Newspapers / The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, … / March 2, 1923, edition 1 / Page 3
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s 1 ill) 111,111 ' """" ' 1 " ' "I"' IIMIIIIII Illl.ll.ll I , ,. ,, mm , II1MII1III Vol. XXVI MARCH 2, 1923 Entered as second class matter at the post office at RICHMOND, VA. Subscription, $2.00 per year. 1 1111111 1,1 1 1 111111 11,1 11 1,11 i urn iiiiiiimiin inn i mini i i n , inn, n imiiiiiiiiiiii. i i 111.1..1...1 ii.i.ii.i..i..i..ii..ii..i.i..i.iii..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.i....ii.ii...iiiiii..ii..ii..iii.iiii Number 12 On The Fairways (By Sandy McNiblick) .... rt'iill,1Vwr, . iir) :r ft r. V If 1 Miss Glenn Collett and Miss Edith Cummings In the Semi-Final Round of the Women's North and South Tournament, the renewal of which will be played this month. MANY folks have probably heard of the town we call home, personally Philadelphia. One gets a cold reception up - there, however, these days. This is partly due to the snow and ice, but mostly to the fact that there isn't any serious golf to be played in that town right now. There isn't anything in the book about how to play a shot from a casual iceberg, the penalty for hitting a lame Eskimo with a sliced ball, or things like that. So the folks of Philadelphia are flocking to Pinehurst these days to get a fling at golf. The first thought is of the balmy sunshine in the Dixie resort, the warmth and glow of a golf season in full swing. Then Pinehurst is so close to Philadelphia and New York, hardly sixteen hours away, that the citizenry up there is anxious to have a look at Pinehurst personally and see if all the stuff they read about it is O. K. Merion and Philmont, up there, are two clubs with 36 holes of golf. The other courses lie around the city, some of them hardly a healthy brassie shot, the one from the other. There is plenty of golf up there, in the summer, but the golfers fret industriously when they have to set aside the clubs for the winter. These may be some of the reasons to explain the pilgrimage of a section of the linksmen host up there, lately, to Pinehurst. Anyhow the most celebrated arrival from Philadelphia recently was Levi L. Rue, president of the Philadelphia National Bank, and probably the leading banker of Philadelphia. Rue was re-elected last week as president of the Federal Advisory Council for 1923, at the meeting the other day in Washington. He has served con tinuously on the Council, representing the Third Federal Reserve District, since the beginning of the Federal Reserve System, in 1914, and has been president the last two years. Right after his re-election, Rue came to Pinehurst to celebrate with decorum on the golf links here. If you haven't met the Bank ing Trio here, it gives great pleasure to introduce, besides Rue, ij.; C. Neff, vice-president of the Fidelity Trust Company, Philadelphia,! and H. J. Haas, vice-president of the First National Bank there. Neff and Haas are golfers of the Merion Cricket Club in Philadel phia, where the national amateur was once played, while Rue belongs to Sunnybrook, another club in Philadelphia, for the purpose of playing golf. These prominent financiers are said to thoroughly enjoy The Carolina, where they hung the hat, and where the rolls at the meals are so elegant, especially as they're not bank-rolls. When the Trio makes the official fiscal report for the year 1923, the clients hope the golf scores made here will be confused with the interest rate to be paid. Meantime there was a lot of golf played here the past week in the way of tournaments. The big event was the third annual (Continued on page 12)
The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, N.C.)
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March 2, 1923, edition 1
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