Newspapers / The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, … / Dec. 21, 1918, edition 1 / Page 4
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THE PINEHUZST OUTLOOK UTLQ0K Published Eyery Saturday Morning Daring the Season, NovemDer May, at Pinehurst, North Carolina Conducted by Ilalph W. Pag For adrertising rates and space apply to Edwin A, Dvnham Pinehurst, N. 0. One Dollar Annually. Five Cents a Copy Foreign Subscriptions Fifty Cents Additional The Editor is always glad to consider contribu tions. Good photographs are especially desired. Editorial rooms over the Department Store. Hours 9 to 5. In telephoning ask central for Outlook Office. Advertising rate card and circulation state ment on request. Entered as second class matter at Post Office at Pinehurst, Moore County, North Carolina. Saturday December 21, 1018 RELIGIOUS SERVICES At thb Pinbhubst Chapel: Holy Communion 9.15 A. U. Children's Services .10.00 a.m. Morning Service and Sermon. .'.11.00 a.m. Night Service at the Community House at 8.00 P.M. Roman Catholio Early Mass 6.15 A.M. When visiting Priest is at Pinehurst Second Mass 8.00 A.M. niD cross vronK THE LUI'TEII II OX The Bed Cross Boom at the School House, next to the Movie Theatre, will be open Thursday and Friday mornings from 9.30 to 1.00. The principal work will be done on refugee garments, -which aro sorely needed by the starving and homeless peoples abroad. "Wool will be given out and finished articles returned at the room. Volunteers for sewing are most welcome. Roll (!H f ! Ml Christmas this year can have but one significance our experience of the last four years compels us to accept the re sult of the respite of the holiday to seek what service we can render the myriad victims of Kultur. One simple and uni versal action is presented and expected of everyone to lend their active sup port to the Bed Cross. The National campaign to enroll every man, woman and child , in the nation is in progress is progressing in Pinehurst as in every Middlesex village and farm. It is for you and me, and everyone in our house holds to make this enrollment a condition precedent to any stocking and to any tree. The Committee on the Christmas Boll Call are: Mrs. Leonard Tufts, chairman; Mrs. H. W. Priest, Mrs. N. S. Hurd, Mrs. J. V. Hall, Mrs. Thomas Craig, Mrs. Sam Stutts, Miss Judith Jenks, Miss Esther Tufts, Miss Annie Medlin. W. A. Sandford is in charge of the work at. the Carolina and Angus E. Mason at the Pinecrest Inn. From our friends, the aviators, who took the village by storm last week Mr. Tufts has received word that they are safely back at Langley Field. The let ter is from Lieutenant Charles J. Cleary: Langley Field, Va., Dec. 11, 1918. My dear Mr. Tufts: Just a line in behalf of the "Air plane Party ' to thank you and all the folks of Pinehurst for your wonderful hospitality to us. ,Our party was reduced to three planes when we arrived here, due to a slight ac cident at Baleigh, but no' one was hurt, so we were all quite satisfied with our results. Trusting to have the pleasure of meet ing you again, I am, Very sincerely yours, A Charles J. Cleary. Arthur Page writes us from Paris tell ing about the celebration when le jour de glorie est arrive, and of the coming of a Canadian preacher that had spent the war in Germany: ' ' It has taken four years and something more, to pass the first line of the Mar seillaise, but at last, yesterday, the sec ond line came true as never before. Le jour ed glorire est arrive, and all Paris went forth accordingly. I enclose an appeal by the city council urging all cit izens to cast aside all reserve and give free rein to the celebration. They fol lowed instructions implicitly, and the British, Americans, Serbs, Poles, Czechs, Italians, Portugese, and various other odds and ends of humanity around the place did likewise. As soon as I got the news, about 10.30 in the morning, I dismissed the office the stenographer and started for the Place de la Con cord. From every side the people were swarming into it for before I got there the guns of Paris that had so often fired at the Boche airmen had fired the Peace Barrage. Workmen were decorating the statues of Strasborg, and the other statues around the Place, and the crowd was climbing over the captured guns, airplanes, etc., that filled the square. Two great barge loads of British out for a ride with the Y. M. C. A., rolled into the crowd just as I came along and started the Marseillaise