The Village Gossip
To the
best of my knowledge and belief the thing to do is strike out for Pinehurst in
a Rolls-Royce. Failing that you can follow my humble example and pack your old
kit bag in a tin Lizzie in Boston. It’s a simple trick. Get an amiable
freebooter like Clyde Davis to do the singing and the cussing. And it is an
easy four days’ run from New York. Hitting by way of Washington,
Fredericksburg, Richmond and Raleigh, there is nothing to hinder or debate but
the open road, except for the notorious swamp near Fredericksburg. I will for
the first time give a truthful account of that. If the weather is dry it is no
barrier at all. We went through the whole slough of despond at 15 miles an
hour. It is all boarded about in bad spots, and the road has been built up out
of the wet. However, it still looks as if it would be a trap in a storm.
We came
rattling in here on November 3d thinking to rush the season and have a fussed
made over us in the roll of Early Birds. No luck. For all we could tell, the
old reliables had been here all summer. The fairways, still flush with the
green of summer, were covered with the seried ranks of the midiron offensive,
and Wilson, as always, was on hand to soberly tell us that the fairways wee
beyond all compare better than ever before, being in fact somewhat of an
improvement over Rana-aleigh, and if anything a bit too thick for heavy
approaching.
Investigation
disclosed that when C.B. Hudson came into the Dogwood expecting as usual to be
a lap or two ahead of the bunch, he found Mrs. W.H. Lloyd already encamped in
the Craddock with her children, which she will make her retreat until the
return of her husband from the front, where he is surgeon, with the army of
occupation. She is a daughter of Benjamin F. Butler of Eagle Springs, and although
for the first time living in Pinehurst is well known in the Sandhills.
Mrs.
Homan and her son Charlie Horton have been staying in Mrs. Spencer Waters’
Cotton Cottage for the month of October and November, and will remain there
until the arrival of Mrs. John List Crawford of New York, who has rented it for
the season. The whole village shares with Mrs. Homan the keenest sense of loss
and sorrow for her heroic son Gifford, who met his fate like McConnell and
Quentin Roosevelt in single combat over the Heathen Lines.
The most
apalling racket and hubbub ever chronicled in the annals of Pinehurst brought
the people rushing into the streets and parkways last Monday. I went out by the
roof expecting nothing less than conflagration or invasion. And then everyone fell
to adding to the din. It was the official requiem to William the Conquered. A
thousand flags appear from God knows where. The blinds in the stores went up,
the children poured from the schools, and placards hopped into place bearing
the legend:
“Gone to Bad Bill’s Funeral”
By one
accord the whole populace of the county took to the road. From every quarter
the sound of hors and sirens, the trebble yells of the youngsters and the hum
of motors heralded the coming of squadrons of trucks and cars loaded to the
gunwale with the entire population. Bedecked and festooned and covered with
mottoes with one accord, they made through Pinehurst on the way to Carthage.
This outpouring revealed to what extent the colony had been arriving this
October. A prominent place was occupied in the line by Miss Bruce’s big car.
She and Mr. Frederick Bruce were in line, leading a merry overflow of children
who almost completely swamped the chariot piloted by the Rev. T.A. Cheathem,
Mr. and Mrs. Armstrong sprang from the “Orange” and joined the glad throng.
On every
hand the greeting and rejoicing was almost pandemonium. Colonel and Mrs.
Swigert and Stuyvesant LeRoy, Mrs. Z.R. Bliss, who has opened the Cherokee for
the season, Mrs. Donald Ross, Mr. and Mrs. P.B. O’Brien and the children,--who
came down in a car, Mrs. Dana and Mrs. Eric Parson, the Warings and the
Newcombs—most of the familiar faces were in evidence in the amazing interlude.
Eric of course was not on hand. Like Achilles he couldn’t abide in school when
the great expedition was afoot, and he followed the Red Cross to France and is
doing his celebration in the Place de Concorde. The same is true of a host of
the boys for years the prevailing figures on the links of Pinehurst. Paul Dana
is with the 302d Field Artillery, presumably at the moment firing the last
mammoth salvo over the grave of Kultur. Bob Jewett is running an ambulance in
the Champaign. Henry Seggerman is toting a musket in the great advance. Phil
Robeson is behind the lines camouflaged to resemble a poilu with a dashing
mustache. Julian Bishop, after his tenth try, got into the army in spite of his
lack of ears, and spends his time on fatigue for not obeying orders he doesn’t
hear. But he is happy. He got into the game. And he got there over the dead
bodies of half the enlistment corps of the United States army. Trumbull Dana is
wearing the uniform at the training camp Kearney in California.
We have
become hardened to the inevitable changes and improvements which greet the
visitor each year in the colony. In spite of the laws of the War which forbade
the erection of any new buildings, there were sufficient and impressive changes
just the same. The completion of the derelicts which littered the offing last
spring, and their transformation into some of the most stately and attractive
places in the whole region has worked a charm. I don’t know whether the most
striking is Henry Hornblower’s brick masterpiece, now all ready and furnished,
and awaiting only the expected arrival of its master to be christened, or James
Barber’s new chateau. Every year Barber builds him a finer and a more beautiful
place. This year’s location has all the new places beat on grounds.
We found
Wiswell, the putting course designer and miniature golf maniac in the last
stages of executing a most ingenious, complicated and beautiful little course
of 18 holes there. It reduces putting to a science and an art, and adds
interest and variety to the landscape design.
Jimmy Barber himself put in an early appearance to view the handiwork
and take a hand in the Carolina tournament pulled off on the 11th.
To our
mind the most attractive design of all is shown in Mrs. A.C. Spring’s new
residence, which also only lacks Mrs. Spring to be complete.
