PAGE :rXg&mmm :ggggggBPjM8filL I C. IB. TOWJISEflD'S TRIPliEX (PATENT PENDING) V ' !M J k 1 A 111 1 Hi,. ,,,, .J- The Greatest Grass-cutter on Earth Cuts a Swath 86 Inches Wide Drawn by one horse and operated by one day than any three horse-drawn mowers man, the TEIPLEX will mow more lawn with three horses and three men. Does in a day than the best motor mower ever not smash the grass to earth and plaster made, and cut it better at a fraction of it in the mud in Springtime, nor crush the cost. out its life between hot rollers and hard, Drawn by one horse and operated by hot ground in Summer as does the one man, it will mow more lawn in a motor mower. Write for Catalogue illustrating all types of Lawn Mowers in cluding Townsend's Golf Wonder for putting greens. (Free). S. P. TOWNSEND & CO., lUlT A. S. NEWCOMB Pinehurst INSURANCE General Office Building '"VIJ"-I J i iy .j i, minn, mil nin an , ...v Fl-, V- HIGHLAND PINES INN ON WEYMOUTH HEIGHTS SOUTHERN A. I. CIlGAMEll PINES, N C- 1W. II. TUMIR Interesting Booklet on Bequest Gape God Fish Products Put up Fresh from the Cape Cod Fish Wiers just off our Beach Delicious little mackerel (spiced) $2.25 per dozen cans. Kippered Silver Hake, a lightly smoked tasty article, $1.75 per dozen cans. Kippered Herring $1.75 per dozen cans. Fresh Butterfish (you'll like them) $1.50 per dozen cans. Assorted dozens if you like. Transportation prepaid east of the Mississippi. Cape Cod Products Co. North Truro, Mass. CAUGHT 5 1 RATS ONE WEEK Trap resets itself. 22 inches high. Will last for years. Can't get out of order. Weighs 7 pounds. 12 rats caught one day. Cheese is used, doing away with poisons. This trap does its work, never fails ana is always ready for the next rat. When rats or mice pass device they die. Rats are disease carriers, also cause fires. These Catchers should be in every gchool building. Rat Catcher Bent prepaid on receipt of $3.00. Mouse Catcher 10 inches high, $1.00. Money back if not satisfied. H. D. SWARTS, Inventor and Manufacturer Universal Rat and Mouse Traps Box 566 Scranton,Pa. TOP Blakea the Heat Score for Selected 14 Hole In Tin Whiatle Even Monday last, the 20th of March, Mr. W. S. L. Hawkins, Mr. W. L. Hurd and Mr. M. B. Johnson contributed to the joy of the Tin Whistle Club three prizes, to be awarded in a handicap tournament, the best selected 14 holes. And so it came to pass that sixty strong the famous golf brigade essayed the treacherous course in three classes. And leading all the rest in the competition came C. B. Fownes of the Oakmont Club, his net score for the fourteen holes of his selection being 53. C. L. Becker, many times leader of the Tin Whistles on the war path, was a close second with 54. Fownes ' score for the 18 holes, an eighty one, was equalled only by C. M. Eansom of Buffalo and W. II. Faust of Westfield. J. L. Welleriof St. Catherines and T. E. Palmer of Erie tied for first honors in the second class, their net score for the best 14 holes being 55 apiece. Class C also resulted in a spirited contest and an even finish, the honor being divided between E. D. McCabe of Brooklyn and O. A. Blackburn of Oakmont, with 57. The totals tell the story, giving each man's score for the full eighteen holes and his net score for the best 14: A C. B. Fownes, Oakmont 81 53 C. L. Becker, Woodland 8554 C. M. Eansom, Buffalo 8155 W. H. Faust, Westfield 8155 Donald Parson, Youngstown 85 56 H. C. Fownes, Oakmont 86 57 E. C. Shannon 2nd, Brockport 84 57 W. H. Thayer, Boston 8958 J. M. Thompson, Philadelphia . 