anew. As its inspiring volume rose I saw woman after woman turn away out of the crowd with the tears rolling in streams off their faces. It would have taken very little more to make me join them. Then I decided to go over . to the Castigloine and see if Mile. Fowler did not want to come out and see the sights. When I got there Mille was out but Harold was there a Lt. Col. and we went out and looked around a bit more, and then some six or seven went over to the Bitz for luncheon. A General Bogers showed us a synopsis of the armistice terms. They justified the comment that Clemenceau is said to have made that they left the Kaiser little but his pants. Then we sallied forth in Harold's car to see the town. A crowd like those from a foot ball game, with election night added, and then turned French, thronged every street. We pushed along slowly with men and women clinging to the running board and shouting Vive I'Amerique! and everything else. Men, women, boys and girls started little impromptu dem onstrations of their own all over, and parades would start up, join each other, die away and reappear. Joe Grew was out in the street with a tremendous American leading a private parade of his own, and the big Osborne boy that used to play squash with Balph in col lege led a parade up the Champs Elysees beating a toy drum. Then the submarine in the Seine began firing its 75 every minute or so. Never in the world have there been so many flags. It is now 12 o'clock, and the guns around Paris are still firing. And then a rare good for tune allowed us to see a dozen permis sioners direct from the front. The crowd fell on them and kissed them, and when one said cigarette he might have had a million. I could not get into the Cham ber of Deputies to see the Old Tiger of Franco announce the terms of the sur render, but I want to call attention to one thing he said that marks him not only as a terrible fighter but as a great man in other ways. He that had been the most uncompromising foe of Germany while she fought said, "We shall undertake the feeding of the Ger man people; we fight for humanity, not igainst it." I would have given mil lions if you had been here. It was a grand thing to have seen and I do not know any one who would have gotten as much out of it. Into this comic house there came yes terday a little Manitoba Y. M. C. A. preacher who had been in Poland and Austria during the whole war, for some strange reason uninterned, and who is, I think, the first person out of the main enemy countries to reach Paris. He spent seven days coming and arrived in a somewhat tramp-like costume. He had shoes with wooden soles and iron heels. His cuffs were made of paper. I got no chance to talk to him, but I saw the cuffs, and they were certainly good im itations of the real thing, and if they did not get wet they would do well enough as cuffs. But paper shirts and underclothes on the same style would give a fellow a mighty nervous feeling about a rainstorm, not to mention a ter rible contemplation of winter. He fascinated the crowd upstairs with his narrative all the afternoon, and oc casionally , surprised them also a good deal by going off in the corner and breaking into prayer. The Ilelg-ht BY DAVID O'NEAL Alone, On a high mountain trail, I drew strength from the sky; My thoughts went out Like my shadow at sunset; I was as great as my shadow at sunset. From a Calinet of Jude. Hoax "How many men have we in the American Navy?" Joax "I don't just know what the floating population is." gpiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii" I I I f m I I r 1 I a : IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMI IIIIIIH Illllllll IIIIIIIIMS Poland Water has been endorsed by the medical profession for j over half a century. I The most efficient Natural j Diuretic known. 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Used by the Ameri can British and Trench troops and by men in training in Army Camps through out the United States. Sold everywhere. For FREE sample, address ALLEN S. OLMSTED, LeRoy, N. Y. FOR SALE One Second Hand 1 FRANKLIN Series Nine, Touring Car Model, in Good Condition. Enquire "Outlook" Send The Outlook to your friends. It tells the story of the week and saves letter writing.. Ask for mailing envelopes.
The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, N.C.)
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Dec. 21, 1918, edition 1
4
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