Newspapers / The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, … / March 11, 1916, edition 1 / Page 10
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1 THE PINEHURST PAGE OUTLOOK 3ggpgpfpjgp 10 I TOWflSEp'S TRIPLE X (PATENT PENDING) j " 'Tiof fey - 1 The Greatest Grass-cutter on Earth Cuts a Swath 86 Inches Wide Drawn by one horse and operated by one man, the: TRIPLEX will mow more lawn in a day than the best motor mower ever made, and cut it better at a fraction o the cost. Drawn by one horse and operated by one man, it will mow more lawn in a . day than any three horse-drawn mowers with three horses and three men. Does not smash the grass to earth and plaster it in the mud in Springtime, nor crush out its life between hot rollers and hard, hot ground in Summer as does the motor mower. Write for Catalogue illustrating all types of Lawn Mowers in cluding Townsend 's Golf Wonder for putting greens. (Free) . S. P. TOWNSEND & CO. lUZTTnue Jupiter Island Golf Course HOBE SOUND, FLORIDA Joe Mitchell, of the Cleveland Country Club, professional in charge Comfortable quarters at Pine Ridge Inn, Hobe Sound. Apply for Booklet Good Nine Hole Golf Course, of about 3,000 yards, oa the ocean front. A. S. NEWCOMB Pinehurst INSURANCE General Office Building The Fulname Golf Ball Marker Now Installed at The Pinehurst Country Club Take your FULNAME DIE with you or order a new one there Golf's Greatest Convenience The Fulname Company CINCINNATI, OHIO CAUGHT 5 1 RATS ONE WEEK Trap resets itself. 22 inches high. Will last for years. Can't get out of order. Weighs 7 pounds. 12 rats caught one day. Cheese is used, doing away with poisons. This trap does its work, never fails ana is always ready for the next rat. When rats or mice pass device they die. Rats are disease carriers, also cause fires. These Catchers should be in every school building. Rat Catcher sent prepaid on receipt of $3.00. Mouse Catcher 10 inches high, $1.00. Money back if not satisfied. H. D. SWARTS, Inventor and Manufacturer Universal Rat and Mouse Traps Box 566 Scranton,Pa. A. MOINTESAINTI Tailor and Dress Maker Biding Habits and Sporting Apparel French Dry Cleaning Pennjjlvanla Ave., Southern Pines, N. C. Manicure, Shampooing, Chiropody and Marcel Wave Violet Ray Treatment UURA AGNES WALKER, Room ?, THE CAROLINA f 1 Cape Cod Fish Products Put up Fresh from the Cape Cod Fish Wiers just off our Beach Delicious little mackerel (spiced) $2.25 per dozen cans. Kippered Silver Hake, a lightly smoked tasty article, $1.75 per dozen cans. Kippered Herring $1.75 per dozen cans. Fresh Butterfish (you'll like them) $1.50 per dozen cans. Assorted, dozens if you like. Transportation prepaid east of the Mississippi. Cape Cod Products Co. North Truro, Mass. REAL ESTATE LETTER noY SCOUTS A. E. Newcomb Tells About the Plans for Building 2Vw lleoltlvnccN in Ironpct for Jam Ilarber, W. II. Tluimlon and W. JT. ItlcAttl INFORMATION re ceived indicates that building operations in Pinehurst during v the coming Summer will equal and probably ex cell those of last year. Plans for four new residences are already in the hands of builders and the number of inquiries for building sits is for great er than in any previous season. Mr. James Barber of Englewood, N. J., president of the Barber Steamship Com pany of New York, has purchased three lots on Beulah Hill Road, adjoining the property of Mr. H. W. Priest and the Pinehurst Building Company, and extend ing through to Shaw Road, where he al ready has the stakes up for a commo dious and substantial residence. Mr. Barber and his family are well known here, and highly esteemed, and will be warmly welcomed as permanent Winter residents. Within two years a second dwelling will be built on these lots and this development will greatly enhance the value of all the surrounding land. Mr. Barber is a veteran golfer, a member of the Englewood Country Club, one of the leading spirits of the Knickerbocker Golf Club and a man of large business affairs, and the fact that he has decided to in vest heavily in Pinehurst realty is sub stantial evidence of his confidence in the future