The Oldest Sandhills Publication Daily Except Monday Dufing the WiritensSeason VOLUME 44, NUMBER 59 Price 3 Cents THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK, PINEHURST, N. C. TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1940 t! ■ ■ at . '-s - - sit KJRD-MARR TEAM’S 69 BIS TIN WHISTLES SELECTED drive tilt Viri«s Finish Two Up on P«P; WO Pairs Tied for Second with One lTP Score in Foursome Competition ' W. H. B. Ward and C. B. S. Man are getting to be among the most feared golfers of the Tin Whistle Club. Yesterday they ’won the foursome, match play against par, selected drives event when they finished two up on par. Sitting in the Tin Whistle room, neither Mr. Marr nor Mr. Ward wanted to take credit for the victory. Other members who knew something about the round played by the victors 'ex plained that on two occasions Mr. Marr had holed out from great distances, and that Mr. Ward performed a similar coup on the second. The winners’ card: Out 434 524 543—34 In 545 333 444—35—69 In a tie for second place were W. M. Ailing and W. T. McCul lough and J. R. Bowker and Rev. Dr. T. A. Cheatham. These pairs were one up on par. (Continued on page four) POLO GAME DRAWS RECORD CROWD TO EXCITING SKIRMISH Polo returned to Pinehurst with a booming success Sunday after noon, after an absence of seven seasons. The game, betwen the Sand hills Club and the Blind Brook Club, really lived up to prom ises. It was a thriller, and the crowd was gratifying. The No. 2 field was crowded with limou sines. Several Pinehurst residents fa miliar with the Pinehurst polo of days gone by said that the crowd was larger than any of the past. The Sandhill team, composed of R. B. Green, B. R. Brown, Earl Shaw and Captain Paul Miller °f Fort Bragg, defeated the Blind Brook foursome, composed °f Fred Wilmshurst, Henry Gib-, Son Barnard, U. N. C. star’ >Mer ril1 Fink of Rye, N. Y. and Cap lain Dave Erskine of Fort Bragg. The final score was 6-5. With ^ seconds to go in the findl ehukker, Captain Miller, No. 4 ’’aan for the Sandhill team, was 10Wn for a spill as he tried to Pul1 UP nTter successfully check 'n§ a goal for Blind Brook on the ar end. The throw knocked Mil ei oui- Tor several minutes. He ec°^eied and called for his pony, nsisting on finishing the game. Captain \\. V. Slocock and Col e Geoi-ge P. Hawes Jr. were Ihe referees. - P°Lo COACH HUF CAMDEX, s. C., Jan. c„a„,y suffered by Cyril H; in a ttle Camden poll a?n ?a,me *lel e yesterday today as *fr >n? if* '<*e a week look fromr! rtdnison was' thrown tw0 | ls niount in a game between ^°cal teams. Island C°aC^ Came ^ere From Long AUSTRALIAN CHAMPION GOLFER COMING HERE According to an Associated Press cable from Sydney, Au stralia, Jim Ferrier, ranking amateur golfer of Australia, will sail shortly for the United States and will make the North and South open championship, Pinehurst, his first tourna ment start in America. Ferrier has Won the Austral ian amateur title three times and the open there once. In 1936 „he was runner-up for the British amateur title. SECOND TOURNAMENT OF AMATEUR-PRO GOLF LEAGUE IS TODAY i Representatives of Four Clubs in Sandhills Renew Rivalry on Mid Pines Course; 40 Expected to Tee Up Rivalry in the amateur-profes sional golf league will be resumed at the Mid Pines today when rep resentatives of the four clubs in I the Sandhills will play the sec ond in a series of four 18 hole [tournaments. .Ted ^Turner _and. George Dun lap Jr. are leading with a low score of 65 net, scored in the opening meet at the Pine Need les Club when the competition was started last week. It appeared certain last night that a full quota of ten profes sionals and 30 amateurs would start today at iVlid Pines. Turner will be playing with his star amateur partner, Dunlap, and will also have Mat Holman, nationally known basketball coach and F. R. Wilkenson of Toronto. JPinehurst will have a full rep resentation with these profes sionals: Bert Nicolls, Jimmy Ni colls, Harold Callaway, Tom Howe and Purvis Ferree, all hav ing a full quota of amateur part ners. Roy Grinnell and John Schoon maker of Southern Pines will play with their partners of last week and Schoonmaker will add a third partner. Roy Bronsdon, home club pro fessional in today’s amateur-pro, will have three partners. The leaders in the league: Ted Turner and G. T. Dunlap Jr.