9k
THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 1957
THE PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina
Page THREE
Some Looks
At Books
By LOCKIE PARKER
thor presents a problem in per
sonal relations that is dramatic,
absorbing and insoluble. More
than external obstacles compli
cate the attraction between man
and woman.
THE BraD BIOGRAPHIES OF,
JOHN JAMES AU0UBON. edit-]
ed by Alice Ford (Macmillan
$10.00). This handsome volume
will be welcomed by those ad
mirers of Audubon who are not
among the fortunate few owning
the 'Octavo edition of ‘‘Birds of
America,” now long out of print.
A few years ago the plates of this
edition were reproduced in, a vol
ume of moderate price. Now we
have to accompany this a well
edited selection chosen from the
text in accordance with Audu
bon’s wish for the original that it
be “a pleasing book as well as an
instructive one.” The editor has
gone back to the original version
written to accompany the great
Folio and included some delight
ful passages omitted from the
text of the Octavo.
“Here is the vision, matchless
and moving, of an incomparable
observer, who catches the beauty
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jne of once I
and drama, the wonder and mys
tery of the birds.” These are the
words of the editor, and she has
justified them by her text. The
burning enthusiasm of Audubon,
his tireless patience, his eager
ness to share his experiences
with others comes through. It
was never easy for Audubon to
write. In the midst of his great
work he told a friend, “I know I
am a poor writer. . . but no man
living knows better than I do the
habits of our birds; no man liv
ing h2is studied them as much as
I have done.”
So each bird becomes a vivid
personality here—^the brown
thrasher defending his nest
against a snake, joining with his
fellows to fight a foreign intru
der but quarreling with them
noisily on other occasions, a
formidable fellow who will chase
a dog or cat, even tease a fox, but
also a devoted husband and fath
er. To Audubon each species was
an experience, esthetic and emo
tional as well as scientific, and
so some of these “biographies”
are essays of'literary quality and
others verge on poetry. “To the
Wood Thrush I owe much.” he
writes, “Often when I have lis
tened to its wild notes in the for
est, it has revived my drooping
spirits.”
The biographies have each an
accompanying picture in the
above-mentioned “Birds of
America,” but by way of a bom^
the publishers have added to this
book twelve reproductions of the
original Audubon drawings now
in the Harvard Library. Less elab
orate than the engravings these
have a delicacy of color and aus
terity of design that remind one
of the best periods of Chinese
painting.
Felion J. Capel
Phone 2-7585
Southern Pines
CHALLENGE TO VENUS by
Charles Morgan (Macmillan
$3.50). This novel will not make
the best seller list. It asks too
much of the reader. Building up
slowly, carefully, skillfully his
characters and situation, the au
Lei Us Give Your Clothes Thai
NEW LOOK FOR EASTER
Valet
MRS. D. C. JENSEN
Where Cleaning and Prices Are Belter!
Charles Morgan, who long
since proved himself a good
European as well as a distin
guished writej of English, has
chosen Italy as background for
this book, the hiU town of Va-
renna. Here into a tight group of
Italian aristocrats comes a yoimg
Englishman who falls in love
with the most beautiful of them.
Fiammetta is h young widow,
aware of her beauty, generous,
passionate, but very much mis
tress of herself and deeply root
ed in Varenna. The struggle of
Fiammetta and the English Mar
tin to understand each other, to
come to terms with their love and
yet to be the people they have to
be with their backgrounds is su
perbly worked out in this novel
of unusual quality.
Like E. M. Forster, Morgan has
a special feeling about Italians,
a feeling of threads and influ
ences that go back far beyond
the Renaissance, even beyond
Christianity, and so we find “tiie
old gods” appear more than once
as shadowy background, not tak
en too seriously and yet present
as a real factor in explaining
people’s moods and actions.
A TREE IS NICE by Janice
May Udry. Pictures by Marc
SimonL (Harper $2.50). This book
has just receiyed the , Caldecott
Medal given annually by libra
rians to the most distinguished
picture book of the year. In sim
pie but poetic language that
smaU children wiU find just right
Mrs. Udry presents the pleasures
we enjoy Isecause of trees.
These are aptly illustrated by
Marc Simont in uncluttered and
effective pictures, many in color.
We see the trees that make
woods and “the one tree” that
gives shade to an old horse or to
dozing humans, a tree that grows
apples, one with a swing and one
that is full of climbing childrem
Finally the child learns that "a
tree is nice to plant” and watch
grow as he himself grows year
after year.
three .promises to you
by Munxo Leaf (LipiuncoU
$2.00). The incomparable Munro
Leaf, who wrote “Arittmetic C^
Be Fun” and proved his point in
this and other equaUy improb
able subjects such as gramn^
and manners, has now turned his
attention to the United Nation^
With simple language and
clever drawings he has translated
abstract principles into terms
that will be entirely comprehen
sible to children from six to tern
He establishes first the concept of
the individual, his wants ^d.
rights, then shows
United Nations was formed to
keep three promises, that there
should be (1) No wars, (2) F^
treatment for everytx^y,
Better living for everybody by
sharing what we know.
