IBjSpF THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK MSI The Line To Pinehurst DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE BETWEEN BOSTON, NEW YORK, PHILADELPHIA, BALTIMORE, WASHINGTON RICHMOND, NORFOLK AND PORTSMOUTH SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY During the tourist season Parlor Cars are operated on day trains between Washington and Hamlet and through Sleeping Cars on night trains between Washington and Pinehurst. For full information apply to any representative Seaboard fir Line OR TO CIIAIlfIvS II. RYAN, General laeiig-ev Agent, Portsmouth, l a. Pinehurst Is a Unique Village In the Southland The Pinehurst Schools. PUPILS OP ALL AGES MAY CONTINUE THEIR PRESENT STUDIES for a portion or the whole of the winter, and rejoin their classes in the North without loss. THE PREPARATORY SCHOOL furnishes instruction in all branches preparatory to entrance into College and Technical Schools T Ell MS: $1. per Meek, or $. per month Private Tutoring-, per hour. Separate instructions for Young Ladies. Special attention to French and German Conversation. THE LOWER SCHOOL for boys and girls, furnishes instruction in all grades up to the High School. TERMS: For JPiipilg remaining during entire season. Primary Grades $1.00 per week Grammar " 3.00 " With French or German, $3.00 per week. For Pupils not remaining- during entire season. Primary Grades $S.OO per month Grammar " 15.00 " " With French and German, $20.00 per month. ALlftlCE G. WAHIIE3IT, llead Master. Pinehurst is, apparently, a "Yankee'' Village, located among the long-leaf, health-giving pines, in the Thermal belt and the dryest part of Moore County, North Carolina ; a section long noted for its healthfulness. It is seventy miles southwest of Raleigh, one hundred and twenty-five miles from the sea coast, and has an altitude of six hundred and fifty feet. The Village was founded in 1895 by the late James W. Tufts of Boston, Mass., and now consists of nearly fifty family cottages, four modern hotels, several boarding and apartment houses, a public cafe and numerous public buildings. The Village is beautifully laid out, and abounds in shrubs, perennials, sub-tropical and other plants. The Carolina, completed in 1900, is the largest hotel in the State, and one of the best appointed in the South, an imposing four-story structure, accommodating four hundred guests, modern in every particular, and with appointments calculated to suit the most fastidious tastes. The Holly Inn is roomy, home-like, modern, and accommodates two hundred guests. The Berkshire and The Harvard are two modern hotels, accommodating one hundred guests each and equipped to furnish every comfort at a moderate price. The Casino, designed for the use of the guests of the Village, is supplied with a ladies' parlor, game, reading and bath rooms, and daily papers and periodicals are kept on file. Jn connection is a Cafe, supplying excellent New England cook ing at a moderate price. The boarding houses are The Lenox, Concord, Magnolia and Pine Grove. The Cedars and several other cottages, provide rooms only, singly and en suite. The family cottages are cozy, substantially built, well-furnished and provided with modern conveniences, including electric lights, running spring water, and perfect sanitary drainage. Many are heated by steam and provided with bath. The Pinehurst Golf Links are generally acknowledged by experts to be the finest in the South, embracing two distinct courses, one of eighteen holes and six thousand yards in length, another of nine holes, and a finely appointed and admirably located Club House. The fair green throughout the courses is excellent and the putting greens are perfection. Natural and artificial hazards are found in sufficiency to make the course an exceptionally attractive one. A well-known Scotch professional is in charge of the Links, and available for instruction. A Shooting Preserve embracing 30,000 acres, nearly 50 square miles, is under control of the Village, and maintained expressly for the use of its guests. Kennels containing thoroughly trained blooded setters and pointers, are run in connection with the Preserve, and trustworthy guides are available. Trap shooting grounds, modern in equipment, are a feature of this department. There are numerous croquet grounds and tennis courts scattered throughout the Village; a public Bowling Alley and Billiard Hall. Dairy and Poultry Farms are maintained and which will eventually supply the entire Village with fresh milk and cream, poultry and eggs. A Market Garden provides f reh vegetables. The Village has a Post and Telegraph Office, private Electric Railroad, Local and Long Distance Telephone System, Electric Light and Power Station, Village Hall, Circulating Library, Private School, Department Store, Meat Market, Steam Laundry, Bakery, Ice-Making Plant, Livery Stable, Photographic Studio, Resident Physicians, and Weekly Paper, The Pinehurst Outlook. In fact, Pinehurst is admirably equipped to supply every modern need; offer ing unequalled attractions for people of refinement at a varying range of prices. Consumptives cannot be admitted. The Electric Railroad connects with the Seaboard Air Line at Southern Pines, Railroad connection is made from Pinehurst over the Aberdeen & Asheboro Rail road with the Seaboard Air Line at Aberdeen, and the Southern Railway at High Point. Pinehurst is eighteen hours ride from New York, and through Pullmans run during the season from Washington direct to the Village, over both Railway Lines. For handsome booklets or detailed information, address : IFOXAItl) TUFTS, Owner, PIIVEIIUHST KEWJEllAI. OFFICE, lloston, Mass. Pinehurst, HT. C. PINEHURST And principal Winter Resorts of the South, via SOUTHERN RAILWAY The Southern Railway is the best, quickest and most comfortable route to and from Pinehurst. Its service is unequalled. Through Sleeping Cars Between Washington and Pinehurst, during the Season. Elegant Equipment Dining Cars See that your tickets read via Southern Railway New York Office, 1185 and 271 Broadway Boston, Mass., Office, 22S Washington St. Philadelphia, Pa., Office, 828 Chestntit St. Washington Office, 705 15th St. N. W. W. A. TURK, S. II. HARDWICK Pass. Traffic Mgr. Gen'l Pass. Agent, Washington, D. C. Washington, D.C, Pinehurst Preserves Embracing nearly 30,000 acres of the Finest Hunting Territory In Moore county, North Carolina, offer unusual and V A III ED ATT RACTI () NS For Sportsmen and Sportswomen. The climate is unsurpassed, cover excellent and easy to traverse and close to the Village in which every comfort may be found at a varying range of prices. Here one may enjoy Sport Without "Ronghing-it;" New England comforts in Southern territory a rare combination"". In connection with the preserves are maintained fully equipped kennels, and reliable guides, shooting wagons, saddle horses, and every requirement for long or short trips, are available. Excellent Quail Shooting Turkeys for those who care to hunt them, some woodcock, and abundance of hares. Dove or pigeon flight shooting in the spring ; Fox Hunting at all seasons. Rates t Shooting privileges, $1.00 per day, $3.00 per week, $15.00 per season. Note These charges are waived for the season owing to the fact that under the new law non-residents pay a tax of $10 to accrue to the Audubon Society. Guides, $3.00 per day, including use of dog, if desired. Boarding dogs, $1.50 per week, $5,00 per month. For further information address, -P-Utjeiiitiisi: general office, i

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