KSfMfii THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK "HlfmM 2 BRETTON IN THE HEART OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS OF NEW HAMPSHIRE JvOODS Improved Golf Course Full 6,450 yards THE 910UJVT PLmKAST TUG MLOUffT WAIILCT01 C. J. Dunohv. Manaaer D. J..Trudeau Winter: The Copley Plaza JiosroN, MASS Winter: Hotel Ormond OKMOND BEACH, FLA. Information at 243 Fifth Ave., New York, and all of Mr. Foster's offices i8E5"BRETTON WOODS SADDLE HORSES AT OKMOND THIS WINTKK CONTRACTING and REPAIRING Painting, Paper Hanging, Plumbing, Steam Fitting, Carpentering, Electrical Work, Brick Laying, Plastering and Planting Call or 'Phone the PINEHURST GENERAL OFFICE PINEHURST SCHOOL Day and Boarding School for Boys of from eight to eighteen years, offers, in addition to the advantages of a small private school, features which only a school in the Sandhill Region can possess. Among the numerous extra curricular activities which the School offers are: baseball, tennis, basket ball, golf, riding, canoeing on the Lumbee, foiestry, manual training and mili tary drill Boys who live in Pinehurst during the winter may enroll as day scholars. Such pupils are conveyed to and from School; motor bus leaves the General Office at 8.25 each morning. Classes begin at 8.45 and last until 1.00. Boys remain for the afternoon recreation period, when, in their work and in their play, they are constantly under the super vision of experienced masters. Capt, R. A. Duckworth Ford, F. R. Q. S., Headmaster. For additional information address PINEHURST SCHOOL, PINEHURST. N. C. Statesmen on Holiday and Iteturn lug- Soldiers Celebrate at Carolina Uf ou plan to visit flMneburst You surely want THE OUTLOOK in advance of your coming. Why not send your remittance NOW! A post card secures a sample copy. THE OUTLOOK PUBLISHING CO., Pinehurst, North Carolina Thanksgiving took off the lid. And the ball room of the old caravanserie was a correct imitation of revelry by night, resplendent with the proud uni forms of heroes returned from the wars, the brilliant plumage of their youthful partners, and the stately presence of distinguished visitors from the National capital, intent on a brief Thanksgiving holiday . The preceding week was marked by the annual influx of golf champions lin ing up for the Autumn fray on the links, and the initial influx of the mi gration from the bleak Decembers of the North Atlantic. Senator T. J. Walsh, of Montana, mentioned for a place on the American Peace Commission, was prominent among the guests. A well known and strong contingent arrived from the Hub of the Universe: Galen Stone, the finan cier; William V. Kellen, known of old; Mr. and Mrs. Parker Whittemore, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Tufts for a few days while The Cones are being ,put in commission; Edward A. Filene, a visitor from Pine Bluff, wrhere the leader of the Democratic hosts in Massachusetts spends his leisure hours, and A. II. Alley, a familiar figure these many years on the links. Particularly welcome were our old friends and partners Mr. and Mrs. II. J B . Emery, from Everett, and Warren Manning, the landscape artist. From Champaign, Illinois, came Mr. and Mrs. George A. Meattis. Meatiss was the famous star on the Princeton football team, remembered by every f ol ower of sport in the country. Added to the cosmopolitan company were a number of the leaders of business and thought in the Carolinas, notably: Mr. nd Mrs. George Watts and Mr. and Mrs. John Sprunt Hill, of Durham, and Mr. and Mrs. John M. Scott, of Charlotte. NEW ENGLAND AND CANADA ' Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Merrill, .Sher bourn Merrill, Mrs. Stearns, Galen VL. Stone, William V. Kellen, Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Whitttemore; Edward A. Filene, Mr. and Mrs. E.J. Hood, Miss Pauline Hood; A. II. Alley, Miss M. D.' Alley, Boston; S. G. Flagg and -family, Brockton, Mass.; Mr. and Mrs. II. B. Emery, Miss Louise Emery, Everett, Mass.; Warren II. Manning, North Bil lerica, Mass. