M ANY years ago, a pen tipped with light wrote a new and deeper meaning into the word patriotism than it had ever had before. The Man Without a Country" went into many tongues, bearing its messages. The pen that wrote the story has lately written of a matter which bears a close relationship to the life of the individual instead of the life of the nation. It is in this clear-cut Saxon fashion that Edward Everett Hale writes of his experiences at a North Carolina health resort: Ever since I returned home, I have been saying to tired people and worried people who have notes to meet : 'Why don't you go to Pinehurst? At Pinehurst,' I have said, there is no care. At Pinehurst you do as you choose. At Pinehurst you simply breathe sweet air and drink pure water, and walk under the blue sky and meet pleasant people, and you do not know that there is any worry in the world."" This expresses with rare aptness the sentiment toward Pinehurst which is held by rapidly growing numbers of refined people in all parts of the country. The causes for it may be worth discovering. In the first place, Pinehurst stands for something very wholesome and fine for an ideal that is full of the life of outdoors. The village is the physical embodi ment of a business man's dream. Some years ago, Mr. James W. Tufts, of Boston, conceived the plan of a resort in the South where people from the North could go in the winter (not merely for a day or a week, but for a season) and find the sort of rest that builds up and makes new again. The plan found a place in the long-leaf pine region of North Carolina, on the Piedmont plateau, midway between the wet coast and the cold mountains. Nature having done so much for the region in equable climate, dry and pine-laden air, pleasing landscape, and winter blossoms, it only remained for man to make the spot habitable, to furnish the necessary appurtenances and comforts for a desirable home. The sanitary advantages of the long-leaf pine district had long been conceded. With the establishment and development of Pinehurst, they were made available for people needing just that sort of resort. Here Mr. Tufts bought 6,000 acres of pine land, and began zealously to put his plan into visible form, so men could see and pass judgment on it. That was six years ago. To-day, the beautiful and stately Carolina, the largest hotel in the State; the comfortable Holly Inn, the Berkshire, and many other places of sojourn, grad THE HOLLY INN, ONE OF THE THREE MODERN HOTELS AT PINEHURST, N. C., ALL OF THEM WELL KEPT AND POPULAR. The Casino Café is under the management of a competent New Englander. Here table board is provided at very reasonable rates. A bakery connected with the café furnishes families with sup plies. The cottages of the town are rented entire or in suites of rooms for light housekeeping. The village is supplied with running water from Pinehurst Spring, which has proved an attraction to people suffering from rheumatism, weak digestion, and kidney trouble. Large quantities of this water are shipped North. Sports are a particular feature at Pinehurst. The 18-hole golf course, covering nearly 150 acres, is by general recognition the finest in the South. Harry Vardon, the champion golfer of the world, after playing over it a number of times last spring, said: "It is a course it will be a great pleasure to any golfer to play over, and, in my judgment, one which will compare favorably with any of the Eastern courses. game has grown to a great popularity at Pinehurst. At any time of the day a sight of the links would give a Scotchman's heart a good, loyal thump. Many tournaments are held during a season, and attractive prizes offered. "The The course is divided into 6, 9, or 18 holes, so that all grades of strength and skill can have a test. Donald Ross, a professional player of world-wide reputation, has charge of the links this season. At the beginning of the course is a comfortable club-house, with large reception-room, retiring. rooms, lockers, and everything necessary for the pleasure of the golfers. The links are about ten minutes' walk from the hotels. A special car on the trolley-road makes frequent trips, connecting all the hotels directly with the club-house on the links. But golf, although easily in the lead in popu lar favor, is by no means the only sport enjoyed. Bicycle-riding, tennis, croquet, quail-shooting, riding to hounds, riding, driving, and walking over the excellent roads are other excellent recreations much indulged in. About the Casino are croquet and tennis courts, and a fine bowlingalley, and in the Casino, a restaurant, a musicroom, and a reading-room where the leading daily papers and magazines are on file. There is a large hall in the village where many entertainments are provided during the winter, and where Sunday-school and church services are held every Sabbath. Pinehurst is divided in the line of travel between the East and the South, on a short branch of the Southern Railway, which leaves the main road at High Point, N. C. It is about three hundred miles south of Washington, and is easily and