THURSDAY. JULY 5. 1956 THE PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina '-li ■m Summer Reading This is the year of the 100th amviversary of the birth of Wood- row Wilson. As a part of the cen tennial tribute to the great war president, “The Politics of Wood- row Wilson; Selections from His Speeches and Writings” (Harper) edited, with an introduction, by August Heckscher has been pub lished. There are, of course, other col lections of Wilsonia, including the voluminous Ray Stannard Baker work. The present volume has distinction, however, because of its timeliness and the particu lar purpose which its editor-com piler has tried to achieve. Characterizing Wilson as “a great image and mighty force” in his day, Mr. Heckscher des cribes this book as an effort to re create these attributes in a way which will be relevant to modern times—to make clear why those who knew this ‘‘image and force” in their full tide speak of them with awe, “and which a new gen eration can iU afford to neglect.” Commenting further on the timelines of a reexamination of Wilson thinking Mr. Heckscher says that increasingly Americans are aware that without principles adhered to, without the concept of enduring values, this country risks losing the advantage which it has maintained in the past over every form of imperial or aggres sive power. In that realization we should be ready to turn back to a deeper study of the example of Woodrow Wilson. The lonely scholar seeking the path to action in a democracy, the upright in dividual condemned to find suc- KEEP THIS AD! Over 20,000 Arthritic and Rheumatic Sufferers have tak en this Medicine since it has been on the market. It is inex pensive, can be taken in the home. For Free information, give name arid address to P. O. Box 826, Hot Springs, Arkansas j2128i5c cess in failure .brings a note into contemporary discussion to guide us past the twin pitfalls of ex perience and despair. Mr. Heckscher stresses the fact that WSlson “in the fullnes of his intellectual and spiritual power ... exhibited a kind of leadership from which the present genera tion may dissent but which it pannot afford to dismiss as irrel evant. He saw things in a clear ihorning light. He honestly be lieved that men could put aside the obsessions which divided or confused them and disinterest edly pursue the common good.” l^e Virginia-born former Pres ident of Princeton, whp practised law for a brief time in Atlanta, “had an instinctive grasp of reali' ties which enabled him to pre serve the vital balance between ideals and practice,” notes the editor-compiler, who says “his disposition. . . was to penetrate to moral issues and to expect men and women to submerge narrow interests in pursuit of a common ideal.” To give contemporary readers ja better understanding of the great proponent of the League of Nation's, Mr. Heckscher groups his selections under these head ings: “The Problem of the Const! tution,” “Making of a Nation,” “The Individual and Society,” “Under a Higher Judgment, “The Ideals of Education,” “The Political Scene,” ‘‘The Challenge of Action,” “Foundations of Re form,” “The Exercise of Power,” “The Essence of America,” “From Neutrality to Leadership,” “Into WaiT,” “Toward Peace,” “The Great Hour,” “Image of the League,” and “The Lost Battle.” As Author Schlesinger Jr. has said, this is a book ‘“which res tores Wilson as a political think er in all his variety, insight, and excitement.” Mr. Heckscher is president of the Woodrow Wilson Foundation and was formerly chief editorial writer for the New York Herald Tribune. ARCTIC 20 NEW! SPECIAL • 2 speeds, with shock-proof switch. • Safety guards front and back snap out for dearnog. • Mounting Brackets Included. • Reding carrying handle for portability—may be " PORTABLE WINDOW FAN TERMS used as a drodator. Kts any window om 2Z^ wideb One year guarantee, listed VillnoYC up to 3500 cubic feet per minute on high. Underwricenr Labocacoocab BROWN AUTO SUPPLY SOUTHERN PINES ABERDEEN