OUTLOOK TMPMiK -3 THE PINEHURST Mr. W. O. Smith of Brooklyn, spent the week here. Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Van Horn of Hold erness, N. II. will remain until spring. Mr. Walteiv J. Travis of Garden City, returns for February. Mr, and Mrs. Wm. A Dunning of New York, spent the week here. At The Holly Inn Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Nicholson of New Bedford, return for their annual visit. Mr. Russell Bickford of New York, is their guest. Dr. and Mrs. C. A.Ward of Binghanip ton, and Mr. Charles A. Ward, Jr., of Big Rapids, Mich., return for an extend ed visit. Mr. and Mrs. G. D. Thorndike of Port land, spent the week here. Mr. George Wright of Boston, returns with his son, Mr. Irving 0. Wright. Dr. T. Crawford Perkins of New York and Mr. Paul II. Gaither of Greens burg, Pa., join the golfers. Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Hawkins and Miss Georgiana Hawkins of Providence, join Mrs. T. B. Dotten. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. At wood of Beaver, Pa., are here for the coming week. Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Marchant of Balti more, are spending a fortnight here. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. VanDyne of Troy, will remain several weeks. Mr. and MrsJ II. W. Bean of Framing ham, come for February. Mrs. George E. Lawrence of New York and Mrs. Jay R. Gardiner, and Master Lester Gardiner of Buffalo, are completing a short visit. Mr. Leslie D. Pierce of Rochester, Vt, returns. Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Hager of Lan caster, Pa., are making a short visit. Mr. J. D. Foot of Rye, returns for his annual visit and will remain until spring. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Milliken and two children of Hyannisport, are here for the season. Mr. and Mrs. George II. Williams of Hackensack, will remain through the week. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Moore of Montclair, are here for February. Mr. Charles Decker of Madison, N. J, joins his friend, Mr. Aborn. Mr. Robert Comly, accompanied by Miss Marion Comly, and Mr. G. Nor wood Comly, come for an extended visit. Mr. F. Milton Hunter of Pittsburg will remain some time. The Morning: After A city chap went to work for a farmer out in one of the western counties of North Carolina. At three o'clock the next morning the farmer called him to begin the day's labors. A few minutes later the young man came out of the bedroom carrying his grip. "You an't a-goin' to take that grip with you to work, air you?" asked the farmer. uNaw," answered the man with a fine scorn, "but I'm going to find some place to stay for the rest of the night !" Hi tie Shooting- Popular Many are enjoying rifle' shooting un der the guidance of Mr. Moore, the sport especially popular among the women. COTILLION A JOLLY ROMP Younger Set Makes Merry at First of Winter's More Formal Dances Fig-urea X.arg-lj . Old Favorites, Aniong- Them Tandem Steeple Chase and Men's -Hal let ALTHOUGH planned on informal lines and arranged on short no tice, Wednesday even ing's Cotillion at The Carolina provided a merry romp for the younger set which is already planning for other dances more elaborate. Attrac tive decorations, gave the music hall a gala appearance and many onlookers enjoyed the fun. The figures were largely old favorites among them the tandem steeplechase in which pairs of young men and women raced about the hall, and the ever ludi cious ballet for the men in which skill in the art terpsichore meant a dance and the lack of it,a man for a partner. There was also "slipper rush" for men and a hand kerchief dash for the fairer sex,a"Follow the Man from Cooks" which led to West End and back, and drawing and jig-saw puzzle contests. The attractive favors included huge paper lion costumes and medicine bottles, roses and poppies, canes and boas, cig arettes and fans, musical pipes and siren horns. Punch was served at intermis sion, dancing ceased at midnight. At the favor booths were Mrs. Lee B. Dur stine, Mrs. F. N. Sewall, Mrs. F. J. Ma rion and Mrs. J. A. Brown. Mr. Justus Kendall Mr. Roy S. Dur stine and Mr. Paul E. Gardner led. Arrangements were in the hands of Mrs. Brown,Misses Sewall, Lewis, Wat ters and Rathburn. 9 I .-.M'" "ALL IN THE BLACK" 'Mil wk .1 xv r M i . .... IX If IS X y Made In .32, .35, .351 and .401 Calibers There is nothing to take your mind off the game if you shoot a Winchester Self-Loadiner Rifle. The recoil does the reloading for you, which places complete control of the gun under the trigger finger, and permits shooting it as fast as the trigger can be pulled. These rifles are . made in calibers suitable for hunting all kinds of game They are safe, strong and simple in action; easy to load and unload and easy to take down. Ask your dealer to show you one, or send to the Winchester Repeating Arms Company, New Haven, Connecticut, for a catalogue describing THE TRIGGER CONTROLLED REPEATERS "Winchester Shells and Cartridges For Sale at the Pinehurt Store, Traps and Ranges. Look for the Big Red W" on Every Box" THE SUM TOTAL, OF WARM SUNSHINE SOFT SOUTHERN AND BREEZES i Shredded Whole Wheat IS HEALTH. What the breezes and sunshine of the South are to the outward physical frame, the nourishment contained in Shredded Whole Wheat is to the inward physical. Shreded Whole Wheat is made of the pure, whole wheat, cleansed to per fection, divided into delicate, easily assimilated shreds, and baked to a scien tific degree. The body that rejects other forms of food will accept, assimilate and thrive on. v Shredded Whole Wheat Concentrated Life Two Shredded Wheat Biscuits with milk or cream and a little fruit will sup ply all the energy needed for a half day's work at a cost of five or six cents. Try it for ten mornings and you will feel brighter, stronger and happier. Your GROCER sells it. 'There's Health and Strength in Ererj Shred' I I I : : THE KIRKWOOD CAMDEN, SOUTH CAROLINA Renewed Golf Course Best Saddle Horses and Livery . T. Edmund Krumbholz HOTEL WOODWARD Broadway at 55th Street, New York Combines every convenience, luxury and home comfort and commends itself to people of refined tastes wishing to te within easy access of the social, shopping and dramatic centers. T. D. GREEN", Manager.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view