r fc rrf r THE CflHOIiIflfl PINEHUBST, n. 0. I . - 7 ; ' Uw; The Carolina is a magnificent four-story building completed in 1900. The interior is a model of elegance, with appointments calculated to suit the most luxu rious tastes. The hotel accommodates four hundred guests and is provided with fifty-four suites with bath. The cuisine and table service are unsurpassed. The house contains every modern comfort and convenience, including elevator, telephone in every room, sun rooms, steam heat night and day, electric lights, and water from the celebrated Pinehurst Springs, and a perfect sanitary system of wage and plumbing. H. W. PRIEST, Manager, THE ARLINGTON VIRGINIA BEACH, VA. The Arlington is located on the most desirable part of the beach, within two hundred feet of the surf, and i open for the reception of guests the year round. The house is so arranged that its fifty-seven guest-rooms are open to nature's air and light ; has hot and cold water, baths and toilets on each floor and gas in each room. Being situated in the heart of the finest trucking section, we are able to procure all kinds of vegetables fresh from the fields each day. Pure milk and sea food in abundance. WUITE FOR BOOKLET. Mrs. J. T. Wright, Proprietress. PINEV WOODS INN, SOUTHERN PINES, N. C. A modern hotel, home-like in every respect. Luxuriously furnished appealing-to all who desire home comforts at moderate rates. Rooms en suite with private baths. Sanl tary conditions perfect. No consumptives received. The Water used at Piney Woods Inn Is from the Celebrated Crystal Springs abso lutely free from sediment the finest table water to be had. RATES ON APPLICATION. Leon St. John, Manager. THEY TEST SIMPLE LIFE Beau Brummells at Lenox Perpetrate Novel Joke on Unsuspecting Friends. Joyou Moment Cornea IT lien Thej Sit In Characteristic Country-Side lliST and are Photog-ruphed. HE guests at The Lenox find something to enter tain them most of the time and when there Ifl V- approach of lethargy there is a sudden awakening. One of the recent novelties was the appearence at the noon hour, of two of the' social Beau Brummells of the house, Mr. Arthur M. Allen of West Newton, ride home, a gleeful acceptance came. The only conveyance on the place was a "single wagon" and the steed was the "family mule," the "critter" which does odd jobs in this section much as the family mare does in Kentucky, but hardly as well. Much scurrying was necessary before harness, and rope, and wire enough to keep mule and wagon together could be secured. Chain from an old plow furnished tugs, rope of several kinds, reins, and a seat was found in the shape of a board which formerly had splinters on both sides, but which is now said to be quite smooth. The trip in was .without incident ex cept speculation on he part of the young meu as to how long the splinters or their trousers would hold out, .but the absence of springs on the wagon made it possible, in the rough places, for them to keep their minds off themselves, and inci dently, their trousers off the boards. But all this was forgotten in the joy of the moment when they sat fx - n "SUNLIGHT AND SHADOW" A NEARHY SCENE. Mass., and Mr. G. It. Wallace of Brook lyn, driving a rig characteristic of those used by the natives of the country-side. Ever on the lookout for something in the way of a new experience, the young men in question, have recently taken to the country-side for walks and drives, and incidentally, during these trips, have made many friends among the residents. Open hearted hospitality has, always greeted them, and numerous invitations to dine on the "snack," or eat-as-you-go plan, have been declined, but when one of the exponents of the "simple life" offered the loan of a team in which to before The Lenox, the cynosure of ad miring eyes as the acknowledged per petrators of one of the most novel jokes of the season, while kodacks snapped in rhythmic cadence with the spasmotic braying of their strange steed. Mr. Crockett Entertain. Mrs. Montgomery A. Crockett of Buf falo, gave a delightful afternoon bridge party at The Mystic, Thursday. Follow ing the play tea was served, Mrs. T. B. Cotter and Mrs. Herbert L. Jillson assisting.

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