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Kerrigan and family, London Ontario. NEW YORK NEW JERSEY Mr. and Mrs. N. S.. Hood, Howard Bayne, Mr. and Mrs. II. S. Marshall, Mr. and Mrs. E. Z. Beare, C. E. Paul son, M. C. Ludlam, Mr. and. Mrs. Joshua C. Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Ferrin, Daniel W. Raymond, Miss Alva Wing Raymond, E. Beadel, New York; Ed. G. Harris, Buffalo; Mrs. A. W. Page, W. T. Jones, New York. S. 0. Miller, Ethel C. Miller, Bertha 0. Miller, West Nyac, N. J.; George A. Graham, Englewood, N. J.; Mr. and Mrs. William M. Hager, Roselle, N. J. j WEST Mr. and Mrs. George M. Meattis, Champaign, 111.; Miss Fowle, Minneap olis; L. L. Seeley, White Hall, 111. Louis E. Newman, Cleveland; Angela Engshom, Indianapolis; Mrs. W. T. Hitchcock, Youngstown, O.; Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Van Camp, Courtland Van Camp, Julian Van Camp, Dr. C. D. Vaughn, Indianapolis. CENTRAL Mr. and Mrs. Abner M. Seeley, New ark, N. J.; Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Cox, Bridgewater, N. J.; Dr. and m Mrs. E. J. Porteons, Atlantic City; Miss E. E. Bell, Toledo, O. Mr. and Mrs. Alan C. Dodson, Beth lehem, Pa.;' Mr. and Mrs. N. E, Par rish, Reading, Pa.; Mrs. Mary C. W. Laurens, Miss Orr, St. Davids, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. John C. Dilworth, Mrs. William Frew, Mr. and Mrs. T. II . McGraw, John M. McGraw and Miss Barbara McGraw, Pittsburgh, Pa.; F. F. Clark, F. W. Bacon, Erie, Pa.; Sen ator T. F. Walsh, J. II. Clapp, Mr. and Mrs. L. B. West, Mrs. J. C. Mus ser, Mrs. C. A. Lohmann, Major Frank C. Page, Washington, D. C. ; L. W. Gleason, Driftwood, Pa.; L. O. Heck, Pittsburgh; Major Robert McLean, Phil adelphia; Charles E. Shenk, Erie, Pa. SOUTH D. E. Eferd, Zed L. Williams, George M. Mass, Jr., J.D.Culbertson, Laurens, S. C; Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Whit ney, Beaufort, S. C. W. D. Scott, Georgia; B. L. Wood cock, Atlanta; C. J. Ilardman, Com merce, Ga.; II. L. French, Atlanta; F. II. Cantrcll, Chatanooga, Tenn. Mr. and Mrs. II. W. Baum, D. G. Scott, Mr. and Mrs. John M. Scott and Miss Scott, Charlotte, N. C. , Camp Bragg, N. C; Judge J. P. McConncll and Mrs. McConnel,, Carthage; Earl Ilostetter Raleigh; M. L. Matthews, Sandford; Mrs. J. D. Grimes, Miss Maude Grimes, Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Grimes, L. M. Grimes, Jr., Lexington; Mr. and Mrs. George W. Watts, John Sprunt Hill, Durham; O. Rumsen Shaw, Charlotte; Charles W. Turney,1 Jackson ville, Fla. PIG'H IN Plft'H IIow to Turn Tlivm Into Itfmey May I not as the President says liso to state a vital National problem, r. nd its definite answer? And I trust I will l)e forgiven if I state both cat egorically and without argument. The Department of Agriculture, Her bert Hoover, the family larder, the Bel gian refugee, and the whole suffering world are now crying in unanimous vol ume, "Give us Pork!" This is not, and cannot be, a matter of charity or sentiment. Raising hogs is a business. Unless it pays it will not and cannot bo conducted. It is an agricultural business. And like every other business under the sun, it can be conducted only upon estab lished lines and in large volume in com munities where all the steps and pro cesses have been determined and crystal lized into everyday knowledge. Disregard of this single fact explains

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