55) THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK x i s .v x trA x i ii f if i " :l: 'C1 A Bold Original Creation 1 !! m For The Seashore . I'Mg hron A Bold Original Creation For The Seashore MAGNITUDE and CHEERFULNESS W It expresses the spirit of America at play amid the spaciousness of green ocean, blue sky and radiant sunshine. THE LARGEST FIREPROOF RESORT HOTEL IN THE WORLD Belvedere Submarine Grill Restaurant Traymore D. S. White, Pres't. J. W. Mott, Mgr. Adjustable Hole-Rim or Gup For Putting Greens Seamless Pressed Steel, Galvanized. Thin and stiff. Holds its shape. No mud on ball. No water in Cup. Lip of Cup accurately adjusted up or down, relative to surface, without removing Cup. No sharp Marker-Bods, or Bamboo Spikes. i J : rifcfc Booklet upon request Sample sent to any Golf Club In the U. S. without any charge whatever for SO days trial In the ground THE TUTTING GREEN, 1517 H. St. N. W., Washington, D. C. TSE fiQLF SHOP, 75 East Monro St., Chicago, III. ARTHUR I. JOHNSO I CO., 180 Devonshire St., Boston, Mass The Dewey Hotel, VtisSiRll The most comfortable and homelike hotel for tourists in the Capitol American and Euro pean Plan. Send for booklet with map of Washington. Reference Mr. H. W. Priest. The Carolina. G. Q. PATTEE, Proprietor THE Pinehurst Jewelry Shop Jewelry Notions and Silverware Repairing and Engraving Manicure, Shampooing, Chiropody and Marcel Wave Violet Ray Treatment LAURA AGNES WALKER, Room t, THE CAROLINA UTEjQOK Published Every Saturday Morning, During the Season, November May, at Pinehurst, North Carolina Conducted by Ralph W. Pag-e Edwin A. Denham, Business Manages 11 West 32d Street, New York One Dollar Annually, Five Cents a Copy Foreign Subscriptions, Fifty Cents Additional The Editor is always glad to consider contribu tions. Good photographs are 'especially desired. Editorial Booms over the Department Store. Hours 9 to 5. In telephoning ask central for Outlook Office. Advertising rate card and circulation state ment on request. Entered as second class matter at Post Office at Pinehurst, Moore County, North Carolina. Saturday, April S3, 1010 Religion Services At the Pinehurst Chapel: Holy Communion 9.30 A. M. Children's Services 10.00 a.m. Morning Service and Sermon 11.00 a. m. Night Service at the Com munity House at 8.00 p. m. Roman Catholic Early Mass 6.15 a.m. Second Mass (when visiting Priest is in Pinehurst. . . 8.00 A. M. Malls Arrive 8.00 a. m. 8.30 A. m. 7.00 p. M. 8.30 p. M. NORTH Leave 9.40 a. m. 9.00 p. m. from north Due 8.05 A. M. 8.30 P. M. Leaves 7.00 a. m. 8.30 a. m. 6.00 P. M. 8.00 p. m. Train SOUTH Leave 7.10 a. m. 7.35 p. m. from south Due 10.30 a. m. 9.45 P. M. An October Invitation There is a delusion abroad that Pine hurst exists only from November first to the middle of May. And that when the dogwood comes to blossom, and the sym phony of mockingbirds to inhabit the groves, the plantation folk to serve sup per on wisteria covered verandas and ter races flanked with roses, that the village is dead. It is nothing of the kind. Least of all will it be so this year. The country club will never close again. For some time now the clans of the Sandhills have gath ered there to exhibit their husbandry, to frolic and to hold community council, to parade and to make merry at the fair. The bucolic meetings for the benefit of beef cattle and the introduction of better methods in agriculture have of old been seen in the village in the Summertime. But now Pinehurst has taken its posi tion for the year round as a playground, a golfing center and a country club. It is of the greatest interest not only to the planters and the many country estates, but to those old friends of the village who have felt the yearly regret that they were abandoned so early in the luxuriant Spring, and joined so late in the Fall. The club now has a substantial member ship for the entire Summer the links will never close, and the tournament schedule is formally extended to begin on the 10th of November. Informally it never stops. Those who would love to begin their golf arid their journeys in the surround ing glens early in the year, at harvest time, while the Autumn splendor is still abundant, will find good company and select, and many things going on in Sep tember and October. They would be rewarded by an early arrival by the pageant and country fair, by the festivities of this unique Scotch settlement, the hospitality of the open house prevailing among the country gentry, and by association with the leaders of this Southern Community, even more than by the games and the canoeing and the golf and the riding which have now become a year-round feature. There is an association and an acquain tance with Southern men and the leaders in thought and action of the community to be gained for those who share the village with us in those quiet Autumn days before the coming of the many. It would be the greatest delight both to them and to the man of culture and experi ence from the North, if they could meet in the field and on the links, and in some measure link their interests in this grow ing community. Any fellow travelling South in October will find here a hearty welcome, and the Sandhills at play. An Unprecedented Seaiton Never since the first plow struck into the virgin and astonished terrain where the Carolina Hotel now commands the prospect has anything like this season been seen in the Sandhills. It cannot merely be said that more people have wandered into our bailiwick. They have stormed the place, overrun it, flooded the Sandhills, and put us , to devising new ways and means to accommodate them. It may be of interest to many of those comprising the legion of the links and the squadron who have added to our pleasure on the track and the polo field, the hunts men and the string of tourists rolling incessantly in over the Capitol Highway, that although during 1915 we supposed the village was crowded to its capacity, but that this year the hotels have already as early as mid-April, made 13,911 more full day's service to guests than ever before in an entire season. That is, if-a day's board and lodging for one person be counted as one, there were 13,911 more such persons served this year to date than last year entire. And probably a still greater number than this turned away for very lack of a couch whereon they could lay their heads. No human being can tell how many of this army of friends who came here for the first time were impelled South by the closing of the Kiviera and the danger of bombs in Venice. But this we know. That they will come again. And to a larger and ever improving Pinehurst. The three major golf courses stood the strain of hundreds of more players in good shape but next year we are promised the fourth course in good condition, and early in the season. Fflr another tendency of moment to the travelling world has here developed. People are coming South earlier than ever before; and this year " Glad to see you I've a place In my .squad for you." YOU ARE WELCOME AT THE TRAPS YOU'LL find the "glad hand" and a spirit of good fellowship wait ing for you on your arrival at any Of the Gun Clubs scattered over the country. Trapshooting is the national gun fest, a sport that appeals to men and has the approval of women. The night of the clays makes sport for the vacation days. Go to the shooting club where you can have fun with your gun. ASK FOR BOOKLETS," THE SPORT ALLURINO." (FOR MEN) AND "DIANA OF THE TRAPS" E.l.du Pont de Nemours & Go. Powder Makers Since 1802 WILMINGTON, DEL. THE MOUNTAIN PARK HOTEL AND- HOT MINERAL SPRING BATHS AT Hot Spring's, N. O. Open alii the Tear "In accessibility of location; in absoluU freedom from dampness and fogs; in the per fect purity of its health-giving atmosphere, and the beauty and grandeur of its surroundings, the North Carolina Hot Springs stand pre eminent among health and pleasure resorts of America." Golf Tennis Open Swimming Pool Mountain Trails Horseback Riding. The waters of these springs have been found to be practically a specific in the cure of rheu matism, gout, rheumatic gout, kidney troubl, and all kindred ailments. Testimonials on application. Under Entire New Management. For information and reservations write or vrt FRED J. FULLER, Manager, Mountain Park Hotel, Hot Springs, N. O.