THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK FOR THE YOUNG FOLKS V'.- : v .: : - Xp&QL1':. :;.' . g in i, i ZTbe Sborebam; XSS'KE s Hotel : m ReoDened December 15th, having been closed for extensive structural alterations, improvements, re decorating and re-furnishing. All bedrooms j now have baths and running water. j W. I-f. BARSE, Manager BALTIMORE STEAM PACKET COMPANY (Old Bay Line) Portsmouth Norfolk OR Old Point Comfort TO Baltimore Side Trip with Stop-over at Old Point Norlina or Richmond TO Baltimore -$3.50- DAILY STEAMERS Special Meala and a la Carte Service G. Z. Phillips, G.P.A Baltimore, Md. FIREPROOF EUROPEAN PliAN NEW Hotel Continental Opposite Union Station Plaza Washington, D. C. A. W. CHAFFEE, Manager Rates 81.50 Per Day and Upward The Magnolia PINEHURST, N. C. Steam Heat, Electric Lights, Excellent Table SOUTHERN PINES HOTEL, Southern Pines, W. C. J. L. POTTLE & SON. Managers NEEDLEWORK. "NOVELTIES EXHIBITION ..ROOM v - ' HIGHLAND PINES INN . Weymouth Heights SOUTHERN PINES, N. C. L1FT-THE-LATCH TEA ROOM PInebluff,N. C The Misses Little. The finest resort hotel in the world is being built at Sunset Mountain Asbeville, N. C. Absolutely Fireproof Will open July 1st Win. S. KEISISEY, manager if R. W. GROVE, of St Louis, Mo., is building tie finest resort totel in tie world, to be opened July ist. 1913. ft will be absolutely fireproof, ud it being built of tbe great boulders of Sunset Moontiin. at whose foot it (its. It is being built by bud in tbe old-fashioocd way. Full of test ud comfort and wholesomeness. Q Tbe front lawa is tbe hundred-acre cigbteeo-bote golf lints ol tbe Asbeville Country, Club, and with it sixty jcree of our own lawa. J Tbe purest water obtainable anywhere, piped seventeea miles, from tbe slopes of Mount Mitcbell, over 6000 feet altitude. Biltmore milk and cream exclusively, supplied from 300 registered Jerseys oa tbe estate of Mr. Ceo. W. Vaadcrbilt. It is doubtful if this famous dairy is equaled in tbe world. J Four bondrcd oae-piece rugs are being made at Aubussoa, France. Seven bondrcd pieces of tbe furniture are being made by band by tbe Roycrofters. Tbe silver will be hand hammered. J Tbe plumbing material will be tbe finest tbat bas ever been placed ia any bote! ia tbe world. Tbe soil pipe bas been bydraulicly tested and tbea galvanized. Tbe bot water pipe, 18.000 lbs. in weight, will be solid brass. Tbe steam pipes are Byers genuine lap-wcldcd wrought iroa tested bydraulicly to 1000 lbs. Tbe bathtubs and fixtures all solid porcelain. No pipes visible anywhere. No radiators to be seen all placed ia re cesses under windows. No electric bulbs to be seen. J'The "Big Room." or what some call tbe lobby, is 80 feet by no, and the rugs in tbis one room will be worth $5000.00. Tbe two great lire, places ia it will bura twelve-foot logs. J For tbe golfers we are building locLers aad shower bath rooms witb a forty-foot swimming pool tbat will not be excelled by the finest clubs ia existence, and tbe players will be leu tbaa loo yards distant wbea they are oa the links. J Mr. Win. S. Kennev, of Brettoa Woods, N. H., who his sbowa la bis management of Tbe Mount Washington hotel and Hotel Clarendon, that be is the peer of hotel keepers, will manage the Inn. J We owa eight hundred acres around the lno (consumptives not taken). -- J Especially available for northern guests in the Spring, Fall and Winter, going or returning from farther southern resorts, or for an all Winter re sort. J The Iaa is located oa the (iie of Sunset Mountain, about a mile from tbe top, and is not only cool eaough ia the Summer to make a blanket necessary at night, but is protected aad mild eaough ia tbe Winter to 1 suite life enjoyable without enervation. ' 1 GROVE PARK INN. Sunset Mountain. Asbeville. N. C : New York Booking Office, 1180 Broadway. Hand loom rug weaving by native. weaver Native potter and potter's wheel Indian basket weaver Colored wood carver Arts and Crafts Shop General Office Building The Strange Story of the Magic Feathers and the Spider Woman A VERY long time ago, many years before the Indians saw the first white man, there lived, as the story goes, two orphans, a brother and a sister. After the death of their parents these two had wandered away irom ine rest 01 ineir uiDe ana made their home all alone in a sunny valley near a swiftly flowing stream. They were not afraid to live alone, young as they were, because of the powerful guardian that they had. For no sooner had they become orphans than they came under the protection of a mysterious in visible being known to them as Chief of 8j Jjg Still another warning Chief of All the Eagles gave them, while the boy and girl listened eagerly and held each other's hands. "Brother andsinerv" said the spirit, "as long as you stay with each other all will go well with you. But if one of you should go away the one who is left behind will die. " However, this did not frighten the orphans, for they knew that neither of them would ever wish to leave the other. Through all the spring and summer and fall the two children were as happy as they could be. They had started by digging a little garden, and planting seeds in it, but the tiny harvest that they gathered gave them rather scanty food during the first winter, so the next year they started as soon as the ground was soft to dig an entire field, which they planted with corn and other vegetables. WHO DOES TIIE SENTRY CHALLENGE? All the Eagles. Although they could never see this mighty spirit, they could often hear his voice, and they faithfully followed his directions. On the very bank of the stream stood the children's tepee, or tent, of buffalo hide, which they had set in place with great labor and which successfully shel tered them from rain and wind. In front of the tepee stood two trees, set there by the Chief of All the Eagles. One was a cedar tree and belonged to the girl, and the other was a cottonwood tree and belonged to the boy. Beyond these the mighty spirit raised,. mound of earth and covered this with eagle feathers. The children were told that as long as the feathers remained upon' the mound they would progper. Also that the, feathers would serve as a warning, for in case any monster or Spider Woman (a dreadful witch, the terror of all Indian children) should approach, the j feathers would rise and fly toward her. Always after this they lived abundantly from their own harvest, and from wild fruits, and from the animals that the boy shot, now and then. And they did not mind working hard in the sun through all the hot weather, for it was such a joy to see their crops ripen and the tall corn sway in the soft summer wind. Often the sister would ask her brother to climb to the top of his cotton wood tree and .look out over the big field to see that all was well with the grow ing grain, j One day when the boy was surveying the farm from the top of his tree, his sister, who stood below, called out to him, "Oh, brother, a fawn is running by. Come down and get your bow and arrows and kill it, so that I may have its skin for a bag to keep my seeds in through the winter." The boy slid down very quickly and seized his bow and his quiver from the tepee, knowing that it was a very easy A