f PAGE WlmaUlK PINEHURST OUTLOOK M?f " 1 TLHE SANDHILL ESTATES Samarcand, an Independent Duchy 12 Miles from Pinehnrst. How a Citizen of tie World Found His Household Gods ma TAKE your machine some day and run up into the country towards the foothills. In about half an hour you will come into a plantation of expansive fields and clustered houses with innumerable pigs graz ing on the lingering green and catch a glimpse of a chateau with a white pergola and tiled roof, suggestive of California and the patio. If you were not bred to the bucolic life you will ask the chauffeur what the two great cylindrical towers are, looming upon the left. If he is a prosaic man he will say they are silos, providing endless table d'hote for the lowing kine. tic. On one side bales of cotton piled high, the bare boards of a typical tobacco warehouse and an unsightly boiler making steam under a shed are an inheritance from the lumberman 's school of landscape design. On the other a rustic log house, a hedge row along an old fence, a lawn framed in violets and rose bushes, with a stone balustrade and a retaining wall, tile covered, flower garden . and vine-clad Doric columnssuggest the permanent seat of some retired artist. Viewing all this, and with the further fact considered that five years ago it was an impassible sandy road from Pinehurst interested spectator of the strange self conscious students at Harvard (I believe officially he is still at Harvard. He went there as I go to the information bureau at odd times for desirable facts) . He was to be found most anywhere. THE PUMPELY TRADITION It was an easy guess that he would never stay in an office overlooking the street, or commute daily from Englewood every morning. The inevitable occurred. When he came to settle down in one spot he went out into the world as if he owned it, and selected from this vast dominion wherever he happened to find it a territory big enough to live in, and rule over, and proceeded to make it after his own fash ion, to stay to the end of time. There is no hurry in the Pumpelly philosophy. His father bought timber and iron in primeval countries at what was considered the end of the earth in the '70s. He has them yet. It takes time to make an estate. That is why we have APPROACH TO THE PUMPELLY HOUSE AT SAMARCAND If he is not he will state the important truth and say they are observation towers, and suggest you add to your memories a picture conceived in Asia Minor by a practical poet. - ... A PASTORAL SCENE ' There is a broad stair leading towards Heaven which you can ascend with ease to the.highest point in the Sandhills. And there you get a full view of the Duchy of the Duke of Samarcand. A more charm ing outlook would be hard to find. Well tilled corn lands stretch into the dim dis tance, brown herds of Jersey cattle fill a foreground that would have delighted Millet, and human endeavor will be there represented by six great horses pulling a gang of plows, cutting the field in two. Underneath is a dairy barn of concrete with stanchions for 50 cows; and across the way a gigantic corn crib facing the stable, where 40 horses and mules are kept. The bank of pines across the way protects the residence of Mr. T. B. Cotter. The whole is cut into squares by the red roadways flanked by newly planted wal nut and poplar trees. It is a picture curi osly mingling the practical and the artis- n nil 1 1 171 1 3 T to Greensboro, anyone that can read so rew oi tnem, ana wny xmgianu naa bu character from landscape as a palmist many. Other people have farms. The does from the hand, could reconstruct an rumpellys have an estate. adventure and the character of the ad- S0IIj conservation And this is the key to the really re markable results shown on his farm lands this year.' Today, as far as yields of cot ton and corn and peanuts and peas and wheat and rye and the crops planted are concerned he holds the palm alone in the district. Every cent spent there is for permanent improvement. He cares ten times as much for the lasting betterment of his soil as he does for any one yield any one year. Tons and tons of tobacco stems go on his field every years, regard less of the times or the market, or the success of the season.. Four hundred hogs are grazing on his peanuts and chufus this minute. To be sure it is a profitable business in itself. But the hogs are there primarily because they lend a permanent increase to acres. PHILOSOPHY OF COUNTRY LIFE Samarcand proves one thing. That any man with a will can make himself a home and a profitable retreat in the coun try, and master the mysteries of the soil. He knew no more about it than I do when he went there. I doubt if he knew a cot ton boll from a pumpkin. Yet he is now his own farm manager, and runs thirty plows planted 150 acres in cotton that would be a credit to any planter in the South, old or new school, runs a suc cessful modern dairy, which is a delicate business in itself; plants, tends, cures, packs and sells carloads of tobacco, breeds championship Berkshire hogs, feeds hun dreds of others; raises more corn than he can use, and more hay; conducts a coun try store and cotton gin, and still has time to entertain his neighbors, and de velop the philosophy of Country Life in the United States on the principality plan. '.' a? venturer who willed it all into existence. THE DUKE OF SAMARCAND I do not suppose the whole world could produce another such. Raphael Pumpelly was by profession a mining engineer, fol lowing in the footsteps of his father, one of the greatest geologists of his time. He is one of the few pupils of Nathaniel Shayler who can detach himself suf ficiently from the threads of existence to consider the earth merely as a cooling cinder. Or as a great laboratory mar velously and wonderfully stocked with elements, and human vagaries, and waste places, and poetry, and ancient customs, and lost memories; a kind of enchanted play ground where one minute a fellow would be riding a yak in search of the Garden of Eden, the next courting a Cau cassian princess, or at the bottom of a shaft in Wisconsin delighted to contem plate the rich treasures of the earth. Dublin, Newport, Georgia, the smiling Isle of Capri these were all home. The world was home. With a caravan into the heart of Asia in a sloop on the coast of Alaska packing a gun across Mexico at a dance at Sherry 's occasionally an nati H. D. Swarts of Scranton-, Pa., has in vented a Rat Catcher that caught over 100 rats in one month in one establish ment. This diabolical contrivance has the rat habit, and sufficient intelligence to reset itself after getting each victim, ac cording to information received direct from the inventor himself. PINEHURST SCHOOL PINEHURST School was constructed during the spring and summer of the present year, on a site one mile south of Pinehurst. The school receives both day and board ing scholars. In the day school the curri culum is composed of both elementary and college preparatory courses. Arrangements have been made to con vey to and from school boys who live in Pinehurst during the winter and who desire to enroll in the day school department. (Tbe School Calendar First Term. Begins Thursday, October 14, 1915 First Term Ends Wednesday, December 22, 1915 CHRISTMAS VACATION Second Term Begins Wednesday, January 5, 191$ Second Term Ends Monday, March 13, 191& Third Term Begins . Tuesday, March 14, 1916 Third Term Ends Thursday, May, 18, 1916 For additional information address ERIC PARSON (Headmaster) Pinehurst, - North Carolina Merchants 1 Miners Trans. Co. Steamship Ilnes BETWEEN Boston, Providence and Norfolk Most Delightful Route Between ALL NEW ENGLAND POINTS AND PINEHURST Florida Service between Boston, Provi dence, Philadelphia, Baltimore md Jacksonville FlmSteimert Low Fans Beit Seniles AUTOMOBILES CARRIED Marconi Wireless Telegraph end For Booklet E. O. Lohr, Agt., Norfolk, Va. O. H. Maynard, Agt., Boston, Mass. James Barry, Agt., Providencee, R. I. W. P. Turner, G. P. A., Baltimore, Md. "Finest Coastwise Trips In the World" Pinehurst Farms Dairy and Market Garden Supplying the Entire Village in their Respective Departments. Village Guests are Cordially Invited to Visit These Modern Plants. Add wit Ccrrupinderce to PIXEDIiniT CBJIEUAL OTVICV A. JVIOINTESAINTI Tailor and Dress Maker Riding Habits and Sporting Apparel French Dry Cleaning Pennsjlvanla Ave.. Southern Pines, N. C.