Newspapers / The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, … / Jan. 12, 1921, edition 1 / Page 8
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TEE PINEHUBST OUTLOOK TAGE 8 HOLLY INN OPENS SAND HILL POLO CLUB NOTES ! a7i si !! 1 1 RAY MORt ATLANTIC CITY WORLD'S GREATEST HOTEL SUCCESS The luxurious center of social life in America the inspiration of the gayest and most fascinating life on the continent. Traymore guests have full privileges of the beauti ful Country Club of Atlantic City, where Golf is played the year round. 18-hole championship course of 6,016 yards. AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PLAN Prtdat rJGwnarw Manager 'Hi l' r r W ! 'ill' JJ Ml .. i.:r ; r'V. Sir ' 1 '....: - ; v" -':W& 'ill MMIIilliliiillll HIT 1 I IIIIMH " Tnft T"' ' - --' a At the Greemtich Country Cb, Greenwich, Conn., where the Women's Metropolitan Championship, as well as tht Metropolitan Open, was held in 1920. Grass Seed for this course supplied by the Stumpp and Walter Co. Grass Seed of Known Quality TESTED for PURITY and GERMINATION for the Golf Course, Tennis Court or Lawn REMEMBER All our seed is of the highest quality, purchased direct from the most reliable sources of supply and is carefully examined as to purity and growth, including tests made for us by leading Seed Testing Stations. We are always glad to suggest formulas, suited to soil and climate, and tell you the exact percentage of each of the varieties in tht formula, or, we furnish seed by named varieties. The benefit of a grass seed expert one who has made a life study of this subject is at your disposal A! Qi . eV a CP 30-32 Barclay Street New York It seems but a very short time since the orchestra at the Holly Inn played "Home, Sweet Home" as the closing concert number for last season, but on Monday last, January 10, that home-like and popular hotel again swung wide its doors, and is well on its auspicious way toward another happy season. Old friends returning for their annual visit very largely make up the list of those on hand for the opening. Manager and Mrs. Fitzgerald have been on the grounds some time and have spared no efforts in making the Inn the same cheery, home like place that has always marked its ex istence. The social festivities at the Inn will begin with a dance for the young people on Saturday evening. Among those registered for the open ing were: Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Weller. Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Dodd. Mrs. H. P. Chambers. Mr and Mrs. H. Loomis. Mrs. Alice "W. Gifford. Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Blackburn. Mrs. O. E. Lakeland. Dr. Edward Rowe. Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Lamont and daugh ter, Miss Ethel Lamont. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Truesdell. Mrs. Elizabeth B. Kayser. R. H. Hunt. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. McMahon. Frank Sturgis. Mr. and Mrs. II. A. Wrenn. Miss Helen Bamford. Harry A. Hall. Judge and Mrs. George Arrell. Seward II. Fields. Robert Foote. Noyes D. Clark. Dwight N. Clark. George F. Fosdick. Mrs. Whitney. Mrs. Holton. FREAK PLAYS IN ADVERTISERS' TOURNEY In golf tournaments where unusually large fields participate, freakish occur rences always happen. This is what happened during Tuesday's play in the Advertiser 's tournament. J. A. Migel, of Scarsdale, played the 220-yard blind eighth hole on the Cham pionship course in 3 without having hig ball touch the fairway or the green. His drive sliced into the rough. His second shot flew over the green and landed in a trap. His third, a back-spin niblick shot, dropped cleanly into the cup with out touching the green, and stayed there. Henry F. Hosley, of Haworth, and W. II O'Brien, of Siwanoy, both landed in the same trap, driving for the short seventeenth. Hosley 's ball was away, about eighteen inches behind O'Brien's. The Haworth golfer's recovery shot car ried O'Brien's ball with it on the follow-through and both balls came to rest on the green with O'Brien's still the orig inal eighteen inches ahead and dead to the pin. The club had one of its best practice games of the season on Thursday last. The officers at Camp Bragg have be come lflembers of the club. Major Bow ley aid the members of his team distin guished themselves at the last Fort-Sill Polo tournament. The club is glad to welcome the arrival at Southern Pines of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. M. Maddison and Miss Ivy Maddison and Capt. Marshall, late of the British Army. They have shipped down a string of thir teen hunters and polo ponies. Miss Maddison is well known as one of the best lady riders in this country, having carried off blue ribbons on several occa sions at the National Horse Show at Madison Square Garden and other impor tant shows. Mr. Windsor White of Cleveland, and Mr. Jack Bowman of the Biltmore group of hotels in New York, are expected to arrive in the near future for hunting and polo. The Moore County Fox and Drag Hounds have opened their season. The Master, Mr. James Boyd, is to be con gratulated on the looks and working qualities of his pack. UNITED STATES SHIPPING BOARD To Hold Convention at Pinehurst About fifty members of the United States Shipping Board and owners of the country's leading shipping lines will gather at Pinehurst for conferences and an outing for golf during the week be ginning January 24. AT THE LEXINGTON Mr. and Mrs. "Jack" Reardon are making a big hit with the guests at the Lexington this season, where they are in charge. They gave a Christmas party, which was a highly enjoyable affair, with a real Santa Claus and a Christmas tree loaded with presents for all who attend ed, followed with delightful refresh ments. Every Tuesday night Mrs. Reardon en tertains a sewing circle party, at which the ladies are taught all the latest tricks with the needle. After the lesson is over the men joininandagrandniusicale is enjoyed. Harold Calloway is fine on the piano and there are a number of well tuned voices among the other guests, who render all the latest Broad way hits. Caddy Master Curry furnish es the jokes for the gatherings. Jack Reardon has taken up golf anl is improving daily. He started off one day on Number Two course with three 0's and one 10, and then blew up and took a 16. Jack says he still has topes of breaking 100 for the first nine befcre the season is over. r
The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 12, 1921, edition 1
8
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