THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK CHECK AND GREGG (Concluded from page one) t yf&oriam'3gsoution fir 19 P yf this season of trie year wkenood Tjgsolu lions are the order of the day, The (porham tympany, snariria the common aspirations and hopes ofman kinc. renews its annual resolve to ded icate itself to making the iworld richer lor its labors, to esteem silversmithincj as an art as well as a business, and to measure its success by tke artistic value of its achievements rather than by the volume of its sales. fyenvare is soc by e&dinyjeweers every ere on J bears . his frademar .rCr e orham Company GIversmitKs and CoIdsmilKs 2bR.RS - Providence and jVv. w tsork. mi !tJ! 66 Choisa" Ceylon Tea O RANGE PEKOE Packed in Parchment-Lined One Pound and Half-Pound Canisters Treraont and Beacon SU. Copley Square. 185 Milk St. (Wholesale) S. S. PIERCE CO., BOSTON. Coolidge Corner, BROOKLINB y "The World's Best Table Witter" A. S, NEWGOMB Pinehurst Real .Estate and Insurance General Office Building T. J. Check, East Orange, 107 20 87 W. H. Gregg, Jr., Oakmont, 93 18 . 75 162 G. M. HoAvard, Halifax, 92 20 83 C. L. Becker, Ekwanok, 90 9 83 165 C. A. Magoon, Oakmont, 103 8 82 H. G. Phillips, Moore County, 86 7 79 162 G. T. Dunlap, Canoe Brook, 96 '18 78 J. M. Robinson, Harbor Beach, 118 25 93 171 R. C. Shannon, II, Brockport, 93 7 86 W. E. Truesdell, Fox Hills, 96 8 88 174 J. B. Bowen, Merion, 109 21 88 S. H. Patterson, Plainfield, 104 14 90 178 C. B. Hudson, North Fork, 105 12 93 II. G. Waring, Moore County, 102 15 87 180 W. T. Barr, Marine and Field, 102 16 86 T. A. Kelley, So. Pines, 106 6 100 1S6 J. R. Goodall, St. Louis, 118 20 98 G. W. Statzell, Aroniminck, 103 14 89 187 H. W. Ormsbee, South Shore, 119 16 103 J. D. C. Rumsey, Brooklyn, 108 20 88 191 G. T. Dunlap won prize for best low net score. H. G. Phillips had best gross score, but no prize. TIN WHISTLE TOURNAMENT, MEDAL PLAY Two classes, December 21st, prize for each class. MISS VREDENBURGH'S DAY (Concluded from page one) Dixie Alcantara, whose mettle and money making calibre had been demonstrated a the Fair, raced in a close second, lead ing Mrs. V. E. Davis' Mary B a step or two. This devastating finish keyed the inter est in the second heat to a high pitch. But Rosalie was no longer to be denied. She outran the field, Ed A and all in both the following races, took the winning purse and stepped proudly back to the stables, while the Christmas throng dis solved towards the Club House and the cottage, the hotels and the blazing fires of the plantations ,f or forty miles around. Some one was foolish enough to lay the price of a small potato on the track, to wit, one dollar, with the idea of hav ing any'5 one of the three colored men who offered to do it, walk a straight line after twirling their noodles around on a cane five or six times. Johnson Brown, the first to venture, never knew where he was at all, let alone trying to see a straight line. Even with the result of his sad experience before them the others took a chance. To make a long story short the lucre is still in the hands of Mr. Picquet, who is willing to let anybody have a crack at it some time in the near future. Little Horn, Melos or the Great Dan Patch himself had nothing on the next race. Stop watches were not fast enough; people wept, cried with laughter and danced with joy when the six entries for the Mule race lined up at the start. "Off," yells the starter, and off they go, three one way and three the other way. It makes no difference to them which way they go; so long as they go at all. After a lapse of time dust is seen yonder and the calvalade comes rushing down the track, three one way and three the other way, like knights of old. We are sorry to say, whV.o w endeavored to obtain the name and pedi gree of the winner and his fam us steed he was unable to speak of anything but water. Lucille II una Alone Riderless, briderless, all on her own and by her wild lone the wonderful brown mare Lucille from the Tabb sta bles ran Molly O, ridden by the diminu tive Tabb to a standstill. She knows all the signals on the track, answers the starter and the bell, and has no more need for a jockey than I have. Send The Outlook to your friends. ! , K ) f - H. W. ORMSBEE