BY DR.‘ KENNETH J. FOREMAN
BackKroand S«rlptare: Matthew 21:1-
11* 27*11^4.
bevetiona'l Reading: Hebrews 2:9-18.
The Shouters
Ijesson for ApM 14,1959
Bookmobile
Schedule
I T WAS an exciting week in Jeru
salem. There was shouting on
Sunday; there was shouting on
Friday; all about the same Visitor,
one Jesus of Nazareth. Only the
shouting was different. On Sunday
he rode in to the city preceded by
a guard of honor, disorderly to be
sure, but wildly enthusiastic. They
called him King
(“Son of Dav
id”); they said
with loud voices
that he came in
the name of the
Lord; the Hosan
nas must have
been heard for
miles. Friday
morning the Vis
itor was mostly
out of sight. The Roman police had
him, and they did not disgorge
prisoners easily. The crowd milled
about in the streets outside the
governor’s castle, and they kept
yelling “Crucify him!” Nothing
can be more thrilling than to be
hailed as King; nothing can be
more dreadful than the sound of
a mob hungry for torture.
Tuesday — Cameron school,
11:30; Cameron, 12:30; Walter
McDonald, 2; Lewis Marion, 2:30;
Sam Taylor, 2:45; Thomas Sta
tion, 3; Routh’s station, 3:15.
Wednesday — Doulos Chapel
route: Arnold Thomas 10; Clyde
McKenzie, 10:30; Mrs. Frances
Scarboro, 11; R. L. Blake, 11:30;
W. E. Jackson, 2; Clyde Auman,
12:30; Landis Cox, 12:45; Mrs. E.
L. Sutphin, 1; Frank Cox, 1:30.
Thursday — Westmoore school,
10:30; Roland Nall, 11:30;
Charles Stutts, 12; Arthur Bald
win, 12:30; Davis School, 1; En-
loes Grill, 1:45; Carthage, 2:30.
Friday — Murdocksville Road:
ban Lewis, 10; W. R. Dunlap,
10:15; Miss Margaret McKenzie,
10:30; Tom Clayton, 10:45; Mrs.
Ethel Black, 11; Edward Black,
11:15; Mrs. Earl Monroe, 11:30;
Mrs. Helen Neff, 11:45; R. E. Lea,
12:15; J. V. Cole, 12:45; H. E.
Blue, 1:15; Ira Garrison, 1:45; M.
L. McGirt, 2:15.
DRIVE CAREFULLY — SAVE A LIFE!
GEORGE W. TYNER
PAINTING & WALLPAPERING
205 Midland Road SOUTHERN PINES. N. C.
Phone 2-5804
Dr. Foreman
THE BOOK OF REVEUTIONS
A New Translation of the Apocalypse
by J. B. Phillips ($2.00)
and other inspiring books for
the Lenten season.
THE CHILD JESUS by Florence
Mary Fitch, illustrate ($2.50)
Bible Stories for every age.
Lovely Easter Cards with appropriate messages.
Attend The Church of Your Choice Next Sunday
The Same Voices
Now the strange thing is that
some of the same people who were
shouting “Hosanna!” on Sunday,
were shouting “Crucify him!” on
Friday. Didn’t diey know their
own minds? Well, they didn’t.
Shouters seldom do. There are al
ways shouters about, they emerge
from every crack when anything
exciting goes on. They shout in
crowds; solo shouters are rare. If
you had taken many (maybe most)
members of that Sunday crowd
aside and asked each one in pri
vate: “Do you really think this
Jesus is a King?” it is a fair guess
that some of them would have re
plied, “Well... I don’t know, of
course. But he might be. Good
idea to get on the band-wagon. I
hear ...” and so forth. Further,
if you had been able to get private
interviews with the bloody-sound
ing shouters wi Friday morning,
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PILOT advertising PAYS
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SAVE
The undersigned, havmg du^
qualified as the executrix of the
Estate of John Hichnor Youi^,
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ed in bar of their recove^. ^
persons indebted to the said John
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Southern Pine*
and asked, “do you reaUy think
that this Jesus is guilty—and if
he is, of what, exactly? Do you
personally want to see him cruci
fied by the Romans?” You might
have got some answers like—“Was
I saying ‘crucify’? WeU, that’s a
little strong. Of course I hate to
see anybody in Homan hands. No,
I don’t know the man personally,
but I was told...” and so forth.
I have heard—X was told—They
say . . . Your shouter has no mind,
all he has is a voice.
