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THURSDAY. JULY 12. 1956 THE PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina Page THREE ■vf $ Slimmer Reading TAR HEEL WRITERS I KNOW b7 Bernadette Hoyle. (John F. Blair. Winston-Salem. MJ. Soon to be -oublished by one of North Carolina’s top flight newspaperwomen and press photographers, is a volume of delightfully informal inter views with thirty-five of the State’s authors. Profusely illus trated with photographs made by Mrs. Hoyle with her Speed Graphic, the book promises to become an all-time favorite with school and public libraries, with would-be writers, with book and study clubs, and with anyone who likes to read about other people. Far from being in the ‘■’stuffy research” category, Tar Heel Writers I Know brings to life the men and women who write. It demonstrates what the working press of North Carolina has long known — Bernadette . Hoyle’s knack for interviewing people. All the many Tar Heel_ writers could not possibly be included in the book, so Mrs. Hoyle has sim ply made informal visits with thirty-five lof her friends and; gives to the reader, not only bio graphical facts, but also some of these author’s suggestions for Fayetteville 2-6731 Coll. 'ptee inspection WORLD’S LARGEST beginning writers about work ing methods, aims, and philoso phies. The author is a North Carolini an, having been bom in Hender son. One of the best known of the State’s free-lance writers and press photographers, Mrs. Hoyle is equally at home at a wreck, a murder trial, a hurricane, or a wedding. She has covered events of na tional importance, ranging from presidential campaigns to the “Miss America” pageant at Atlan tic City, and has interviewed numerous celebrities, including Margaret Truman, Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, and Ava Gardner. She is a member of the North Carolina Press Women, the Car- olinas Press Photographers Asso ciation, the North Carolina Writers Conference, and the Smithfield Woman’s Club. Four times winner of the Feature Ar ticle Cup given by the North Car olina Federation of Women’s Clubs, she has also won awards for interviews from the North Carolina Press Women and for short stories from the Greensboro Writers Club. Mrs. Hoyle and her husband, Macy, live in Smithfield, where he is mechanical superintendent of the Smithfield Herald. Writers included in Tar Heel Writers I Know are LeGette Blythe, Zoe Kincaid Brockman, Marion Brown, Mebane Holoman Burgwyn, Sam Byrd, Ruth and Latrobe Carroll, Jonathan Dan iels, Burke Davis, Lambert Da vis, Wilma Dykeman, Inglis Fletcher, Charlotte Hilton Green, Paul Green, Frank Borden Hanes, John Harden, Bernice Kelly Har ris, Lodwick Hartley, Noel Hous ton, Kermit Hunter, Hugh T. Lef- ler, Dave Morrah, Frances Gray Patton, James Larkin Pearson, Ovid Pierce, William T. Polk, Fred Ross, Phillips Russell, Dr. Frank G. Slaughter, Walter Spearman, Thad Stem, Jr., David Stick, James Street, Richard Wal- ser. Manly Wade Wellman, and Tom Wicker. NEW! SPECIAL ARCTIC 20 2 speeds, wich shock-proof switch. Safety guards front and back snap out for cleaning. Mounting Brackets Included. Receding carrying handle for portability—may be " PORTABLE WINDOW FAN TERMS used as a circulator. Res any window over 22^ widiA One year guacamee. Listed bf Will move up to 3500 cubic feet per minute on high- Underwruecs’ UbocatodcA BROWN AUTO SUPPLY aOUTHEBN PENES ABEBDEEN BE m FIRST IN RUBBER- FIRSr IN TUBELESS Pruning - Cabling - Bracing - Feeding Cavity Work a Specialty WRITE OR CALL FOR FREE flSTIMATES 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. Billion Spent Yearly By Fishing Fans, Green Says Dr. Philip Green, pathologist at Moore County Hospital and a noted fishing enthusiast, gave members of the Southern Pines Rotary Club a short demonstra tion of fishing equipment and tackle at the regular weekly meeting last Friday. ' Dr. Green, in tracing the his tory of fishing, called it probably one of the oldest sports known to mankind, although fishing origi nally was not looked on as a sport, but rather a means of pro viding food. He said that there is an esti mated 30 to 50 million fishermen in the country—^women and chil dren as well as men. “Those peo ple,” he said, “spend an estimated three billion dollars a year en joying fishing. The money is spent on such things as travel, lodging, food, tackle, bait, and other necessities of a fishin.s trip.” The estimated number of fishermen, he said, was arrived at through a survey of the num ber of fishing licenses sold in va rious states, the amount of equip ment sold, and the educated guesses of travel and vacation experts. Dr. Green, who owns an envi able assortment of fishing tackle brought several types of rods with him and explained the dif ference between a deep sea, or salt water, piece of tackle and a fly fishing rod; There was a general question and answer period following his talk. Guests at the meeting included Dan Clark, Bill Small and Joe Carter. James