I PAGE WMf THE P1NEHURST OUTLOOK fiMKMBT . . ........ pox HUNTING ASSURED The Ideal Resort for Health or Pleasure Seekers j I j Thrilling Runs Will Once More Delight JgL : Lovers of the Chase. fe. j VUlac Ilecomlng- llemlezvou. for j Fok M--7 rrt. The Hecklenburg Hineral Springs and Hotel CHASE CITY, VIRGINIA. On the Southern Railway, ninety miles south of Richmond. Hotel thoroughly modern. Rooms single and en suite, private baths, steam heat, electric lights, elevator. Winter climate ideal, location and sur roundings superb; cuisine and service the best. All popular diver sions; orchestra. Game preserves of thirty thousand acres; quail, deer, turkey and small game abundant. Fox hunting. Fine livery. Baruch and Xauheim system of baths. The famous Mecklenburg Springs water Lithia and Chloride Calcium served to guests. Tour ists rates from all points. Stop over privileges on all tourist tickets. Weekly rates, $15.00 and up. For booklets address THE TVYECKILENBURG, Chase City, Virginia. 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 all the nutri tive elements of the whole wheat grain and are taken up and assimilated when the stomach rejects all other foods. Shredded Wheat is made in two foriiiffllKSCUIX and TKIiCUlT. The BISCUIT in delicious for breakfast with hot or cold milk or cream, or for any meal in com bination with fresh or preserved fruit. TIIISCU1T is the Shrededd Whole Wheat wafer, criap, nourihing and appetizing-. Deliciouit am a toast with be ve rag-en or w ith butter, cheese or mar- -SSrmwwS malade. Both the BIS CUIT and TBISCUIT should be thoroug-hly heated in the oven just be fore serving1. 'There's Health and Strength in Every Shred." THE MOST DELIGHTFUL SUMMER RESORT IX THE WHITE MOUNTAINS a modern village 1000 feet above sea level, is Bethlehem, N. H. No better place for rest and recreation. Every amusement and sport common to resorts is iouna nere, wnue tne natural advantages ana scenic oeauties are unsurpassed. m iMA-pNki isoneof the best of the many home-like botels at a moderate THE ARLINGTON price. .Splendid location-excellent cuisine modern in all its appointments. Fine golf links, tennis; orchestra. Longdistance telephone. Furnished cottages xui iciiL, w F. C. ABBE, PROP. HERE is ample assur ance of sport in plenty for lovers of the chase, for Pinehurst is becom ing a favorite rendez vous for fox hunters from many parts of the country? last sea son's glorious runs still being thrilling recollections in the minds of all who par ticipated. Many a day two and three foxes were going at the same time and reynard, sorely pressed, was crossing and recrossing the tangled branches in plain sight of the hunters in the last frantic at tempt to throw his relentless pursuers from the trail. In at the death was the whole party. matched in size, color, speed and voice the pick of the country f iom the first dog in the string to the last and the an nouncement that Mr. Kilmer will return this season with a pack of twenty-six braces of similar hounds, fifty-two in all, will be received with pleasure. The owner's aim has been to assemble a pack which can hold its own against all comers, an undertaking possible only for a man of wealth and means, but that the effort has been successful is demon strated by the fact that the catching of the lleet red fox by this pack is not at all uncommon, three .being killed last fall, in Broome County, X. Y., the home of the Broome County Hunt Club of which Mr. Kilmer was the founder and is the leading spirit today. As a natural consequence lovers of the chase are keyed high in anticipation of days to come, and sly reynard will not find the pursuit of the timid quail or wan dering fowls his only occupation during the winter. Coif lad In New CJutse. Pinehurst's golf lad, famous in two continents, makes his appearance this year in new guise, but the same, inimita- AL 'I ' If II ... &fc MR. KILMKK AND HIS TIIOHOl GHBKKU TACK. again and again, and the wild gallops through sedge grass and scrub oak. over hill and down vale, mingled with the musical "Audi! Auch! Aou-auo ooo- oo-o " of the fast flying pack, are memories never to be forgotten. Just the wild joy of it all, tempered with the quiet of the early morning starts, when all nature is soft gray like a rare Corot; and the noisy return, when the landscape gleams like a brilliant Monet with yellow lights and purple shadows. Surely the sport of our English ances tors has found ardent devotees in twen tieth century days, and though hounds may be a faster and finer bred, and hun ters more shapely and better broken, it is still the same sport that hns been ranked first and foremost for centuries, and for which England alone spent two million and a half dollars last season. First to visit Pinehurst last season was Mr. J. F. Jordan of Greensboro, X. C, and a pack of twenty "distance destroy ers,'' including several hounds which have finished first in national trials; close after Mr. Jordan coming Mr. Willis Sharpe Kilmer of Binghampton, X. Y,, with a pack of twenty-four thor- i ougnureus ana oeauties : periectlv ble, indescribable lad who wins your interest at the first glance. This sea son the little chap is perched upon the back of a golf tee settee, basking in the sunlight, with the fair green of the golf course stretching away to the Country Club house in the distance. At his side are two trophies, showing that he is gaining in experience, and in connection a calendar tilled with appropriate Vil lage illustrations. IP Additional Itrenniiig- Iloom. The addition of dressing and locker room at the Country Club House will be appreciated ; a new golf work room having been built in what was once the caddy "pen"', and the old room ,taken for the purpose mentioned. Popularity of Itoque. Roque and croquet hold their own in popularity here; a social recreation in which old and young participate. There are numerous grounds all through the Village, true and keen, and many a pleas ant hour is spent upon them. n