Newspapers / The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, … / Dec. 5, 1939, edition 1 / Page 4
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' .. / SOUTHERN PINES By Jerry V. Healy Staying at the Pine Cone Lodge for a few days are Mrs. Edwina Glenn Garfield and "Miss Dora F. Welti of Boston, Mass. Mr. and Mrs. Emmet French entertained at dinner recently at their home on Grover Road, for Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Watson, Mr. and Mrs. Winthrop Williams, ' Mr. and Mrs. George Moore and Mr. J..T. Hunter. * * * ♦ Recent arrivals at the High land Pines Inn include Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Cushman of Bay Shore, N. Yy Mr. a;id Mrs. C. E. Collett of Washington, D. C., Mrs. J. William Clark and Miss Nina B. Tucker of Bernardsville, N. J., Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Windatt of Bound Brook, N. J., Charles E. I^arnes . of Boston, Mass., and Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Davis of Welcome, Va. * * * Emmet G. Holdeil, proficient wielder of wood and niblick, won the weekend medal play handi cap tournament held by the Sand pipers at the Southern Pines Country Club with a score of * 83-10—73. Three entries tied for second, R. T. Mills with a score of 96-22—74; Dr. Greer Stutz, 88-14—74 and Johnny Schoonmaker, 76-2—74. * * * ' An item of good news. Word has been received that Mr. and Mrs. Hugh J. Betterly will re turn tonight from Philadelphia, where ^hey have been confined to the Frankford Hospital for sev eral weeks as result of an auto mobile accident. * * * The new ping pong table at the Southern Pines Country Club, a gift of the Pine Dodgers and Sandpipers, received its bap tism of fire recently when,Dick Suggs, major-domo of the club office, Emmet fcolden, pre-emin ent golfer and Johnny Schoon maker, par shooting assistant of Roy Grinnell, pounded an elusive white celluloid ball over its shin ing surface. An added attraction to the club’s indoor pastime fa cilities on a rainy day. * * * The weekly tournament of the Pine Dodgers will be played to day over the Southern Pines Country Club course. Seventeen players entered this match play against bogey event. Perhaps Mrs. Edna Hayes had heard of people who were first in line at the World Series, first to cross new bridges, or first to fly across the Atlantic. Anyway Mrs. Hayes broke into-print ves ‘ terday morning when she ap peared as the first customer at i r, MONTESANTI TAILORING — CLEANING Daily Call and Delivery in Pinehurst Dial 5541 So. Pines the opening1 of Jack’s Grill in its new location in the Stevens building. * * *f Weekending at the Dogwood were Mr. and Mrs. WScott Manley, Elmira, N. V., Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Jones of Hammonds port, N. Y., Mrs. Charles I. Pres cott of Maplewood, N. J., and Mr. and Mrs. George Mellor of Stoneham, Mass. * * * Recent > arrivals at the High land Lodge include Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Chesney of Washington, D. C., Mr. and Mrs.* M. .F. Dallard Jr. and family of Albany, N. Y., M!rs. H. Charles MJiller, Cedar Villa, Richmond, S. I. and Miss Betty Miller; Mrs. A. L. Brink ley of Norfolk, Va., Mrs. Mary Boothe Walker of Portsmouth, Va., and Mrs. Walker Francis of Atlanta, Ga. * * * The last of the Southern Pines hotels to open, the Southland be gan its 1939-40 season with the registering yesterday of three former guests who are here for the season, Miss Elsie W. Kor mann, Miss Eloise C. Church and Miss Josephine McClennen of Caldwell, N. J. * * * In the second of a series of duplicate bridge tournaments, played at the Pine Needles Club on Saturday evening, Dr. and Mrs. Beaman Douglass of New York City were again winners as North and South players on team number three, dividing the honors with A. J. McKenna of New York and Leslie M. Brown of Maplewood, N. J., East and West players on team number one. s * * * Mr. and Mrs. George Lauder IH of Greenwich, Conn., stopped at the Pine Needles for the week end on their return from a trip to Florida where they went in search of a boat to charter for a winter of cruising and fishing off the Keys. Mr. and Mrs. Lau der left Greenwich with the in tention of completing the tran saction in Maryland, but were not successful in their quest un til they had reached Daytona Beach. Mrs. Lauder is the sis ter of Mrs. Gene Tunney, who winters at Hobe Sound. * * * Among the visiting golfers on the Pine Needles course over the weekend were Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Van Ness of Bronxville, N. Y., Dr. and Mrs. M. L. Pullen, M. A. Lalley, of New York City; F. Bachelor and E. P. Schroyer of Drexel Hill, Pa., and D. S. Fred rick of Philadelphia. * j * * Mrs, Charles Hamilton Mad dox and Miss Evelyn Maddox of Washington, D. C., and Newport are visiting Mrs. Maddox’ father, S. Y. Ramage of Oil City at the Pine Needles. Other arrivals there include Mr. and Mrs. James A. Holladay, Niagara Falls, N. Y., Mr. and Mrs. George W. Smith, Boston, Mass., and Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Woodhaus, Men tha, Mich. Advertise in* The Outlook HENRY B. LOOMIS Of NEW HAVEN DIES ON WAV TO PINEHURST Henry B. Loomis, of New Ha ven, Conn., one of the seven sur viving members of the class of ’75 at Yale University, died of heart disease Saturday at a New York hotel where he had stopped on his way from. New Haven t,o Pinehurst. He was ex pected to arrive -over the week end at the Carolina Hotel, where he had been a guest for a num ber of years with Mrs. Loomis. Mr. Loomis, who was 86 years old, was born in Tallmadge, Ohio. His father, the late Elias Loomis, was professor of natural history and astronomy at Yale from 1860 to 1899. Mr. Loomis was admitted to the California bar in 1881 and, in 1890, to prac tice before the Supreme Court of the United States. He estab lished the Henry Bradford Loo mis Fellowship in chemistry at Yale and, with his brother, Pro fessor Francis E. Loomis, estab lished the Francis Englesby Fel lowship in Physics. Mr. and Mrs. Loomis acquired a number of friends during their visits to Pinehurst. One of their hobbies, receiving considerable note, was a “sunshine calendar,” on which the 12 months of the year were represented with col ored discs denoting the weather. The elderly couple kept this daily calendar for a number of years. It was considered a treasure in their old age and proved a fas cinating pastime for them and for their many friends. HITLER S DOWNFALL (Continued from j page one) tiny. What we sow, we reap. There is a cause for every effect. Thought is the most potent force alive in this world today. War lords and dictators through their power of thought can build pow erful war machinesbut these same war machines generally turn around and eliminate the originator,” Professor Douglas stated in an interview yesterday. There will very likely be some sort of a revolution in Germany during which Hitler will lose his power, according to; Douglas’ be lief. ■ . Regarding Stalin, Prof. Doug las asserted that unless he stops now, in the event Russia suffers a severe defeat on the battle front, there will very likely be a revolution in progress within her borders. This may not come for some time yet, he added, “but the prediction is that Hitler and Stalin, or perhaps I should say Germany and Russia will be tear ing at each other’s throats.” “Just as Hitler timed himself into a zero hour when his arm ies invaded Poland, just so did. Stalin, when he invaded Finland/’ ] according to the astrologer, who is planning to stay in the Sand hills a few days while organiz ing^ an astrology lecture pro gram here. According to the many letters of appreciation which are in his possession, Prof. Douglas is well qualified to lecture on the sub ject of Astrology. During the past ten years he has entertained thousands of people through his lectures and individual analyses in such leading hotels as the Fla mingo, Lincoln, Nautilus, Tatem, Good and Ron^y-Plaza, of Miami Beach, a number of leading ho tels at Virginia Beach, The Shoreham in Washington, D. C. and numerous others 'from Maine to Miami. A few of the many leading theatres at which Prof. Douglas has appeared include the Florida theatre, St. Peters burg and the Olympia at Miami. A “bumper” crop of game fish eggs is being “harvested” in Wy oming this year. The state game and fish department expects to gather 12,500,000. The eggs are hatched in state fish hatcheries and the fish are released in Wy oming lalces and streams. HRS. PAGE REPEATS , ACE ON SAME HOLE, WITH SAME PLAYERS (Special to the Outlook) CHAPEL HILL, Dec. 4—His tory might not repeat, but Es telle Lawson Page does. About a year ago Mrs. Page scored a hole-in-one on the ninth hole of the Chapel Hill course, j Yesterday afternoon, using the same club (a no. 8 iron) on the saipe hole, and in the same four some as a year ago, she got an other ace. Her husband, Julius A. Page, Jr., and Coaches Johnny Vaught and Chuck Errickson of the Uni versity of North Carolina staff, were in the foursome. Mr. Page and Errickson had birdie 2’s while poor Coach Vaught could do no better than a par 3 on the 87 yard hole. - Mrs. Page’s drive hit on the front of the green, bounced once and snugly fell into the waiting cup, in almost the same manner as the one last year. OYSTER BAR AT HOTEL “Just supposin’’ it was a dark, rainy night and you found your self outside a small Inn whence came the