The Oldest Sandhills Publication Daily Except Monday During the Winter Season volume 44 NUMBER 58 Price 3 Cents THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK, PINEHURST, N. C. SUNDAY, JANUARY 21, 1940 jd CROWD expected If OPENING GAME OF POLO CLUBS TODAY Most is for Cowl Weather, as rn Sport Again Takes its Pl8te „„ Sandhills Competition Program Eagerly awaited by polo fol lowers, the formal opening game in What is to be a revival series, Wween Sandhill Polo Club and 4 Blind Brook team, takes place on No. 2 field at Pinehurst this afternoon, starting at 2:30 p. n;. Expectations are that “auto mobile row" at the game will stretch a long way around the field, for there is every indication that the weather will favor the event, which has been twice post poned. Earl Shaw and Merrill .Fink, who have ventured to revive the Ipony pastime at considerable ex penditure of money and time, de serve the most thorough-going support of all the public. When polo was a vogue in Pinehurst in past days the sport gained wide publicity for the Sandhills, the press services carrying re ports of the games, and sports editors playing up the contests in their columns. And this can all happen again. So it behooves sports fans, and Sandhill folks in general, to get tack of the polo clubs by attend ing the matches, and help in again making the games a big at traction for the resort section. It^ means not only added sport of an extremely spectacular and exciting type, but it also means added business. Intensive workouts over al most a month have, sharpened both riders and mounts, and the opening skirmish is sure to find the players out for individual glory, and riding and hitting all they know. All the players today are ex perienced mallet wielders, and the spectators can be assured of an evenIy balanced and fast exhibi tion. The refereeing will be done yCol. George P. Hawes, who is Jvei'y capable official, with W. ' EaEer acting as timekeeper. The lineups: Wind Brook Club jjen*Y Gibson Barnard Jr. bred Wihnshurst M«rill Fink Captain Dave Erskine Sandhills Polo Club ^ & Green ^ R. Green Eai'l Shaw Captain Paul Miller Wain Rejects U. S. ^ Removal Protest States Gainst the removal of :«n. 20—(/P)—Flat leMmo. 1T , Protest ' U United Am • Rriti^an niai'* for censorship the lftas clear°Vei-lU'1'n^ said there 'Zeri traffi e'•^ nce an or&an" t\veen pC in contraband, be ie u. §eiman sympathizers" in Action u' and German.y- The re gion tbaf38 on the conten %t^dearbiel!im‘ent haS the ;e cert • n'ernational law to fail bags 7 that ocean goin£ Wd. ° Jl°t contain contra c°lri gu-, cy an(l not quite so ^°ndy. a^‘ Monday partly Polo Game Today in Pinehurst PINEHURST SCOREBOARQ ■ by ROBERT E. HARLOW POLO TODAY See you all at the polo game. Polo will be played today according to the predictions of the weatherman, for it will be clear and the temperature will be rising. Earl Shaw and Merrill Fink desrve the support of the Sand hills today when they bring the sport back to Pinehurst. We may expect some good contests in Pinehurst this season provided proper support is given. Remember the hour. It is 2:30 p. m._ today. SANDHILLS GOLF LEAGUE The amateur-professional tournament, second on the program of the Sandhills league, will be played on Tuesday. The Tin Whistle Club, which furnishes amateur partners for a number of the profes sionals will be engaged in their own weekly tournament, postponed from Saturday, on Monday, and according to the regulations of the league, this action moves the amateur-pro forward one day. The first event of the amateur-pro league was a big success. Out of a possible 30 pairs in the opening event at Pine Needles, 28 played. It is expected that on Tuesday a full roster will play over the Mid Pines course. The amateur-professional league should be given every bit of support possible from every club in the Sandhills. It will lead to some entertaining and interesting competitions. NAMES DESERVE RESPECT There are rumors that the horse show to be put on in Southern Pines on February 23 at the Southern Pines Country Club will be called the Southern Pines Horse Show. This is right and proper*. Pinehurst horsemen will unquestionably support it. Junebug and Bill Tate will win thpir share of the jumps, without a question, and will probably provide one of the best “acts” in the show. At least these boys are in sufficient demand to indicate they are one of the best horse acts in this section. Eyery sportsman should support every worthwhile event in the Sandhills, regardless of where it is held, or the name by which it is called. i ( And by the same token, events which have been associated with Pinehurst should retain the Pinehurst name. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS At a meeting in Chapel Hill Thursday, attended by Associated Press franchise holders in North Carolina, Scoreboard represented the Pinehurst Outlook, recognized as the tiniest daily newspaper in America having both an Associated Press franchise bringing in news via wire and an engraving plant. As far as the Associated Press is concerned the Pinehurst Out look is entitled to the same protection on news breaks as the New York Times, or any other of its 1,400 clients. It cost the A. P. $5,000 per day to bring in the European war news -during the first month of the war. Since then radio short wave, censorship and cable saving methods have reduced the cost more than half, but the bill is still a large one. The A. P. has 170 staff correspondents covering the European war/ besides adequate staffs in the Orient. Gathering the news of the world is only one phase of the activity of the A. P. In the New York laboratories, methods are being devel oped for transportation of news, and photographs by new machines which will astound the world when made public. Sending 1500 words a minute around the world is one of the developments. War Briefs By the Associated Press BIGGEST WAR BUDGET Italy today bulwarked her oft proclaimed determination to be ready for all eventualities in Eu rope with her largest military budget since the World War. The cabinet approved the ex penditure of aboyt $542,000,000 for military purposes in the fis cal year beginning July 1, $128, 000,000 more than the sum or iginally allotted for the current fiscal period. CONFISCATE PROPERTY In Berlin the official Law Ga zette has announced that Field Marshal Gen. Hermann Wilhelm Goering, supreme war economic authority, had decreed confisca tion of the entire property of the former Polish state. 17 NATIONS LOSE SHIPS NEW YORK, Jan. 20—Seven teen nations, 12 of them not in volved in the two wars raging in Europe, have lost a total of 312 ships since England declared war on Germany last Sept. 3. -ft-• PINE DODGERS The Pine Dodgers will hold their weekly competition ^ Tues day at the Southern Pifieg Coun| try Club in the form of a match play against par tournament. WHAT TO DO AND SEE Today •Polo game at No. 2 field this afternoon. Public invited. Putting tournament at Pine Needles this afternoon. Buffet supper at Holly Inn tonight. AT THE THEATRES - Pinehurst - Today and Monday at 8:30 matinee Monday at 3:00, “Re member the Night,” with Bar bara Stanwyck. - Southern Pines - Tomorrow and Tuesday at 8:15 matinee Tuesday at 3:00, “The Hunchback of Notre Dame,” with Charles Laughton and Maureen O’Hara. - Aberdeen Theatre - Tomorrow at 7:15 and 9:00, “TKe Return of Dr. X.” The Forum Monday evening at the Country Club, at which ]}r? Walter H. Judd will speak