Perkinson, who was president of the club during the past year, presided in the ab sence of newly installed presi dent A. C. Dawson. The increased demand of the consuming public for red meat and poultry meat has given con siderable impetus to the broiler and turkey ^sectors of the poultry industry. FOR Land Surveying CONTACT Clarence H. Blue Mallbews Bldg. So. Pines Shop Sprott Bros. FURNITURE Co. Sanford, N. C. For Quality Furniture and Carpet • Heritage-Henredon • Drexel • Continental • Mengel 9 Serta and Simmons Bedding • Craftique • Sprague & Carlton • Victorian Hold This • Kroehler JASPER • Lees Carpet (and all famous brands) • Chromcraft Dinettes SPROTT BROS. 1485 Moore St. Tel. 3-6261 Sanford, N. C. SP (ntematiolul Undonn Sunday School Lassonh BY DR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN Baekirroand Sortptare: John 4:39-42; Hebrews 2:9—5:14. Devotional Beadlnf: John 3:14-21. 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 Saturdays ! Get Belter Sleep ON A BETTER 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 Pines Lee Bedding and Manufacluring Co. LAUREL HILL, N. C. Makers at “LAUREL QUEEN” BEDDING Savior of Men Lesson for July 15,1956 T he Bible does not say that Je sus saves men from hell. It does say that he saves men from their sins. This is much more; im portant; for suppose a man were saved from hell but not from his sins? Perverted by sin, such a man would carry his own hell with him even through the gates of heaven. Christ is the Sav iour of men here and now, not in the future alone, but in the living present. In the Bible the word “save” means, first of all, to res cue. Christ as Foreman Saviour comes to the rescue of men who are chained and beaten, men who are the victims of their worst selves, bondsmen of the devil. Your worst self hates your best self. Left alone, your best self has a very slim chance, if any. You need to be rescued from your self, and Christ is the rescuer every man needs. Sin-bearer How does Christ rescue men? The Bible suggests, and the church echoes, many answers. Let us look at three. Christ rescues men by taking their sins on himself. As a modern Christian writer (Hordern) puts it, he “took the rap” for man kind. As St. Paul put it, “He who knew no sin was made to be sin, for us . . .” In a long-ago battle for Swiss independence, the story is that one of the front-line sol diers seized as many of the ene my’s spears as he could gather in his arms, and forced himself on them, thus making by his death a gap through which his fellow-sol diers poured to victory. In North Carolina, when the United States government was about to punish the Cherokee Indians for an al leged crime, their chief Jimaluska offered to give his own life if the government would let his people go. So he was killed, and his peo ple went free. These are imperfect illustrations of what Jesus Christ did as sin-bearer, as self-giving Sacrifice. He “tasted death for every one.” That does not have to be done twice. Example Another way in which Christ saves is by just being himself. Once there was a school-room in which the small boys and girls seemed to learn a courtesy, a gra ciousness of manner, which chil dren in other rooms did not learn. Some one who wondered how the teacher did it, and who knew how hard it is to teach some children even the ABC’s or of politeness, asked one of the boys how the teacher did it. “She don’t teach us at all,” the small boy said. “She just walks around, and we feel as polite as anything.” A well-known' “Spiritual” sings, “I want to be like Jesus, in my heart.” Jesus saves men from their sins by so inspiring them that they know there is nothing better than to be like Him. If you are learning to play the piano, you don’t learn best by listening to poor pianos poorly played. You learn by listen ing to a master-pianist, a real art ist. Now there is an easy way of misunderstanding this matter of Jesus saving us by his example; it is to suppose that we must every day compare him with ourselves, keeping (so to speak) a chart on which our “spiritual progress” is charted every day—20% like Jesus in 1955, 25% in 1956, and so on. 'That is absolutely the wrong way to do it; all you become is a Phari see. The right way is to keep our mind fixed on Christ, so to love him in sincere earnest, that we shall grow more and more like him, one may say almost without knowing it. True saints are not self-conscious. Unseen Guest Once Jesus invited himself to diimer at the house of a very shady character named Zacchaeus. After dinner Jesus said, “Salva tion has come to this house,” and we know that Zacchaeus began to be a different man from that after noon. In the last book of the New Testament a picture is drawn of Christ standing outside a closed door. “If any one hears my voice and opens ttie door, I will come in ...” So Christ saves men by being their permanent unseen Guest, by being the Inner Compan ion whose very presence is a sav ing power. Christ is Saviour, not alone by what he does for men, but by what he does In men. Being “saved” is more than knowing or believing; being saved is becom ing, by his invitation, host to the Lord of all. (Based on outlines copy righted by the Division of Christian Ednoatlon, Na tional Council of the Churches of Christ ' n the U. S. A. Released by Community Press Service.