9 W&Lmm&&sk THE
PINEHURST
ditniMO AIIIHVK
JLtal t th CMrullim
Monday is bridge day at the Carolina.
ml great is the tournament thereof.
Last week there were three tables in full
:swing, guests of Mrs. W. B. Hanna,
alies of the Carolina and the colony
seeking to establish the leadership in the
science of leads and bids. The honors
fell to Mrs. Spencer "Waters, Mrs. A. S.
Oilman and Mrs. E. P. Spencer. The
line up included' Mrs C. R. Hathaway,
Mrs. William McLaughlin, Mrs. F. J.
Ham, Jr., Mrs. E. C. Horton, Mrs. H. W.
Moore, Mrs. M. L. Bishop, Miss Caroline
"Bogaft, Mrs. H. G. Waring and Mrs. W.
A. Sandford.
Interest in the big golf tournament
running through the week was augmented
at the hotel by the arrival of many well
known experts at the game, headed by
James D. Standish, Jr., of Detroit, the
Michigan champion.
Another leading athlete entering
the Tinehurst lists that came in
last week is E. R. McCormick, the cham
pion tennis player of Yale. He has been
trying out the courts with Simmons, who
was runner up in the Yale tournament,
and who also holds the title for the State
of Montana.
Among the charter members of the
village returning for their annual visit
are Mrs. E. C. Beall of Uniontown arid
Miss Priscilla Beall. Other recent ar
rivals include.
NEW YORK STATE
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Shoemberg, Daniel
P. Morse, R. P. Morse, Mr. and Mrs.
Jno. K. Herr, R. Werthum, Dr. W. W.
Tanderhoof, E. J. Kilduff, Mr. and Mrs.
rercy S. Mallett, New York; Daniel F.
McMahan, New York City; F. A. Subert,
Mr. and Mrs. Thos. B. Wells, New York;
S. 0. Miller, West Nyark, N. Y.; Mr.
and Mrs. D.. E. Knowlton, Buffalo, N.
Y.; Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Pennochs,
Rochester, N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. H. W.
Schroder, College Pt., L. I.; A. M.
Chil.ls, Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Pratt, New
York; Mrs. Florence M. Rudisch, New
York; Mrs. P. C. Thomas, Miss Mae
Harg, Rome, N. Y.
SOUTHERN STATES
Stoney McLinn, Wilmington, Del.; Jas.
Craig, Waynesboro, Va.; Harry Jarrett,
Jr., Atlanta, Ga.; Jno. West, Raleigh,
X. C; F. J. Coxe, Wadesboro, N. C;
ft- C. Ballantyne, Mrs. M. E. Ballantyne,
Washington, D. C, Mr. and Mrs. F. B.
Cotter, Beaufort; Robert S. Page,
Kaleigh,. N. C; Mr. and Mrs. Hiram
Pinenoodles, Pinehurst; Lieut and Mrs.
T. A. De Vane, Camp Jackson, S. C.
MIDDLE WEST
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Standish, Jr., Mrs.
T- D. Standish, Detroit, Mich.; Mr. and
Mrs. w. A. Bell, Kenosha, Wis
EASTERN STATES
Mrs. Louis E. Beall, Miss 'Priscilla
Heall, Uniontown, Pa.; W. W. Posey, J.
r- Brenneman, F. E. Herr, Lancaster,
T.; Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Jeffrey, Phila
Mphia; T. E. Doremus, Wilmington,
Dyl., Mr. and Mrs. Geo. W. Reynolds, Glen
Ri,lge; Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Pierce, Miss
Editha Pierce, H. C. Davis, Boston,
Mass. ; Mr. and Mrs. Geo. A. White,
Mrs. A. M. Reed, Manchester, Vt.; W. C.
Hogan, E. H. Lovell, Boston, Mass. ;
Mrs. J. E. Farrell, Miss M. IL. Farrell,
J. E. Farrell, Jr., Philadelphia; Dr. and
Mrs. J. T. McGillicuddy, Worchester, N.
Y.; Chas. S. Patten, H. H. .Miller, Bos
ton, Mass.; A. H. Berry, Montclair, N.
