Newspapers / The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, … / Jan. 12, 1923, edition 1 / Page 14
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14 - The Pinehurst Outlook mini nun nun iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiNNHiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiilimiiiiiiiliiiiiliiim .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Ptne Jf oresft 3Jmt anti Cottages; Summerville, S. G. (22 miles from historic Charleston) Fully Open January 1, 1923 SPECIAL EARLY RATES TO FEBRUARY 1st One of the Finest Winter Resort Hotels in Middle South. Cuisine and Service on Par with Best Metropolitan Hotels. SPECIAL JANUARY TOURNAMENTS GOLF TENNIS SADDLE HORSES Quail, Wild Turkey, Fox and Deer Hunting No Snow, only Sunshine and Flowers WILLARD A. SENNA, Manager Address until Dec. 15th, care of Plymouth Inn, Northampton, Mass. Cafe des Invalides (Compounded) This compound is not all coffee, but contains about seven eighths coffee, of the finest grades, blended with vegeta ble substances, which have been found to render it more healthful than pure coffee, in that it does not produce nervousness or wakefulness. "CAFE DES INVALIDES" does not produce the usual effects. Yet "CAFE DES INVALIDES" pleases the most critical coffee connoisseurs. S. PIERCE CO. BOSTON, MASS. Sold at the Pinehurst Department Store s. BRETTON WOODS The Mount Pleasant -:- The Mount Washington , C. J. ROOT, Manager In the Heart of the White Mountains of New Hampshire 18 Hole Championship Course and a 9 Hole Course winter: hotel clarendon Seabreeze, Florida PINEHURST DEPARTMENT STORE PINEHURST, INC., Owner THE HOUSE OF SPECIALTY SHOPS Pinehurst, N. G. J. F. Adams defeated N. B. Wallace .2 and 1 W. P. Andrews defeated J. H. Bialas 3 and 2 A. J. Armstrong defeated J. Kent Rawley 4 and 3 A. H. Plummer defeated Lawrence Barr .5 and 4 Second Round C. W. Harmon defeated C. A. Chandler 4' and 3 E. K. Heath defeated J. J. Jones .5 and 3 J. F. Adams defeated W. P. Andrews 2 and 1 A. J. Armstrong defeated A. H. Plummer 5 and 3 Semi-Final Round C. W. Harmon defeated E. K. Heath 7 and 6 A. J. Armstrong defeated J. F. Adams 3 and 2 Final Round Harmon defeated Armstrong 4 and 2 Beaten Eight First Round Arthur Newcomb defeated Curtis Wiggs 1 up E. L. Barnes won from D. A. Magoon by default J. Kent Rawley won from Lawrence Barr .5 and 4 J. H. Bialas won from N. B. Wallace by default Semi-Final Round E. L. Barnes won from Arthur Newcomb by default J. H. Bialas defeated J. Kent Rawley 4 and 3 Final Round Barnes defeated Bialas 2 up Some Sandhill History (Continued from page 6) an expedition to probe the raging McDeed's creek around the bridge at the site of the old Yadkin ford, and brethren, what a find it would be if we might dig up those ancient pieces of artillery that the British dragged up from Charleston perhaps to Camden, then to Guilford Courthouse, and then abandoned on the burden some retreat to Wilmnigton after his campaign into the interior of the Carolinas proved a failure to the British aspirations, and the practical guarantee of the success of the new government in the colonies. I would not like to lay too much encouragement on finding those guns, but I know that while the men were doing the excavation on the golf links at the Mid-Pines golf course one of them unearthed a Spanish piece of money that he uncovered from beneath a con . siderable depth below the surface, and under considerable vegetation that had overgrown the whole vicinity. That coin was from away back in the century that saw the war of revolution fought, and it shows that somebody was around that country a long time ago. If you can find Spanish pieces of eight under ground at Mid-Pines a man might be justified in taking up with the sport of hunting for bigger game in the shape of cannon down at the creek, for the creek is only a short walk from the golf grounds, and it stands to reason that when Cornwallis had dragged those guns that far on his way back to Wilmington he would realize that if he could not do any thing with them up at Guilford he could not do a great deal more where he was going next. Then it is cheaper to go to the quarter master's headquarters and get other guns than to struggle all the way from here to Wilmington through the sand with those that could not chase the continental soldiers away up at Guilford. Prob ably the guns are there. Certainly the mulberry tree where Corn wallis tied mV horse at Carthage as his command stopped there over night was there until a storm a few years ago blowed it down. And certainly no wind could blow down a gun that is already down. So why not an expedition to hunt up those lost guns over on the Midland road at McDeed's creek ?
The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, N.C.)
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Jan. 12, 1923, edition 1
14
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