Newspapers / The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, … / Jan. 1, 1916, edition 1 / Page 6
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IMiTHE pinehurst ouTL0OKSMtf c.l -- ATLANTIC Cltr' ''rfdu!jto' ' I'.'Vi A Bold Original Creation '1.1' mmM For The Seashore I'M I For The Seashore 7w MAGNITUDE and CHEERFULNESS W It expresses the spirit of America at play amid the spaciousness of green ocean, blue sky and radiant sunshine. THE LARGEST FIREPROOF RESORT HOTEL IN THE WORLD Belvedere Submarine Grill Restaurant Traymore D. S. White, Pres't. J. WMott, Mgr. Adjustable Hole-Rim or Gup For Putting Greens Seamless Pressed Steel, Galvanized. Thin and stiff. Holds its shape. No mud on ball. No water in Cup. Lip of Cup accurately adjusted up or down, relative to surface, without removing Cup. No sharp Marker-Eods, or Bamboo Spikes. Booklet upon request Sample sent to any Golf Club in the U. S. without any charge whatever for 30 days trial in the ground THE PUTTING GREEN, 1517 H. Si. N. W., Washington, D. C. THE GOLF SHOP, 75 East Monro St., Chicago, III. ARTHUR L. JOHNSO I CO., 180 Devonshire St., Boston, Mass The Dewey Hotel 14th and L Sts. N. W. I WASHINGTON. D. C. The most comfortable and homelike hotel for tourists in the Capitol. American and Euro pean Plan. Send for booklet with map of Washington. Reference Mr. H. W. Priest. The Carolina. G. Q. PATTEE, Proprietor Dr. Richard T. Taylor Dentist At Pinehurgt from Jan. 1st to April 1st Are You Going to Build or Paint or Renovate a House? If you want it done well with par ticular care and finish, with highest grade of materials and skill, I will do it for you. Let me advise you concerning the best available method of construction in this locality, and its cost. Telephone or write FRED C. PAGE, Aberdeen, N. C. Builder and Contractor JACKSON SPRINGS HOTEL New Management OPEN NOVEMBER TO MAY Published Every Saturday Morning, During the Season, November May, at Pinehurst, North Carolina Conducted ly Ralph W. Pair Edwin A. Denham, Business Manager 11 West 32d Street, New York One Dollar Annually, Five Cents a Copy Foreign Subscriptions, Fifty Cents Additional The Editor is always glad to consider contribu tions. Good photographs are especially desired. Editorial Rooms over the Department Store. Hours 9 to 5. In telephoning ask central for Outlook Office. Advertising rate card and circulation state ment on request. Entered as second class matter at Post Office at Pinehurst, Moore, County, North Carolina. Saturday, January 1, 1010 The Immortal Motor 1 ' Journeys end in lovers meeting Every wise man 's son doth know. ' ' Since history dawned on the divine fab rications of Odysseus, the first great ex ponent of the Strenuous Life, the human race has never seen a golden age of romance to compare with this amazing era, unfolding before our very eyes. Nothing Cervantes or Marco Polo could even imagine can be compared with it. More adventure is concentrated in a week's time in Chicago than is contained in all the chronicles of Bagdad (and quite as scandalous) . Every newsboy on the train has seen more strange and wonder ful characters than Peter the Hermit ever dreamed of. Do you doubt? Let us see. Suppose you opened the morning World and found these headlines: "Italian Gentleman Sails Across the Atlantic in a Caravel." Well, you'd say, what of it. I've done it myself, on a steamer, and Blondin did it in a catamaran on nuts and barley water. "Hannibal Crosses the Alps with 10,000 Mcn." This you would assume was a police drill and belonged in the municipal column. " Iccarus flies two miles and falls into the Sea." If you didn't skip it entirely in search of Mutt 's adventures you 'd doubtless say this flying business isn't perfected yet. "Jeanne d'Arc on the Rampage-" You'd look over your specs and inform your gentle partner that there is no limit to this feminine foolishness. If De Quincy were to drop in and begin his epic about the. Flight of a Tartar Tribe you would sigh and write a small check for the Polish relief fund. Guy Fawkes would languish in obscurity and die of envy, these days- Cleopatra would go into vaudeville, swan boats take parties of children sightseeing on the Styx, Dra gons be lassoed by gentlemen