With
pardonable pride, Newcomb managed to get us away from our 12 bore long enough
to display and eulogize the two new buildings finished off by the Plateau
Company. The Lenoir, the last word in the evolution of the “Perfect Pinehurst
Design” over by Pat O’Brien’s and the links, is to be occupied this winter by
Mrs. Henry Drinker Riley of Philadelphia. The other one is a white and green
creation back of Redfield’s, surnamed the Morganton, and like Barkus, is
willing (to be taken).
It was
like a return from exile to find Colonel and Mrs. Ormsbee as of old in the
Plymouth, the Shannons established for the winter in the Stanwood, and the
latch string hanging out at the Pines, where Mrs. Willam Hurd and Mrs. Splane
and Lambert had long since opened the shutters.
We were
greeted by the Tufts in full force. Miss Esther was on the job racking down the
willing victims of the War Work Drive with Mrs. Lloyd and Mrs. J.R. McQueen.
For John
McQueen and Miss Annie McNeill were married this summer. Probably nothing imaginable
could have astonished the countryside as much as it delighted them.
Mr. Tufts
arrived fresh from helping to conduct the Liberty Loan campaign in
Massachusetts. Two of the boys—Albert and James—are on hand. Richard is now an
ensign in the navy, an expert in radio work, busy all up and down the seaboard
with matters he will not divulge.
I tell
you it was like a reunion in force. Mr. and Mrs. Homer H. Johnson of Cleveland
had the Rosemary under full way, and were making the best of the best possible
of seasons in the best possible of places. Mrs. David Johnson, M.B.’s
daughter-in-law, is going to spend the winter here too in the Mistletoe.
There is
a good deal of humbug about this affection of ours about the beginning of the
season. Roger Derby and Mrs. Derby were not moving in. They were moving out of
the Robert Hunter’s Dormie cottage, where they had been all summer to make room
for Mr. and Mrs. T.A. McGraw of Pittsburgh, who are expected at any minute for
the winter. Tom bought him a peach orchard on Blue’s Hill, the other side of
Aberdeen, last spring, and all summer has been clearing up the top of the world
over here to put in some more this fall.
Another
house appearing on the horizon for the first time in its full glory is the
Dickinson Bishops’ on the Beulah Hill Road. Bishop is in the government service
at Washington, but Mrs. Bishop will open the house and he is expected to return
as soon and as often as the unscrambling of Count William Hohenzollern’s mess
will allow.
Hard on
our heels came Dr. and Mrs. J.S. Brown. The Doctor was in his usual inimitable
form. He has the most wonderful letters from the front.
Miss
Dorothy has been nursing right under the guns and seeing everything to be seen
after the style of an American girl. Jim has been in charge of the
reconnaissance photography for the whole 42d division. This is some
entertaining proposition. In the main it consists of snooping out ahead of the
lines and taking snap shots of the Germans in their positions, their neat
little machine gun traps, and other pictorial stunts that make the rattlesnake
and African lion photography positively silly. He has been over the top 32
times, been blown bodily into the air by a big shell and seen—and taken—most
that there is to see. When the curtain went down he was captain in charge of
the work for the whole corps. He will sure have a tale to tell when he gets
home.
Over on
the hill the lights are shining in the Linden where Mr. and Mrs. H.W. Priest
and Miss Lucy Priest have been for some time. Miss Lucy has returned to the
charge of the Library, which will open its doors Monday next.
Mrs.
George T. Dunlap left town the day we got here to go after Mr. Dunlap. He has
been ill at the Battle Creek Sanitarium, but we are glad to learn that he is on
the high road to recovery and will return to the Sandhills over the road.
The
report of those on their way are legion. Walter H. Page, former ambassador to
England, who has been convalescing from a serious illness in New York, is
expected shortly at the Currituck, where he will spend the winter with Mrs.
Page and his daughter, Mrs. C.G. Loring. Lieutenant Loring is with the big
celebration in Sedan.
Coming
with them, to occupy the little Brick House, is Mrs. Arthur W. Page and her
children. Arthur is a captain in the Intelligence Department stationed in
Paris. It is also expected that Major Frank C. Page, who has just returned from
active service, will spend a good part of his time under the family roof.
The
Albemarle, W.H. Thurston’s residence, will be shortly opened by the J.D.
Chapmans, who have taken it for the season. The Watauga, which they lived in
last year has been sold to N.B. Hersloff of Nutley, New Jersey, who will we
welcomed and initiated into the colony counsels sometime about Christmas.
Mr. and
Mrs. H.F. Noyes are reported on their way here now, traveling by the Capitol
Highway. Mr. and Mrs. Warren Bicknell and Miss Bicknell are moving into the
Warbeck, and a cordial welcome has been extended to Mr. and Mrs. N.A. Rose and
their children, of Wellesley Hills, new comers in the Sperry Cottage.
Mrs. J.J.
Carter has arranged to take the McKenzie House, last year occupied by Miss Mary
V. Healey. Miss Healy has deserted us temporarily for the less luxuriant but
more exciting quarters in Flanders.
I presume
this epic letter is becoming tedious beyond possible endurance. But the woods
are so full of folks and doings that there is no end. Here comes everyone
telling about Priscilla Bealls’ wedding to Captain Schofield, and hopes and
fears that they will still spend their winters here. Here is the news that Miss
Eleanor Abbe has deserted us for the Gilman School in Baltimore, where she is
acting as secretary. And here am I this minute greeting Mr. and Mrs. J.D.C.
Rumsey, who have apparently spent the summer, they appear so settled. And it is
told that Miss Sarah C. Brayton has arrived at the Cypress, and George Doran,
the publisher, is coming any minute to invest Commodore Newton’s new cottage,
La Cassita.
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