»I VOLUME 43, NUMBER THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK, PINEHURST, N. C. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1939 Pinehurst Plans Observance Of Two Thanksgiving Dates Compromise in Controversy Means Two Programs to Enliven Visit of Guests gymkhana planned Thanksgiving will have a "double date” at Pinehurst, with the official community recog nition of both of,' the much-dis cussed holiday periods this year. Various attractions planned for entertainment of guests are beingf the holiday given the multiply-by-two treatment. One of the sports events sche duled is an equestrian gymkhana which will be held in the riding ring of the Carolina Hotel on the first holiday period,. November 23. The following Thursday ' there will be a fox hunt under the direction of Lloyd Tate, with six couples of the Carolina Hounds in the chase. Everyone is invited to participate in the dash for the brush. Highlight of the gymkhana is an appropriate Thirkey Race in which a group pf ladies of the leash will race the gobbling bird around the ring for the ribbon prizes. Feathers, of course, are expected to fly in the race. There will also be two jumping events, a potato race and several other obstacle events, all handled with the inimitable technique of gymk hana master Tate. The putting tournament will be held Nov. 25. All of the Pinehurst hotels- will also be keeping a “double date,” with the traditional turkey din ner and other festivities taking place on both Thursdays. Thus, our resort community, by taking a middle course in the 1939 Thanksgiving issue, which has become a political football throughout the various capitals of the nation, has. solved the problem by keeping both camps happy through this “mutual aid” Pact. Furthermore, if present in dications have anything to do with the subject, Pinehurst’s 1939 extended Thanksgiving hol iday should be gayer and bigger than ever before. The Pinehurst Gun Club, now situated near the Pinehurst Ken neJs> under the management of Glen Davis, is planning a turkey shoot the day preceding each Thanksgiving date, November 22 and November 29. Six heavy, healthy birds will be up as prizes each of the festive dates. Competition will be in skeet, traPs, shot guqp rifle and revolver classes. The gblf program consists of three scheduled tournaments, thie 19th annual Carolina Touma Dlent for Women, November 28, * Tin Whistles contest, a Silver °iis tourney and a putting tour-) ^toent for women. The Tin histles’ will be a par-bogey contest, all four partners, November 25, the Silver Foils a Jjedal piay afTajr> scheduled for November 22. COTTON EXECUTIVE DIES GREENVILLE, S. C., Nov. 11 A. P.—Thomas ,/M. Mar !jant> president of the i^ctor on&ghan company and former resident of the American Cot-' 11 Manufacturers Association ^ of a heart attack today, °rtly after attending the eroson-Wake Forest football &me. i Three Players Hole Their Tee Strokes Three holes-in-one have been scored at The ? Pinehurst Country Club since the open ing of the season. On October 26th G. S. Johnson, Chatta nooga accomplished the most difficult ace in town, the num ber five hole on the number three course. Mr. Johnson was playing in the Carolina Yarn Association ^tournament. On November 5, in the one day tournament of the Caro linas Golf Association, L. L. Taylor of Rutherfordton, N. C., holed his 5 tee shot at the ninth hole on number two. Mr. Taylor is an experienced hand at making holes-in-one, hav ing made three previous to his Pinehurst bull’s eye. Yesterday Frank L u i c k, who is here with a group of Milwaukee business men reg istered his first hole in one when Jie hit a spoon shot into the cup at the seventeenth hole on number two course. Mr. Luick has been visiting Pinehurst for 13 years and' estimates he has played 182 rounds of golf here. TIN WHISTLES CLUB CONDUCTS BEST BALL OF FAIR TOURNAMENT E. -S. Blodgett, H* J. Blue, F. C. Robertson and W. A. Rupp won the best ball of pair of all four partners tournament of the Tin Whistle club yesterday "when they finished 12 up on par over the number three course. Aided by handicap strokes the members of this partnership were better than par on five holes on the first nine and on eight of the incoming nine, On only one hole, the eighth, did par hold firm against the attack of this dev astating foursome. * The net score: Out 344 323 353—30 In , 333 233 243—26—56 Mr. Rupp of Buffalo, here with considerable determination i n connection with his participation in the Pinehurst Seniors* cham pionship this week, indicated that he is very much on his game. He contributed a number of brilliant holes to the cause, as did Mr. Robertson. At the" fourth Mr. Robertson holed a three. Mr. Rupp had natural birdies at the seventh, tenth and sixteenth. Mr. Blodgett drove t|ie green at the fifth. There was a tie for, second be tween teams composed of Donald J. Ross, S. A. Strickland', R. H. Webber, C. B. Van Dusen and W. B. Calkins, R. :S. Farr, E. C. Keating, H. F. Seawell. Each finished ten up.