I PAGE PINEHURST mSSJVBBBK . 12 HADDON HEIGHTS, If IS IT JEIlE 1; THE SUBURB OF PHILADELPHIA Dont wait until Spring to buy a Home BUY ONB NOW As prices will advance 10 per cent. For Sale Fine new Residences, contain ing reception hall, parlor, dining-room, kitchen and laundry on first Hoor; 4 bed rooms and bath-room on second floor; large room on third floor. The very best inside wood work. Lots 75x200 feet; cement side walks. PRICES, $4,250 to $5,000. REFINED NEIGHBORHOOD. Also a few beautiful home sites, from $500 to $1,000, according to size and location. ali 200 iei:t iej;i. 'Phone, write or come and see us about it. HADDON HEIGHTS REAL ESTATE CO., HADDON HEIGHTS, N. J. PINEHURST SCHOOLS Combine under one head College Preparatory Grammar and Primary Schools furnishing instruction in all branches of these grades. Courses of study are elective and pupils may enter at any time and for any length of time, and rejoin their classes without loss, after a long or short stay, in an ideal climate, surrounded by right con ditions for living and removed from the usual temptations of school life. Special attention is given to French and German conversation. TERMS: Primary Department, $ 75.00 per year For less than full year, 2.50 per week Intermediate Department, 125.00 per year For less than full year, 4.00 per week College Preparatory Dept., 200.00 per year For less than full year, 7.00 per week Private tutoring, . . . 2.00 per hour ALDICE G. WARREN, Head Master, OR Pinehurst General Office Gymkahna Today! 3 P. M. Fun and Frolic for All D o n't Miss It! Q3ES9E m bssbss&sgbe THE VALUE OF SUNSHINE ANKIND'S love of sun shine and fresh air is his by natural right, and the out-of-doors climate is his natural home. When he lives in cold countries it is at the expense of a great outlay of labor to provide protection and a very considerable shortening of life. In con sequence it is but natural that a climate such as Pinehurst possesses, should at tract in increasing numbers. The value of outdoor life is best appre ciated by those accustomed to sedentary life when opportunity is afforded them to spend a few days in the open air. It needs no lengthy argument to demonstrate to such a person the value of continuous outdoor life as a health promoter. The value of such life does not consist wholly in the purity of the air and the exercise, matters of great importance, but also in the cooling effect of the air in motion, and especially in the vitalizing influence of the sunshine. The rays of the sun, says Dr. J. II. Kellog, contain heat and chemical rays as well as light rays. The heat acts powerfully upon the glands and vessels of the skin, while the chemical rays in fluence the nervous system in a remarka ble way. It is the chemical rays which cause so-called sunburn. The marvelous energy manifested in plant life is derived from the sun acting upon the green parts to organize and vi talize the elements of the earth and air into living substances. The same energy of the sunlight is essential to animal life. The sun bath is now a well-recognized and much-valued therapeutic agent. In this form of treatment the whole body is exposed to the direct action of the sun's rays. Persons who are not ac customed to exposure to the sun and in dividuals who have light hair and light skins should make the first exposure to the sun of short duration ; ten or fifteen minutes. Longer exposures are likly to produce sunburn. No- particular harm is done by sunburn, excepting the incon venience occasioned by it. The pigmen tation of the skin induced by sunburn protects the skin from further injury. The body may be exposed either in the open air or before a window. When the sun's rays are so intense that the heat is depressing, the heat rays may be filtered out by means of a blue screen placed ber tween the patient and the sun. After the sun bath a cold plunge, a cold shower, a cold towel rub, or a wet-sheet rub should be administered to tone the skin and the nerves. In the summer time in a hot climate the sun hath may be conveniently taken in an outdoor gymnasium. A sand pile fur nishes a most appropriate couch, as the heat