PINEHURST OUTLOOK PAGE THE BALMY BREEZES OF THE SUNNY SOUTH Are laden with Health and Happiness for the Worn-out Wrestler with the Strenuous Life. But you cannot repair wasted tissue or restore strength to jangled nerves with air and sunshine alone. The stomach calls for a food that supplies body-building material in its most digestible form. Such a food is Shredded Whole Wheat. It is made of the whole wheat, cleaned, cooked and drawn into fine porous shreds and baked. These delicate shreds contain the nutri tive elements of the whole wheat grain and are taken up and assimilated when. the stomach rejects all other foods. ShreldMl Wheat i made in two foriiift-lllSCUlTaiirt TltIC 11T. The HISCUIT i tlelicioiift for hreakiaflt with hot or void milk or cream, or for any meal in combination with fruit or veg-etahle. I11ISCU1T U the shredded whole wheat cracker, crisp, noui inhiiig a nd appetizing. Delicious a a toast w ith heverag-es or with cheea or preserve; also covered with Iffuyler Chocolate make a delicious confection. "IT'S ALL I IN THE SHREDS." The Natural Food Company, NIAGARA FALLS. N. Y. "IT IS ALL IN THE .SHREW ill lis A t iAiMiiiiniSiii am mi, il TOURISTS. Always Drink POLAND WATER IT ASSURES HEALTH IN ALL CLIMATES. IT IS VITALLY IMPORTANT FOR ALL TRAVELERS. Because of its unequalled purity and unchanging diuretic qualities, Poland "Water is the most import ant of all dietetic factors in over coming the attacks on health which always menace tourists. To drink Poland Water always is to be free from all dangers of lo cality always. If you have any difficulty obtain ing Poland Water in your travels, we would esteem the information. Want a Trunk? Our unique P & S HOLDS-ALL" Wardrobe TRUNKS offer trunk HIRAM RICKER & SONS POLAND SPRING, SOUTH POLAND, MAINE perfection; care for clothing when traveling just like one's home clothespress and bureau; need never be unpacked; have hangers for all garments, special drawers for neckties, bosom shirts, underwear, shoes, etc., and hat holder; insure safe transpor tation for few or many articles ; save tailors' bills ; keep garments free from wrinkles and always in ready-to-wear condition. Capacity one-third greater than of ordinary trunks of same size. Occupy half the space of ordinary trunks ; en tire, contents readily accessible. No trays to lift; no stooping to pack. Handsome in appearance; ot durability goes with each trunk. Made in steamer, three-quarters and regular sizes ; 25 to $45. Also special indestructible the atrical type. Write us TODAY for illustrated descriptive booklet. The J. F. Parklmrst & Son Co., 2S9 Main St., Bangor, Maine. Factories : Bangor and Augusta, Maine. Boston office, G7 Essex St. nHitifri"iriwiiiiiininiw'a) WILD TURKEY HUNTING Interesting Facts Concerning the King of Came Birds. !erve. ."Muscle ami Wariness intake llim lifticiilt to Fiml ami Hard to Mill. U1IKEV hunting in North Carolina is a good deal like moose hunting in Maine it is one of the things the sportsman anticiiiates doing. Never theless turkeys are plentiful, the sport is most fascinating, and the reward is one of the most delicious table game birds that Hies. 4 'There is only one way to be really certain of bagging wild turkeys,"' says a southern sportsman, "even after the hunter has found a llock, and that is, to sneak at night into the grove where they he lias reached a safe distance, when he pitches again and resumes running. 44Itis aclen sport, and exciting enough to warm any man's blood. But the true hunting of the wild turkey, with shotgun or rifle, that tests a man's strength and cunning and woodcraft and patience to the full, is still hunting. The best terri tory for it is in the Southern States. Vir ginia offers it in the country on both sides of the Blue Bidge, although it is not nec essary to go so far to reach haunts of line game. Culpeper county, where Presi dent J'oosevelt hunted, is only a short distance from the national capital, and well east of the mountains. 44No man should decide to still-hunt wild turkeys without having considered the matter solemnly in the light of the experience of others. The bird is all nerve and muscle and wariness from the moment he opens his bright eyes to the dawn. He can see the hunter long before the hunter catches even the first fleet ing bronze sheen of a single feather of his. Pig as he is, he can melt away in the un derbrush, stirring neither leaf nor twig as he goes at top speed, lift can squat in a clump of dead grass, scarcely enough A. J- RANKIN & CO, Jewelers and Silversmiths General Store Building r. I.. camih:, Itesiilent Manager PINEHURST, IN. C Ntoren: ltoanoke, Va. White Sulphur Hp ring's, W. Va A look will interest you and iinpone no obligation. if- fajl If? mm ' .'t s'vi--,irjrJ'f Asij rV-lv.5 44 iieim: tiiky akk are known to roost, and shoot them while they are sleeping, the immense birds lresent an easy mark even on a pretty dark night. Sometimes two or more can be killed before the frightened things gather their wits enough to flap away. But that is assassination, and not sport. "Hunting the wild bird with hound and horse is sport for the very select few; for not only is it necessary to find the birds first, but they must be found in open country where they cannot escape too easily by Hying to cover. Therefore, coursing is limited to open country, where the turkey, not having been hunted so frequently, is incautious enough to feed in farm lands and open, flat country. The dogs are sent in to cut oil' the retreat to the woods, and then the mounted men break out, of their hiding places and pounce down on them. 4kThe wild turkey runs and flies alter nately. He lopes like an ostrich, though not so fast, and whenever lie thus takes to running, the dogs and horses gain on him. When they get unpleasantly close, up booms the big bird and flies like a feathered projectile straight ahead until to cover him, and lie there so close and motionless that the sportsman may al most step over his retreat, without dream ing that a twenty pound gobbler is in it. 44Yhen the bird is tracked on snow he will lead the shooter a chase of miles. The turkey can hear as keenly as he can see. A crackling twig will startle him even more quickly than it will a dter. Often the man will not be able to get a shot, although he may follow a flock all day long. Often he will get his shot only after he has walked the birds down tired them out by close, patient, grim pursuit. The man who can do that is an athlete. 44If still-hunting and training is the finest form of turkey hunting, calling or yelping is perhaps the most thrilling. The turkey caller goes abroad while it is night. He selects his post in the bushes or thicket, with only starlight to help him. That position must be chosen with refence to two points: One, that the turkey roost shall be within hearing dis tance of the hunter's hiding place, and the other that the ground in front shall be open, so that the turkey when he is

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