THURSDAY, DECEMBER 27. 1956 THE PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina Some Looks At Books By LOCKIE PARKER FIVE A. M. by Jean Dulourd (Simon 8c Schuster $3.00). Not without justice has Jean. Dutourd been called one of the most gift ed of the young French writers. “A Dog’s Head” and ‘‘The Best Butter” were brilliantly execu ted satires in the tradition of Swift and Voltaire, and, despite the bite of their criticism, were irresistibly funny wjth moments of broad farce. This book is less funny but a remarkable literary feat. The whole volume concerns just one hour in a man’s life and that an hour when he is lying more or less quietly on his bed,—from 5 a. m. to 6 a. m. Moreover it is not a flashback with a dramatic narrative of Fernand Doucin’s past but an attempt to reproduce ‘‘the unbroken stream of feelings, emotion's, motives” that pass I The milieu of which he writes I is ‘‘a street where boarding houses sheltered the empty, hun gry, searching, bewildered lives within—drifters, schemers. Plan et Planners, tinhorn gamblers; the ever defeated; the ever hope ful. . . who were eternally, in j their phrase, ‘an hour late and a i dollar short.’ ” I The hero of the story is a mag- ^nificent specirhen from these ranks. Count Casimir Poliatoff- Moreover, as Dutourd points'sky, bom in Guatemala of a Po- out, you will find little that isjbsh father and a Mayan mother, particularly modern in this man’s a tall, lithe man of cool courage «T .Li._ in a crisis, of deep pride and con- SP BY DR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN Backfround Scripture: Revelation 21. Devotional Readinf: Revelation 7:9-17. reveries.' ‘‘Living in the age of Oppenheimer, he thinks and ex presses his thoughts much as men did in the time of Coperni cus of Archimedes.” Obviously this is less amusing than the autlior’s earlier books, partly because one is bound to siderable moral force, widely read in poetry and the weirder philosophies, a bit of a mechani cal genius, an ex-showman, a seaman—in short, a brilliant drifter. The story begins when he All Things New Lesson for December 30, 1956 recognize too much of one’s self meets Hilda Moreau who is beau- in it and partly because of theitiful, vital and determined to at- discursive style inherent in the tain a place of security and pres- nature of the project. Yet the tige in the world. They fall deep- total effect is impressive, and ly in love and then the conflict this commonplace clerk will re-1 begins. Each wants to share the main in your mind when more dreams of the other, each tries in colorful characters of fiction have long been forgotten. an effort that goes on for years. The author has avoided the exploitation of sex and depravity COUNT ROLLER SKATES by which he might easily have used Thomas Sancton (Doubleday in such a setting and written a $3.95). 'This novel about New'first-rate novel based on charac- through his mind at that hour [ Orleans is somewhat off the ter and whose developments " beaten path, too, but for differ- grow out of the characters them- when he habitually wakes and fights insomnia. Coming from the pen of M. Dutourd it is hardly necesssuy to state that the account is threaded with irony. While the body of the book is written in the first per son, purporting to be the note book of this thirty-year-old bank clerk, M. Dutourd introduces Fernand Doucin and in this in troduction he gives us an idea of what he is about. He wants to portray without alleviation or apology the mind of the average man when his guard is down— one can hardly be a poseur at 5 a. m. ent reasons. The style is straight forward narrative and conversa tion skillfully done, but the pro tagonist is a bizarre chEuracter who could not have been madg real by a mediocre writer. Thomas Sancton is not that. In the early forties he made a repu tation for his brilliant essays and short stories. In 1949 he left the staff of LIFE and returned to his home town. New Orleans, and a job on the New Orleans Itemi This book shows a wide know ledge of his home