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GROVE PARK INN
SUNSET MOUNTAIN, ASHEVILLE, N. C. _
The Finest Resort Hotel in the World .
Mr. E. W. Grove, of St. Louis, Mo., has built at Asheville, N. C,, the
finest resort hotel in the world-—Grove Park Inn. It is operated the year
round. It is absolutely mof—obuilt of the great boulders of Sunset
Mountain, st the foot of it wits,
It was built by hand in the old-fashioned way-—full of rest, comfort
and wholesomeness. The front lawn is the hundred and twenty aecre,
eighteen-hole golf course of the Asheville Country Club, and with its sixty
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From the porches of the Inn one looks aeross the golf links upon
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i most entrancing regjon and the most delightful all-year
elimate to be found in America. ’
To describe the beauties of the Asheville Golf Course—the finest in
the South-—is hopeless. It is located on a bit of a plateau near the city
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another Asheville. .dtdha on every side is range
wnnuo:‘zh You'll bave to imagine surroundings from that.
The course itself is well conceived and exeeuted. Its length is 5,754
yards, but seems longer. This‘ds because so many of the holes are on
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ing play that is needful in many resorts in the hills.
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roads and the like, along & moderate mixture of traps and bunkers.
One beauty of the course is that the first, ninth, sixteenth, seventeenth and
sighteenth holes are within a short distance of the elubbouse and much
of the rest of the round is in sight of the elub verandas
" The turf of the course is excellent, and the putting greens are sur-
MP" To those sccustomed to the Bermuda putting
greens of “"Dixie,”” the Asheville greens are a revelation. ?‘b‘:‘Mh
Information, Photographs, Room Plans, Prices and Bookings May Be
Had at Any Southern Railway Office or
—Address—
GROVE PARK INN, ASHEVILLE, N. C.
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HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, JANUARY 2 1916
greens are covered with Blue Grass, which is absolutely without resistance
to the progress of the ball, and in consequence, are “‘keen’’ to a degree.
They are well kept and always true. There is not a resort course in the
South where the turf ean compare with that of Asheville,
All the water used at Grove Park Inn is piped seventeen miles from
theslopes of Mount Mitchell, over 6,000 feet altitude, and is without
question unexcelled for purity and softness. The watershed from which
it comes is the highest mountain east of the Rockies.
Biltmore milk and eream are used exclusively, supplied from 250 reg
dounstul if this iy e T .
ou anyw w
The kitchen of Grove Park Inn is not exeelled in the finest hotels of
this country or of Europe. Its walls are of white glazed tile—the floors
white ceramie tile. All dishes are boiled after each using, even the silver
snd drinking glasses, : ,
No electrie bulbs are visible throughout the entire house. All light
ing is indirect. Every window a casement window (like two doors)
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The “*Big Room,'’ or lobby, of Grove Park Inn is one of the most
wonderful rooms in the world. It is 120 feet long by 80 feet wide, and
can comfortably entertain 1,000 people. The two great fireplaces in it
burn twelve-foot lonnmd each required 120 tons of boulders to build.
This great room is tof a most unique collection of native bounlders,
flint and miea, and at l“fil is illuminated by indireet mwbieh are
nd«-ied:uhfithni g. The lights in this reom give over
12,000 eandle power illumination.
The climate of Ashaville is wholesome and invigorating. Thronged
in winter by those who wish to escape the extreme cold of the North
without, however, losing entirely the favorable effecls of a bracing at.
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