which it accumulates may be utilized as an aid to induce perspiration when this is desired. Every home should be provided with a convenient place for taking the outdoor sun bath in the summer time, and sun bath indoors during the cold season. Civ ilized human beings suffer greatly be cause of the seclusion from the sun oc casioned by modern modes of life. Those who reside in cities, like the cave-dwellers of the olden time, are by their opaque walls and shaded windows almost ex cluded from the sun. The results are shown in the pale faces of old and young, the rickety children, the growing preva lence of consumption and other constitu tional maladies, the increase in deformi ties and degenerations, and other evi dences of race deterioration. Out-of-door life and a return of the simple habits of our ancestors is' the only way in which the race extinction to which we are at present rapidly hastening can possibly be averted. The sun bath is useful in almost every form of disease in which an acute febrile process is not present. It is especially valuable in neurasthenia, all forms of dyspepsia, rheumatism, diabetes, gout, skin disease and chronic maladies of every sort. REPLETE WITH SURPRISES (Concluded from page 1.) Mrs Mr. C. West Taintor, New York, and Joseph Lucas, Philadelphia. Mr. Donald Vaughan, Garden City, and Miss Lucy K Priest, Boston. Mr. Austin P. Palmer, Brooklyn, and Miss Fuller. New York. Mr. Chester N. Palmer, Brooklyn, and Miss Dunne, Boston. Mr. E. A. Olds, Jr., New York, and Miss M. Partridge, Minneapolis. Mr. N. S. Hurd, Pittsburg, and Misa Firth, Boston. Mr. O. B. Prescott, Newton, Mass., and Miss Elizabeth Hoy, Chicago. Dr. E. R. Frankish, Toronto, and Miss Corn wall. Englewood, N..J. Mr. Chas. Smith, Franklin, Pa., and MissEthel Check, New York. Mr. L. E. Fuller, Boston, and Miss Porter, Boston. Mr. W. J. Watson, Hamilton, Ont., and Miss Emilie Capel, Pittsburg. Mr. Heibert L. Jillson, Worcester, and Mrs. Leonard Tufts, Boston. "Jleata tlie World." Mr. W. J. Nellis, representing The Hotel Record (New York), spent the week here in the interest of his paper, and left impressed with the fact that Pinehurst, as he expressed it, "beats the world." OPIE REED The Famous Novelist and Story Teller, VILLAGE HALL, Friday Evening, February Fifteenth Tickets at Pharmacy and Hotel Desks; fifty cents and one dollar. Increase SmrYieils Per Acre i HI, Z Head High Tobacco can easily be raised with regular, even stands, and of the very best grade, for which the highest prices can be gotten at your warehouse, or from tobacco buyers if you will, a few weeks before planting, liberally use YirginiaCarolifla Fertilizers. Use them again as a top dressing, or second application. These fertilizers are mixed by capable men. who have been making fertilizers all their lives, and -contain phosphoric acid, potash and nitrogen, or ammonia, In their proper proportions to return to your soil the elements of plant-life that have been taken from It by continual cultivation. Accept no substitute. Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co., Richmond, Ya. Atlanta. Ga. Norfolk, Va, Savannah, Ga. Durham, N. O. Montgomery, Ala. Charleston, P. C, Memphis, Tenn. Baltimore, Md. Shreveport, Ln. Pinehurst Preserves Embracing 35,000 acres of the Finest Hunting Territory in Moore County, North Carolina, offer unusual and VARIED AT TRACTIONS 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 "ROUGHING-IT" New England comforts in a South ern territory a rare combination. Excellent Quail Shooting Turkeys for those who care to hunt them, woodcock and flight pigeon shooting; fox and rabbit hunting. In connection with the Preserves are maintained KENNELS aa complete as any in the country, at which a string of perfectly broken Betters and pointers andapackof bea gles are kept for the use of the guests. Reliable guides, shooting wagons, and in fact every requirement for long or short trips. Dogs boarded and looked after with intelligent care. RATES. Shooting privileges $1 per day, $3 per week, $15 per season. Notb. 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 i ired. month. Pinehurst General Office 1 1