Newspapers / The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, … / Feb. 10, 1921, edition 1 / Page 6
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THE P1NEHURST OUTLOOK PAGE 6 in qSjorhain cSterling (Silver &ropliies The Fitting Tribute to Skill A SILVER cup to have and to hold through all the years an everlasting reminder of great triumphs won. In athletic sports, as in other forms of competition, silver is the accepted standard for ackowledgement of deeds well done. Whether in the trophy room of a club, or in the dining room or den of a well-appointed home, it is the treasured symbol of permanency, good taste, . and refinement. Qorham Sterling Silverware is sold by leading jewelers everywhere, and in Pinehurst at "The Jewelry Store" THE GORHAM COMPANY Silversmiths & Qoldsmiths NEW YORK JUJWVL3 llNDADO-ANDERBILT SAN JUAN, PORTO RICO J 08 D 00 o ffcj1' OBO 0 op Management The Tanderbllt Hotel New York The Ideal Hotel of the Tropics Situated between the Atlantic Oceai.l ana tne uonaado Bay, in the City of San Juan, Porto Rico the most fasci nating city of the West India Islands. A splendid golf course tennis surf bathing delightful motoring and a cuisine of the highest class contribute to the enjoyment of the traveler. Direct steamer service from New York via the the modern vessels of the Porto Eict Red D and other Lines 1 or hotel reservation! refer to Walton H. Marshall Ihe Vanderbllt Hotel New York FIRST AIRLINER CARRIES 16 PASSENGERS "City of La Crosse," first of a fleet of mammoth airliners being constructed, is scheduled to make its initial flight soon, according to Alfred W. Lawson, inventor and builder. The Lawson ship will carry sixteen passengers as well as at least 1,500 pounds of mail, or without passengers will carry 6,000 pounds of mail and ex press. The airliner, largest ever built, will carry sleeping berths with pneumatic mattresses from which the air can be let out to economize on space in the day time. Shower baths with hot and cold water and a heating plant on the ship are featured. Food is to be prepared before the liner leaves and placed in thermos bottles. A waiter will be aboard the ship to serve the food. ' ' The City of La Crosse ' ' will be pow ered by three Liberty motors aggregating 1,200 horse power and has a wing spread of 15 feet. The cabin is sixty feet long. The maximum speed is to be 120 miles an hour, with a cruising speed of 100 miles. The crew will consist of a cap tain and one or two mechanicians. The maiden trip of the "City of La Crosse" will be from Milwaukee to La Crosse, Wisconsin, to Chicago and then to New York. Lawson, who lives at Zion City, 111., was recently granted an extension by the government on his mail carrying con tracts. The original contract called for operations to begin Jan. 13, but a stay until May 13 has been granted. "The 'City of La Crosse' can make a non-stop flight -from Chicago to New York in eight hours," Lawson says. To avoid penalty, the return must be in the hands of the Collector of Internal Revenue for the district in which the taxpayer lives, or has his principal place of business, on or before midnight of March 15, 1921. THIRD ANNUAL DOG SHOW APRIL 7-8 The Pinehurst Kennel Club has an nounced that the Third Annual Kennel Club Show will be held on April 7 and 8. Entries close March 21, and it is im portant for all to enter their dogs promptly. From present indications the show will surpass those of former years, both in quality and number of entries. The Club will again have the services, of Mr. George M. Foley as Secretary and Superintendent of the Show. Mr. Foley has a national reputation for handling affairs of this sort, and his. presence not only lends prestige and dig nity to the show, but assures the success of the undertaking. At the 1020 Show Pointers, English Setters and West Highland White Ter riers made five championship points. These breeds are popular at Pinehurst, and equally good support for them is ex pected this year. Efforts will be made to bring up the entries of Fox Hounds, Irish Setters, Wire-haired Pointing Grif fons, Cocker Spaniels, Chow Chows, Aire dale Terriers Fox Terriers, Pomeranians and Pekingese to the number, required for five championship points. PROFESSIONAL'S TOURNA MENT TO BE PLAYED ON THURSDAY INCOME TAX FACTS YOU SHOULD KNOW Births, deaths, and marriages during the year 1920 affect materially income tax returns for that year. Millions of babies were added to fam ily circles, each of whom brings an ex emption of $200 in the parents' income tax return. Widows and widowers who lost their husbands or wives during the year are especially affected. They are single for the purposes of the income tax law and are granted only an exemption of $1,000, unless the head of a family. Persons who were divorced or sepa rated by mutual agreement during the year also must consider themselves as single persons. The status of the taxpayer on Decem ber 31, 1020, determines the amount of the exemptions. If on that day the tax payer was married and living with wifn or husband, claim may be made for the $2,000 exemption. If single, or married and not living with wife or husband on December 31, the exemption is only $1,000. Persons who reached majority during the year and whose earnings for that period amounted to $1,000 or more, or $2,000 or more, according to their mar tial status, must file a return and pay a tax on their net income in excess of those amounts. On account of the burning of the Bon Air hotel at Augusta, the open tourna ment scheduled for that place has been called off and a number of the profes sionals will gather' at Pinehurst and en gage in an open tournament here on Thursday of this week. A number of the first-rate men are already on hand, and have been traveling at a fast clip over the local courses in preparation for the match. The list includes: Charles Iloffner, George McLean, Charles Moth ersele, Emmet French, Pat Doyle, George Fotheringham, John Peacock, Walter Howe, Willie Wilson, Harold and Lionel Calloway Ernest Silva and Joe Capello. MRS. EDWARD V. H. WILKIE Wins Rifle Contest The prize for the best score made in last week's rille shooting contest foi women at the Gun Club was won by Mrs. Edward V. II. Wilkie of Lans.lowne, Pa., with a score of 136 out of a possible 150 points. Mrs. Victor Frey of Philadel phia, Avon second prize and was followed by Miss V. Ilolzderber of New York, 120. LADIES SCORE 88 In preparation for the Women 's St. Val entine 's tournament, which started on Tuesday, Mrs. Dorothy Campbell Hurd and Mrs. John D. Chapman both went over the No. 1 course on Monday in 88. Both ladies registered three's on the difficult eighteenth hole. Mr. Chapman was 77 and George Fotheringham 73 in the same round.
The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 10, 1921, edition 1
6
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