of the village and a handsome tribute to Pinehurst as a place for Winter homes. Mr. W. H. Thurston of New York and West Hampton, Long Island, has bought lot No. 406 on Beulah Hill Road, where he plans to erect a bungalow to be ready for occupancy next Winter. He too, is a man of long business experience and his purchase is another expression of confidence in Pinehurst, and he and his family will also be warmly welcomed as permanent Winter residents. Mr. Thurs ton is an active member of the West Hampton Golf Club and an enhusiastic golfer. Another sale of considerable signifi cance recently consummated is that of the lot between the residence of Mr. H. C. Fownes and Dr. J. S. Brown to Mr. W. J. McNab, manager of the Pinehurst De partment Store. Mr. McNab buys for investment and will build a house to rent. Bailcling- Mr. and Mrs. Donald Parson of Youngstown have the plans for their new residence completed. We are told that they will commence construction at once upon their place just across the way from the Johnsons. Next Fall will find that corner of the village completely built up. Uric Paraon Org-anizva Boj of the Pinhurt School The spirit of '76 and the arts of Chingogcook are again abroad in the land. The boys of the Pinehurst School are enrolled among. the scouts, and are busy learning the ways of the woods, and the mysteries of nature, forestry and in dependence under the guiding influence of Eric Parson and Frank Butler. They are divided into groups, and are spending this week t under different chief tains building their tribal retreats. They have been assigned to districts in the school woods. Each group is construct ing a house of some sort for itself, after their own design, and out of the material provided by the forest. The rigid rules of conservation and forestry, as taught by Gifford Pinchot are observed to the finest detail in obtaining material. The first clan are in favor of a tree house, and plan their retreat aloft; the second hark to their antedeluvian ances tors and are constructing them a mound,, after the cosy fashion of the Aztec Tribes; two prefer the Daniel Boone style of architecture, and are hard at work. sawing and splitting the makings of log cabins. They are in the open air all afternoon, . and the great beauty is that the whole of every afternoon is spent in thought ful and constructive work, of a manly,. healthful and instructive nature. Song- Ilvcital On Wednesday evening, March 15th, in the ball room of the Highland Pines Inn at Southern Pines at 8.30 o'clock there will be a Song Rectal by Mrs. Edith Chapman Goold of New York. Mrs. Goold is a singer of rare charm and dis tinction and possesses a soprano voice of great beauty.. She has been connected for a number of years in the past with the famous Musical Art Society of New lork, conducted by Mr. Frank Damrosch and has made a name for herself as an oratorio and church singer as well as a delightful recital artist. It is proposed to give the proceeds re maining after the reasonable expenses of the concert have been paid, to the farm Life School or some other worthy cause. The concert is given under the patronage of Mrs. Leonard Tufts, Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore, Mrs. Tyler Redfield, Mrs. Arthur S. Newcomb, Mrs. Henry Street Houston, Mrs. Guy Metcalf, Mrs. Thom as Theodore Watson, Mrs. Harry W. Priest and Mrs. George Orvis of Pine hurst; Mrs. John G. Boyd and Mr. James Boyd, Mrs. Archibald S. Thomp son, Mrs. Frederick Best, Mrs. Joseph Gregory, Mrs William C. Mudgett of Southern Pines and Mrs. John Warren Achorn of Pine Bluff. There will be bus connections on the night of the concert between the Highland Pines Inn and the Carolina. Tickets at $2.00 each are on sale at the Carolina and the Holly Inn and also at the Highland Pines Inn on the night of the concert. The recital is given under the manage ment of Mr. Lawrence Adler of the Marienfeld School, Samarcand, N. C. Send The Outlook to your friends. -
The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 11, 1916, edition 1
10
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