n VL5 VOL U NO. 8. PINEHURST, N. C, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1897. PRICE THREE CENTS. V .X m nmimm THE PINEHURST FARM. Broad, Green Acres and Substan tial Modern Buildings. Capacious, Well-Filled Barn and Large Herd of Fine Cattle. A Favorite Walk from the Village, Through Pine Groves and Green Fields. Shortly after Mr. Tufts commenced building the model village, Pinehurst, his attention was called to the need of a farm and dairy to supply the wants of his winter guests, and steps were promptly taken to pro vide such a department. A tract of about one hun dred acres, on the south erly side of the village, was selected for this pur pose and men and teams put to work clearing up the land. Ax and tire soon played havoc with the sturdy pines and oaks growing there, and the plow completed the trans formation of the wilder ness into a garden for the use of man. Passing through the gate near the foot of the Village (Ireen, a short rise confronts us, from the crest of which is re vealed a gentle slope on which the young grain is j'oi springing up green and beautiful a picture to delight the eye of a visit fresh from the cold, frozen North. At the foot of this slope aiv located the farm buildings, all models l their kind, the most prominent being the cow-barn, an excellent likeness of which we print in this issue. harn is 70 feet long and 40 feet wde and contains two stories and a h;ls,,'ent, The building is well venti 1 'led and has accomodations for about 11! it v cows, iUU)e room f01. tiie borage of fodder, farm implements, and ' verything that should be kept in a well '''gulated bam. The basement opens ,M1 commodious barn-yards where the nff cattle are kept, and from which an iiuTmed way leads to the floor above. ln main floor contains the quarters of l,u' i'1ice specimans of Jersey and IIol Mein nnvs that 8upi)ly the rich milk con 'iined by our villagers. Here are also ated two large silos, six by ten feet ""I about fifteen feet high; also, room Jw storing tools, and a large space filled with different kinds of food for the cat tle. The upper floor is devoted to the storage of dried cow-peas, a fodder that is largely used in this section as a substi tute for hay. The barn now shelters about twenty cows, and more will be added from time to time as the needs of the village require. There are also numer ous cattle being fattened for local con sumption. The cows are all stall-fed; dry cow-peas, cotton-seed meal, corn meal, hay, and corn ensilage being the food provided for their sustenance. A line spring close by the barn provides a never failing supply of pure water. Everything about the place is kept in the neatest possible manner, and the whole is in charge of a practical farmer from New England. A short distance away, in a small oak grove, is located a neat, home-like cot- ways been a favorite with our vis itors, and the improvements made during the past summer make it more popular than ever. AUTUMN IN THE SOUTH. Rev. B. A. Goodridge Writes of the Pleas ures of the Holiday Season In the Pine Woods. It is a pity that so many people who urgently need the conditions of rest and recuperation that are to be found in Pine hurst and vicinity should think it well to wait until "after the holidays" before going there. Much wiser would it be to leave the North while the weather there is mild and comfortable, and get well settled among the pine woods in time to enjoy the long, beautiful autumn of that region. To do that is to get double COW-BARN AT THE PINEHURST FARM. -(Courteny of S.A.L.Ma(jundi tage the home of the farmer in charge. But a few feet from his door a con venient building was erected during the past summer for use as a dairy. It is 20x20 feet and 11 feet high, with ce mented walls and floor, and serves its purpose well. The razor-backs, so numerous in this section of the country, have no place among the stock of the Pinehurst farm. Well-bred and well-fed Berkshires have supplanted them and are housed in the piggery, a couple of hundred yards from tliTbarn. Sheep and goats graze in a pasture near by while awaiting trans formation into mutton. A short distance beyond the farm buildings are located the market garden and nursery, which have previously been described in our columns. The walk of about three-fourths of a mile through the pine groves and green fields to the farm and nursery has al- advantage from the healing and invig orating conditions of the climate, But to stay in the North through the trying weather we are sure to have in No vember and December, to get well tired out with the strain and fuss and flurry of our social life at its highest pressure, to get a heavy, obstinate cold, and then to go to Pinehurst in January when the healing virtues of its atmosphere are less active, this is to plan one's visit so as to get a much smaller possible advantage from it. I suppose the great reason for this re luctance to go South until Thanksgiving and Christinas have passed, is the feeling that a sojourn among the pine woods is a jort of exile at best, and that it would be , iljnost unendurable to spend the holiday season there. That is, perhaps, a natural idea, but it is also a very mis taken one. Even in the old days before Pinehurst existed, when, instead of flourishing villages, there were solitary houses separated by long stretches of forest, there was no lack of good cheer at Thanksgiving and Christmas. Was there ever more joy in a household than befell on one Thanksgiving day that I well remember, when lires were lighted in the two brand new chimneys and it was found that they "drew" beautifully? To live in one's new house nearly three months without any chimneys, because neither love nor money can secure a mason, and then to have a man from Maine came along one of those blessed Yankees who can do everything and build your chimneys as handily as if he had never done anything else all his life was not that enough of itself to make a delightful Thanksgiving? But the joy of that day and of other Thanks givings that I remember were not all of the mind and heart by any means. There were many substantial delights as well. Perhaps the wild turkey no more abounds as of old, but, once upon a time, mem bers of his tribe almost as large and mighty as that tremendous bird which l'hode Island con tributes every year to the presidental table at the White House, were not too proud to make good cheer upon the Thanks giving board of northern settlers. And when it came to Christmas time there was even less reason for any feeling of homesickness, for there among the pine woods is the haunt and home of Christmas. Up here we make a feeble attempt to look Christmas like. We get a poor lit tle evergreen tree, and some strings of ground a few holly wreaths, thin, and if a little sprig falls into our hands it and pine, made very of mistletoe is a nine days' wonder; and with such scanty Christmas greens as these we make as brave a holiday showing as we can. But in our miserable hearts we know this Christinas never grew for us. We had to buy it by the yard or barrel at the grocery. .Hut you favored folk at Pinehurst are living right in the midst of a green and growing Christinas all the time. For you all out-of-doors is trimmed with evergreen. In every direction you can find the beautiful holly with its glossy leaves and crimson berries, and you need not go far to find abundance of mistle toe. It is a land, too, where Christmas is kept in good old English measure. There must be full twelve days of it to satisfy the natives, white and black, (CONCLUDED OS l'AUK FIVE.'