THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK 12 AT SOUTIIEHi;Ml3SOHTS. UNION VESPER 8BVICE. Increase YourYeld I IN CAMP OR FIELD AT MOUNTAIN OR SHORE There Is always a chance to enjoy some shooting TO SHOOT WELL YOU MUST BE EQUIPPED WITH A RELIABLE-FIREARM: the only kind we have been making for upwards of fifty years. Our Line: RIFLES, PISTOLS, SHOTGUNS, RIFLE TELESCOPES, ETC. Ask your Dealer, and insist on the STEVENS. Where not sold by Ke tailers, we ship direct, express pre paid, upon receipt of Catalog price. Send lor 140 I'lige illutrjtel catalog. An iiidispeimable book of ready reference lor man and boy Khootei'g. Mailed for 4 cento in mtn nips t o cover iosta (re. ISeantif nl Ten Color Hanger forwarded for six cent In tninii. J. STEVENS ARMS & TOOL r. O. Box 4097 Chicopee Falls, Mass., U.S.A. CO. mr PINEHURST SCHOOLS Combine under one head College Preparatory Grammar and Primary Schools furnishing instruction in all branches of these grades. Courses of study are elective and pupils may enter at any time and for any length of time, and rejoin their classes without loss, after a long or short stay, in an ideal climate, surrounded by right con ditions for living and removed from the usual temptations of school life. Special attention is given to French and German conversation. TERMS: Primary Department, $ 75.00 per year For less than full year, 2.50 per week Intermediate Department, 125.00 per year For less than full year, 4.00 per week College Preparatory Dept., 200.00 per year For less than full year, 7.00 per week Private tutoring, . . .- 2.00 per hour ALDICE G. WARREN, Head Master, OR Pinehurst General Office OPIE REED VILLAGE HALL February 15 TICKETS AT PHARMACY AND HOTELS Social CJaltie are Kumeroiit at St Augruntine and Oriuoml. St. Augustine, Fla., January 30 The opening of the local Country Club has been received with general satisfac tion as shown by the numerous applica tions for membership, many of them Hotel Magnolia guests. The special fea ture of the week was a team match be tween the local and St. Augustine teams, the former winning by 11 to 4 on the Nassau system of scoring at match play. The Bridge wliist tournament which has been in progress at' The Magnolia, terminated on Thursday last, when the handsome prizes were awarded the winners: Mrs. George Stewart of Marion, Ind., Miss E. Eunice Evans of Youngs, town, Ohio, Miss B. Smith of Wilmington, Del., Mr. A. H. Neff of Brooklyn, Mr. L.G. McDowell and Mr. II. B. Banning of Cincinnati. A euchre part tendered by the management provided a pleasant evening recently, Mrs. Frank Allen of Chattanooga, Miss Banning, of Cincin nati, Mrs. C. F. Pollock, of New York, and Miss B. Smith being the prize winners. Bishop and Mrs. William F. McDowell are prominent late arrivals at The Magnolia. Miss E. Eunice Evans of Youngstown Ohio, will spend the season with her friend, Miss Catherine L. Oilman. Other late comers include many former patrons, among them Mr. and Mrs. George Kingley, Troy, N. Y. ; Mrs. S. Smith, Asbury Park, N. J.; Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Carvill, Philadelphia, Pa.; Miss Bertha V. Smith, Asbury Park; Mr. and Mrs. N. R. Perry, Messrs. T. L. and E. S. Perry and Miss G. Lathrop, Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Iloagland, Mrs. J. S. Hedden and Mrs. A. E. Childs, New ark, N. J. OitMONP, Fla.," Jan. 24 Ormond has just witnessed one of the most successful weeks in its history ; still the departures of the many guests who came only for the automobile race-meet is hardly no ticeable, so large is the influx of return ing patrons and of new-comers. Many noted people are in the list, and social pleasures have been much in evidence. HIISS ESTIlElt'S GUESTS. Ilirthday Observance Occaion of Keen Enjoyment for Children. The observation'of the ninth birthday anniversary of Miss Esther Tufts, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Tufts, was a never-to-be-forgotten occasion for a merry group of children, Saturday. Dinner at The Carolina, with gayly colored paper caps to wear and a big table all to themselves, was followed by a romp in the Music Room. The guests included Misses Virginia IMnehart, Eleanor Brown, Ellen McMil lan, Mary Jordan, Dorothy Coleman and Mabel Bliss, and Masters Richard, Albei t and James Tufts. Annual Golf Tourney. The annual children's golf tournament for trophies offered by The Outlook, is in progress as the paper goes to press, and a large company of boys and girls are enjoying it. The events include a medal play handi cap for the boys, and a putting competi tion for girls, and the prizes, selected by a committee of