Newspapers / The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, … / April 22, 1905, edition 1 / Page 6
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Efci Jits (Kami THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK PAGE THE GflHOWfifl PINEHURST, H. 0. : ! " " - ' ' " " ' ' ' I - r . - 1 . ; j 32 . .. n i ? " " . v: 'j-?-' """"" fcllTltl Till I l I 1 T- " -falll'ifefe' llll ldtttMMMlllMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMilMMM The Carolina is a magnificent four-story building completed in 1900. The (nterior 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. lhe Berkshire, PINEHURST, N. C. The Berkshire is a modern hotel, delightfully located with all conveniences for health and comfort ; miming water from the celebrated Pinehurst Springs, bath rooms, steam heat, open fires and electric lights and sanitary plumbing. The guests apartments are comfortable and home-like and the public rooms large and attractive. The cuisine and service is of a high standard. J. A. SHERRARD, Manager. PIINBV WOODS INN, SOUTHERN PINES, N. C. Utf xi, 7' v ryi A modern hotel, lionie-like in every respect. Luxuriously furnished appealing to all who desire home comforts at moderate rates. Uooms en suite with private baths. Sani t;iry conditions perfect. No consumptives received. The Water used at Tliiey Wools Inn Is from the Celebrated Crystal Springs-abao-lutely tree from sediinent-the finest table water to be had. RATES ON APPLICATION. Leon St. John, Manager. The mt. Kineo House, KINEO, Moosehead Lake, MAINE. Send for llooklct C, A.JUDKINS, - - manager, THE EMPEROR AT HOME Fascinating Glimpse at the Private Life of Germany's Ruler. Ill About Five o'clock and Oener allj at Work hy glx--IlilnM-I,lk and Systematic. Mm HE private life of the Emperor of Germany af fords a fascinating field for study, lie usually rises about 5 o'clock, and is generally to be found in his work room at G. First there is served to him a cup of tea or bouillon and a sandwich. Then, lighting a cigar, he reads over such clippings from news papers and magazines published all over the world as are deemed worthy of his attention. At 7 o'clock the emperor is ready to receive the reports of his adju- attired in the undress uniform of a col onel and attended . only by his adjutant, takes a stroll in the Thiergarten, and he fore he returns to the palace, at 2, to be gin his afternoon's work, it is his custom to drop in the office of a minister or for eign diplomat for a little chat, or to visit at the home of a friend. The emperor's intimates, be it known are mostly men who "do things." That he prefers intel lect and achievement to blue blood is evi dent to all who come in contact with him, and it has caused no end of heartburning among the old Prussian aristocracy. In his intercourse with his friends the em peror is very informal, quite the "good fellow.'" The emperor has not what would be called a profound mind ; it U more given to scintillation than to orig inal thinking; but more than one person has testified to his really wonderful abil ity to talk intelligently on a wide range of topic, and this quality makes him a delightful companion. The emperor breakfasts with his wife and their tlock of six boys and one girl about 10.30 o'clock, and dines with them about 5, both of these meals waiting upon r H J; m f A mm JlW f". i5r 3 , M4 f A ft i i mfifmf l mmmmmmr. jrVi ONE OF TIIE COW-PEA PATCHES PLANTED ON THE PINEHURST PRESERVES AS FOOD FOR QUAIL. tants and the minister of state, and to this work he usually devotes some three hours. . When the person who is to have an audience is admitted to the room and makes his bow, the emperor, who re ceives standing by his desk, slightly in clines his head in response, and says, "Pleased" as a signal for his visitor to begin, listens attentively to what he has to communicate, but never makes a com ment. The substance of all the visitor has said, however, is contained in the paper that he invariably hands to the emperor's secretary at the close of the audience. These papers are numbered in accordance with the order of their receipt, and after the visitor has departed the em peror usually writes upon the former's communication a terse direction to his secretary, so that, if there are in connec tion with it any papers to be prepared for the imperial signature, they may be ready to hand in the file when emperor and sec retary begin their afternoon's work, says Everybody's Magazine. Every day after breakfast the emperor, the finishing of his work. All the chil dren have participated in these family gatherings, ever since they were able to sit up in a high chair, but neither at break fast nor dinner is ever an unnecessary word spoken unless there happens to be a guest present who chats now and then with the empress. It would be a great mistake, however, to attribute the silence at meat times to an unsocial spirit; on the part of the emperor it is merely an other manifestation of his penchant of concentration. "When I eat, I eat," lie has more than once remarked; "when 1 sleep, I sleep, and when I work I work." Of course the emperor has to talk at the banquets given at night, but his eating on those occasions is a mere formality. In all its appointments the. work room of the German emperor is eminently business-like, as becomes the room that is the scene of the labors of one of the busiest men in the world. The fiat-topped desk that stands near the middle window is built of ebony on massive lines, but it (Concluded on page seven J
The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, N.C.)
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April 22, 1905, edition 1
6
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