r sMNiimiiiiiiiilllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllUlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Published ETery Saturday Morning During the Season, NovemDer May, at Pinehurst, North Carolina Conducted ly Italpb W. Pagre For adrertising rates and space apply to Edwin At nham Pinehurst. N. 0. 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 rooms over the Department Store. Hours 0 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 January 11, 11 RELIGIOUS SERVICES At thb Pinbhukst GhapjsIi! Holy Communion 9-15 AM- Children's Services 10.00 A.M. Horning Service and Sermon. . .11.00 a.m. Night Service at the Community House at 8.00 P.M. Roman Catholic Early Mass 615 A-u- When visiting Priest is at Pinehurst Second Mass 8 00 A-M BED CllOil WORK The Bed Cross Boom at the School House, nezt to the Movie Theatre, "will bo open Tuesday and Friday mornings from 9.30 to 1.00. The principal work will be done on refugee garments, which are sorely needed by the starving and homeless peoples abroad. Wool will be given out and finished articles returned at the room. Volunteers for sewing are most welcome. TRAINS North - South Leave 10.20 A. M. Leave 7.05 A. M. 8.35 M. 8.35 P. M. From North From South Due 8.00 A.M. Due 11.05 A.M. 9.23 P.M. 10.45 P..M. MAILS Arrive 8.00 A.M Depart 7.00 A.M. 11.05 A.M. 9.00 A.M. 6.22 P.M. 5.00 P.M. 7.00 P.M. ROOSEVELT. He stood at Armageddon and battled for the Lord., The Great Champion, the one preeminent warrior and leader of the American people, the .single strongest man on the planet, lies in peace on Saga more Hill. No man knows or can tell what work he has done, how wide his in fluence, how powerful his example. For twenty years the course of American his tory and the progress of American thought has been centered around him. The currents, of popular .ideals, taken for granted by the people ideals of so cial .justice, of the big stick for in trenched special privilege, of equal op portunity, of fearless and lightning quick retaliation for wrong, foreign or domestic were written into our hearts and the hearts of our children by Theo dore Eoosevelt. The very vocabulary which expresses our admiration for the old stalwart virtues, and our contempt for self-seeking, for cowardice, for falter ing, for compromise, for privilege, are his phrases. When men come to write the amazing story of America's awakening, and start ling progress from a provincial State ruled by demagogues and favored man ufacturers to the foremost nation in the world, they will find it co-incident with the advent of this man of inordinate energy. It was he that saved the re sources of the Great West to the nation, and established the principle of conser vation over the remains of the old Bour bon Senators. It was he that laid the foundation for our. modern navy. It was he that tamed the trusts, and saved the soul of the Bepublic from the curse of Mammon. He built the great Ship Canal, the foundation of our secu rity and he built it just in time. He was the mouthpiece and the sponsor of every good work on the continent. And in not one of these things was he academic or a theorist. He was pre eminently a fighter, and a man of action. He participated in every deal, himself a part of every team. His work was all personal. He knew practically every man in the world engaged in any im portant enterprise. He was beloved and esteemed by more men than any other person living, and perhaps any person that has lived in centuries. His last work, unrewarded, and after a service to his people surpassed by none, reviled by the politicians terrified at his unwaning power, was his greatest. When the unspeakable Huns made raid on civilization, and a clear-cut issue was presented to the American people whether they would side with the devil or with Christ, or would wash their hands of all responsibility, it was Theodore Roosevelt, and no one else, who percieved the moral issue and proclaimed from the housetops that we must join the forces of right or sink into everlasting shame and degradation. His worst enemy will not deny this will not deny that he saw this at least two years before our chosen leaders were able to tell the dif ference between the purposes of the Allies and the Germans He went to war on all those that feared or hesitated to prepare for the inevitable conflict the conflict that was inevitable unless we were to follow Bryan into centuries of shame and disgrace. For these things, in which no one now has the hardihood to deny he was right, wise, informed, forehanded he is reviled by a partisan