t t-t. THURi5DAY, JANUARY 4, 1962 Some Looks At Books By LOCKIE PARKER CIA: The Inside Story of An drew Tully (Morrow $4.50)> Here is-a lively and candid account of this controversial agency of our government, written by a veteran journalist who has been covering the CIA since 1948. And you can put aside the cloak-and-dagger stories for a time because there are better true ones here from the bent coat hanger rescued from the garbage at Vienna air port to the “dead drop” on the underside of a slat on a bench in Gorki park. But what is the Central Intel ligence Agency? How did it come about? What is its record? It came about because of Pearl Har bor. Shocked that a nation of our power and responsibilities should have been caught with oui guard down, those investigatii? the cause found that there hai been plenty of information in th files to have warned military com- tnaiyiers of, an imminent ittack but it “had lain unused beause there was no single, centrl or ganization equipped to analje it and see to its speedy dispath to those concerned.” The immediate result of this report was the Office of Straigic Services, which functioned difng World War H and was then a\n- doned. Later a permanent giup was set up to operate under he direction of the National Secuty Council, to collect and evalute intelligence related to natiosl security and perform “other furt- tions and duties” as direcred y the National Security Couicil. This agency repidly muslroon ed into one of the most entrmoii of our government bureau; wit; a payroll estimated at 10,{p0 anj (Norton $S.0(^. When an author combines literary distinction with scholarship, biography can make engrossing reading. Moreover the character of Hadrian has a special appeal to the thoughtful reader of today. Hadrian, too, was con scious of living in a precarious world. Emperor of Rome when the empire was at its zenith, he yet knew well how much weak ness and dissension there was' within and how dangerous the pressures on the far-flung fron tiers. versation. In this one, young Jendy watches mystified while her adored older sister, Nancy, breaks her engagement to the highly de- sireable Allen next door and goes off to Spain. There are other mys teries, too, the irrepresible Wally in his trailer and the peculiar Mrs. Petersen who likes to bury things in her garden. But goodnes has a way of win ning out in Mrs. Cadell’s books. All is cleared up in the end, and each one gets his proper sweet heart. Even Nancy renounces Spain in favor of English “honey for tea.” THE PILOT—-Southern Pines, North Carolina 7th Edition of County Almanac Issued by Blue Born in Italica in southern Spain in 76 A. D., Hadrian was a Roman citizen but not a native of the city. This Spanish province, settled by Romans in the time of Scipio Africanus, had become the richest single possession of Rome, producing gold, silver, lead, tin, olive oil. Culture flourished there, too, and had given to Roman lit erature Seneca, Lucan, Martial. So when the young Hadrian was ent to school in Rome, he came as no pping country youth but one with a critical eye. He saw much that he did not like in the •-eeming slums, in the corruption and intrigues of Domitian’s court. He became convinced that the provinces were as important as Rome. Hadrian had been well endow ed by nature—handsome, athletic, intelligent, imaginative. He be came not only a great soldier and administrator but he had a flair for the arts, wrote poetry, erected buildings that are still the show pieces of Italy—the Castel San’ Angelo (built as his mausoleum), the Temple of Venus and Rome, the superb villa at Tivoli and dozens of others in the provinces. Bookmobile Schedule The Moore County library bookmobile schedule for the week of January 8 through Jan uary 11 follows. MONDAY, JANUARY 8 JACKSON SPRINGS ROUTE; Terrell Graham, 9:45-9:55; W. E. Graham, 10:05-10:10; Jackson Springs Post Office, 10;15-10;20; James Hicks, 10:25-10;30; Mrs. Betty Stubbs, 10:35-10:45; Mrs. Geneva McLeod, 10;50-10;55; Wal ter'Mclnnis, 11-11;10; Carl Tuck er, 11:15-11:30; Mrs. Margaret Smith, 11;35-11;45; Mrs. Edith Stutts, 11;50-12; Phillip Bur- rough.' 