IPIIIIIIIIJ PINEHURST, MOORE COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA. V"SM WHILE FAGOTS BURNED! Imagination Runs Riot in Uncertain Glow of Firelight. Twentj'-iive Participants Tell Strang-e Story in a many Chapter at fag-ot larty. 1 "FAGOT PARTY" provided an en l joyable evening Tuesday, for the guests of The Lenox and Concord and a few outsiders which limited space made it possible to invite, and in the dim, un certain glow of the firelight imagination ran riot, A story of twenty-five chap ters was told, each participant tellinir one while a fagot burned, taking it up where a predecessor had left off and passing it on to another at the close. It was naturally, "an historical novel with a touch of pathos, a tinge of humor and a tale of passionate love," but best of all, it had a moral a terrible moral which must have made a lasting impres sion upon the several mariiagable young women present which they will never forget and that to depend upon the sun for a hair bleach and not peroxide. The story was begun with the cus tomary "once upon a time, long, long ago, a tiny village nestled in a valley, between frov ning mountains. The only means of access and egress were a little road which wound its way in through a mountain pass, and a gurgling brook which rising in the mountains behind the village, flowed through it and sped on iti way merrily towards the great, blue sea But for all this it was a happy com munity, at peace with itself and the world. The southern slopes of the mountains were emerald with growing crops, the sunshine glorious, the water clear as crystal, and the air like good wine. And there was a village school, guarded by veteran maples; a dainty church, with its bright green blinds standing out sharply against the white clapboards; a village Inn, with rustic tables and seats scattered about beneath the great elms in front of it; and little homes which spoke of happiness and contentment, lining the village streets, or glistening in the sunshine on the moun tain slopes. It was amid these surroundings that the first speaker placed the participants in the strange story, which followed. "Our heroine may have been the inn keepers daughter, or she may have been the daughter of the Village rector," said the speaker. "Our hero may have been a robber bold from the mountains, a pass ing stranger-tourist; or either the hero or the heroine may have been any one of a great many other people. But I must leave that all for those who are to follow, for my fagot has long since burned out and it is time for me to close." The second speaker devoted his time to the heroine which he most graphically described as a child of the mountains who had been tempted to improve on na ture by the use of the, drug mentioned. And while the completed result was ever the opportunity offered and he was of course, "William Jones." William's meeting with Maude was after the usual fashion. As William ap proached the Inn and caught sight of Maude, with her peroxide hair, he was immediately transported from th world of the material to the world of the ideal, and with somewhat unfortunate results, for the spirited horse reared, plunged, and threw his rider. When William came to some few minutes later, his curly head was resting in fair Maude's .&?,;. . .;,h.- -1 l i.A All MIT . a A. "SUNLIGHT AND SHADOW." pleasing it was not of a permanent na ture as developed later, and because of all this, Maude, for that was of course, her name, went through strange vicissi tudes before she finally settled down and was "happy ever after," In the second chapter the hero ap peared on the scene, a gallant youth who travelled with gaily caparisoned outriders, and who twirled his mous tache jauntily as he rode, and was not unwilling to cast an appreciative eye upon fair womankind in general when- l.ip while she administered restoratives. Naturally William spent several days at the Inn recuperating, and Maude wa of course, thn nurse. It was but a natural consequence that this man of the world should become infatuated with this child of Nature, and that the pro posed trip of exploration should end and a courtship begin. For a time the course of true love ran smoothly and then a journey down the river was proposed, and after this things ( Continued to Second page ) PINEHURST BOYS CLUB! Ten Members Sign the Charter and Make Plans for Winters' Work. Its Aim in Itltitual Imnrovt'iiient and Social Knjoynientnre'n ami 1ImI tlio Colon. TT HE I'inehurst Boys Club held its first meeting at the Village Hall last Friday evening and perfected plans for organization. Ten members signed the charter: Sterling Conover, Atlantic Highlands, N. J.; Nelson Con over, Atlantic Highlands, N. J.; Kenneth Bradbury, Providence, It. I. ; Spencer Nottingham, liockford, III.; Karl Abbttt, Bethlehem, N. II.; Bitchie Law lie, Pittsburg, Pa.; George Hayes, Canandaigui, N. Y. ; Arthur C. Ketcham, Jr., New York; Kusell Jones, Milton, N. II.; Levi Jones, Milton, II. II. Green and ted were chosen as colors and holly selected for nil emblem. Nominations for officers Proident, Vice president, Secretary and Treasurer were made and will be voted on at the next meeting. Meetings will be held each Friday evening and while the purpose o organi zation is for mutuil improvement, and social enjoyment, it is planned to raise money to be devoted to some worthy cause. A large increase in membership is looked for as the season advances. The following little prayer has been adopted by the club, and will be re pt ated at the close of each meeting : lb KAVENLY FATHER make each of us such a child as Jesus was; quick to obey, glad to be taught, and never afraid to speak the truth. May we hurt nobody by word or deed, but all day long be good to others as our dear Lord has been most kind to us. We ask it In the name of Jesus Christ our Lord A men. The Outlook Illottern. The Pineiiurst Outlook has just reissued the advertising blotter which proved so satisfactory last year, and will be glad to mail them on request. The design is printed in two colors and bears a calendar for four months in the year. Volume VII; Number Four, Saturday, December 19, 1903. Price Five Cents?