press. From beginning to end he preached no parley, no discussion, no let-up on the barbarians, and no finish to the crusade except unconditional sur render. He is the one single great leader of the American people who never faltered, who never questioned our power or our faith, or the power and " faith of the Bight, as championed by our allies, and who had no patience with any man, be he who he might, who took counsel of policy or fears, in this the greatest test that has ever been presented to the faith of men. We went into the war as was right. We did our utmost. We beat the Hun to unconditional surrender. We are go ing to give credit to our allies for staying with this fight, and bearing the brunt of it, and we are not going to let Inter national Jews and Socialists, pacifists and those who wished to compromise or run or let off the Hun while the war lasted, step in and dictate their theories to the torn ranks and shattered hulls of the real saviors of the world. If an impartial man seeks through the last four years for the influence that has supported these results regardless of any thing else, his trail will lead in a broad clear path to Sagamore Hill. Ralph W. Page. Concerning: m Decadent Nation "French troops began to intervene on March 23, in the battle now being fought on the British front.' ' Official dispatch. Hold there Tommy! They come, Petains odoriferous life guards, Slouching with rifle and bomb, and a va ried assortment of blankets, Tinware, onions and stews, and the smile that never failed them at Verdun France from her white-bled veins still squeezes a cup for transfusion. Hold there ! Haig you I They come. Their saucepans gleam like the helmet Of Roland, Jean, Bayard and a minim quota of canon. Three hundred miles of front, a half hun dred more hardly matters France once more is at work spiking the Hindenburg schedule. . Belgium called and they came, this feeble folk from the boulevards, Frog-eaters sadly addicted to peg-top trousers and absinthe, Came in their paper-soled shoes and leap ed at the Riser's machine guns, Caught the blow full in the face, reeled back to the Marne and to glory. Servia called, and they came! "On the banks of the Struma, our soldiers ' ' "Our troops in the bend of the Cerna" ' ' In the Salonic sector our soldiers ' ' Spaded and festered and fought and smoked their notorious tobacco, Wondering what it was all about, but ' ' Alers ca va tres bien n 'est-ce-pas ? ' ' Italy called and they came: "Our regi ment marching through Brescia "On the heights of Asiago our troops": Oh! tight-lipped anonymous poet, Your day and night communiques pronounced ad we do it in Kansas How down-and-out Frenchmen just rais ing Sam Hill in the Mediterranean Stand there Brittan! She comes! : France of the scant forty millions, Done three years ago, white-bled by Hindenburg 's schedule, France of the Lafayette touch, still gives one more twist to her life veins, ' Sounds the call of "Verdun and leaps; Hold Haig! She is coming! glllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllM I w H llllllllllllll Illlllllllllll I IIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIhllllllimiiyir I Poland Water hasbeen endorsed by the medical profession for over half a century. The most efficient Natural f j Diuretic known. It is es- sential in all cases of raging f fevers on account of its I purity and wonderful stim- I ulating effect upon the 1 kidneys. 1 Is the purest water known. Can f I be drunk in any quantity with 1 perfect safety. 1 j Has been used in every pah of 1 the world in cases of fevers where I no other water was allowed. Bottled at the Spring under the 1 most sanitary conditions. For sale by local dealers or at 1 I POLAND WATER DEPOT I 1180 Broadway, New York City 1 Telephone Madison Sq., 4748 1 IIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIli IslfWl iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu ALLEN'S FOOT -EASE :Thi Original Antiseptic Powdsr for the feat Tennis end Base Ball Players, Dancers, Walkers use Allen's Foot-Ease because it takes the friction from the shoe and freshens the feet. Shake it in the Shoes and sprinkle it in the foot-bath. Used by the Ameri can British and French troops and by men in training in Army Camps through out, the United States. -Sold everywhere, Va. TPTJTT'C' oomnlo flridrAflfl ALLEN S. OLMSTED, LeRoy, N. Y. FOR SALE One Second Hand FRANKLIN Series Nine, Touring Car Model, in Good Condition. Enquire 'Outlook" Send, The Outlook to your friends, it tells the story of the week and saves letter writing. Ask for mailing envelopes.