> Bookmobile Schedule July 17-20 Tuesday — Roseland Commu nity, 1:15 p. m.; Colonial Heights, 2:15; Pinebluff, 3:15. Wednesday — Mt. Carmel route. Disk, 9:30 a. m.; Richard son, 10; McCaskill, 10:30; Harris, 10:45; Seawell, 11; Willard, 11:30; Smith, 12. Thursday — Carthage, 9:45; K. C. Maness, 11; Powers, 11:15; Williams 11:30; Yarborough, 12; Morgan, 12:15; Moore, 12:45; Talc Mine, 1:30; Robbins, 2. Friday — White Hill Commu nity, Horn, 9:30; Hendricks, 10; Clark, 10:30; Thomas 11; Denny, ill:30; Cameron, 11:45; Wicker, 2; Caines, 12:15; Salmon, 12:30; McBride, 1; Iver, 1:30; Jackson, 2. Production of cucumbers for fresh markets in North Carolina during 1956 is estimated at 385,000 bushels, based on reports from growers as of June 1. DRIVE CAREFULLY — SAVE A LIFE I COWHimT SOOESBOF CLOSED JULY 1 TO AUGUST 15 Have your Venter Clothes Cleaned r and Stored for the Summer at The Valet D. C. JENSEN Where Cleaning and Prices Are Better! Attend The Church of Your Choice Next Sunday i I AM THE CHURCH They pause in the road of life and gaze at ME. And their feelings are a mixture of long ing and hesitation. What shall I say to their longing ... to their hesitation? I am the Church. I come not from man but from God. Man raised my steeple to the sky, a prayer of steel. But God opened my doors to the reverent. He lifted the Cross of His Son to beckon meii. He engraved His mes sage on the hearts of my people. I am the Church. They long for me because I teach truth and awaken faith . . . because hope and courage and strength and happiness are promises I make to those who heed me. I am the Church. They hesitate as they ap proach me. For they say, “How can we be sure your Truth is true—your Faith believ able—your Promises certain?” I am the Church. That is why men can be sure! I come not from man but from God. Men may toy with the truth, but not God. Men may break faith, but not God. Men may forget their promises, but not God. I am the Church. I belong to you . . . to your family ... to your nation and your world. Do you belong to me? ' t mm 111 the CHURCH FOR ALL ! AU FOR THE CHURCH The Church is the greatest fac et, tiJilding of charobter and good citizenship ft values. Without a strong Church, neither democracy nor civilization can survive. There are four .sounS attend services regularly and sup- For h'’® They are; (f) For his own sake. (2) For h.s children s sake. (3) For the sake ol his community and nation. (4) which needs h.s moral and ma- ‘PPP®--'- Plan to go to stlt. ir '' Day _ PsTlms Monday. .., Psalm, w/h Psalms Wednesd’y Psalms fs±. BROWNSON MEMORIAL CHURCH (Presbyterian) Cheves K. Ligon, Minister Sunday School 9:45 a.ni. 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 Ne'w 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 pan. THE CHURCH OF WIDE FELLOWSHIP (Congregational) Cor. Bennett and New Hampshire Wofford C. Timmons, Minister Sunday Schoijd, 9:45 a.m. Worship Service, 11 aan. Sunday, 6:30 p.m.. Pilgrim Fel lowship (Young people). Sunday, 8:00 p.m.. The Forum. EMMANUEL CHURCH (Episcoptd) Martin Caldwell, Rector Holy Communion, 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 ^ve. at South Ashe David Hoke Coon, Minister Bible School, 9:45 a.m. Worship 11 ajn. 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, Rrst and third Tuesdays, 8 p.m. Church and ftunily suppers, second Thurs days, 7 pjn. MANLY PRESBYTERIAN ' CHURCH ^ Grover C. Currie, Minister Sunday School 10 a.m. Worship Service, 2n<i and 3rd Sunday evenings, 7:30. Fourth Sunday morning, 11 ajn. Women of the Church meeting, 8 p.m., second Tuesday. Mid-week service ^ursday at 8 pjn. ST. ANTHONY'S (Catholic) Vermont Ave. at Ashe Father Peter M. DengM Sunday masses 8 and 16:30 a.m,; Holy Day masses 7 and 9 atm.; weekday mass at 8 a.m. Confes sions heard on Saturday between 5-6 and 7:30-8:30 pjn. SOUTHERN PINES METHODIST CHURCH Robert L. Bame, Mhiister (Services held temporarily at Civic Club, As^ie Stre^) Church School, 9^ tt-tn.- Worship Service, II a. m.; W. S. C. S. meets each first Tues day at 8 p. m. —This Space Donated La the GRAVES MUTUAL INSITOANCE GO. CITIZENS BANK & TRUST CO. CLARK & BRADSHAW SANDHILL DRUG CO. SHAW PAINT & WALLPAPER CO. CHARLES W. PICQUET MODERN MiOUBXT W. E. Kue JACK'S GRILL & RESTAURANT Interest of the Churches by— CAROLINA POWER 8e UGHT CO. UNITED TELEPHONE CO. JACKSON MOTORS. Inc. Your FORD Dealw McNEILL'S SERVICE STATION Gulf Sezvlcs PERKINSON'S, Inc., JawtHm SOUTHERN PINES MOTOR CO< A 8c P TEA CO.
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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July 12, 1956, edition 1
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