12:45-1 ;05; J. W Blake, 1:10-1:j0; Miss Adele McDonald, 1:35-1:40. TUESDAY, JANUARY 9 WESTMOORE ROUTE: Mrs. W. G. Inman, 9:30-9:45; Mrs. Ardena Burnes, 10:05-10:15; James Allen, 10:20-10:30; Mrs. Audrey Moore. 10;35-10;45; Miss Beatrice Shef field, 10:50-11; Talc Mine, 11:05- 11:15; W. J. Brewer, 12-12:05; Ro land Nall, 12;50-1;05; Baldwins Store, 1:10-1 ;15; Jugtown, 1:30- 1:50. The seventh annual edition of “Poor Cliff’s Moore County Al manac” is off the press and is available from news stands around the county or from The Sandhill Citizen, weekly newspaper at Aberdeen. Founded, edited and published by H. Clifton Blue of Aberdeen, who is Moore County’s veteran representative in the General As sembly dnd the editor and pub lisher of The Sandhill Citizen, the almanac combines voluminous in formation about Moore County with the traditional horoscopes, planting guides, hints to house wives, calendar and other infor mation. There is a map of Moore Coun ty and complete lists of county and municipal officials. Demo cratic and Republican Party offi cials and precinct committee members are listed, as well as membership of county and city boards of education and district school committees of the county school system. There are tabulations and lists of results in various races in the 1960 elections, for county and state offices. All of North Caro lina’s representatives and sena tors in Congress are listed. The almanac carries a few ad vertisements from banks and some of the larger businesses and in dustries operating in Moore County. Page THREE Laws For Living Lesson for January 7, 1962 a new office building sedmd il dozens of others in the provinces, size only to the Pentagolj It^He instituted legal reforms and ramifications are fabulous,touch-igave impetus to the codification ing nearly every country fn thePf Roman Law that was comple- globe, and its anonymous iform-' ed under Justinian ers penetrate government bffices and military headquartes in Communist countries and those rated as doubtful. Its funtions have also tended to expail be yond merely collecting fats to taking a hand in shaping lem. Mr. Tully gives a clear ad not uncritical account of the infience CIA has exerted in gettin or keeping non-communist grern- ments in power in a dozen oun- tries from Guatemala throus the Middle East to Egypt and Suth- east Asia, not to mention tl ill- fated venture in Cuba. Somaave been more successful than ojers, some have raised storms ofpti- cism. But the fundamental jies- tion is whether the CIA hajen- croached on the field of piicy making, whether an age;jcy yen unusual independence in choing personnel and spending a ;ige budget will grow or has glwn into a dangerous power iirle- quately controlled by the r«-e- sentatives of the democracy.'he Cuban debacle made the anrer to this question urgent. In a ial chapter, the author tells whatas been done, about it. HADRIAN by Stewart Perone The author shows the young ban learning his trade under the Imperor Trajan, an older cousin, 'ho was pushing the frontiers ot te Empire ever farther and died q his way home from a campaign ii the East, naming Hadrian as hi heir. Then we see the young nin facing opposition and in ternes but gradually securing his Pdtion and making the funda- matal decision to consolidate the Ensire rather than extend it. His idei was that “all the provinces, inciding Italy itself, should re- gar each other as equal, and all be pund to the emperor, not as to ^master by fear, but as to a fathi- by love.” To this end he labc^d, not always successful but achiring much and inaugurating the lost peaceful and prosperous era < the Empire. HQEY FOR TEA by Elizabeth Cadel (Morrow $3.50). Few au thors lave given their readers in Englad and America as