—65 * Ted Turner and3 G. T. Dunlap Sr.—68 Ted Turner and F. H. Hyde Jr.—68 Harold Callaway and Richard S. Tufts^68 Tom Howe and .Frank Cos grove—69 Johnny Schoonmaker and Gor don Keith—69 Bert Nicolls and James T. Hunter—69 BROWDER GETS 4 YEARS NEW YORK, Jan. 22-r(A»)— Earl Browder, Kansas-born Am erican Communist leader, was convicted of passport fraud in federal court today and sentenced to four years in prison, and fined $2,000. , WEATHER Cloudy, snow in interior and • rain mixed with snow on the coast. Slightly colder Tuesday; Wednesday partly cloudy and continued cold. ^ ■ -—- - HOME OF PROSPERING SANDHILL INDUSTRY Photo by Hemmer Outlook Engraving ANGLOW TWEEDS PLANT ON MIDLAND ROAD MAN ABOUT TOWN by Ivou Koch / “Long Jim” Bames, former British and U. S. open golf cham pion, has returned to Pinehurst after a trip to Sarasota, Florida . . . he said it was too cold down there and that there was much more sun in Pinehurst . . . and we’re not trying to start a resort tong war like that between California and .Florida. * * * We met a fellow yesterday and a discussion arose on the many newspapers in the country which are sponsoring a Finnish Relief Campaign . . . “How about that New York Red sheet, The Daily Worker?” he asked. * * * The fire alarms in the halls and rooms of the Holly Inn blasted away about noon Saturday . . . George Veno of the Pinehurst Fire Department responded with the truck ... it was only a' defective sprinkler system joint in the kitchen section . . . incidentally, -we’ve always wondered (in view of the fact that the fire whistle blows Saturday at the stroke of 12 noon) what would happen if a fire really broke out at 12 noon and the whistle for it blew at the same stroke ... , * * * The five dollars which Mr. and Mrs. William T. McCullough won as a prize for the best Christmas decorations was donated by them to the Galilean Church in Taylortown, a scout reports . . . the church used the five spot to buy new robes for their choir . . . * * * * Interest in Pinehurst polo is on the up . . . the latest note is to the effect that James A. Hanna, Paul Butler and S. A. Healy, all players of the Oakbrook Polo Club, Chicago are expected next month with a number of ponies . . . * * * Merrill Fink, Pinehurst polo player of the Sandhills Club is one of three brothers, all in the game . . . there’s Jack Fink of New York, who has been at it ten years and Wesley Fink, Jr., who’s been playing the exciting game two years . . . Merrill has a ten-year chalkmark on his time too ... ' \ ' Charlie-Picquet was movie host at his Pinehurst Theatre, Friday night and matinee, to all the waitresses and kitchen employees who served the guests at the. annual banquet of the joint Chambers of Commerce of Moore County which took place at the Carolina Friday, January 12 . . . Charlie was chairman of the affair . . . Put down another badminton promoter, Who believes that the game can be made to takf root in the Sandhills . . . F. L. Dupont, who ordered equipment, including racquets, shuttlecocks, presses, covers and nets as added stock to his downtown store . . . the material was ordered from George W. Woods, representative of the R. S. L. Shuttlecock Co., Ltd., wtio was written up in Scoreboard, Outlook column, Friday. ^ * * A fellow named Mack Upchurch over Carthage way says he has held his head under the cover many a cold morning to keep from I seeing his wife fcuild a fire ... we don’t get it, personally, but the Moore County News had a small headline over the item in last week’s issue. > ' > ' (Continued on page four) SAVANT WILL SPEAK ON CAUSES OF WAR Herbert E. Cushman, Ph. D. of Newton, Mass., who spends his winters in Pinehurst play ing in Tin Whistles golf events and friendly games, will be the speaker at the weekly Ki wanis club meeting . at The Holly Inn, Wednesday. Dr. Cushman will discuss war from the standpoint of the man of science. He will point out some most entertaining data concerning the East and West, the Orient and the Occi dent, and the age long strug gle, and will discuss / some fundamental causes of war among the nations'of the Oc cident. WAR BOOSTS MARKET DEMAND FOR TWEEDS MADE IN SANDHILLS Factory Where Anglow Product is Manufactured, on Midland Road, is Family Enterprise With Growing Clientele A native