The Oldest Sandhills Publication Daily Except Monday During the Winter Season VOLUME 44, NUMBER 117. Price 3 Cents THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK, PINEHURST, N. C. SATURDAY,. MARCH 30, 1940. SPIRITED ACTION - promised at polo (OMTEST ON SUNDAY Pinehurst Four to Tangle With Ramblers in Game in Which Army Players From Fort Bragg Will Take Part, Also Visiting Star. ON NO. 2 FIELD Polo fans planning to attend the Pinehurst vs Ramblers game which will be played on the No. 2 field tomorrow afternoon will see plenty of action and an evenly-contested match. The line-up will include James B. Murray, a guest at The Car olina, who plays with the Fort Hamilton team in the New York district. Murray, who proved himself an outstanding player in Thursday s game between the Yellows and the Blues will play No. 2 for the Ramblers. Three Fort Bragg officers will also be in the fray, Capt. Dave Erskine, Lieut. Alex Grahanl and Lieut. T. G. Bilboe. Gra ham will play No. 1 for Pine hurst, Capt. Erskine No. 3 for the Ramblers and Lieut. Bilboe back for the Ramblers. R. B. Green will be at position 2, Mer rill Fink 3, and B. R. Brown at hack to complete the Pinehurst foursome. Henry Gibson Bar nard Jr., U. N. C. star, will play 1 for the Ramblers. WHAT TO DO AND SEE Today Fifth annual spring golf tour nament for women, finals today at Pinehurst Country Club. North and South Women’s Golf Championship finals at Pinehurst Country Club today. Tin Whistles tournament to day, medal play for non-winners. Putting tournament for ladies at Pinehurst Country Club, from one o’clock to four o’clock this afternoon. Keno and dance at The Caro lina tonight. Pinehurst-Ramblers polo game at No. 2 field tomorrow after noon. Public invited to attend. AT THE THEATRES - Pinehurst - Tomorrow and Monday night ^ 8:30, matinee Monday at 3:00, Too Many Husbands,” with Jean Arthur, Melvyn Douglas and Fred MacMurray. - Southern Pines - Today at 8:15 p. m., matinee at 3:00, “Blue Bird,” with Shir ty Temple. All Technicolor. Aberdeen ^ (j Today at 3:00, 7:00 and 9:00. “Down the Wyoming Trail.” Jex Ritter and White Flash, The Northerners.” PRINCE KILLED LONDON, March 29.--(^)— Pninee Alexander Obolensky, 24, nssian-born British subject and an international Rugby football S^r’ was killed today in a Plane accident at a Royal air orce airdrome. The prince, a pilot officer in he R. A. F., suffered a broken ?ec^ when his plane piled up in | WEATHER thundershowers and continued doudSatur<3ay* Sunda'y PartJy HAD NOT HEARD OF WAR PARIS, March 29.—#P)—A French worker was acquitted today of failure to. answer the general mobilization call to arms—because he did not know France was at war. Robert Placier, arrested sev eral months ago, was ordered released by a military trib unal when he proved he was unable to read and had been working in an isolated region when war was declared. ALMET JENKS NAMED HEAD OF SANDHILLS RACING ASSOCIATION At the annual meeting of the executive committee of the Sandhills Steeplechase and Rac ing Association held yesterday morning, Almet Jenks of South ern Pines was elected president for the ensuing year, succeed ing James Boyd. Mr. Boyd ask ed to be relieved of the presi dency after serving for two years. Mr. Jenks was the first* presi dent of the association, serving at the time of the first race meeting in 1935.He was suc ceeded by Verner Z. Reed Jr. of Pinehurst, who served until two years ago when Mr. Boyd was elected. George Watts Hill ol JJurnam and Knollwood and Mr. Boyd were elected vice-presidents, and Col. George P. Hawes of Pine hurst and (Nelson C. Hyde of Southern Pines were re-elected treasurer and secretary, respect ively. Added to the executive committee, which comprises the officers of the association, were Heman Gifford of Pinehurst, Lydig Hoyt of New York, and Nat S. Hurd of Pinehurst. Richard Wallach Jr. of War renton, Va., was unanimously re-elected racing secretary, and given a * rising vote of apprecia tion for his successful manage ment of the race meeting here on March 16. Improvements to the course and preparations for the seventh annual steeplechases next March were discussed informally. Outlook Ads Prove 100 P. C. Effective The Outlook feels that it is time it pointed with justifiable pride to its 100 percent record for the season in lost and found advertising. Latest incident oc cured Wednesday night when a Southern Pines visitor attended the theatre in Pinehurst and some time during the evening lost a watch near the theatre building. The owner of the watch im mediately inserted a lost ad in the Outlook, which appeared Friday morning. Less than three hours after the ad appeared the watch was brought to the Out look office % the young man who had fouhd it. So far this season every lost article which has been adver tised for in the Outlook has been recovered,/ and while were not wishing our readers any bad luck, remember <mr record if you should happen to lose anything and we’ll change your bad luck into good. f :■ U,:: , ; ■. DlNEHURST SCOREBOARD 1 by ROBERT E. HARLOW A case for a Solomon* to decide will come up before the exec utive committee of the United States Golf Association at its next meeting when it will rule on a request froln Oscar Guilfoil, who wishes to know if his talented and beautiful daughter Virginia, will be permitted to play in the amateur championship if she accepts a position as a physical education instructress, with the understanding that among her duties she may be required to give instruction in golf. Miss Guilfoil is visiting in Pinehurst, having come here Sun day with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar D. Guilfoil Jr., to wit ness the North and South Women’s championship. Miss Guilfoil not having .played any golf for the past several months did not enter the championship this year. She was runner-up in 1937. Mr. Guilfoil, father of the star golfer, has exchanged letters with Edward L. Cheyney, chairman of the amateur status and conduct committee for the'U. S. G. A. and inquired if Miss Vir ginia’s amateur standing will be denied if she accepts a position in which giving instruction in golf is included in her duties. Mr. Cheyney has written Mr. Guilfoil that it is his opinion that by accepting such a position, Miss Guilfoil will professionalize herself. Mr. Cheyney’s opinion is not final, as he has advised Mr. Guil foil he will present the matter at the next meeting of the execu tive committee of the U. S. G. A. for final judgment. Golf is included in most physical education programs, although it plays but a very small part in the task of this sort, which really has to do with the health and proper exercise for students accord ing to their needs. Miss Guilfoil is prepared to manage the executive duties of a director in physical education as well as to instruct in swimming, archery, gymnastics, tennis, volley' ball, basketball, track, soft ball, golf and other sports.. The young lady is eager to retain her amateur status in golf, and at the same time she desires to obtain a position for which she has spent four years in Syracuse University in preparation. Meantime Mr. Guilfoil is obtaining, opinions of directors of physical education, and he has a letter from Lewis P. Andreas, director of the department of physical education at Syracuse Uni-, versity, which presents an interesting view of the case. . (Continued on page two) QUIZ BY R. S. TUFTS FEATURES APRIL NUMBER OF GOLF Richard S. Tufts supplied the Golf Quiz in the April issue of Golf, which went on sale today at the news depots of Pinehurst, Southern Pines, Pine Needles and Mid Pines. Fanshawe Lindsley, publisher of Golf, and Mrs. Lindsley, ar rived in Pinehurst last night and will be spectators today of the final between Mrs. Page and Miss Kirby. Mr. Lindsley will take photographs of golfers and Pinehurst courses for use later in his nationally distributed pub lication. It so happens that Arch Mur ray, golf editor of The New York Post, who wrote the leading ar ticle in the April issue of Golf, entitled The, Merry - Go - Round Broke Down, is also a Pinehurst visitor at this time. The April issue of Golf is fill ed with entertaining and in structive articles by well known writers, and contains numerous photographs and cartoons of in terest to all golfers. Among the questions asked by Mr. Tufts in the Golf Quiz are these: Where are the following: The redan; East Lake course; The Queen’s course; Cathedral Hole; The Eden. What former intercollegiate champions have subsequently won the U. S. G. A. amateur championship ? ■ T.' What are the following: Baffy; Tin Whistles; Fog (per the rules' of golf); Old Guard; A Stolon? Pinehurst golfers could cer tainly answer a few of these. Mr. Tufts has the thanks of the publicity staff for this good work. HANGRUH, GULDAHL, DIETZ TIED WITH 64 IN ASHEVILLE GOLF ASHEVILLE, March 29.—(ff) —The par 70 shooters were strictly out of the running to- : day as the country’s touring golf pros took the Asheville Country Club course apart and neglected to put it together again. What they did put to gether, however, were some of the lowest scores of the winter tour. When Dick Metz came in with a six under par 64 ^for a new competitive course record, it looked pretty good, but be fore the afternoon was over, both score and record had been equaled by Ralph Guldahl and Lloyd Mangrum. Leading scorers: Metz -. 30-34—64 Mangrum . 32-32—64 Guldahl .. 32-32—64 Picard .. 33-32—65 Waish .. 34-31—455 Hogan ...-. 33-34—67 Nelson .. 35-32—67 McSpaden . 34-34—68 Dodson ... 34-34—68 Reiser .— 36-32—68 Walper .. 33-36—69 Warga .. 34-35^—69 Harrison —. 33-36—69 WHISTLES VS. PRINCETON George Dunlap Jr. will cap tain a team of Tin Whistle Club members in a match against Princeton University golfers, over the championship course on Sunday. LOUIS RETAINS TITLE MADISON SQUARE GAR DEN, N. Y., March 29.