Newspapers / The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, … / April 8, 1916, edition 1 / Page 8
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c THE PINEHURST OUTLOOK 8 in. v- k ATIANTIC-CITY inn sat '1RAYM0RE A Bold Original Creation .For The Seashore W MAGNITUDE and CHEERFULNESS Wf 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. 8. White, Pres't. J. W. Mott, 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-Rods, or Bamboo Spikes. Booklet upon request Sample sent to any Golf Club In the U. S. without any charge whatever for 80 days trial in the ground THE FUTTING GREEN, 1517 H. St. N. W Washington, D. C. THE GOLF SHOP, 75 East Monroa St., Chicago, III. ARTHUR L. J0HNS01 CO.. 180 Devonshire St., Boston, Mass The Dewey Hotel, Zltll 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 Q o Q Q Burke golf CLUBS Receive infinite care in their manu facture, from the selection of materials down to the last finishing touch. Awarded Grand Prize, Panama Exposition. Ask your dealer or pro. to show you Burke Grand Prize Woods and Irons If he is not supplied write us and we will tell you where you can see them. In any event write for Catalog and Golfers' Guide. The Shaft is 90 per cent, of the Club Burke Shafts are the World's Standard. The Burke Golf Co. 66 Manning St., Newark, Ohio o Q OUTLOOK Published Every Saturday Morning, During the Season, November May, at Pinehurst, North Carolina Conducted by Ralph IV. Pagre 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, April , 1910 Religious Services At the Pinehurst Chapel: Holy Communion 9.30 A. M. Children's Services 10.00 a.m. Morning Service and Sermon 11.00 A. M. Night Service at the Com munity House at 8.00 p. m. Roman Catholic Early Mass 6.15 A. M. Second Mass (when visiting Priest is in Pinehurst. . . 8.00 A. M. IM.alls Arrive 8.00 a. m. 8.30 A. m. 7.00 P. m. 8.30 P. m. Leaves 7.00 a. m. 8.30 A. m. 6.00 p. m. 8.00 P. m. Train a NORTH Leave 9.40 a. m. 9.00 p. m. from north Due 8.05 a. m. 8.30 P. m. SOUTH Leave 7.10 a. m. 7.35 p. m. from south Due 10.30 a. M. 9.45 p. m. Old Southern Cooking- There is a legend among naturalists that when some friend walking in the neighborhood of Walden Pond with Tho- reau asked him where one might find arrowheads of aborigines, that he replied picked one up. It is so with most things we seek. It is so with treasures the pine stumps desecrating the landscape are worth more per ton than the average gold bearing quartz; it is so with Eomance probably the greatest beauty and the most dynamic heroine in the universe sits at the table next to you, dying for adventure; I know it is so with regard to old Southern cook ing. . We found it out Sunday. Riding over the ridges and in the by ways about the village, most any day one can hear a fellow like Thoreau's friend saying "Where is the home-smoked ham and the country sausage? Who gave the South a reputation for fried chicken, sorghum and lye hominy; who makes the beaten biscuit and the waffles, the persim mon beer; show me the yams baked in the ashes, and the 'possum turning on the spit. It is not here, in this chaperal. Wrong again. That's exactly where it -r-i i j ii. ml i is. Hivery uem oi it. nere camo iu the village last week one of those great captains, sons of Carolinas, of which there are so many one of the legion that left the old homestead and the cross creeks, the plank road and the plantation in the days just after Sherman's raid, and who have turned up since in the councils of kings and governments, in the lead of armies and in the meetings of the mightiest directorates. His first call was for a table such as Tyson used to set on the hill at Carthage fifty years ago. Someone said the ancient hospitable and abundant spread was a memory, a lost art; others that it was an invention, or a secret confined to novelists of the Richmond school, and the illus trated pamphlet artist. But at this stage of the game another suggested he try "Uncle Dune," in the grove at Jackson Springs. If one third of those that read this were to understand what we found at Uncle Dune's, it would no longer be Uncle Dune's. It would be the scene of a mob and in its pristine beauty and simplicity would vanish down the road taken by famous "Bohemian" restau rants. Once popular they are no longer Bohemian. Once overrun, and Aunt Mat tie could no longer preside over a board as bountiful and hospitable as ever adorned the pages of a Civil War romance: It was Sunday dinner, served at noon, as of old. The menu was not only rich and varied, it was all the more remark able in that everything on the table was a product of the place, and of a process of preparation and culinary art a hundred years old, with the single exception of cranberries. Maybe those fond of believing that our country kindred of the fifties fared better than we do now, even with the wealth of the Indies and a cordon of French chefs, will pardon a little reca pitulation of this extraordinary meal. There was firied chicken, the original article, in unlimited quantities; home made sausage and fresh ham, flanked with more kinds of jelly and preserves than I have names for; yams whole and yams sliced; corn bread made of water ground meal, and sorghum syrup light bread and plantation biscuits; lye hom iny, a delicacy of a bygone era, and tur nip greens, a dish whose maligners are either ignorant or malicious. Buttermilk comes at this fountain not by the glass, but by the gallon, and sweet milk and cream are second only to that found in Devonshire. If this repast leaves anyone stout enough to proceed the sideboard is laden with layer cakes and pastry of dire pro portions, and in numbers to insure defeat of any hunger ' ever seen. Mr. W. W. Fuller took Miss Caroline and Lady Fuller, Miss Staples and Miss Madden of Ossining and Mr. Henry Holt Jr., to investigate this story, and have reported all as here recorded. This un bounded and refreshing hospitality will be shared at small expense on short notice by Mrs. Duncan Johnson, of Jackson Springs. Send the Ptnehurst Outlook to your friends. It will save lettter writing. " Glad to see you I've a place in my 3 31 YOU ARE WELCOME AT THE TRAPS YOU'LL find the ''glad hand" and a spirit of good fellowship wait ing for you on your arrival at any Of the Gun Clubs scattered over the country. Trapshooting is the national gun fest, a sport that appeals to men and has the approval of women. The flight of the clays makes sport for the vacation days. Go to the shooting club where you can have fun with your gun. ASK FOR BOOKLETS," THE SPORT ALLURING" (FOR MEN) AND "DIANA OF THE TRAPS" E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Go. Powder Makers Since 1802 WILMINGTON, DEL. THE MOUNTAIN PARK HOTEL AND HOT MINERAL SPRING BATHS AT Hot Spring's, N. C. Open all the Year "In accessibility of location; in absolute freedom from dampness and fogs; in the per fect purity of its health-giving atmosphere, and the beauty and grandeur of its surroundings, the North Carolina Hot Springs stand pre-, eminent among health and pleasure resorts of America." Golf Tennis Open Swimming Pool Mountain Trails Horseback Biding. The waters of these springs have been found to be practically a specific in the cure of rheu matism, gout, rheumatic gout, kidney trouble, and all kindred ailments. Testimonials on application. Under Entire New Management. For information and reservations write or wire FRED J. FULLER, Manager, Mountain Park Hotel, Hot Springs, N. O.
The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, N.C.)
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April 8, 1916, edition 1
8
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