Sandhills industry is coming into its own as a result of the havoc played with world trade by the present European conflict. With World War II cut ting down on the import trade, American woolen buyers are find ing it increasingly difficult to procure imported tweeds^ Amer ican tweed lovers can now look to their native resources, the An glow Tweeds plant on the Mid land Road, being a fine example of the fact that this country can and does produce excellent tweeds. No one is better qualified to speak on the subject than Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Chatfield, owners of Anglow Tweeds Co., for they themselves have proven that the United States need not go out side of its own borders for tweeds as fine in every way as the im ported fabrics. They have proven this so well, in fact, that not only have they created a small but growing market for native hand woven tweeds, but have ac tually sent their tweeds abroad. About five years ago, Mr. and Mrs. Chatfield and their son, Henry, came to the Sandhills from Marion, Mass., having se lected this locality as best suited (Continued on page four) WHAT TO DO AND SEE Today Golf tournament at Mid Pines club today: Second event of Sandhill Amateur-Pro league. Bridge luncheon at Pinehurst Country Club. Keno at the Carolina tonight. AT THE THEATRES - Pinehurst - Tomorrow at 3:00 and 8:30, “The Earl of Chicago,” with Rob ert Montgomery. - Southern Pines - Today at 8:15, matinee at 3:00, “The Hunchback of Notre Dame,” with Charles Laughton and Mau reen O’Hara. - Aberdeen Theatre - Tonight at 7:15 and 9:00, “Hen ry Goes Arizona,” with Frank Morgan. (Continued on page two) AIDING JAPAN IN WAR WILL RECOIL ON U. S. SAYS FORUM SPEAKER Dr. Judd Urges Americans to Boycott Goods from Nippon; Sees Country Become Our Greatest Rival in World Trade That the United States is cut ting its own throat by aiding Ja pan in her war with China, was declared by Dr. Walter H. Judd in his speech before a good sized audience of Forum listeners last night. Dr. Judd, who has worked as an American surgeon in China for over ten years, spoke from an eye-witness viewpoint when he described the crucial Chinese Japanese situation.1 He made three main points in his address, stressing first that the conflict in the East is being conducted today in a way which makes previous wars look like “child’s play” in comparison; with the Japanese waging a war which is premeditatedly directed against civilians in order to break Chinese morale. Secondly he pointed out that in spite of America’s seeming indig nation at Japanese aggression and atrocities, the United States is supplying as much as 86 per cent of the war materials with out which she could not wage the war, and which she cannot get elsewhere. In conclusion he urged thaf ev ery Aiherican citizen support ec onomic boycotts against Japan ese made goods, and make stren uous efforts to force legislation which will prevent this country from shipping war time supplies to Japan. Otherwise, he pointed out that, even aside from humani tarian reasons for making the war impossible, Japan will sub jugate China and use China’s re sources to become the world’s greatest competitor to United States trade. Dr. Judd’s address was received enthusiastically by the audience, who bombarded him with ques tions until he# was forced to leave in order to catch his train. Dr. Judd performed the feat of mak fhg four speeches in one day yes terday. Victory Puts Demaret Top of Money Winners SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 22— (A*)—Professional golfers hiking along the winter tournament cir cuit, made their salaams to a new leader today—Jimmy Dem aret, from Houston. Victory v in the San Francisco open put Demaret in the fore front of the current year’s mon ey-getters in the art of battling par. Along with $2,375 earnings— $75 in the Los Angeles open, $1, 200 in the Oakland and $1,100 in the San Francisco event—Dem- * aret became the first player in the ten tfear history of the local tournament to win it twice. He was top man here in 1938. MRS. FABYAN SUES NEWBURYPORT, Mass., Jan. 22—Mrs. Sarah Palfrey Fabyan of Brookline, one of the nations top-ranking tennis players, asked a divorce today oii a charge that her. husband, Marshall Fabyan of Manchester, Mass., had been, cruel and abusive.