Daily Except Monday During the Winter Season VOLUME 44, NUMBER 90 . Price 3 Cents THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK, PINEHURST, N. C. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 194ft gDELS, MEINECKE FACE mallaghan and fARMAN IN FINAL Rhode Island Links Star Cuts Medal Score from 88 Monday to 75 Yesterday; Team Trims Sloan and Pierson in Pine Needles Golf. Bi e. Windels, Philadelphia, Dr. E. A. Meinecke of Ridgewood, N. J., moved into the final round of the Pine Needles handicap bestball tour nament yesterday by defeating p M. Clemes and Harold Har yny, Toronto, one up. In the other semi-final, John Mallaghan, Providence municipal links champion and Rhode Island Interscholastic champion and Jim Warman, defeated Clifford Sloan and Harlow Pearson, 7 and 6. The youthful Providence play er reduced his strokes from an 88 he scored on Monday to a 75 yesterday. Among other things he drove over the tops of the trees at the eleventh and finished on the fairway while other members of the match had to be contented to play around the dogleg. This sort of long driving was too much for Mr. Sloan and Mr. Pearson, who play most of their competitive golf in the , Tin Whistle Club in Pinehurst, where surveying equipment is seldom needed to measure tee shots. The match in which Mr. Win dels, who is the German consul in Philadelphia and Dr. Mein ecke won was a close game which went to the home green. At the tenth hole, Dr. Meinecke took something out of his. op ponents when he chipped in for a gross. three at a hole where he had a stroke. The final round will be play ed today, starting at 1:30 P. M. PING PONG TOURNEY FOR CHAMPIONSHIP SET FOR MARCH 8-9 The third annual Pinehurst Ting' Pong- championships will be contested at Holly Inn on the evenings of March 8 and 9, ^cording to an announcement r,la('e by Ed Horne, manager. The table tennis tournament Trove(! to be one of the best gaIlei'y events of the • season ast year and a large crowd at en^ed both the preliminary and lllal rounds, played in the ball rooni of the hotel. ^hs. William A. Merton won e ^omen's title in a fine ^atch from Miss Helen Waring, 1° Was the first champion. e Merton-Waring match went 20ree sets, 22-24, 24-22 and 21 • Miss Waring was within.a 0lnt of her second victory. ,Jn The men’s final Ralph 3*eler defeated Robert E ai °w, in a match with consid 3ble comedy injected. Th e er>try books are now opt uuuks are .tlle 1940 event. Practi< Hon!nS be in order on tl ar \ *nn tables. Contestai) %Cited t0 polish up the Mr. vid0 and ^rs- Horne will pi ae Prizes. ON THE PEACE FRONT The draw in the bestball fourball tournament at the Pine Needles Club brought P. M. Clemes and Harold Har vey, of Toronto, Canada into golfing competition yesterday with E. E. Windels, German consul in Philadelphia and Dr. E. A. Meinecke. The Ger man diplomat and his part ner won in a match which went to the home green. 200 YOUNG DEMOCRATS GATHER AT THE DUNES FOR DINNER MEETING Representatives From Twelve Counties Take Part in Session which Hears Address by For est Pollard. Approximately 200 young Democrats of the eighth district of North Carolina gathered at the Dunes Club last night for their first quarterly rally of the year. The 12 counties of this district responded to the call for identification, including An son County, Union, Montgom ery, Hoke, Richmond, Yadkin, Scotland, Davidson, Lee, Davie, and last'but not least, our own Moore County. Moore County was represented by a large contingent of young Democrats “too numerous to mention,” as W. A. Leland Mc Keithen, president of the Moore County contingent, said. Forrest Pollard, president of the N. C. young Democrats gave a short talk on the administra tive progress of the organiza tion. Jim Amburn, chairman of the eighth district was substi tuted at the meeting by Miss Betty Harwood of Sanford, vice-president. After a delightful dinner, which was supervised person ally by Jim Warman of The Dunes, the large, group enjoyed the entertainment furnished by the special floor show of the club, and the merry tunes of Jerry Mack and his orchestra. BANKER TO SPEAK Gurney P. Hood, Commission er of Banks for the state of North Carolina will be the speaker today at the Kiwanis Club meeting to be held at the Southern Pines Country Club, at 12:30 o’clock. Mr. Hoo(l is president of the National Asso ciation of Bank Supervisors. WHAT TO DO AND SEE Today Weekly bridge party at the Carolina Hotel this morning be ginning at 10:15. Pine Needles Best Ball cham pionship continues today. AT THE THEATRES - Pinehurst - Today at 3:00 and 8:30, “My Little Chickadee/’ with Mae West and W. C. Fields. - Southern Pines - Today and tomorrow at 8:15 P. M., matinee tomorrow at 3:00, “His Girl Friday,” with Cary Grant and Rosalind Russel. - Aberdeen - Tonight