Newspapers / The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, … / Dec. 21, 1929, edition 1 / Page 13
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THTiVT For Health Drink Chosen by the Graf Zeppelin for its epochal cruise around the world. For Sale at All Leading Hotels in Pinehurst POLAND SPRING COMPANY 680 Fifth Avenue, New York City Forrest Hills-Ricker Hotel AUGUSTA, GEORGIA Open December 19 to April under man agement of Ricker Hotel Company. New S.S.“ Alleghany”; every comfort, luxury, private baths, suites; each Saturday, from Boston to Norfolk. 40 hours rest, relaxation. Rail from Norfolk; through fares. Very low auto rate. Also Tuesday sailing, apply Merchants & Miners Trans. Co. 3 Providence St. (Park Square) BOSTON DR. ERNEST W. BUSH Osteopathic Physician SOUTHERN PINES, N. C. j MYRON W. MARR, M.D. j ■ Resident Physician for Pinehurst Office Hours: j 10 to 11 a.m. or by appointment | PINEHURST GARAGE cjkj I Cars for Rent, With or j Without Driver \ Repairs of Every Sort by j ’Skilled Mechanics ; Parts of All Standard Makes \ PARTS NOT ACTUALLY IN STOCK CAN BE \ SECURED FROM RALEIGH IN A FEW HOURS \ Tires of All Sizes in Stock j I PACKARD j HUDSON—ESSEX | Sales and Service I ( -tay^JL1^jTO.,iiv,v,vrCTVIV,.i,|...prTOTrTO The Pinehurst Outlook Established 1896 Published by the Outlook Publishing Company every Satur day during the Season, November to mid-April, at Pinehurst, N. C. Publication and Editorial Office, General Office Build- : ing, Pinehurst, N. C. A. T. Robertson, Jr., Editor. j Yearly subscription rate $2.00, payable in advance; single : c°py, price ten cents. Foreign postage fifty cents a year ad- ■ ditional ; The magazine welcomes news items and contributions of any \ sort from all and sundry. They may be telephoned, mailed, or : left at The Outlook office. \ Entered as second class mail matter at the post office at Pine- \ hurst, N. C. ■ Volume XXXIII December 21, 1929 Number 4 ! The State The relations of Pinehurst with the rest of North : Carolina are cordial, and have always been so. Pinehurst : has been from the start a “Yankee Village,” and was : formerly so advertised; but North Carolinians, generally : speaking, have the admirable trait of liking their own : ways and background without in the least looking down on those who come from outside. j Three things, perhaps, are bringing in more people from ■ the State than ever before: the economic growth which : has left more time for recreation; the motor roads which have brought Pinehurst within easy reach; and the growth : of colleges and universities, whose undergraduates—and : graduates—come down for golf, or to enter tennis tourna- ; ments, or just to have a good time. Among undergraduates, : those of North Carolina are unsurpassed in their tendency ] to wanderlust of this variety. ■ In return, the interest which the State has come to have j for some Pinehurst people has grown gradually, in a : natural way. More “natives” come here; business and ] social connections grow; the Duke Foundation helps to ■ make possible the new Moore County Hospital. Thus \ the rather academic and not very full-blooded interest ■ which those from the North used to feel towards the ; South, gives way to more actual ties. North Carolina still ■ has its traditions and background, but they are strong \ enough to survive without being dragged continually into ; print. It is the present and future State which will come \ more and more to Pinehurst, and of -which Pinehurst will j become more and more aware. ■ I Christmas The Village welcomes all its guests at Christmas; a ; feast which is celebrated here with hospitality, with sports, j and with all the good will which ordinary mortals can feel j on their greatest occasion for it. : Contributors, to this Issue ■ James M. Ross was until recently managing editor of ■ the Lexington, Ky., Herald. He is now in New York ; where he is an observer of sports in general and in their ; relation to Pinehurst. : Harry Yorke is the press correspondent stationed in the i Village, and probably its best-informed resident on Pine ■ hurst sports. Bion H. Butler is the dean of newspapermen in the Sandhills and has contributed to The Outlook for many years. w***'*1 Shop in the Village^assBo SPOUTS • APPAREL • FOR • WORER Town and Country Clothes Only 4 More Days Till CHRISTMAS Let us do your Xmas Deco rating-Wiring Now Houses and Trees The Electric Shop :knox: 'hats" Mrs. Franklin’ Hand Knitted Suits Carolina Pharmacy Market Square “As Close as Your T elephone” G ^melmrst Nurseries For appointment call H. F. KELLY, Manager, Robert J. Barbee, R. A. Stiles S. Dixon, A. I. A. DIXON & BARBEE Architects Fayetteville, N. C. — Pinehurst, N. C. Glow’s Gift Shop Market Square Building “The Shop Unusual” Christmas Gifts Native Hooked Rugs Kenwood Blankets Biltmore Homespuns Mountain Hand Loomed | Material Toys and Juvenile Books
The Pinehurst Outlook (Pinehurst, N.C.)
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Dec. 21, 1929, edition 1
13
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