directly reached from any direction by the througn trains of the Southern Railway. An electric troiley-line, six miles long, through an attractive country, runs to Pinehurst from Southern Pines, a station on the Seaboard Air Line. Pinehurst, though a natural sanitarium, has no hospital features. It is not intended, in any respect, as a retreat for hopeless invalids. To avoid all danger of contagion, no consumptives are received. It is designed for persons who desire to escape the severity of the Northern winter; for golfers, and lovers of out-of-doors generally; and for people of imperfect health in whom disease has not progressed beyond expectation of recovery. To all of these Pinehurst offers a pleasant, health-giving atmosphere, the comforts of good living, plenty of amusement, and the genial, sunny Southern climate. Pamphlets and further information may be had by addressing Resident Manager, Pinehurst, North Carolina. The Ship Canal Commission's Report.. The Canteen Question.. Reapportionment... Settling the Status of Annexed Islands. The Electors Vote on January 14... Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, Amended and Ratified 22 With portraits of Paul Krüger, Count von Bülow, Wil- A New Flag for Australasia.. Madagascar's Progress as a French Colony. The Author of the Eight-Hour Day The Builder of the Canadian Pacific. 18 The Girlhood of Sarah Bernhardt. 79 18 Professor Ely on Tax Reform.. 80 19 Attendance at American Universities.. 81 20 College Endowments 81 21 21 A French View of English University Settlements... Boston Literary Gossip by an Englishman.. 22 Psychical Research in the United States.. 88 88 89 90 90 91 92 93 94 95 24 96 With portraits of George von L. Meyer, President Krüger's granddaughters and great-grandchildren, the late C. C. Beaman, and the late H. R. Beekman. Some Recent Political Cartoons... Notes on Experimental Physiology 98 28 With reproductions from American and foreign jour The Kind of Men the Boers Are... 99 101 nals. With portraits of Mme. Sarah Bernhardt, and Sir Wil Sir John Tenniel's Fifty Years on "Punch".. 31 liam Van Horne, and other illustrations. TERMS: $2.50 a year in advance; 25 cents a number. Foreign postage $1.00 a year additional. Subscribers may remit to us by post-office or express money orders, or by bank checks, drafts, or registered letters. Money in letters is at senders' rísk. Renew as early as possible in order to avoid a break in the receipt of the numbers. Bookdealers, Postmasters, and Newsdealers receive subscriptions. (Subscriptions to the English REVIEW OF REVIEWS, which is edited and published by Mr. W. T. Stead in London, may be sent to this office, and orders for single copies can also be filled, at the price of $2.50 for the yearly subscription, including postage, or 25 cents for single copies.) THE REVIEW OF REVIEWS CO., 13 Astor Place, New York City. Powers, Demands of the. 8. Reform, Prospects of, 730. Russian Roads and the Manchuria Issue, 397 Columbus, Christopher. Where Did He First Land? 487. Commons, John R. A New Way of Settling Labor Disputes, 328. Congress of American Republics, Appointment of Representatives from the United States to the, 520, 664. Congressional Affairs: Appropriations, Amount of, 399. Congress, Work of, 15-19, 140-146, 275, 276, 399–405. Hay-Pauncefote Treaty Amended and Ratified, 22. Senate Debates, Proposed Limitation of, 401, 402. Taxes, Internal Revenue, Reduction in, 399. Constitutional Status of the Annexed Islands, 19, 151. Consumption, Battle Against, in Paris, 744. Consumption, Winning War Against, 705. Contemporary Review reviewed, 107, 238, 368, 497, 624, 751. Cosmopolitan reviewed, 103, 233, 362, 491, 620, 746. Coubertin, Pierre de. France on the Wrong Track, 447. Constitutional Convention, 274, 521, 654. Cuban Amendment, Senator O. H. Platt on His, 595. Trade with the United States and with Europe, 522. United States, Relations with the, 273-275, 404, 405, 521, 522, 654. DANISH West Indian Islands and the United States, 150, 151. Davis, Cushman K., Death of, 23; portraits, 55, 57. Day, David T. The New Oil Fields of the United Delaware, Punitive Survivals in, 273. Deutsche Revue reviewed, 243, 373, 503. Deutsche Rundschau reviewed, 503. De Wet, Gen. Christian, Sketches of, 340, 602. Diaz, President Porfirio, Sixth Inauguration of, 12. Dictionary, Oxford English, 739. Doctor, Family, Relation of the, to Recent Progress in Medical Science, 459. Duelist's Vade Mecum, 85. EDINBURGH REVIEW reviewed, 369, 755. Attendance at American Universities, 81. College Endowments, A New Method of Financing, 81. Industrial Education in the South, 347. Neighborhood Coöperation in School Life,-the "Hesperia Movement," 443. Plants and Animals, Living Pictures of, 482. Tuskegee Institute, Industrial Education at, 649-652. Edward VII., King, Characteristics of, 134, 135; Sketch of, 294. and Possible, 315. England: see Great Britain. Evarts, William M., The Career of, 435. FARMS, Abandoned, Versus Summer Hotels, 618. Advertising in France, 485. France on the Wrong Track, 447. Newfoundland, Rights of France in, 148. Religious Congregations, Legal Status of, 354, 478. Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly reviewed, 363. GERMANY: Affairs in Germany, 283, 409, 537, 661. Chancellor, New, of Germany, 78. Germany: Will She Fail? 601. "Hall of Fame," German, 720. Kaiser from the German Point of View, 78. Krüger, Mr., Germany and, 3. Prussian Bicentenary, 138. Gilman, President Daniel C.: His Administration at the Gilman, President Daniel C., Retirement of, 13. Great Britain: see also Australasia, Transvaal. Africa, England's Minor Troubles in, 7. Boer War, British Discussion of the, 353. Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, Rejection of the, 396, 397. Roberts, Lord, Arrival of, in England, 136. Salisbury, Lord, and English Politics, 533. Salisbury, Lord, and Ireland, 660. Shipping, British, Development of, 90. Taxation, War, 523, 658, 659. Throne, Firmness of the, 133–136. Women in British Politics, 225. Gunsaulus, Frank W. Philip D. Armour: A Character Sketch, 167. Gunton's Magazine reviewed, 237, 366, 496, 624, 750. HALE, Edward Everett, Sketch of, 549. "Hall of Fame," German, 720. Halstead, Murat. Some Reminiscences of Mr. Villard, 60. Harmsworth, Alfred: His Idea of a "Simultaneous Newspaper," 226. Harper's Magazine reviewed, 102, 232, 361, 490, 619, 745. Harrison, Benjamin, Death of, 409; portraits, 413, 430, 432, 433. Harrison, Benjamin, Sketch of, 430. Harrison, Frederic, in America, 558. Hawaii, Affairs in, 522; Political Deadlock in, 663. Hinton, Richard J. The Indian Territory,-Its Status, Development, and Future, 451. Hotchkiss, William H. The Pan-American on Dedication Day, 677. Hygiene and Medical Science : Consumption, Battle Against, in Paris, 744. Medical Science, Relation of the Family Doctor to Recent Progress in, 459. Microbes in Cheese-Making, 88. IMMIGRATION, Japanese, 207. Inauguration, Second, of President McKinley, 405. Indian Territory, -Its Status, Development, and Future, 451. Infection, How to Guard Against, 732. International Monthly reviewed, 106, 237, 367, 496, 624, Anthracite Coal Crisis, 391, 488, 525. Cotton-Mill Labor in the South, 723. Labor and the "Trust" Movement, 390-392. Labor Disputes, A New Way of Settling, 328. Steel Trust, Labor and the, 526, 655. Ladies' Home Journal reviewed, 103, 234, 363, 492, 621, 747. Leading Articles of the Month, 78, 209, 337, 465, 593, 717. Life-Saving Service, Founder of Our, 486. Lincoln, Abraham, in Contemporary Caricature, 156. Lincoln, Washington and: A Comparative Study, 191. Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission, Appointment of the, 520. Lusk, Hugh H. The Australian Commonwealth-Its People, Resources, and Outlook, 74. Lynching Mania in the United States, 262, 263, 408. MCCLURE, W. Frank. The Steel Trust on the Great Lakes, 560. McClure's Magazine reviewed, 103, 233, 362, 491, 620, 746. McCormick, Robert S., Appointment of, as Minister to Austria, 403. McKinley, President William, Second Inauguration of, 405. McKinley, President William, Western Tour of, 407, 521, 652, 653. McKinley, William, as President, 338. McKinley, Mrs. William, Illness of, 653. Maori, The Modern, 736. Maps and Diagrams: Argentina, Southern, 617. Balloon Contest from France to Russia, Route Taken in the, 610. Charlotte Amelia, D. W. I., Harbor and Roadstead of, 217. Columbus, Islands Claimed as the First LandingPlace of, 487. Danish West Indies and Porto Rico, 217. Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York, Route of the, 541. Guiana, French, Adjusted Boundary of, 13. Lakes, Great American, Principal Ports on the, 560. Pan-American Exposition, Plan of the, 210, 678. Philippines Route Followed by General Funston in : the Capture of Aguinaldo, 540. World, Unexplored Parts of the, 218. "Mark Twain," A Sketch of, 37. Mars, What We Know About, 342. Marvin, Winthrop L. The Merits and Advantages of the Frye Shipping Bill, 197. Maryland, New Election Law in, 643. Massachusetts Benefaction, Another, 441. Medical Science: see Hygiene. Merriam, Edmund F. Foreign Missions in the Twen tieth Century, 64. Mexico, Foreign Relations of, 664. Mexico: Sixth Inauguration of President Diaz, 12. Minneapolis Flour Output for 1900, 231. Missions, Foreign, in the Twentieth Century, 64. Mohammedan Peoples, Europe's Relations with the, 476. Monatsschrift für Stadt und Land reviewed, 244, 373, 503. Monthly Review reviewed, 111, 240, 498, 628, 755. Massachusetts Benefaction, Another, 441. Municipal Elections in Cleveland, Columbus, Toledo, Chicago, and St. Louis, 515-518. Municipal Ownership, Argument for, 468. Municipal Progress, Notes of, 518, 519. Rapid Transit Subways in Great Cities, 212. Munsey's Magazine reviewed, 492, 747. Music: Verdi, Giuseppe, and Italian Opera, 358. NASH, Gov. George K., Prize-Fighting Prevented by, 264, 265. Nation, Mrs. David, Saloon-Smashing Crusade of, 260262, 665. National Review reviewed, 109, 240, 369, 627, 754. Negroes, Disfranchisement of, in Southern States, 643. Neighborhood Coöperation in School Life,-the "Hesperia Movement," 443. Neue Deutsche Rundschau reviewed, 244. Newfoundland, Rights of France in, 148. |