city from flow ering msnrtles to river wharves and political bosses. Pruning - Cabling - Bracing - Feeding Cavity Work a Specialty WRITE OR CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATES 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 Have Your Summer Clothes Cleaned and Stored for the Winter at The Valet MRS. D. C. JENSEN Where Cleaning and Prices Are Better! Eastman Dillon, Union Securities & 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 A profitable place to ... SAVE All Accounts Insured —UpTo— $10,000 Current Rate 31/2% —Par- Annum ACCOUNTS OPENED ON OR BEFORE THE 10th EARN INTEREST FROM THE 1st Accounts Conveniently Handled by Mail. FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION 223 VRcker Street SANFORD. N. C. W. M. Womble. Sec. & Treas. Established in 1950. Assets Over $3,500,000.00 selves. THE GREAT CHAIN OF LIFE by Joseph Wood Krutch (Hough ton Mifflin $3.75). This eagerly awaited book by Joseph Wood Krutch wiU be published on Jan uary 7th. It is a lively, challeng ing and informative view of life in the world around us, from the Paramecium^ up through the in sect world, mammals and man. Here is speculation and variety enough to challenge armchair philosophers and outdoor adven-| turers alike. • 1 Anyone who has ever wonder ed about say: I (1) Darwin’s apparently order ed theory of evolution. | (2) Whether animals have emo tions, and the extreme complex ity of many of them, including some who seem to reverse the process of evolution; or | (3) Man’s place in the whole | scheme of things, and whether he is machine, God or animal, will find in this book stimulating ob servations and conclusions to ar gue about or uphold. The book is studded with en chanting digressions. There is Mr. Krutch watching squirrels at play; his , description of the change from caterpillar to but terfly; and, for contrast, the lights of the Rocky Mountain bighorns, all providing a fresh slant on the otherwise familiar. There are twelve decorative headings by Paul Landacre. Joseph 'Wood Krutch now lives in Tucson, Arizona. He has been a New York dramatic critic, pro fessor of drama criticism at Col umbia, essayist and biographer of Samuel Jolmson and Thoreau. He is perhaps best and most recent ly known as one of our most dis tinguished nature writers. THE DESERT YEAR won for him the John Burroughs Medal for Nature Writing in 1954, and THE MEA SURE OF MAN won the Nation al Book Award for Non-Fiction in 1954. Entomologists with the U. S. Department of Agriculture report that they have been working for a long time to find an insecticide that can be fed or injected into the bodies of beef cattle to des troy heel-fly grubs before they bore holes in the hide of the ani mal’s back. Many insecticides have been tried and rejected eith er because they were ineffective or because harmful residues re mained after their use. FOR Land Surveying CONTACT Clarence H. Blue Matthews Bldg. So. Pines Wolmanized PRESSURE-TREATED LUMBER STOPS ROt AND TERMITES Sandhill Builders Supply Corporation Service-Quality-Dependability Tel. Windsor 4-2516 Pinehurst Rd. tf Aberdeen. N. C. THE verge of New Year’s Eve, our thoughts go forward to the New Year. But what will be new about it? We shall mostly have to “make do” with what we have, rather than find much that is brand-new. We shall be the same people. Sleeping between Dec. 31 and Jan. 1 is not going to change us a great deal. We shall live in the same house, have the same neighbors, the same prob lems, tempta tions, brains, bodies, bank ac count (if any), tax bills, dis eases and pros pects. What we can have that is Dr. Foreman new, is a new attitude to some of these things. But that is another story. What we have to think about here is another of the great chap ters of the Bible, the one in which come the thrilling words, “Behold, I make aU things new.” What will life be like in that “new heaven and new earth” which is described here in shining pictures in the very last chapter of the Bible? Death Behind U$ In that life wherein all things