r rat THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK JO THE HOUUY iflfl. Seasons January to May PBiiiiSiiiSiiiiiiiii v'- "K, tt ' l feslfliffip SIS mpM The Holly Inn is one of the most comfortable, attractive and popular hotels in the South, accommodating with its annexes, 200 guests. The interior, which has been thoroughly renovated and refurnished since last season, is cheerful and home like, no effort having been spared in putting the rooms and furnishings in first-class condition. There are a number of rooms connected with private baths which are let singly or en suite. The hotel is heated throughout by steam and there are open fires in the loyer and parlors. A large music room where daily concerts and dancing are enjoyed, together with the attractive Dutch room and the billiard room, provide appreciated social features. The excellent cuisine and service for which the hotel is noted, will be maintained and patrons will find the Holly Inn a most comfortable home. from January to May: FT. C ABBE, Manager, PInehurst, IV. C. The Harvard, PINEHURST, N. C. TiNEJiURST.'Ti.G. A homelike hotel, modern in every respect, having electric lights, steam heat and several suites with bath, and with its cottage annex, accommodating seventy-five guests run in connection with The Berkshire. J. M. ROBINSON, Manager. "T HOTEL TRAYMORE, f Atlantic City, N. J. ALWAYS OPES FOH TUB OECEP1IOV OF CJUISSTS HOTEL TRAYMORE CO. P. S. WHITE, President The Citizens NationalBank Of RALEIGH, N. C, (Commercial and Checking Accounts) AND THE RALEIGH SAYINGS BANK & TRUST CO., (Savings accounts 4 per cent quarterly) invite correspondence for all kinds of banking tWt Combined Resources $2,750 000.00 Joseph g Brown, Henry E. Litchfokd, President Cashier Bethlehem Country Club BETHLEHEM White Mountains, New Hampshire Superb 6000-yard golf course and new Club House. Weekly Tournaments. . Thirty Hotels, Hundreds of Cottages. "Ask Mr. Abbe" at The Holly Inn IMPORTANT TRANSFERS Closing Weeks' of Season Witness" Con tinned Activity in Real Estate 1 " Mr. lownei, Mr, and Mr. Jenks and Mr. and Mm. Pierce Added to Increasing IList THREE additional and important real estate transfers for the week past ensure individual ownership as a potent factor in Pinehurst's future development. As the culmination of years of growth and bearing the hall mark of the approval of old friends, it is the most gratifying evidence of future prosperity in this the Village which has made the Sand Hills famous, f "The sort of thing the peo ple wanted, " was the tribute of beloved Rev. Dr. Edward Everett Hale, and what finer tribute could be paid in this age when we are ever seeking ! f Thursday came one of the most gratifying pur chases of the season, three lots of land lying between the Ivy cottage and the School upon which Mr. Henry C. Fownes of Pittsburgh, will build a fifteen-room villa, with adjoining garage and attrac tive grounds. Architects are already at work upon the plans and construction will be with the idea of next season occupancy, f An annual visitor for years, father of not alone a former amateur champion, but the Oakmont Country Club as well, and a business man of national reputation, Pinehurst welcomes him as one of her own most heartily. A second purchase is by Mr. and Mrs. George J. Jenks of Detroit who take the Orange cottage as the result of sev eral winters here. Mr. Jenks was the founder and is one of the large owners of Harbor Beach, an exclusive Michigan summer resort located on the shores of Lake Huron, and maintained on much the same lines as Pinehurst, some sixty cottages being owned individually and controlled by the " Harbor Beach Resort Association." The property embraces three hundred acres and includes a Club house, golf course, tennis courts, boat house, etc. f Briefly, Mr. Jenks is in a position to know what a resort should be ! f Still a third transfer comes in the pur chase of the Maple cottage by Mr. and Mrs. Leslie D. Pierce of Rochester, Ver mont, f Mr. Pierce came first as a golf er, and came again ! It was here, also, that he met Mrs. Pierce and the friends of both are legion. " Excuse me, please, " says Mr. A. S. Newcomb to his intimates, "I must go and sell another cottage ! " Anticipat ing what might happen, Mr. and Mrs. G. Glenn Worden of New York have thus early leased the Plymouth for the coming season with an option on purchase ! Get the Habit : Send The Outlook to Friends. Telling, as it does, the full story of the wees "It saves Letter Writing" MANY LIKGEn . FOR APRlf, Wistaria and Cherokee Rose Queens Among: I be Wealth of Blooms Yielding to the summons of Spring is the Village Beautiful, the fragrant wis taria and exquisite Cherokee rose Queens among the wealth of blooms which sparkle on the rich and ever-varying background of shrub, bush and vine, f The closing of The Carolina on Thurs day marks the beginning of the season's end, but many are lingering throughout the month, f Among those who wit nessed the closing of The Carolina were : Mr. and Mrs. II. I. Cole of Detroit, Mr. and Mrs. Gage E. Tarbell of New York, Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Hopkins of Melrose, Mrs. J. M. Pew, Miss Pew and Miss Waite of Philadelphia, Mrs. Mary Hyde and Miss Lillian Hyde of Bay Shore. IMr. and Mrs. II. H. Cutler and Miss Julia Cutler of Milwaukee, Mrs. N. P. Cutler of West Newton, Mrs. J. Page Massie and Miss Katherine Jones of Lynchburg, Mrs. A. G. Olmstead and Miss M. Dunn of Condersport, Mr, and Mrs. Thomas J. Check and the Misses Green of New York are among the num ber who will prolorg their visits at The Holly Inn. At The Holly Inn At The Holly Inn the household is still a goodly one, the week bringing many additions from The Berkshire, among them Mr. D. N. Clark and Mr. Noyes D. Clark of Woodbridge, Mr. A. T. Woodruff and Miss Helen Wood ruft of Mt. Carmel, Mr. and Mrs. II. E. Pease of East Orange, the Misses Anna M. and Elizabeth P. Putnam of Lynn, Mrs. C. A. Farnum and children, Mrs, E. J. B. Thomas and Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Prince of Philadelphia, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Wilson of Nahant. Others who have registered recently include Mrs. J. J. Carter and Mr. Hugh Carter of Elizabeth, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Kinter of Ambler, Pa., Dr. Andrew God frey of Ambler, Pa., Messrs. George L. Atkins of Trenton, William Le Compte of Bristol, Pa., Mrs. A. O. Shand and Mr. A. C. Shand, Jr., of Philadelphia, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Stetson of Macon, Mr. and Mrs. A. Morrell of Brooklyn, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Casey of New York, Mr. J. II. McConkey of Wrights ville, Pa., Mr. and Mrs. John Guy Ows ley of Skaneatiles, N. Y., Mr. and Mrs. N. W. Lockwood of Stamford, Miss G. S. Hadley of Lowell, Mrs. Hiram Whitney of Brookline. SHARP CONTRASTS THESE IBlooinlnff Flow era Here Contrast with New- JEng-lund Snow "Snow storm amounting almost to a blizzard, in Boston today." f The fol lowing telegram posted at The Carolina early in the week, is a reminder of the old adage : We live to learn " and sug gestive of the frequent query : " But do we learn to live?" To be sure there has never been a keener appreciation of April's joys, yet still tnere is a lesson to be learned: " Blooming flowers here are frequently but contrasts to snow in Northern climes. Learn to live ! "