at 7:15 and 9:00, “Granny Get Your Gun,” with May Robeson. (Continued on page 2) Finns Quit Arctic Posts Before Soviet Thrusts (By the Associated Press) The Finnish high command today announced Russian attacks from the Arctic to the Gulf of Finland and acknowledged that Finnish forces had withdrawn to new defensive positions after an all-day Russian assault in the Arctic region of Petsamo. Finns said they withdrew to new positions at Nautzi, bn the Norwegian border 65 miles south of Petsamo, and 8 miles south of their former position at Jordenfoss. The Russian high command reported that Red army forces continued to crash through the Finnish fortified zone of the Kare lian Isthmus, and had captured 13 additional fortifications, with 6 Finnish planes shot down during Tuesday. In the south the Russians were reported to be driving across | the bay of Viipuri, attacking islands in the southwestern part of the bay, naval key to Viipuri, after having occupied the strategic fortifications on the islands of Koivisto. COMMITTEE REJECTS GRANT FOR LOCKS AT PANAMA CANAL House Group Turns Down Presi dent's Request for Immediate Appropriation; Recommends Fund for Plans. WASHINGTON, Feb. 27.—(ff) —The house appropriations com mittee, whacking away with its economy axe, turned thumbs down today on President Roose velt’s request for immediate ap propriation of $15,000,000 , to start a third set of Panama Canal locks. Instead, the committee recom mended an $850,000 fund for preparing plans for the locks, asserting that “in the absence of such plans and specifications the ultimate cost must largely be conjectural.” The committee also followed up the house’s recent action in refusing to appropriate $1,000, 000 for a harbor project at Guam in the mid-Pacific by re jecting a $700,000 request for dredging the channel at Wake Island, on the route from Ha waii to Guam. Both the Panama Canal and Wake items "were part of a $203,472,667 appropriation bill for the war department’s civil functions. The committee re ported the measure to the House for action tomorrow. Although the President had reduced the estimates for these functions which include river and harbor work and flood con trol, to $220,082,250 from the $305,125,384 appropriated for the same purpose this year, the committee went still farther. It cut the total of the bill $16,609,683, chiefly in the Pan ama and Wake items, below the Presidential requests. URGES CANAL DEFENSES ABOARD U. S. S. LANG AT SEA, Feb. 27.—(^—President Roosevelt said doubling present number of guns, etc., in Panama Canal was necessary for de fense of vital links of the canal, such a long range program ex tending if necessary throughout Central America, Ecuador, Co lumbia and Venezuela, he told reporters at a press conference aboard the cruiser Tuscaloosa after he had completed inspec tion of canal defenses and start ed home to United States. , FORUM PRESENTATION WILL BE PRECEDED BY SPECIAL SUPPER Mrs. Auslander, Who with Her Husband Will Head Poets’ Symposium, Won Pulitzer Prize for Book of Verse. The date for the appearance of Joseph Auslander and his wife, the former Audrey Wurde mann, at the Forum is next Monday evening, March 4th, at 8:45 oclock. There will be also a special buffet supper served in the grill at the Country Club that evening from 7:30 to 8:30 for those wishing a complete gala evening. Miss Dorothy Pierce wishes to call attention to the fact that because of week-end interrup tions, all reservations for the buffet should be in by Sunday noon. The price for supper will be $1.25, as usual. To those new residents and to the hotel visitors, the Forum wishes them to know that they are most welcome to this week ly Pinehurst event. No admis sion is charged, but a basket for voluntary contributions is at the door. Just to give a hint, by way of pre-view, of the beauty of Audrey Wurdemann’s poetry, the' following is a popular ex cerpt: “I held an instant in my hands The thing that no one under stands, ' The thing most perfect, most complete, Most finely fashioned and most fleet. And of myself I let it go, Being afraid to hold it so, Being afraid that overmuch It would be tarnished at my touch.” i BOBBY, CIUCI WIN CORAL GABLES, Fla., Feb. 27.—(JP) — Bobby Dunkelberger and Richard Ciuci, defeated Robert Lowry, Pinehurst Tin Whistler and W. J. Harper, in a quarter final round of the fourball tournament at v Miami Biltmore today. Frank Strafaci and Jerry Causa, advanced by beating Charlie Whitehead and Frank Allan. PATTY IS MEDALIST ORMOND BEACH, Fla., Feb. 27.—(A*)—Patty Berg won the medal in the South Atlantic golf tournament here today with a round of 74. CAMDEN HERE SUNDAY CAMDEN, Feb. 27.