1 up.
Finals Ward beat Pierce, 1 up.
HOES ItOUXD IN SEVENTY.
Donald Hons Ilay llrilliant Golf in
Four llall Foursome Match.
Among the interesting golf events of the
week was a four ball foursome between
Donald l?oss and William C. Freeman,
and Alex Ross and C. L. Becker, its
features being a record round of seventy
for Donald, and a best ball score of sixty
five for Donald and Mr. Freeman.
The cards :
ROSS.
Out 4 5 3 4 3 4 6 2 3-34
In -4 4435453 4-36-70
BEST BALL.
Out-3 4 2 4 3 4 6 2 3-31
Jn 4 3 4 3 5 4 4 3 4 34 65
Donald's score is a professional record
for the course, barring Braid's phenom
enal sixty-eight, made during the visit of
the British professionals, and the best
ball card is remarkable, showing six
threes and two twos, eight fours and only
one five and one six.
Alex started out at a rapid pace,
doing three, four and two, in order, but
Donald and his partner took the fourth,
fifth and sixth, evening the score. The
seventh wTas halved in si.v, the only poor
hole played, Donald winning the eighth
in two.
At the ninth Donald made a remarka
ble recovery, playing a ball from the
rough to the green and running down a
long putt for three. The tenth was halved
in four, and Freeman took the eleventh
in three. The twelfth was halved in
four, the thirteenth went to Donald with
a remarkable three, the fourteenth was
halved in five, and the fifteenth in four.
The sixteenth went to Becker with a
wonderful four, the seventeenth was
halved in three, and the eighteenth in
four.
A big gallery followed the match from
start to finish, bestowing applause lib
erally. JT. O. II. IlEiYAY WIffS.
Leads Field In Tower Trap Shoot Iy
Single Target.
J . O. II. Denny, of Pittsburg, was the
winner of Tuesday's trap shooting tour
nament, with a score of thirty-one, lead
ing E. J. Wardwell, of Camden, Me., a
single target.
The event was fifty targets from the
tower trap, ten each, right, left, overhead,
unknown, and double. The novelty of
the trap continues to appeal to shooters
as strongly as ever.
Mr. Taft Oet the Itug-.
Mr. W. A. Taft, of Somerville, Mass.,
was the winner of the handsome rug in
Mr. Fuleihan's raffle, which ended Mon
day evening. The ticket was number
forty-four.
With automatic shell Extractor.
Rebounding Iock,
Adjustable target Sights.
Recommended by the Committee and
used by expert shots everywhere.
This single shot target pistol embodies
the finest Smith & Wesson qualities of
workmanship and balance, and is the
most accurate pistol made. The ammu
nition best adapted to this arm is the .22
long rifle cartridge. Penetration, five and
one half 7-8 inch pine boards. It is also
bored to take the regular Smith & Wes
son .32-10-88 and .35-15-146. Cartridges.
All SMITH V WESSON
Arms have tills Monogram
Trade-mark stamped on
the frame. Hone others
are genuine.
For sale at The Pinehurst General
Store or direct of us,
SMITH & WESSON,
8 Stockbridge St., Springfield, Mass.
WHITMAN
SADDLE
The one saddle al
io ways preferred br
$12
$65 P"t riders
It is the highest type of the Sad
dler's art. Correct in every line
always comfortable for the horse and
rider. Complete catalogue sent free,
showing the Whitman for Men and
Women, and every thing from "Sad
dle to Spur1'
MEHLBACH SADDLE CO.
Successor to Tlie Whitman Saddle Co.
106 (a) Chambers St., New York.
NEW ORLEANS
The Most Popular Winter Resort in America
Continuous Home Ilacing
French Opera. fiJolf, Hunting
lloating, Comfort, Health,
I'leanure.
THE ZVKU ST. CHA.lt LE HOTEL
Modern, Fireproof, First-Class
Accommodating One Thousand Guests
EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN FLANS
Turkish, Russian, Roman and Electric Baths
Luxurious Sun Baths and Palm Garden.
Andrew R. Blakely & Co. , Ltd. - Props.
Citizens National Bank.
of Raleigh, N. C
(The only National Bank in the City) offers
its services to residents and visitors.
Capital - - $100,'00.00
Surplus - - $100,000.00
Assets - . $1,400,000.00
Joseph G. Brown, Henry E. Litchford,
President Cashier.
MIMOSA HOTEL
TYRON, N. C
Select family hotel. Mild climate.
Baths, steam heat ; excellent table. Write
for booklet. W. II. Stearns, Prop.