B.F. Goodrich Pruning - Cabling - Bracing - Feeding Cavity Work a Specialty WRITE OR CALL FOR FREE ESTIIiilATES SOUTHEASTERN TREE SERVICE LLOYD HALL Phone Aberdeen Windsor 4-7335—or Phone 8712 - Burgaw. N. C. - Box 564 JAMES A. SMITH, Mgr. 30 Years Experience m24tf GEORGE W. TYNER PAINTING & WALLPAPERING 205 Midland Road Phone 2-5804 SOUTHERN PINES, N. C. EASTMAN, DILLON & CO. Members New York Stock Exchange 105 East Pennsylvania Avenue Southern Pines, N. C. Telephone: Southern Pines 2-3731 and 2-3781 (Complete Investment and Brokerage Facilities Direct Wire to our Main Office in New York A. E. RHINEHART Resident Manager Consultations by appointment on Saturday^ Rites Held For Charlie McNeill, Cameron Farmer Charlie A. McNeill, 69, farmer of Cameron, Route 2, died last Thursday at the Veterans Admin istration Hospital at Fayetteville. Funeral ^rvices were held at Cypress I^sbyterian Church Saturday at 11 a. m., conducted by the pastor, the Rev. A. D. Caswell, assisted by the Rev. Irvin Stevens. Surviving are his wife, the for mer Bessie Willard; three daugh ters, Mrs. G. P. White, Sanford, Mrs. S. L. Sorrells, Greensboro, and Mrs. T. J. Baker, Cameron, Route 2, and nine grfuidchildren. European Duly Tour Ended By Dr. Slevick Dr. and Mrs. Charles Stevick and daughters, Linda, 15, and Susan, 10, will arrive in Southern Pines Satiuday after having spent more than two years in Eu rope. Dr. Stevick is the son of Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Stevick of 135 South May Street. During his overseas duty Dr. Stevick has been assigned to the United States Public Health Service in Paris and Munich. FOR RESULTS USE THE PI LOT’S CLASSIFIED COLUMNS FOR Land Surveying CONTACT Clarence H. Blue Matthews Bldg. So. Plnea it’s ^ termite time! Fayetteville 2*6731 Coil. inspection WORLD*S LARGEST Shop Sprott Bros. FURNITURE Co. Sanford. N. C. For Quality furniture and Carpet • Heritage-Henredon • Drexel • Continental • Mengel • Serta and Simmons Bedding • Craftique • Sprague & Carlton • Victorian Hold This • KroeUor JASPER • Lees Carpet (and all famous brands) • Chromcraft Dinettes SPROTT BROS. 1485 Moore St. Tel. 3-6261 Sanford, N. C. Get Better Sleep ON A MATTRESS Let us make your old mattress over like new! Any size, any type made to order. 1 DAY SERVICE MRS. D. C. THOMAS Southern Pinas Lee Bedding and Manufacturing Co. LAUREL HILL, N. C. Makers of 'LAUREL QUEEN” BEDDING Page THREE SP IntefMtionat Uniform Sunday School Lessonk BY DR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN Baekfround Serlpture: Matthew 3:13* 17; Hebrews 1:1—2:8; 6:1-3. DeveUenal Readinf: John 14:1-11. Son of God Lesson for July 8, 1956 O NE thing the Christian_church has believed from the begin ning: Jesus is divine. Now the Bi ble never says that in those words. A more vivid and personal way of expressing it is the Bible way. There he is called Son of God. Theologians have written volumes on top of volumes to explain what it means to call Je sus the Son of God, and some of these volumes are pretty hard to un- | derstand. It is im- portant to look into the Bible it self and see what is said there.! The Foreman letter to the Hebrews (one of those nine letters at the end of the New Testament), in^the very first sen tence, gives Jesus the title of Son; but does not finish the sentence before beginning to explain a lit tle what is meant by this. God Speaks by a Son The first thing we are told here Is that God, who has been speak ing to men for thousands of years in various ways, has at last spoken to us by a Son. Jesus Christ is God’s answer to man’s questions, he is the answer to man’s call for help, he is God calling to us. Men have long wished the sky were not so silent. They wish they could read the inscrutable mind of the most high God. Well, God has spoken, he has given us his last and best Word. And this Word is not in the form of a textbook, not in the form of an answer-book for all the riddles of existence. God’s message to man is not a