are made new, not by clumsy man but by the power of God, what will be especially new—if you like, shockingly new, so new we shaU not perhaps easily become used to it? First we can see a complete contrast with this present life, in that death will be always in the past, never in the future. The one thing that is certain about life on earth is that we shall all die. Death is the one certain prediction that can be made about every one who reads these lines. (Or, it Christ should come in your lifetime, you would undergo a radical change, just as radical as death itself, in any case.) But in that world where all is made new, death is behind !very one, not in front; a memory lot a hope or a fear. The one ex- Terience which unites all men in his world is one which they have not yet had. But in that world of the redeemed, the experience of death is one they all shall have had. We cannot even imagine this, just how it wUl be. But think how much activity in this world is de voted to one object alone—to stave off death. All that will vanish with death itself. Evil No More Another absolutely and unimag inably new thing wiU be the com plete riddance of aU forms of evU, especiaUy suffering and sin. (Ig norance and ugUness too no doubj will be done away with, but they do not weigh^upon us here quite so' painfully as the other two). No matter what your idea may be about sin and suffering,* what they are and where they came from, you have to admit that human life is woven of these threads. At this very moment every reader’s life would be radically different if he himself had never signed, and as for our neighbors’ sins, and the sins of our ancestors, the world we have inherited is a world fashioned and controlled by sinners. It is only by the mercy of God that it is not worse than it is. Try to think what life would be if there were no form of evil affecting it whatever. You can’t really think it; but that goes to show what an amazingly new state of things the “new heavpns and earth” must be. At Home With God Most wonderful, and least imag inable, of all the new features of that life to come, is the presence of God. It is true, God is every where. But it is also true that God is in some places and situations and occasions more than others. ■What is said in Revelation about God’s coming to dwell with men leads us to think of God’s presence in the tnUy New World as being far more direct and less veUed than for us at our present stage of existence. Indeed, as God 4s real^to us in prayer far more (as a rule) than when we are feeding the hogs or getting a haircut, so the presence of God in the all-new World may be as far beyond our highest aware ness of him here, as the prayer is more spiritual than the haircut or the hogs. All we know is that in this world we seldom do feel quite at ease in God’s presence, and may even be seldom certain that he is near. But “over yonder,” we shall be at home with God as we never been in this life. Foretastes'of the New Life we may enjoy here: in freedom from fear of death, in a life growing more purified by the Spirit, in the “practice of the Pres ence of God”; but the fullness of glory we cannot, imagine, only trust God that these things shall be. (based on outlines copyrigrbled by tbe Division of Christian Education, Na* .oral Council of the Churches of Christ in the U- S .\. Released by Community Tross Service.) Page THREE Hobbs Inducted As Kiwanis President James D. Hobbs of Southern ^ Pines was inducted into office as : the 36th president of the Sandhills i Kiwanis Club at a recent meeting, | succeeding John L. Ponzer, also of 1 Southern Pines. Other officers, all taking their oath from Glenn 'Webb of Laurin- burg, lieutenant governor of this division of the Carolinas district of Kiwanis Internationtd, wer^ I Lawrence Johnson of Aberdeen,' vice-president; J. Vance Rowe, Jr., Southern Pines, secretary-treasur er; and directors L. B. Creath, Pinehurst; Dr. Bruce 'Warlick, William T. Huntley, Jr., Joe Mon- tesanti, Jr., Major Edward Kitch- in. Dr. Harold Johnson and