Newspapers / The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, … / Feb. 19, 1910, edition 1 / Page 6
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PAGE B0t0Ktt PINEHURST 0BBKBH HTJBIfTY-ONlS UOIiES. The Gorham Co. Silversmiths IN the finer grades of Sterling Silverware there is but one standard that which has been established by The Gor ham Company. Gorham Silverware exem plifies a certain elegance of design and quality which has never been equalled by any other maker, while the prices are no greater than those of far less meritorious wares. TRADE MARK STERLING This Trade-mark Identifies every piece of Gorham Silverware, which maybe procured from responsible Jewelers everywhere. The Gorham Co. New York nrsAL MEANS A60DEAL A. S. NEIACOMB & CO., REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE, Telephone No. 4. Southern Pines, North Carolina. Tourists' Baggage In. sured from time of leav ing home on journey, in hotels and until re turn. Automobile In surance Special. Life Insurance: Mutual of New York. Fire In surance : All Best Com panies, including Home of New York, Liver pool and London, Hartford, Royal and others. Opportunities for Investors. Fruit Lands for Sale. CHOICE CUT FLOWERS Roses Carnations and Violets A Specialty Mail, 'Phone and Telegraph Orders Promptly Filled J. L. O'QUINN & CO. 'Phones 149. Raleigh, N, C. FASSIFERN Lincolnton, N- C A Home School for a Limited Number of Girls, Individual Care and Attention. Superior Musical Advantages, Principal Miss Kate C, Shipp, (Diploma, Cambridge University, England. wT II E" - ST. JAMES - European Plan Centrally Located WASHINGTON, D. C. Published Every Saturday Morning, During the Season, November to May, at Pinehurst, Hoore County, North Carolina (Founded by James W. Tufts) Herbert JL. Jlllaon, - - Editor The Outlook .Publishing-Co., - Pub's One Dollar Annually, Five Cents a Copy. Foreign Subscriptions Fifty Cents Additional. , Entered as second class matter at the Post Office at Pinehurst, North Carolina. Saturday, February 10, 1010. Iff other on the Boycott. "It was bad enough," said mother, "in the days before the strike, It was hard enough to get a meal that Pa would surely like, It kept me guessing every day to think up some thing new, To get a change from mutton chops, hamburger steak or stew; But this boycott proposition has me guessing now. Alas, How can I vary meals that are made up of oats and grass? There are ways of making dishes out of meat that please the men, They like it cold on Monday, and on Tuesday warmed again; There are stews and little salads, there are patties and croquettes. And man thinks that it is something very differ ent that he gets; But potatoes are potatoes, whether creamed or baked or fried, And you can't disguise a biscuit, I am sure be cause I've tried. "It was bad enough to figure out a meal that was a change, When veal and beef and mutton, pork and liver were the range Of diet I could choose from, but a woman's task today Is the limit, let me tell you, when the bill of fare is hay; O, the problem isn't easy, and you cannot fool a man, A baked bean is a baked bean still, fix it howe'er you can." Free Press. Baby's Choice. A mug there was, of carving rare, With wishes best of Auntie Clare; A fur-trimmed bonnet, cloak to match, Three rattles, picture books a batch, Four pairs of boots, dress, skirts and socks, Came from the city in a box, A tiny ring from "father's friend," A Teddy bear, that sits on end; And, yes, a watch of solid gold. From Uncle Jack in Klondike's cold. Was ever given tot before To choose from what! from all the store She turns aside, the little jade, To seize the rag-doll grandma made. Pinehurst. ( Written for The Outlook.) I've longed for the land of the long-needled pine, For the land where the mocking-bird sings his sweet lays. Where the white sand paths wind o'er hill and dale, Where the grasses are brown from the hot sun's rays. I've longed, and I've dreamed and I've waited 'till now Back once more in this dear, dear land I find sweet memories one by one The birds and the pines, the grass and the sand. 8. 0. Amateur-Professional Perrin, Fow- nes, Boss Match is Very Fast. A big crowd followed the fourball match between Mr. Perrin, the winner of the St. Valentine's tournament and Professional Donald Ross, and Mr. Fow nes, the runner-up and Professional Alexander Ross ; the latter pair winning on the twenty-first green in one of the prettiest contests of its character ever seen here. Starting out the first five holes were halved in par figures, Alex winning the sixth in three and gaining a lead which was lost on the next hole ; a two for Donald on the eighth, and a three for Alex on the ninth, making the score all even at the turn. Coming home, Donald captured the eleventh in four, but the lead was lost on the thirteenth and four teenth, both of which went to Alex. On the fifteenth a three for Mr. Perrin won the hole, his two on the seventeenth tying the score, the eighteenth being halved. The first two bye holes were halved in four each, Alex winning the third and the match in three. THE CARDS: Fownes and Alex Perrin and Donald Fownes and Alex Perrin and Donald Fownes and Alex 55446363 333 55445452 438 45444443 537 44455342 5-36 4 4 3 Perrin and Donald 4 4 4 MB. TOBB WINS AGJAIX. Captures Trap Shooting- Handicap In Tie Shoot-oil'. A tie at ninety-seven between J. Cush ing Todd of Newburyport, whose allow ance was two targets, and II. J. E. Thomas of Baltimore, whose handicap was sixteen, at ninety-seven each, gave snap to the weekly hundred-target trap shoot. On the shoot-off, twenty-five targets with' the same handicaps, Mr. Todd led with twenty-three and one half, twenty-three for Mr. Thomas. E. II. Lecrone of Pittsburg (22), was third in ninety-three. Last week's postponed shoot was won by Mr. Todd (4), in ninety-three. JL Popular Retreat, The Gun Club cabin continues a popu lar retreat for the younger set, Messrs. Paul E. Gardner. W. S. Dillon, Ralph N. Gardner, E. L. Scofield, Jr., II. II. Kirk patrick, and Misses Fuller, Beall, Hum phrey, Sewall, and Check gathering there for a rustic supper and evening of songs and story telling round the blazing fireplace early in the week. St. Valentine's CJolf for Women. The final rounds of the annual St. Val entine's golf tournament for women are in progress today, three pairs playing for the trophies. Slake a If ote or It. When in need of fine half tone or zinc "cuts" write the Maurice Joyce Engraving Company of Washington, D. C. SMOKELESS is the most popular powder in the world. WHY? Because it always does the work Breaks Old Records Makes New Ones It is the powder you should use for trap or field shooting. Every dealer in the United States carries shells loaded with DU PONT SMOKELESS Send 12 cents in stamps for a set of six Pictures illustrating "A Day's Hunt." Address Dept. Z E. I. DU PONT DE NEMOURS POWDER CO. Wilmington, Del., U. S. A. 'wu rn Smith Premier Typewriters Have Improved by Development Along Their Own Original Lines. Model io is the Original Smith Premier Idea Brought to the Highest State of Typewriter Perfection. The Smith Premier Typewriter Co., Inc., 607 E. Main St., Richmond, Va. PINEBLUFF Have you had a cup of coffee at the JAY TEE PEE INN and a boat ride on Jay Tee Pee Lake ? L
The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, N.C.)
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Feb. 19, 1910, edition 1
6
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