" l""! PINEHURST ' OUTLOOK .BOKf 6 " I "i .' 1 1865 1916 TRADE M ARKRCMT OFF C. C. 5HAYNE & CO. .IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF STRICT LY RELIABLE FURS Annual Discount Sale We are offering our entire stock of manufactured Furs at discounts from lO to 2,5 per cent, 126 West 42nd Street New York City Jupiter Island Goll Course Good Nine Hole Golf Course, of about 3,000 HOBE SOUND, FLORIDA yards, o a the ocean front. Joe Mitchell, of the Cleveland Country Club, professional in charge Comfortable quarters at Pine Ridge Inn, Hobe Sound. Apply for Booklet AUTOMOBILES FOR HIRE Cheap Hate Instant Service Good Cars SUGG'S LIVERY Telephone SOUTHERN PINES A. IVIOrNTBSAINTl Tailor and Dress Maker Riding Habits and Sporting Apparel French Dry Cleaning PenwWanla Ate.. Soathern Pines. N. C. Photography MERROW DevelopinM The Fulname Golf Ball Marker The Pinehurst Studio Now Installed at The Pinehurst Country Club Take your FULNAME DIE with you or order a new one there Golfs Greatest Convenience The Fulname Company CINCINNATI, OHIO Manicure, Shampooing, Chiropody and Marcel Wave LAURA AGNES WALKER, Room 2, THE CAROLINA PnEPinEDXERN VINDICATED Have the Club Home from Conflagration Rolling home from the party of parties at the Lift the Latch last Monday even ing your orator came upon the strangest sight that ever astonished his gaze in confines of the Sandhills. And these con fines aforesaid abound in strange sights. Gathered upon the greens and fairways the forms of many gay figures could be discerned flitting about, the red sweaters distinctive of our leading ladies being the prevailing motif. Chairs and tables be gan to loom out of the darkness, and mysterious halloween lights glimmer in the Club House. Evidently a great lawn party was in progress. We speculated .mightily on this new owl festival, and what kind of a game it was. Coming closer we con jectured that the golf clubs and the fur niture had gone on a strike. These were all on the lawn in congress assembled. A burst of flame from the caddie house and Donald Ross ' Sarcophagus of Worth- emptied the precious niblics and para phanalia for the morning's contest on the lawn, and rescued the chairs and the furnishings, and led the cheering. It all amounted to little in the total. The caddie house was destroyed, and the store room badly damaged, but the club house proper was none the worse for the excitement. Everyone had a scramble to get his own bag back into its lair, and there was a few moments in swapping sweaters next morning. But the tour nament proceeded as scheduled, and to day it is a legend. A Putting Party was given on Friday last by Mrs. Henry S. Houston at Fernleigh Cottage for the benefit of the Farm Life School. This was found to be a very popular and re freshing change from the conventional bridge sketch, by a large part of the vil lage which attended. Vuallade The weekly fusilade at the Gun Club, in the weekly trap shooting competition on Monday last was a triumph for P. W. ..tS?5 -xt,r- ?---f' -. ... .- - m .tv y - 1 THE NEW COTTAGE OF MR. AND MRS. J. II. ANDREWS OF AKRON, OHIO ington and St. Mungo balls revealed the cause of the festival. The inevitable fire had arrived. It broke out in the boiler room and soon threatened the structure. It had always been assumed that the building was outside of the limits of the village fire protection, and it had been insured on that supposition. The long and pains taking fire drills under Tom Kraig, chief of the village fire department now bore it efficient fruit. The chemical engine was on the spot coincident with the last shriek of the alarm. The hose was at tached to the hydrant at the edge of the village by Dr. Brown's house, but as expected would not nearly reach. This did not phase Tom Craig. He mobilized all the hose in the town, whatever size or purpose intended, and by ready meth ods of his own pieced the stream of water together and himself led the van guard into the building and drowned out the flame. Meanwhile the fashionable audience at the Carolina Opera House near by, and the leading citizens and the belles at the ball all arrived like minute men and Whittemore, the Brookline sportsman. He and G. M. Howard and John Ebberts all broke 93 out of the hundred targets. This was a very good showing for a windy day but not better than the shoot-off, in which Whittemore only let one escape him, and Howard and Ebberts two apiece. J. II. Andrews and Frank Butler were next on the list with 80 to their credit. An Informal Dancing: Party was given last Wednesday night in the ball room of the Carolina by Basil Durant of New York. The irresistable medium was supplied by the colored sym phony and after their retirement by Miss Hazel Treat at the piano and Mr. Fuller manipuating the drum corp. Miss Treat, Miss Dorothy Fuller, Mrs. Bar ber, Miss Barber, Mr. Staples Fuller, Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Waters, Edward Beall and Terpsichore were the princi pal guests. Send the Pinehurst Outlook to your friends. It will save lettter writing. V

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