PINEHURST OUTLOOK PINEHURST, THE COMMUNITY 1" 1 13 11 ..A.. w w Best in the Long Drive Or any drive. Whatever your game is, a Goodrich ball will help make every shot better. True, accurate, steady excellent carry and roll in every one. They are durable, too. Seven styles a ball for every preference 50 cents and 75 cents. Goodrich Golf ALLS Vv s Writ bool w w w e for interesting klet A Worthy Suc cessor. " vs M I NT f ?T & ha The B. F. Goodrich Co. Akron, Ohio Meteor, 50 cents Full size, lightweight; floats Makers of Goodrich Tires and Everything that's Best in Rubber The Hew Jackson Springs Hotel Delightful Rtde, Drive or Motor Trip A SPECIALTY OF TEAS, LUNCHEONS AND SUPPERS William Jordan, Manager FIREPROOF EUROPEAN PLAN HOTEL CONTINENTAL WASHINGTON, D. C Opposite Union Station Plaza This modern fireproof hotel offers every comfort and convenience at moderate prices. Room with detached bath . . . $i. 50 and $2.00 Room with private bath . . . 2.50 and 3.00 Management of A. W. CHAFFEE PARTRIDGE INN Pen November to May AUGUSTA, GA. M. W. PARTRIDGE, Prop. All rOOItlS With Tinth Stnifoa rfV T-,li- ir. randas, Sun Parlor and Open Lounge on the Roof. Steam Heat, Electric ElevatSr, White Service. Only three blocks from Augusta Coun ty Cub, two 18-hole Golf Courses. Write for liooklet Men of Ilefinement, Information and mean Attracted Uy IoiiMIitie PROnAiiL 1 not one man out of sixty who wanders into the Pine hurst section in search of congenial surround ings and pleasant sport is aware that the immedi ate vicinity, all the year round, is the very center and home of one of the pleasantest and most advanced communities in the whole country ; that men of means, refinement and information have chosen it for their homes and are opening it up into planta tions and forming an agricultural com munity upon the most scientific and put upon the land. It cost them less than $30.00 an acre all cleared up and plowed. This year there are 900 acres open on that plantation, and the cotton brought a net earning of $25.00 an acre and the tobacco over $100.00 per acre. They set out 90 acres in peaches. That orchard paid them a net profit of 45 per cent this last spring, and they paid their superin tendent a fourth of the profit as his share before division. They were very shortly followed by others. Roger Derby, one time Harvard tackle, the originator of llogan's alley and other breaks in the famous Yale line, who today feeds steers by the car loads and organizes all the farmers in the section with the help of both depart- . . mr.-J v.. rimm. to . :- ' -S., ,5 .tif 7 ' .Jf" STUMP PULLTNG ON DROWNING CREEK PLANTATION modern plans. 1 Four years ago Raphael Pumpelly and Ralph W. Page, recently graduated from Harvard College, ex plored the South in search of a country home where they could make their living on the land and where life presented its pleasantest aspect. They bought 4000 acres of wild land near Pinehurst, for three reasons : That the country was the healthiest, the highest and the pleasant est they could find; that Mr. Tufts had already demonstrated the value of the land for their purpose; and that they were encouraged to do so by the advice of the Farmers' Cooperative Bureau in Washington and the absurdly cheap price ments, St ate and National, to the building of the soil and the final word in rural cooperation, credits and markets. He owns an estate of 2000 acres, plows with a caterpillar tractor and lives like a gen tleman of the Virginia school all at a cost of a few dollars an acre, f These have been joined by many others. Adam Haskell, who lived in Washington Square in a total space of 200 square feet, now has a mile square of cotton lands and a hundred acres in cultivation, his own game preserves and a family inheritance, at a total cost of $10,000. On the other side of him the Allen brothers, Mitchell and Langdon, from Boston and Yale, arc