—Joe Louis knocked out Johnny Pay chek in the second round to night and retained the heavy weight championship. Enuf said. BARLOW ANNIVERSARY Just twenty-five years ago last Thursday week, Mrs. R. H. Barlow of Philadelphia defeated Mrs. J. R. Price of Pinehurst for the champion ship of the women’s North and South. Mention of this was made in the New York Sun’s feature, 25 Years Ago Today, on March 21st, the an niversary of Mrs. Barlow’s victory. Mrs. Barlow followed her 1915 victory with another in 1916 when she won the North and South that year. She has remained prominent in Pine hurst golfing circles and is an honorary member of the Silver Foils. NORTH AND SOUTH Starting Times ~ 10:30 Miss Dorothy Kirby Mrs. Estelle L. Page Consolation 10:05 Mrs. J. M. Robbins Mrs. J. P. Meador SPRING TOURNAMENT Second Division 9:45 Mrs. J. G. Batterson Miss Joanne Farris Consolation 9:50 Mrs. L. F. Porteous Miss R. D. Hall First Division 9:55 i Mrs. C. B. Shea Mrs. J. K. Weeks 10:00 Consolation Mrs. J. C. Prizer Mrs. McLeod Thomson Results NORTH AND SOUTH Championship Mrs. Estelle Lawson Page de feated Miss Deborah , Verry 5 and 4. Miss Dorothy Kirby defeated Miss Jean Bauer 6 and 5. (Continued on page two) MRS. BUCKMINSTER - IS NEW PRESIDENT OF SILVER FOILS At the annual meeting of the Silver -Foils Club yesterday aft ernoon Mrs. H. C. Buckminister was elected president for the coming . year. Mrs. Emmet French was elected vice-presL dent, Miss Katharine Coe secre tary, Mrs. Marion Phillips, treas urer, and Mrs. J. P. Williamson club captain. Newly elected members of the board of governors are Mrs. L. H. Gates who will serve on the board for three years. Mrs. B. L. Tyrrel and Mrs. Emmet French will serve another year on the board,' and Mrs. Ray mond Farr and Mrs. ■ Frederick Lesh for two years, according to the rules of the club, which call for election of board members for a term of three years, with two members being elected evei^y year to replace existing vacancies.. .. The Silver Foils now. number 137 active members and 76 as sociate members. There will be a' putting con test for the Silver Foils mem bers today from 12 o’clock to four. If there are as many as twelve entries, prizes will be offered. MRS. PACE TO FACE DOROTHY KIRBY IM ; NORTH-SOUTH FINAL. Defending Champion Defeats? Miss Verry 5 and 4 With ‘ Scorching Round; Atlanta Star Downs Jean Bauer, 6 and SL WINNERS 36 TO TURN - By LESTER RICE Golf Editor New York Journal American *_• PINEHURST, N. C., March 29.—Playing relentlessly through; a gentle spring shower, Mrs.. Estelle Lawson Page, the de fender from Chapel Hill, N. G*. and Dorothy Kirby, of Atlanta,, converged into the final' round of the Women’s North an<i South championship here today. • Mrs. Page again was in th.es same torrid mood which yester day saw her establish an unoffi cial record of 6J8 for the reno vated No. 1 course, and defeated Deborah Verry of Worchester, Mass., by 5 and 4. , Miss Kirby, matching Mrs. Page’s pitiless pace, accounted for Jean Bauer of Providence, R. I., by 3 and 2. Mrs. Page stroked her way to the turn in 36, one above men’s par and .stood one up to Miss Verry’s 38. The New Englander had lost the first hole, when Mrs. Page pitched her approach dead to the cup for a birdie three. She drew level at the third when Mrs. Page trapped her bid for the green. A bunkered second put Miss Verry down again at the fourth, but again she righted herself two holes later by producing a birdie deuce. Both she and Mrs, (Continued on page two) NEDTRAUTY STAND TAKEN BY RUSSIA, MOLOTOFF ASSERTS ; MOSCOW, March 29.—W— Premier-Foreign Commissar j> Vyacheslaff Molotoff tonight de clared before Soviet Russia’s parliament that “our position ia (neutrality in the war” and “the safeguarding of our land.” "K Molotoff announced this pol icy at the end of a review of foreign affairs in which he) v charged that “the hopes of the , British and French rulers to use the Soviet Union in war against; Germany have been frustrated/* He asserted that the conflict with Finland “was a welcome opportunity for a number of im perialist states to embark on war against the Soviet Union” / and mentioned the United States and Italy among “other imper ialist countries” besides the al lies whp sent “military aid” to ) Finland. \ Molotoff said Russia’s rela tions with the United States, “have not improved of late” but he added they “have not be come worse unless we take injto , consideration the so-called moral embargo against the Soviet Union which, now that peace* with Finland has been concluded* is devoid of any significance/* He pointed to activity in Hie Near East and warned that countries there might be “play ing with fire.” - - v - - " ~ This was taken as an obvious reference to British, French and Turkish military activity.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view