| There were 44 entries. Other results: G. T. Dunlap, Jr., G. T. Dun lap, Sr., Frank Kilmer, R. S. Tufts—£ up.v Dr. E. M. Medlin, H. S. Pear son, E. C. Stevens, C. I.*W5l: liams—6 up, ' C. B. S. Marr, E. D. Thomson, (Continued on page four) SWEDISH ENVOY IS PINEHURST VISITOR MR. AND MRS. FOLKE WENNERBERG Charge dAffaires is Guest at Holly Inn; Believes Sweden Will Remain Neutral In War Mr. Folke Wennerberg, Charge d’ Affaires of the Swedish Em bassy, and Mrs. Wennerberg will be guests at the Holly Inn dur ing the week. Mr. and' Mrs. Wennerberg motored here from Washington by way of the Sky line Drive, spending the weekend in Asheville and arriving here last Monday. Mr. Wennerberg commented on the beauty of our Blue Ridge mountains, especially at this sea son, and expressed interest in the activity and prosperity of North Carolina’s Piedmont towns. When asked his views of his country’s precarious position in the present foreign situation, Mr. Wennerberg stated that in asmuch as Sweden had been a neutral country for over one hundred and twenty-five years, he held every hope thap she would be able to remain so dur ing the present war. The Wennerbergs will return to Washington at the end of their I visit which is Mr. Wennerberg’s first vacation of the year, due to the pressure of affairs in the '’State Department. DlNEHURST SCOREBOARD • by ROBERT E. HARLOW Reunion in Pinehurst. 1 Notes from Scoreboard’s diary, summer of 1939. May 22—Ted Turner, Pine Needles and Pine Valley pro led the Philadelphia field in the sectional qualifying round for the open championship. He was 141 over Overbrook and St. Davids. Papers reported, "terrific thunderbolts” during the play. Remember to write Ted a postal card. May 27—At Myers Park in Charlotte, Richard S. Tufts made the finals of the Carolinas state amateur golf championship. Bobby Dunkelberger was the winner. The radio became blurred by static and I failed to get the final score. Must remember to ask Dick when I get back. He did well to reach ^the finals. June 6—Dick Chapman met the Duke of Windsor and the Duke was smoking a com cob pipe on| the porch of the golf club at St. Germain. Dick won the French! amateur title. He beat a chap, Jacques Leglise, 5 and 4, ip the final round. I would have cabled Dick but was short this day. June 6-—Do not forget to write a story about this one when you return to Pinehurst. Mrs. Julian Bishop won first prize in the Cat Cay Tuna fishing competition for women, held in the Bahamas. Mrs. Bishop landed a 548 pound fish. Mrs. John Weeks was second. Most remarkable thing about it was that Mrs. Bishop was practically a novice at tuna fishing. This ought to be gobd for photos and a real feature story next winter. See John Weeks about this one Five hundred and forty eight pounds. Must be five times Mrs. Bishop’s weight. t June 7—Tin Whistler Bill Rupp won low gross in Class D in the United States Seniors’ championship at Apawamis. Bill scored 162. 0. W. Deibel, present holder of the Pinehurst Seniors’ title, won low gross in Class C with 163. Many Tin Whistle members pfayed. June 12—The bluest day of the summer. Went to the Aque duct Race Track full of ambition to win some money without work ing for it. By the time the last race was called up I had lost so (Continued on page four) Village Is Formulating Program Of Diversified Entertainment Hies to Gold Mine In South America Forbes Wilson, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Wilson, will start tonight to fly to his re sponsible position in Medelin Colombia, where he is general superintendent of the Tim mons - O c h a 1 i Corporation, gold miners of South America. A graduate in mining en gineering from Yale Univer sity, Mr. Wilson has success fully developed some of the most valuable holdings of Timmons - iOchali Corporation. During a short visit in, Pinehurst, Forbes visited his many friends and played golf. He had only played two rounds in two years before arriving here and while his terrific