We Should Know
It is not such a dark mystery
why the same people could yell
Hosanna! and Crucify! about the
same person within a week. Re
member what was lined up against
Jesus—intrenched interests, self
ishness, indifference, pride, hatred,
greed, prejudice. For him there
was only truth, and truth has short
^ift when the shouters are going
strong. We may be shouters our
selves. How is it that on Sunday
we can sing the most devoted
songs about Jesus, we can even
offer prayers in His name, and
then on Monday (not waiting tUl
Friday) our actions, which speak
louder than our words always,
“crucify the Son of God afresh’’?
we sing come from poems which
better (Christians wrote; we just
sing along 'with others, we don’t
think much about what the words
mean. Then on Monday we fall in
to the ways of the world. We don’t
connect what we are doing (which
can be pretty devUish and stiU
legal) with what we said on Sun
day; and we don’t (maybe) inten
tionally, mean anything against
Jesus. But we do and what “every
body” does and ^says, and don’t
stop to think (it’s too much trouble
for a shouter to think) that what
we are doing, or failing to do, says
louder than words—“Jesus? 'Who’s
he? Nobody that makes any dif
ference with me, nobody I’d care
to be like!”
ONE
■When we become mired in the routine o/
life, one day is like any otKer. This was just
another working-day for most of the people
in Jerusalem.
Three men died on Calvary Hill. One pf
them was the Galilqan!
Business as usual in Jerusalem. Unless we
understand the whole significance of what re
happening we pay little attention . . .
Do you understand what happened that
Friday. Do you realize ’WHO hung on that
central Cross. Do you know WHY He died.
And FOR WHOM?
There is nothing more necessary in our
lives than the deep, jpersonal knowledge of
what happened that Friday . . . and the Sun
day following.
Come to Church!
THE CHURCH FOR AU. . . .
AU FOR THE CHURCM
The Church is the greotest fac
tor on earth for the building oi
character and good citizenship. R
is a storehouse of spiritual values.
Without a strong Church, neither
democracy nor civilization can
survive. There are lour sound
reasons why every person should
ottend services regularly and sup
port the Church. They are: (1)
For his own sake. (2) For his
children's sake. (3) For the sake
of his community and nation. (4)
For the sake of the Church itself,
which needs his moral and ma
terial support. Plan to go to
church regularly and read your
Bible daily.
Day Book
Sunday... Mark
Monday. ..Mark
Tuesday.. Mark
Wednesd'yMark
Thursday. Mark
Friday... .Mark
Saturday. Jldark
Chapter Verses
11 1-S3
12
U
14
14
15
15
1-44
1-37
1-31
32- 72
1-32
33- 47
Copyrich^ 1957, Kehter Adv. Service, Straaburs, Va,
BROWNSON MEMORIAL
CHURCH (Presbylerian)
Cheves K. Ligon. Mini*ter
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 ai
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 Servire, 8 pjn.
Reading Room m Church Build
ing open Wednesday 3-5 pjn.
EMMANUEL CHURCH
(Episcopal)
East Massachusetts Ave.
Martin Caldwell, Rector
Holy Commimion, 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, Wednesdajre
and Holy Days, 10 a.m. and Fri
day, 9:30.
Saturday—6 p. m. Penance.
MANLY PRESB’YTERIAK
CHURCH
Grover C. Currie. Minister
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Worship Service, 2nd and 3rG
Sunday evenings, 7:30. Fourth
Sunday morning, 11 a.m.
Women of the Church meeting,
8 p.m., second Tuesday.
Mid-week service Thursday at
8 p.m.
If They Had Knows Him
There were some who shouted
on Sunday who were silent on Fri
day. The Eleven forsook Him and
fled, we know; but we may be
sure they did not yell “Crucify
Him!” and perhaps the Mother
Mary took no voice in the shouting
any time. ’The star of her love
shone steadily through the storm.
Those who really know Jesus, not
by hearsay, rumor or tradition,
but know him as a living inner
Friend, and Savior, do not change
their minds about Him overnight.
And sometimes those who love
Him most deeply. are not to be
found among the Shouters, but
among those who serve.
Cor. Bennett and New Hampshire
Wofford C. Timmons. Minisler
(Cased on outlines copyrlfhted by the
Division of Christian Eduoatitm, Na
tional Council of the Churches or Christ
m .he 11. S. A. Released by Community
f*ress Service.)
iriE CHURCH OF WIDE
FELLOWSHIP (CongregalionM)
Sunday School, 9:45 a.m.
Worship Service, 11 am.- _ ,
Sunday, 6.30 p.m., Pilgnm Fel-
lowship (Young people).
Sunday, 8:00 p.m., The Forum.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
New York Ave. at South Asha
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.
Missionary meeting, first and
third Tuesdays, 8 p.m. Church
and family suppers, second Thurs
days, 7 p.m.
ST. ANTHONY'S (CathoUc)
'Vermont Ave. at Asha
Father Peter M. Denges
Simday masses 8 and 10:30 ajs.;
Holy Day masses 7 and 9 a.m.;
weekday mass at 8 a.m. Confes
sions heard on Saturday between
5-6 and 7:30-8:30 p.m.
SOUTHERN PINES
METHODIST CHURCM
Midland Road
Robert L. Bame, Minister
Church School, 9:45 ajn.
Worship Service, 11 a. m.;
W. S. C. S. meets each third
Monday at 8 p. m.
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