creed, however good it may be. His mes sage is in a Person, a Life. We want to know what God thinks. We wish he would say something. Well, God has said . . . and what he says is Jesus Christ. Through Him, the World The line that divides aU things that exist into two different. kinds of things, the first and most im portant line, is not the line divid ing spirit from matter. The real dividing-line is that which runs /bC' tween Creator and Created, or to put it in another way, the line between God and everything else that is. When you take time to think about it, you can see that only God can be on the creator- side of creation. God alone, of all that exists, is because he is and not because something or some body else made him be. Every man must say to himself, “If it were not for such and such a per son, or such and such an event, I would not be here.” But God could not truly say a thing like that. He does not depend on something or some one else for his very exist ence, as we do. It is by his good will that we are in the universe at aU; it is by his will that the uni verse is here for us to be in. Now the letter to the Yiebrews declares that Christ is God’s active agent in creation. In the simple words of the writer, we read that through the Son, God created the world. No wonder the early church soon saw that this puts Jesus on the God-side of that line dividing Cre ator from Created. This is part of what we mean when we say that Jesus Christ is divine. Ratlection and Stamp Another part of what we mean is expressed in those two words “reflection” and “stamp.” The old Greeks had a story about a crea ture called a Gorgon, with snakes for hair, so horrible that the very sight of her turned the beholder to stone. Only when a brave man thought of going up to her, not looking directly at her but into a mirror, was any one able to enter her presence and live. In quite the opposite way, God is not too hor rible, but too holy, for mere men to gaze at. We too need a mirror to reflect the unbearable glory of God; Christ is that reflection. He is likewise the “stamp” of God’s nature. He is as it were God’s sig nature, his • handwriting, his per sonal seaL “Therefore ... Closer Attention” The divinity of Christ, of which these sentences in Hebrew are only a few of the New Testament testimonies, was never thought of, in those clear early days of the church, as a mere doctrine in a book. It meant and means some thing intensely practical. If Jesus is really divine, then, we cannot just take him or leave him. If he is God’s Son he is no more op tional than God is. Deciding for or against him is the most important decision in life. What he tells and teaches is not “one man’s opin ion,” is not even the voice of gen- i ius; it is the Voice of God. I (Based on eatllnes oopYTiRhted hy the Division of Christian Edueatlon, Na** tional Connell of the Churches of Christ In the U. S. A. Released hj Communitjr Press Service.) Bookmobile Schedule Week of July 9-13 Tuesday—^Routh’s Service Sta tion, 9:30; Taylor home, 10; Marion home 10:30; Cameron, with stops at Thomas, Talley, and Philips homes and the Post Office, 10:45 to 11:30; Collins, 11:45; Gilchrist, 12; McDonald, 12:15; Paul Thomas, 2:30. Wednesday—Doub’s Chapel Route. Chriscoe home, 9:45; Black home, 10; Freeman, 10:15; Chaf fin, 10:30; Vest, 10:45; Doub's Chapel, 11; Auman, 12; and Cox, 12:30. Thursday — Carthage, 9:30 to 10:30; Westmoore Community, 11 to 2:30. Friday Murdocksville Road. Lewis, 9:15; Dunlap, McKenzie, Clayton, Black, Rice, Monroe. Cleave mail box, Neff, Cxildee Presbyterian Church Community, 12 to 2. DRIVE CAREFULLY — SAVE A LIFE I coiniv&Y CLOSED JULY 1 TO AUGUST 15 FOR RESULTS USE THE Pi LOT’S CLASSIFUaa COLUMN. Have your Winter Clothes Cleaned and Stored for the Sutnmer at The Valet D. C. JENSEN Where Cleaning and Prices Are Better! Attend The Church of Your Choice Next Sunday / r We need fences. They serve a good purpose. They give protection. But unless they have gates in