tee shot is still in his bag, it has lost some of its former direction. I The young engineer plans to leave for Miami1 tonight where he will board the Am erican Clipper for South Am~ erica. The filial hop will be via a land plane to Medelin. I - : I HOMERS. CUMMINGS AND GOLFING FRIENDS HOLD ANNUAL REUNION Homer S. Cummings, recently retired Attorney General of the United States and a large* party of golfing friends from various parts of the country, are now at The Carolina for their 14th an nual Pinehurst reunion. The group, Numbering 40, the largest of all th4 Pinehurst get-togeth ers, is jcdmprised of men who have b£en associated with Mr. Cummings in business, politics and : splitting the fairways over a long period of years. On each | of these visits, the “gang,” as the former U. S. Attorney calls them, stage a golf tourney of their own. This is allegedly of a medal play nature, under a high ly • complicated handicap system, on which, as several of the group testify, even the committe does not quite completely “sustain the objection.” . The latest tournament was held yesterday over the No. 3 course. Ilobert Fleming, presi dent of the Riggs Bank of Wash ington, and1 Charles D. Lockwood, Stamford jurist, carding net 64, tied for first prize in the con test, Cummings placing third with a net 65. Incidentally, Mr. Cummings had a gross 81, one of the best rounds of his golfing career. Clarence W. Bell, pres ident of the First National Bank of Stamford, Conn., was fourth with a net 68. Fifth place re sulted in a tie between Stephen Early, President Roosevelt’s sec retary and Raymond E. Hackett, Stamford attorney and' partner of Mr. Cummings.-' Early and Hackett carded a net 69. j Mich ael A. Morrissey of Rye, N. Y., president of the Americaii News Co., and John Drye, New York attorney tied for seventh with net 71. I j today’s program will include a consolation tournament for (Continued jon page three) I Miss Mildred Hall Mason of Boston Appointed to Task of Arranging Group Gatherings in Pinehurst CANVASS CONDUCTED As an added attraction to its re sort life, Pinehurst is instituting an extensive entertainment pro gram for this and coming seasons. The need for a diversified pro gram has long been felt and it is hoped that this season will find it fulfilled. Miss Mildred j Hall Mason of Boston, M^ss., has been appointed the task of discovering the type of entertainment most desired. From a partial canvass, which she has made thus far, it appears that a revival of the former for ums should meet with the great est popular appeal. Tentatively, these forums will include current events, exploration and discovery, economics, problems of modern so ciety and a variety of other topics of timely and absorbing interest! If sufficient interest is shown, a debate groupi will be formed, whose forensics may be indulged iii on other forum evenings. - -Next- in-favor is the interest in the creating of a garden group whose speakers would include au thorities on local plants and shrub bery from both Carolinas. Also special attention will be given to . the art of arranging cut flowers. As a finale for the garden group, the idea of a Spring Flower Show has met with enthusiastic re sponse. Third in local interest is a mus ical program. A series of morn ing get-togethers in various homes or at the hotels, with both local and imported -talent presenting various trends in music, will be offered. Following this, and spon sored by the initial groups,'would be several musical evenings with outstanding artists. “Information, Please” (in a Pinehurst version), spelling bees and hobby lobbies, square dances and community singing will be of fered for additional fun after some of the regularly scheduled Pine hurst events. 1 An amateur dramatic movement1 has also been suggested as a pos sibility. As special features many have voiced the desire to bijing here to Pinehurst such fine enter tainment as is offered by The Play-Makers, the one-woman the atre of Cornelia Otis .Skinner or Ruth Draper, and one or more of the outstanding negro musical or ganizations, such as that of the Hampton Institute. Many of these have already met with favor at previous performances in Pine hurst. I FOOTBALL RESULTS Duke 20—V. M. I. 7 North Carolina! 32—Davidson 0 ^ Clemson 20—Wake Forest 7 Harvard 15—Army 0 Cornell 14—Colgate 12 i Iowa 7—Notre Dame 6 ^ V V'". Penn State 10—Penn 0 n Pittsburgh 6—Carnegie Tech 0 Fordham 13—Indian 0 Yale 14—Brown 14 WEATHER ^Mostly cloudy Sunday, some what cooler. T