THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK ROSTER OF THE GUESTS RIDING PARTY f ! i 8 ill Mi '! n . i 1 1 I '','1 HBQHiDHiDBiaHiaHiD Don't Buy Water at Humus Prices THERE'S a vital difference between buying and getting. When you buy unprepared humus in its natural, water-logged condition, 75 per cent, of what you get is water, which you pay for at regular Humus prices. Unprepared humus is nothing more or less than sour swamp muck, Nothing has been done to neutralize its acidity. No plant foods have been added. None of its moisture has been driven out. It is sold to you just as it is dug up from its watery bed. When you buy humus; get humus. Buy Alphano Humus the concentrated humus. It contains only 30 per cent, moisture only the necessary amount needed to keep the bacteria alive. The rest of the water has been driven out in huge drying drums, leaving it in a finely granulated condition. Before being dried out the rich soil humus is dug up and scattered over large areas to sun sweeten and aerate. After being dried out, the necessary plant foods are added to make it a perfectly balanced soil ration. Instead of the green moulds and injurious acid fungi of unprepared humus; Alphano Humus contains the highest forms of fertiliy producing and nitrogen gathering bacteria. It is weed-seedless. Because it is so thoroughly screened, it is free from lumps and roots, and is easy to scatter uniformly on the greens. It can be easily incorporated with the soil, giving a firm, compact surface. Our book on Lawns and Golf Courses, Their Care and Fare, was written by four experts from the standpoint of actual results obtained. Send for it. $12 a Ton in Bags $10 a Ton in Bags by the Carload $8 a Ton in Bulk by the Carload F. O. B. Alphano. N. J. AlpKano H UtTLCLS J Established 1905 17-2? Battery Place NEW YORK a mi a WA a ii THE JEFFERSON THE MOST MAGNIFICENT HOTEL IN THE SOUTH RICHMOND, VIRGINIA ; ! ' 'if i rr "",' ... W ' 9 ' Eighteen Hole Golf Club of Country Club of Virginia Nearby H The many points of historic interest in, and around the City, and its central location make Eichmond a very desirable stop-over point for tourists. H Rooms single and en suite, with and without baths. Turkish and Roman Baths. Every comfort for the tourist, every convenience for the traveling man. H For handsomely illustrated booklet or reservations, address THE JEFFERSON, Richmond, Virginia O. F. WEISIGER, Manager The Carolina Hotel Welcomes the Christmas Host NEW JERSEY Gardner Colby, Jr., East Orange, F. N. B. Close and wife, Crawford; Miss Elizabeth C. Close, Crawford; H. Fayen, Montclair. PENNSYLVANIA C. G. Ria and wife, Pittsburgh; H. P. Dixon and family, Wallingford; Mrs. M. S. Jeffries, J. 0. Watson, W. W. Watson, Philadelphia; Joseph Swain, Swarthmore. NEW YORK J. B. Moore, II. G. Warren, William Newgrass, Miss L. A. Newgrass, Charles F. Rand and family, C. C. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Sandford, M. A. Haas, New York; Eugene Ells worth, H. J. Ellsworth, Irvington; Mrs. Harold Sherrell, Poughkeepsie ; George R. Bunker, Arthur H. Bunker, Ellsworth Bunker, Yonkers; W. H. S. Brinner, Rochester; C. Elmer Weber, J. A. Robin son, A. E. Wulkschugen and family, II. H. Bottome, Frank Presbrey, Dr. and Mrs. John McCoy, Victor A. Seggerman, Henry V. Seggerman, W. C. Sheldon and wife, Miss Malcolm, Harrison Williams, W. II. Foster, W. E. Truesdell and wife, I. N. W. James, Miss Lawson, D. McKeene, William T. Barr and wife, Brooklyn. MASSACHUSETTS Mr. and Mrs. L. II. Fullerton, Brook line; Warren H. Manning, Boston; Dr. and Mrs. Fred Coburn, Lowell; W. Har old Manning, J. W. Small, G. E. Barnard, Boston; B. Shonts and family, Newton Centre; Benjamin Pearson and wife, Benjamin Pearson, Jr., Byfield. SOUTH G. II. Bowell, Memphis, Tenn.; J. C. Beaum, Atlanta, Ga. ; J. T. West, Raleigh, N. C; C. W. Swan, Savannah, Ga.; C. E. McMillan, Augusta, Ga.; C. E. Heyman, A. II. Luis, Atlanta, Ga.; George M. Stamback, Wadesboro, N. C; W. S. Haw kins, Norfolk, Va.; J. H. Young, Norfolk, Va. ; G. H. Chasman, Washington, D. C. ; J. C. Carr, Wellsburg, N. C; E. C. Wat kins, Raleigh, N. C; Robert Glasgow, Charlotte, N. C. CONNECTICUT H. C. Tenn, G. L. Austin, Hartford. CANADA Miss Katherine Hurby, Miss Bernice Carter, College Station, Que.; Hon. Geo. G. Amyop and family, Quebec; J. II. Lindy, Toronto; N. W. Rowell, Toronto. WEST Mrs. J. C. Yeager, French Lick, Ind.; Miss Jenia Ria, French Lick, Ind.; E. Rudolph, St. Louis, Mo.; L. E. Newman, Cleveland, O. ; Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Frank leton, Cleveland, 0.; Channing Keep and wife, Chicago, 111. James Barry and wife, Providence, R. I.; J. O. Carr, Wilmington, Del.; Mr. W. 0. Fowler, Trinidad. Girls of Cottage Colony and Guests at the Hotel Make Merry at Historic Grove In ever increasing numbers the girls of the colony are joining the chase and taking to the innumer able sandy paths of the piney woods on scouting expeditions ahorseback. Today Annie Oak ley, whose enthusiasm for an ex pedition ahorseback runs back to memories of cowboy days and the pony dispatch, headed a squadron of riders for the pine grove the other side of Deep Creek, known as the Old New Gilead post office. (Quite correct. Haven't we the precedent of the purest of the purists in the New Old South Church?) To beauty of scene, and pleas ure of the camp fire is added the memory of the last cavalcade to camp at this spot. It was a scout ing expedition of General Sher man's Yankee Cavalry, coming down the old Morgantown road hot on the trail of that pillar of Secession, Wade Hampton, leader of rebel horse. The party is even now picnic ing under the pines, and exploring the neighborhood where the corn mill used to grind out the meal for the old settlement and where Air. Robert Hunter is planning to revive the drooping spirits of the pond for the benefit of the Jack pike and the appearance of the landscape. The party includes : Mrs. Malcom Ormsbee, Miss Ormsbee, Miss Eleanor Abbe, Miss Esther Tufts, Miss Eliza beth Cheatham, Miss Frances Thomas, Phelps Hunter, Miss Close, Miss Malcom, Miss Nave and Miss Denham. House Warmings are becoming the fashion. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Demott of Syra cuse have started life in their new domain. Mr. and Mrs. Howard P. Hotchkiss have taken posses sion of the Walnut, which they purchased last Spring. Their old est boy is going to the Parson School. Mr. and Mrs. Jay Hall, known in the Sandhills ever since there has been a Pinehurst, have moved into the Chinquapin for this season.

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