J.; Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Bevn, Harris
burg, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. .J. R. Shoe
maker, Plainfield, N. J;; S. C. Milligan,
Horace Hays, N. B. Richardson, Pitts
burg, Pa.; E. R. McCormick, New Haven,
Ct.; Geo. P. Elkins, G. L. Hayes, Pitts
burg, Pa.
CANADA
E. M. Shaw, P. M. Sanson, Toronto,
Canada. V
.
Holly Inn
B. H. Bates, Pleasantville, N. Y.; Sam
Sayed, New York; W. A. Underwood,
No. Carolina; Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Smith,
New York City; Mr. and Mrs. T. H.
Sullivan, Millburg, Mass.; W. H. C.
Smith, New York; Mr. and Mrs. F. Neil
son, Maplewood, N. J.; Miss Enwright,
Freehold, N. J.; S. C. Brennan, Worces
ter, Mass.; Mr. and Mrs. Reid Kennedy,
Homestead ;W. M. Johnson, Co. K, 30th
U. S. Inf.; Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Phillips,
Kennith, Pa.; P. M. Samsqn, Toronto,
Canada; Miss Nell Pender, Charlotte, N.
C.
nrkhlr
Russell V. Bleecker, New York; 'B. E.
Kile, Providence, R. I.; J. F. Souther,
Miss Souther, Boston, Mass.; Geo. B.
Amos, White Plains, Ga.; Miss Mary
Sloan, Anna M. Sloan, E. J. Sloan, Pitts
burg, Pa.; M. B. Hatch, Amherst, Mass.;
E. A. Hall, Syracuse, N. Y.; John M.
Curlea, Camp Lee, Va.; Chas. M. Har-
man, New Rochelle, N. Y.j Ed. Shaffer,
Buffalo, N. Y.; W. T. Griffin, Norfolk,
Va.; Philo S. Clark, Mrs. Philo S. Clark,
Portsmouth, Ohio; H. S. Sise, Medford,
Mass.; M. H. Dalton, Norfolk, Va.; Geo.
A. Goodman, Portsmouth, 0.
Golf in France
Ned Beall, for many years a power on
the Pinehurst links, and premier golfer
$f the village last year, is in the am
bulance service in Italy. Next week we
shall run his story of the taking of the
first American ambulance overland from
Paris to Venetian front.
While he was in Paris he met up with
Philip V. G. Carter and some other erst
while golf champions. They decided to
have a game for old times sake, Huns or
no Huns. So those two and Bob Fields
and Bill Souiher borrowed a set of
weapons from a Frenchman and took a
shot at it at St. Cloud's near Paris. It
is recorded that Carter had the best
score. But it would hardly have won
the medal in the North and South.
French JLeaaonn
Miss Katherine O'Connor, who gives
lessons in French and Spanish is staying
at the Berkshire Hotel. We regret that
we inadvertantly gave the impression in
our last week's issue that she had been
staying at the Pine Crest Inn, and had
left town.
The Big Front Door
of the Hotel McAIpin opens at your approach.
It admits you to an hotel where you will find
every comfort, every luxury and, above all,
the earnest desire to welcome you.
Location and management make the McAIpin
an ideal home for those who linger and those
whose stay in New York is short.
The McAIpin has more than 1700 rooms. Its
Mezzanine Restaurant and Terra Cotta Grill
are famous. Rates moderate.
When you come to New York, make the Mc
AIpin your home.
HOTEL MALPIN
L. M. BOOMER. Manning Directbi
Broadway at Thirty-Fourth Street
NEW YORK CITY
De MERITTE MILITARY SCHOOL
JACKSOtl SPRINGS, I). C.
A Preparatory School for boys, which prepares boys to enter any Col
lege or Scientific School, West Point, Annapolis, or for. Business. '
The School is seven miles from Pinehurst. This gives the opportunity
to study without interruption, yet to spend a week 's end with parents there.
The life is a simple life which develops health, character and mental
activity.
The head-master has had long experience as teacher and principal of
the leading preparatory schools in Boston, Mass.
EDWIN DeMERITTE, A. B., Head Master.
CAMP ALGONQUIN- the oldest existing boys camp
Asquam Lake, N. H. In the foothills of the White Mountains. The camp
for boys who love nature and a wholesome active outdoor life. 33Td year.
For circulars, address
EDWIN DeHERITTE, A. B., Director.
Jackson Springs, North Carolina.