them, they stop being fences and they be come barriers. Without that gate, for instance, Mary Jane couldn’t go across to the garden next door, and play with the little girl who lives there. And, just as we need physical fences sometimes, we need mental and spiritual fences too. We need the privacy of our own thoughts, the sanctity of our own beliefs. Danger comes only when we build barriers rather than fences around our inner selves. For none of us can live in spiritual isolation. We must have gates in our personal fences. We must permit Faith to enter. We must commune with others ... and, above all, with God. THE CHURCH FOB AU . . . AU FOR THE CHURCH Th« Church is tha greatest fac tor on earth for tha building of character and good citizenship. It IS a storehouse of spiritual values Without a strong Church, neither democracy nor civilization can survive. There are four sound reasons why every person should attend services regularly and sup- ^rt the Church. They ore; (1) For his own. sake. (2) For his children s sake. (3) For the sake ot his community and nation. (4) For the sake of the Church itself, which needs his moral and ma terial support. Plan to go to “dJi!?.'”"’’' Day Book Chapter Verses V Eitodus 3 i.< Monday.... Psalms g j.# TuMday Hebrews 12 i.ta Wednesdy Luke ig i.}* Thursday... Komans 12 10-21- n Corinthian, 5 g-ij Saturday... Ephesians 4 1-27 Copor.ns^it 19S4. Keister Adr. Serrto., Straskvrs. Ve, BROWNSON MEMORIAL CHURCH (Presbyterian) Cheves K. Ligon. Minister Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Wor ship service, 11 a.m. Women of the Church meeting, 8 p.m. Mon day following third Sunday. The Youth Fellowships meet at 7 o’clock each Sunday evening. Mid-week service, Wednesday, 7:15 p.m. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH New Hampshire Ave. Sunday Service, 11 a.m. Sunday School, 11 a.m. Wednesday Service, 8 pjn. Reading Room in Church Build ing open Wednesday 3-5 pjn. THE CHURCH OF WIDE FELLOWSHIP (Congregational) Cor. Bennett and New Hampshire Wofford C. Timmons. Minister Sunday School, 9:45 a.m. Worship Service, 11 ajn.. Sunday, 6:30 p.m., Pilgrim Fel lowship (Young people). Sunday, 8:00 p.m.. The Forum. EMMANUEL CHURCH (Episcopal) Martin CaldweU. Rector Holy Communitjn, 8 a. m. (First Sundays, 8 a. m. and 10 a. m.) Sunday School, 9 a. m. Morning Prayer and Sermon, 10 Holy Communion—each Wed nesday and Holy Days, 10 a. m. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH New York Ave. at South Ashe David Hoke Coon. Minister Bible School, 9:45 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. Training Union, 7 p.m. Evening Worship, 8 p.m. Scout Troop 224, Monday, 7:30 p.m.; mid-week worship, Wednes day 7:30 p.m.; choir practice Wednesday 8:15 pjn. Missionaiw meeting, first and third Tuesdays, 8 pan. Church and family suppers, second Thurs days, 7 p.m. MANLY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Grover C. Currie. Minister Sunday School 10 a.m. Worship Service, 2nd and 3rd Sunday evenings, 7:30. Fbioth Sunday monung, 11 a.m. Women of the Church meeting. 8 p.m., second Tuesday. Mid-week service Thursday at 8 p.m. ST. ANTHONY'S (Catholic) Vermont Ave. at Ashe Father Peter M. Deng^ Sunday masses 8 and 10:36 a.m,; Holy Day masses 7 and 9 a.m.; weekday mass at 8 a.m. Confes sions heard on Saturday betwera 5-6 and 7:30-8:30 p.m. < SOUTHERN PINES METHODIST CHURCH Robert L. Same. Mlniator (Services held temporarfly aft Civic Club, Ashe Street) Church School, 9:49 a-tn. Worship Service, 11 a. hl; W. S. C. S. meets each first Tues day at 8 p. m. -This Space Donated in the Interest of the Churches by— GRAVES MUTUAL INSURANCE CO. CITIZENS BANK & TRUST CO. CLARK & BRADSHAW SANDHILL DRUG CO. SHAW PAINT & WALLPAPER CO. CHARLES W. PICQUET MODERN MARKET W. E. mue JACK'S GRILL 8e RESTAURANT CAROLINA POWER & UGHT GO. UNITED TELEPHONE CO. JACKSON MOTORS, Inc. Your FORD Dealw McNEILL'S SERVICE STATION Gulf Swrvlee PERKINSON^S, Inc. Jeweler SOUTHERN PINES MOTOR COc A 8e P TEA CO.