Newspapers / The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, … / Dec. 7, 1929, edition 1 / Page 15
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At Southern Pines The PADDOCK will have its first hunt next Saturday, going out with the Moore County Hounds on a drag hunt The deer season, open from now until January fif teenth in these parts, and the bird season, open for the Sandhills until February fifteenth, will draw a great many sportsmen from the North. (Mr. Butler’s article in this issue is very much in point.) Mr. Frank Gould, of the Manufacturers’ Record, was at the Highand Pines Inn for the Thanksgi ving hol idays and had with him Mr. H. L. Clark, of Baltimore. Mr. E. J. Walsh of Rochester, and Mr. M. E. Welsh of Syracuse, joined Dr. F. T. McNamara and Rev. P. J, Brophy for a period on the links. Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Ticknor stopped over on their way down to Camden by motor. Mr. Ticknor is the owner and operator of the Court Inn at Camden and the Berkshire Inn at Great Barringon, Mass., and is thus known to a number of Southern Pines and Pinehurst people. Mrs. M. B. Meday, of Philadelphia, is hostess to Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Scott, of Buenos Ayres, Argen tina Mrs. Reginald Felowes of New York, has as her guest Count Rossi and Mr. and Mrs. J. Allen Grover and Mr. Townsend Martin. Former Governor Robert P. Bass of New Hampshire arrived Friday of last week with his family to join the Southern Pines Hotels /— — 1 — II —:- ■ ■ -A SOUTHERN PINES HOTELS . WELCOME SANDHILLS VISITORS For Information Concerning Southern Pines Write CITY CLERK THE HOLLYWOOD HOTEL Noted for its large sunny rooms and broad verandas invites you tto Southern Pines, solicits your inspection and an opportunity to demonstrate the comforts and attractions afforded its patrons. J. h. POTTLE & SON, Props. Southern Pines, N. C. Maximum fire protection afforded by Automatic Sprinklers recently installed. HIGHLAND PINES INN Weymouth Heights SOUTHERN PINES cottage colony. Mrs. John L. McKinney, of New York, has come down to open her cottage in the next few days. Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Ticknor stopped over on their rived and will be in their cottage on Weymouth Heights. At the Hollywood are Mrs. M. D. Howell and Mr. J. C. Lohscen, of New York; Mr. and Mrs. Peter Bodine, of Flemington, and Miss Susan Swanwich and Mrs. M. V. A. McCutcheon, of New Canaan, Conn. INTRAMURAL Thirty years ago the feeling between Southern Pines and Pinehurst was, to say the least, a feeling, so far as some of the residents were concerned. Now that the two communities are thick as fleas and on the best of terms there is no harm in recalling an episode of thirty years ago, when an electric trolley was run from this Village to connect with the trains at Southern Pines. By the rail road station where the cars stopped in Southern Pines a loyal partisan of this Village erected a large sign: PINEHURST JUNCTION. Amy Lyman Phillips, the newspaper correspondent of Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, is at the Highland Pines Inn where she has as her guest, Mrs. Alice Leonard, of Clarksburg, West Virginia. Mrs. Sloan Hilton, of New York, is occupying one of the Lachine houses on Weymouth Heights. Mr. and Mrs. Hunter Eckert have opened their house for the winter. Mr. and Mrs. Jerome A. Q. Franks have rented the Lachine house on Arbutus road, Weymouth Heights, for the season and will be down after the New Year. THE SOUTHERN PINES HOTEL FRANK HARRINGTON, Manager West Broad Street. THE COLONIAL INN The Newest Inn at Southern Pines “A SOUTHERN HOME FOR NORTHERN VISITORS” Catering to Parties MRS. LEIGHTON B. HUSKE, Proprietor New York Avenue at the Corner of Broad Street. THE SOUTHLAND J. ELMER HARRINGTON, Manager New Hampshire Avenue.
The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, N.C.)
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Dec. 7, 1929, edition 1
15
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