—The Camden Polo Club will jour ney to Pinehurst Sunday, March 3rd, to play Pinehurst the return match which was postponed from Sunday, Feb ruary 21. Camden won the contest, played there, 7 to 6. Since that game Pinehurst has defeated Fort Bragg twice. Earl Shaw and Mer rill Fink of ‘ Pinehurst con ferred with Camden polo men today and departed for Aiken. ' SEVEN GABIES TO BE HEADQUARTERS FOR VISITING PRESSMEN Spacious Hou,se on Magnolia Road Leased by Pinehurst Inc., for Purpose from Mrs. Eberhard Faber; Many Writers Expected. i __ The Pinehurst Press Club headquarters for the spring sea son will be established in Seven Gables, the spacious ‘house on Magnolia road, which has been leased by Pinehurst Inc., from Mrs. Eberhard Faber, for the remainder of the season, and | placed under the jurisdiction of The Pinehurst Press Bureau. It will be in this house, known as Seven Gables, that the mas terpieces of the visiting news paper correspondents will be typed out and rushed to the telegraph wires during the North and South golf champion ships, the Sandhills Steeple chase meeting and such other incidents as the “foreign” cor respondents deem of sufficient interest to send to their news papers. For the past two seasons the Blackjack cottage was desig nated as the Press Club, and I many nationally known sports writers have enjoyed Pinehurst visits while residing in the spa cious domicile now occupied for the season by Mr. and Mrs. Al bert C. Aborn. , A Press Club is a lively spot during the North and South championships. As many as a dozen visiting newspaper men have been here covering events, and this spring will be> no ex ception. Many writers have al ready written in for reserva tions. Police Chief Dees Warns Against Shoplifters Sandhills merchants are warn ed by Chief of Police A. F. Dees, Pinehurst, to be (0n the watch for shop lifters. Chief Dees has had reports that shop lifters have been op erating in the neighborhood, and have made their appearance in at least two Pinehurst shops within the past few days. Pinehurst and the Sandhills communities have had so little in the way of shoplifting and currency arguments that the merchants take it for granted that everybody is honest. Considerable merchandise was taken • from stores in Fayette ville and Raleigh recently, and Chief Dees thinks it a good idea for business people to be alert, and not only watch their stores, but to call the amount of bills handed them for purchases. BRITAIN DISCLOSES 2 HUGE BATTLESHIPS DAMAGED IN WARFARE Dreadnought Barham Hit (6y Torpedo Last September; Flagship Nelson Damaged by Mine in December. LONDON, Feb. '27.—<#)—1Two of Britain’s largest battleships, the 31,000-ton Barham and the flagship Nelson, 33,950 tons, are under repair in naval yards after being damaged by enemy action, Winston Churchill dis closed in the House of Commons today. ' The first lord of the admir alty announced also that five new battleships would join the fleet sooft and predicted an in tensification of German efforts to break the British sea stran glehold. Churchill said the Barham, hit: by a torpedo in September, and: the Nelson, damaged by a mag netic mine in December, soon would be ready to rejoin the fleet. The secret of their crippling had been well kept, he said, and was learned by the Germans only after it had no import ance. In a detailed statement to Commons the first lord an nounced that the British navy had not had the use of Scapa Flow, the great naval base north of Scotland, since the battle- .. ship Royal Oak was sunk there by a German submarine Oct. 13 with a loss of 810 lives. JOHNSON SIGNS MAIN BOUT HEAVIES WHO PROMISE TO FIGHT Ray Johnson, match maker for the Amusement Center box ing club has obtained a guaran tee from the two colored heavyweights he has signed up for the wind-up in Saturday night’s show,. that they will lay a glove, one upon the other. Mr. Johnson was sadly disap pointed when one of the wind up boys last Saturday, engaged! in a marathon aroiind the ring,, got himself out of wind and; quit. - The “Ham,” otherwise knownr as Ham Braboy, winner of last Saturday’s wind-up by ( default,, will be matched this week against Marvin Jones from the State Sanitarium. Braboy was willing to go last Saturday but had no company. His opponent preferred to waltz. A battle royal with five col ored boxers engaged will be a new feature of the show. This is one of those events in which , a boy thinks he is going great' guns, when the fifth stooge sneaks up from behind and smacks him when he is trying to look in three other directions. It is extremely comical, and all in good fun. The man who sur vives gets paid off. The others get car fare. v There will be three prelimi nary bouts, the battle royal and * the ten round wind-up. WEATHER Cloudy, slightly colder in cen tral portions Wednesday. Oc casional light rain 'Wednesday morning, Thursday generally fair, slightly warmer in west portion.