CityView Magazine

September/October 2017

CityView Magazine - Fayetteville, NC

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CityViewNC.com | 65 friendships, fun, & confidence Building one giggle at a time The Little Gym off-ers a wide variety of classes that help children ages 4 months through 12 years reach their greatest potential. Parent/Child Classes • Pre-K Gymnastics • Grade School Gymnastics • Dance • Karate • Sports Skills • Awesome Birthday Bashes • Parents' Survival Nights • Camps The Little Gym of Fayetteville www.tlgfayettevillenc.com 910-223-3496 friendships, fun, & confidence Building one giggle at a time The Little Gym off-ers a wide variety of classes that help children ages 4 months through 12 years reach their greatest potential. Parent/Child Classes • Pre-K Gymnastics • Grade School Gymnastics • Dance • Karate • Sports Skills • Awesome Birthday Bashes • Parents' Survival Nights • Camps The Little Gym of Fayetteville www.tlgfayettevillenc.com 910-223-3496 Give the Gift of The Little Gym this Fall with One FREE Trial Class! friendships, fun, & confidence Building one giggle at a time The Little Gym off-ers a wide variety of classes that help children ages 4 months through 12 years reach their greatest potential. Parent/Child Classes • Pre-K Gymnastics • Grade School Gymnastics • Dance • Karate • Sports Skills • Awesome Birthday Bashes • Parents' Survival Nights • Camps The Little Gym of Fayetteville www.tlgfayettevillenc.com 910-223-3496 Offering a wide variety of classes helping children ages 4 months – 12 years reach their greatest potential. Steven M. Zoellner M.D. Board Certified Plastic Surgeon 20 Memorial Drive Pinehurst, NC 28375 PinehurstPlasticSurgery.com 910.295.1917 Like us on Facebook: PinehurstplasticsurgeryspecialistPA Dr. Steven Zoellner is offering 15% OFF RESTYLANE INJECTABLES! These include Lyft, Refyne and Defyne. These products will give you volume to cheeks, lips, lip lines, under eyes, nasal labial folds and marionette creases. For More Information Text "Stories" to 31996 Offer ends September 30, 2017 Discover the Cosmetic Artistry of Dr. Steven Zoellner. Schedule your consultation today in our friendly private office. Dr. Zoellner takes time to fully explore ALL options with his patients to help them make informed decisions specific to their body. Non Invasive Body Contouring Areas to be treated: Abdomen, Hips, Flanks, Bra Line, Thighs, Arms and Chin. Text "Makover" to 44222 for Special Offer This season you can find Apple Cider, Caramel Apples but what about the "Apples" of your cheeks? Try Restylane filler to bring them back! streets. e commissioners cleverly solved the problem of too many names and not enough locations, by considering each street segment that connected major points as having a distinct beginning and end, even if the street continued in the same direction beyond. Aer a few months, the commissioners gleefully reported that they had laid out six principal streets and two public squares. Unsurprisingly, four of the new streets carried the last names of four commissioners; two local and two outsiders. e commissioners' solution had established a tradition of giving new names to newly created street segments even if they extended from a previously named street. e commissioners took this practice one step further when they renamed one of the earliest roads established in Cross Creek, one that had existed for decades before 1783. e result was two different names, Old Street and Bow Street, because the road had been bisected by a new principal street (Green Street). In 1846, a street connecting Union and Donaldson was cut across the wedge of land between Maiden Lane and Hay Street, it became Anderson Street. Over time, streets were inserted into the local landscape, and the number of street names grew larger than the actual number of streets. In downtown Fayetteville, many streets were given the last names of leading citizens as a mark of honor. e one gentleman who preferred to forgo the honor was James Hogg, an 18th century, wealthy, Scottish immigrant who became a merchant, politician, and philanthropist aer arriving in North Carolina. He and his family lived for only a year in Fayetteville, but donated land to the county for the public square upon which the

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