88 59 T. A. Cheatham, Pittsburgh 9359 G. M. Howard, Halifax 82 59 A. L. Carr, Boston 9160 Eobert Hunter, Wee Burn 8661 E. H. Hunt, Worcester 9363 J. D. Chapman, Greenwich 94 63 J. G. Nicholson, New Bedford 9964 W. E. Truesdell, Fox Hills 9464 C. S. MaeDonald, Lambton 9964 C. B. Hudson, North Fork 9867 J. H. Clapp, Chevy Chase 10772 B J. L. Weller, St. Catherines 89 55 T. E. Palmer, Erie 9255 W. L. S. Hawkins, Springfield 9356 Dr. J. S. Brown, Montelair 92 57 G. W. Statzell, Aronimink 9057 W. S. Morse, Eochester 96 57 G. T. Dunlap, Canoe Brook 90 57 W. S. Van Clief, Eichmond 9157 W. L. Milliken, Hyannisport 96 59 W. T. Stall, Brockton 9859 J. H .Herring, New Bedford 9759 C. E. Titchener, Binghamton 98 60 C. F. Lancaster, Wooldand 95 61 Charles Jarecki, Erie 99 61 H. E. MacKenzie, New York 99 61 G. E. Barber, Derby 10362 J. D. C. Eumsey, Brooklyn 100 63 W. L. Baldwin, Stranford 9963 Charles Fletcher, Boston 103 63 S. H. Fields, New York 65 H. S. Houston, Mt. Tom 12368 N. D. Clark, Woodbridge 11572 C E. D. McCabe, Brooklyn 9457 O. A. Blackburn, Oakmont 10057 J. M. Eobinson, Harbor Beach E. M. Slayton, Manchester, F. C. Abbe, Bethlehem C. M. Wells, Southbridge M. B. Johnson, Cleveland M. D. Fink; St. Andrews E. C. Blancke, Montelair J. T. Newton, Tuxedo II. H. Buckley, Dunwoodie J. E. Bowker, Woodland T. H. Hoggsett, Cleveland E. J. Phillips, Nassau Dr. Carlos MaeDonald, Tuxedo T. T. Watson, Wayne II. W. Ormsbee, South Shore 104 5a 105 58 10260 102 60 9760 106 60 10461 10461 103 62 10363 10263 10664 11964 11266 10668 FISID I A X School Boji Ilold Meet for the Athletic Champiomhip The boys of the Pinehurst School held a field day of track events on Tuesday last to establish the all round athletic championship of the school. There were five events, a forty yards dash, a quarter mile run, running and standing broad jumps and a potato race. The preliminaries in the various events were contested by a good sized field, in cluding Oliver Eedfield, Malcolm Ormsbee, Joe Jeffrey, Ernest Haywood, the Hunter boys, Jimmy Tufts, the Denham boys and Henry Van Cleef. Eedfield, Hunter, Haywood, Athel Denham and Jeffries qualified for the finals in the forty yard dash, the event being won by Eedfield in excellent time. Eedfield also took the longer run from Hunter and Denham, thus establishing his supremacy on the track. When it came to the field events however he was not so strong. Denham won both of the jumps and the potato race was won by Haywood. The tie for the championship between Eedfield and Denham was fought out two days later, the silver cup finally landing in Denham 's possession. Pinehurst School Camp Mr. Eric Parson, whose first year of the Pinehurst school has been a signal success and a great satisfaction to the parents of the neighborhood, is opening a Summer camp for boys in the heart of the Adirondack mountains on Big Fish Pond, in the Saranac region a few miles from Placid. A better opportunity for wholesome life in the open during the Summer time cannot be found. Assisting in the super vision will be Mr. H. H. Blagden, who is a well known Government naturalist, and a big game hunter and woodsman of wide experience and training; the leader of many expeditions into the wilds of British Columbia, and explorations in various parts of the world. He is a grad uate of Harvard, and understands the ways of boys quite as well as the ways of the woods. There will be every possible opportunity for fishing and long trips in canoes, and the adventure of the North Woods so dear to the heart of Young America. Nature study, woods craft, and camp life under the care of experienced guides are the- main basis of the enterprise. The camp opens July 1st and runs to the first of September, and is for boys over ten. years old.