Thom as T. Hayes, all of Southern Pines. At the meeting Sheriff Charles J. McDonald was presented with a Legion of Honor certificate from Kiwanis International for 30 years of active membership in the club. Paul Dana of Pinehurst made the presentation. SCRATCH Pilot. PADS, all sizes. The IfOR RESU1.TS ChF THE PL LOT’S CLAvSS11''1J:D COLUMN. ANTIQUES BOUGHT FOR CASH BOOKS, PAINTINGS, GLASS, CHINA, SILVER, GUNS, STAMPS, COINS, JE'WELRY, etc. ,,, JOSEPH GARNIER Midland Road PINEHURST Phone 3055 WANT A BARGAIN ? A Few Hundred Handsome Xmas Cards will be sold at Half Price until Jan. 1st COWHf Bennett & Penna. Ave. Telephone 2-3211 Attend The Church of Your Choice Next Sunday THE GUAM TROM BEVONOllH^ CIOUDS , There may be folks who dream of a new year with no clouds over the horizon. But life has taught most of us that there is never a day free of uncertainty. ^ Some like to rejoice in the calm of today and give no thought to the clouds of tomorrow. Theirs is a contentment without strength a happiness empty of hope. But stronger souls see both the calm and the clouds. And they look beyond the clouds to the Light whose rays bathe the horizon. These are the souls who face the new year with faith in their God. Ihey know the days will not be without shadow. The ripples may sometimes become angry breakers. But they follow the gleam across another year . . . the Gleam from beyond the clouds. The Church is for those who would look ahead . . Light. ever toward the the church for all . . . AU FOR THE CHURCH children‘s°rie°°‘'(3, For th°" ferial support PIr,., . ° Day Sunday ounasy Chapter Verses Monday .-; 27 1-14 Psalms 90 97 102 1-17 1-12 23-28 20-36 50-58 7-18 Copyright 1966, Keister Adv. Service, Strasburs, 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 pjn. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH New Hampshire Ave. Sunday Service, 11 a.m. Sunday School, 11 a.m. Wednesday SerVice, 8 p.m. Reading Room in Church Build ing open Wednesday 3-5 p.m. THE CHURCH OF WIDE FELLOWSHIP (Congregational) Cor. Bennett and New Hampshire Wofford C. Timmons, Minister Sunday School, 9:45 a.m. Worship Service, II a.m. Sunday, 6:30 p.m.. Pilgrim Fel lowship (Young people). Sunday, 8:00 p.m.. The Forum. EMMANUEL CHURCH (Episcopal) East Massachusetts Ave. Martin Caldwell, Rector Holy Communion, 8 a.m. (First Sundays and Holy Days, 8 a.m. and 11 a.m.) Family Service, 9:30 a.m. Church School, 10 a.m. Morning Service, 11 a.m. Young Peoples’ Service League, 6 p. m. Holy Communion, Wednesdays and Holy Days, 10 a.m. and Fri day, 9:30. Saturday—6 p. m. Penance. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH New York Ave. at South A«he David Hoke Coon, Minister Bible School, 9:45 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. Training Union, 7 p.m. Evening Warship, 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 p.m. Missionary meeting, first and third Tuesdays, 8 p.m. Church and family suppers, second Thurs days, 7 p.m. MANLY PRESBYTERIAll CHURCH Grover C. Currie. Minister Sunday School 10 aju. Worship Service. 2nd and 3r(» Sunday evenings, 7:30. FourOt Simday morning, 11 a.m. Women of the Church meeting, 8 p.m., second Tuesday. Mid-week service Thursday at 8 p.m. ST. ANTHONY'S (Catholfe) Vermont Ave. at Ashe Father Peter Denges TT“Millay masses 8 and 10:30 am; Holy Day masses 7 and 9 a Tw ; weekday mass at 8 ajn. Conft*! sions hewd on Saturday between 5-6 and 7:30-8:30 p,m. SOUTHERN PINES METHODIST CHURCH Robert L. Bame. Minister (Services held temporarily at Club. ^Ashe Street) Church School. 9?tS a m, Worship Service, 11 a. m,; W. S. C. S. meets each first Tueo- day at 8 p. m. —This Space Donated in the Interest of the Churches by- GRAVES MUTUAL INSURANCE CO. CITIZENS BANK 8c TRUST CO. CLARK 8c BRADSHAW SANDHILL DRUG CO. SHAW PAINT 8c WALLPAPER CO. CHARLES W. PICOUET MODERN MARKET W. E. Blue JACK'S GRILL 8c RESTAURANT UNITED TELEPHONE 00. JACKSON MOTORS. Inc. Your FORD Dealer McNEILL'S SERVICE STATION Gulf Service PERKINSON'S, Inc. Jeweler SOUTHERN PINES MOTOR CO. A 8c P TEA CO.