children, are especially dainty and attractive. Sermon by Her. A. U. Squler and Spe cial Ulueic at Village Hall. Union vesper services with sermon by Rev. A. L. Squier, and special music, at the Village Hall, Sunday afternoon, were enjoyed by a large congregation. Rev. Mr. Squier's theme was "A Life Poem in a Page of Prose" and the text from I Chronicles, 4 :9. "The chief joy in life," he said, "is in discovery ; and that pleasure is enhanced in finding values in unexpected places. Here amid a weary .tabulation of geneal ological names is the record of a poem of God's grace. This life came into the world under protest. Deep obscurity surrounds his birth, parentage, and en vironments. Yet he pushed onto a sunlit crag on the steep sides of the mountain, and made for himself a place in the enumeration of the great and good. Dif ficulties are the fulcrum with which men overturn mediocrity. Hardships are the springboards from which men leap to places of power. History is being made, not by the soft and indulgent, but by those who have iron in their blood. This character whom we study today took all the fiery dart of a humble, and perhaps stigmatized parentage, and quenched all in the bosom of a brimming life." In response to numerous requests, Rev. Mr. Squier will conduct Vesper services tomorrow at four o'clock, his sermon be ing on the theme, "The Strength of the Inner Quiet." A song service will pre cede the sermon. EOOI IBAUU M A1VACSEH. Karl Abbott a Popular Freshman at r odd a I'd Seminary. Karl Abbott, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank II. Abbott of The Berkshire, lias just been elected Manager of the 'Varsity foot ball team at Goddard Seminary where he is a freshman. Young Abbott has spent several sea sons here and has been an active figure in out door sports, base ball, foot ball, golf and tennis, and his many friends will learn of his popularity with pleasure. Howling' for Women. It is estimated that there are 20,000 women bowlers in New York and two hundred clubs formed exclusively of women residing in cities on the Atlantic seaboard are about to form the Eastern Womens Bowling Congress to arrange for championship contests. In view of this fact it is somewhat sur prising that the spirit is not more popu lar among the fair sex here. To be sure there are some devotees but they are by no means as numerous as the sport demands. There has long been local talk of mati nee events and they would no doubt meet with favor here. Why not a trial at least? If you want to ere dollars arrow, feed your fields with Virginia-Carolina Fer tilizers. They will "increase your yields per acre," and thus bringdown the cost of production, even If you us fewer teams and less labor. We have thousands of strong test!- I moniaia xrum mriueru wuu nave tried other makes of fertilizers and assert that Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers are by far the best. They will give you crops that will make more money for you. Buy no other, even if some dealer endeavors to get you to buy some 44 cheap" brand just because he may make a little more profit on that. Of course, that would be to his Interest not yours. ' VIRGINIA-CAROLINA CHEMICAL CO., Richmond, Va. Norfolk, Ya. Durham, H. C. Charleston, S C. Baltimore, Md. Atlanta, Ga. Savannah, Ga Montgomery, Ala. Memphis, Tena. Sbreveport, La. Pinehurst Preserves Embracing 35,000 acres of the Finest Hunting Territory in Moore County, North Carolina, offer unusual and VARIED AT TRACTIONS for SPORTSMEN and SPORTSWOMEN The climate is unsurpassed, cover excellent, and easy to traverse and close to the Village, in which every comfort may be found at a varying range of prices. Here one may enjoy SPORT WITHOUT "ROUGHING-IT" New England comforts in a South ern territory a rare combination. Excellent Quail Shooting Turkeys for those who care to hunt them, woodcock and flight pigeon shooting; fox and rabbit hunting. In connection with the Preserves axe maintained KENNELS as complete as any in the country, at which a string of perfectly broken setters and pointers andapackof bea gles are kept for the use of the guests. Reliable guides, shooting wagons, and in fact every requirement for long or short trips. Dogs boarded and looked after with intelligent care. R.ATES. Shooting privileges $1 per day, $3 per week, $15 per season. Note. These charges are waived for the season owing to the fact that under the new law non-residents pay a tax of $10 to accrue to the Audubon Society. Guides $3 per day, Including use of dog If de sired. Boarding dogs, $1.50 per week, $5 pet month. For further information address, Pinehurst General Office A