cowboys from the Harvard Club to make a secnario and Charybdis dammed to run a dynamo in Scranton, Pa. Caesar Borgia would be fined $1,000 and costs. Every Sunday supplement would have half tones of Dan iel Boon snooping through the wilderness. I repeat, this is the age of miracles, of adventure, of chivalry. It is so romantic and miraculous that we think no more of wonders than a princess does of pearls. And that is the reason, my friend, that you finish your breakfast and ask, ' ' what is there to do?" I answer, consider the automobile. It is to you what the Dromedary was to the Bedouin, the fiery steed to the crusader, the jin-rickshaw to the Mandarin, his elephant to the Kajah. The one great partner in all enterprise. Take it and go forth with an open mind. There are five roads, broad and dry and firm, the pride of our hearts, each one the Appian Way. And on each one Sir Walter Raleigh would have found the Great Adventure. For him the beauty lay in not knowing what to expect, or where he was going, or who was there- But if you are made on another plan and want your voyages charted and a prospectus of your sur prises, you will find a partial list of object points described on another page. (Assuming the printer can get it into this issue. If not, you can look forward to its appearance with keen anticipation). Tb ChrintiiiaV Dance Even if you were not one of the gay dancers which throng the ball room at the Carolina on Christmas night you doubtless managed to get a look at the joyous proceedings over the shoulders of the assemblage gathered at the en trance; and it seems rather superfluous for us to emphasize at this late date the fact that the dance was a success of the most de cided variety. Just outside, in the cor ridor, stood a punch bowl of generous di mensions and contents, completely sur rounded by human and thirsty beings. That punch bowl was also voted a great success, quite unanimously and frequently. The dance ended late, as is the habit of jolly and successful affairs we cannot conscientiously state just when it came to an end for we weren't there at the time. However, it was all over when we came down to breakfast. An attempt to compile a list of even the most consistent dancers ended in ignominous failure, but here and there we managed to identify one of the whirling couples and to note their names for this Immortal Chronicle, as follows: Miss Gertrude Kerekhoff, Miss Marion Kerchkoff, Miss Judith Jenks, Mr. Jenks, Mr. Andrews and Miss Helen M. Andrews, Miss Lillian Gillette, Mr. and Mrs. Spen cer Waters, Miss Lucy Priest, Mrs. A. S. Newcomb, Mrs. George Lead, .Mr. C. Maxwell Peterson, the Dana brothers, Mr. Charles P. Mason, Mr. and Mrs. Boyd, Mr. and Mrs. Wilkerson, Mr. and Mrs. Sternf eld, Miss Esther Tufts, Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Spindler, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Pearson, Mr. and Mrs. Monsey, Mr. J. C. Skinner, Mr. Melville Brown, and num erous others too active for identification. Send the Pinehurst Outlook to your friends. It will save lettter writing. J L SHUU 1 (fro) POWDERS DUPONT BALL1 STITE SCHULTZE Endorsed by Generations of Sportsmen and Made and Guaranteed by the Pioneer Powder Makers of America Loaded by the leading ammu nition companies in the popular loads for field and trapshooting. Look for DUPONT, BALLIS TITE or SCHULTZE on the shell box. Insist on getting these loads the choice of 80 per cent, of the sportsmen of America. FOR POWDER BOOKLET GIVING GAME LOADS AND LOADING INSTRUCTIONS, WRITE SPORTING POWDER DIVISION. E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Go. WILMINGTON, DEL, J l The Jewelry Shop Large and Varied Stock of Diamonds, Jewelry Silverware and Notions Prom the Best Manufacturers Only Repairing of Jewelry and Engraving of AlFKInds, All in Our Own Shop by Skilled Workmen MAY WE SERVE YOU? THE PINE CREST INN A recent delightful addition to Plnehurst's Hotels M O DE R N THROUGHOUT. Mrs. E. C. Bliss. Dr. Ernest W. Bush OSTEOPATH Southern Pines, North Carolina A
The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, N.C.)
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Jan. 1, 1916, edition 1
6
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