gleam of soft light and the strong flicker of a fireplace glow. And that the ripple of the lake below was the wash of, let’s say, Long Island Sound. Then a whiff of steaming oysters. Per chance it would be that you were gazing into a crystal ball? No, say we—the Crystal Lake Hotel at Lakeview, N. C. A spot where table talk is of the things one found to do during the day, from golf on nearby links to hunting over the 1800 acre preserve owned and leased by the man agement. And the management, Mr. Ted Barrow and his son, Ted Jr., are adding to the cause of good livinjg an oyster bar where this shell-fish can be ob tained in any way, shape or manner. <D naval bases 0 ICE FREE PORTS 0 ICE LOCKED PORTS <§> RUSSIAN BASES V t NARVIK .< % MURMANSK NORWA Army: 140,000 ^ Navy: 31,000 tons Population: 2,800,000 Area: 124,556 sq. miles Industries: paper and pulp, machineryand metals, textile's,, wood, fishing, mining. BERGEN I OSLO 's# SWEDEN \ Army: 630,000 1 Navy: 95,000 tons | Population: 6,250,000 Area: 173,157 sq. milesl Industries: wood prod-| ucts, pulp and paper,| mining, porcelain, tex tiles. V JTOCKHOpd^j FINLAND Army: 600,000 Navy* 69 ships Population: 3,364,000 Area; 147,761 sq. miles Industries: machinery, textiles, wood products, paper and pulp, leather, chemicals. [LENINGRAD ESTONIA" OES1 ifflfcOPENHAGEN! DENMARK Army: 100,000 >1 Navy: 13,500 tons * Population: 3,700,000 Area: 16,575 sq. miles Industries: livestock, machinery, fishing, but ter. KARLSKRONA LATVIA LITHUANIA**,,#’-* MEMEL” DANZIG *KOENIGSBERG, GERMANY /I U.S.S.R. (Russ'3) Army: 14,000,000 Navy: 323' ^ Population: 165,000,000 fuel: 8,144,228 sq- J1*®, (without gains from Po j Industries: tiffbe. leather, livestock, chemicals, metals, coal, chinery. _ Silhouetted soldiers indicate rela tive / sizes of the armies in the path of Russia's westward march. The march started with Poland, continued when Russia won “mu s '*■ * A BE R D E E N By Mrs. William Carter, Jr. Tel Aberdeen 995l Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Pleas ants, Miss Anne Pleasants, Mrs. I. A. Thompson and little Jimmy Johnson visited Mr. and Mrs. Murdock M. Johnson in Camden, S. C., Sunday. Mr. Johnson, who has been very ill for sometime, is slowly improving. * * ♦ Miss Mary Shaw Rasser of Sanford spent several days last week as a guest of Miss Lida Duke Blue. * * * Miss Mildred Campbell, mem ber of the faculty of Lincolnton schools, spent the holiday week end with her mother, Mrs. Mary Campbell. * * * j; Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Herring had as recent guests Mr. and Mrs. H. M. King of St. Paul and Mrs. Emma Herring of Lumber ton. • * ¥ * Mr. and Mrs. Bill Huntley of Chapel Hill spent Sunday visit ing Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Huntley. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Freeman this weekend include Mr. and Mrs. Smith of Eliza bethtown and Mr. and Mrs. Ira Freeman of Hamlet. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Victor C. Tyler and son Henry Park and Miss Lena Stewart spent last Friday in Charlotte. v * * * Miss Kathryn Charles, student at Flora Macdonald College in Red Springs, spent Thanksgiv ing and the weekend with her •'mother, Mrs. G. A. Charles. * * * Miss Lillian Wells, Presbyterian missionary stationed at Hawaian, China, was a guest several days last week in the home of Mrs. Victor Tyler. Miss Wells is lec turing throughout this section, ^nd will speak at the Bethesda j j tual assistance" pacts with Esto nia, Latvia and Lithuania, mak ing these countries virtual Soviet protectorates. Note that if Rus sia makes Finland knuckle down, Presbyterian Church here Sunday night. ten Miss Janette Leach, D. Martin, Miss Louise and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph and children motored to n ^ Sunday to take Mrs. Sadie L ^ who will Remain a guest f daughter, Mrs. Neill Graha° ^ sometime. ^ Miss Charlotte H home Sunday night fron^Gr^ boro, where she spent the ^ end with Miss Mar Margar* Burney and Miss Kathvvn w ' Mrs. Glenn Caviness has turned to her home here # spending a few days with l sister, Miss Jeanne EatehellJ* Raleigh. * * * Mrs. Annie B. Faircloth\ returned to Raleigh after hav ing completed her work am0« the blind here for this month ? ABERDEEN Shoe Rebuilders Expert Repair Work Guaranteed Aberdeen Hotel Bldg. Cleaners and Pressers to the Sandhills SOUTHERN PINES Phone 5651 she will gain an ice-free the far north and more bas# the Baltic. Some authorities she wants at least e00110 Domination of Sweden.
The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, N.C.)
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Dec. 5, 1939, edition 1
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