much Dure ieasure as Mrs. Cadell. A good te a keen appreciation of the joj of living and of the lov able iosyncrasies of human be ings ai joined to a crisp, clean style at a talent for writing con- "WE LIKE TO THIK ..." During recent years serai new iiustries have come to Southern Pines and, I the lookaf things, more are on the way. This means ore jobs local folks, more funds circulating in loc. pockets, lore good citizens coming here to live . . . During the past year a izen or moi drives have been held here for funds in siport of bter health, better education, to alleviate l^nan need i. . During the past year rre people We come here to live, attracted by what tly hear or ^ve read of the climate, the sports, the pisant livin, the charm of a friendly, attractive commiity . . . ; News of all this appeairegularly i the columns of this newspaper and we lilto think thiThe Pilot lends a hand in such good caus< Fill in and mail this epon for regar delivery. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1C LITTLE RIVER ROUTE: Watsoji Blue, 9:30-9:40; James McKay, J. R. Blue, 9:55-10:05; John Baker, 10:10-10:15; George Cameron, 10:20-10:30; Alex McFayden, 10:45-10:55; Brooks Store, 11- 11:05; Kenneth Womack, 11:10- 11:20; Malcolm Blue, 11:25-11:45; Mis. j. W. Smith, 11:50-11:55; D. L. McPherson, 12:40-12:50; John Riggsbee, 12:55-1:05; Will Hart, 1:15-1:30; W. F. Smith, 1:45-1:55; Mrs. Nellie Garner, 2-2:10. THURSDAY, JANUARY 11: Raymond Williams, 9:50-10:05; Paul Williams, 10:10-10:20; Mar vin Williams, 10:30-10:40; R. N. Nall, 10:45-10:55; Mrs. Mamie Boone, 11:05-11:15; Mrs. Etta Mor gan, 11:20-11:30; John Nail, 11:35- 11:45; Eagle Springs postoffice. 12:45-1:10; Mrs. D. D. Eifort, 1:20- 1:30; West End postoffice, 1:35- 1:55. Construction of the State high way bridge across Alligator River neared completion in 1961 and by the spring of 1962 will open up a new loop highway route to the Outer Banks and Roanoke Island by eliminating the present ferry link on U. S. Highway 64. Quartet to Play At Laurinburg The Curtis String uartet will present a program of chamber music in the National Guard Armory at Laurinburg at 8 p. m., Thursday, January 11, as part of the St. Andrews Presbyterian College concert-lecture series. Jascha Brodsky is first violinist of the quartet. Max Aronoff is violist, Mehli Mehta is second violinist and Orlando Cole is cell ist for the Curtis Institute group. The program will include numbers by Haydn, Ravel and Tschaikow- sky. Admittance to the concert is by season ticket only. Season mem berships may be purchased in the St. Andrews College business of fice. Stephen Sheffield Succumbs at 57 Stephen Sheffield, 57, of Route 1, Eagle Springs, died Wednesday of last week. Funeral services were held at 3 p. m. Friday at Big Oak Christian Church, conducted by the Rev. Bennie Maness. Burial was in the church cemetery. Surviving are four sisters, Mrs. Lillie Bruce of Norfolk, Va., Mrs. Lovdia Morgan of Route 1, Eagle Springs, Mrs. Julia Ivey and Mrs. Della Strides of Star; one brother, E. F. Sheffield of Route 2, Rob- fear, with faith in ourselves and Sheffield of Biscoe. Eastman Dillon. Union Securities & Co. Members New York Stock Exchange MacKenzie Building 135 W. New Hampshire Ave. Southern Pines, N. C. Telephone: Southern Pines OX 5-7311 Complete Investment and Brokerage Facilities Direct Wire to our Main Office in New York A. E. RHINEHART Resident Manager Consultations by appointment on Saturdays The Pilot, Inc. Southern Pines, N. C. Enclosed find check or laey order toiart my sub scription at once. Pleasend it to the ime and ad dress shown below for tlperiod cheefci. ( ) 1 yr. $4.00 ( ) 1 yr. $5.00 Name City ( ) 6,. $2.00 (DutsicCounty ( ) 6 1. $2.50 ( 3 mo. $1.00 ( 3 mo. $1.25 Address City Stal A GOOD BOOK and A GOOD EffiE Double Crostics Crossword Puzzles Indoor Hobbies 180 W. Penna. Ave. qX 2-3211 FOR ~ FUEL OIL and KEROSENE Phone WI 4-2414 PAGE and SHAMBURCER, INC. ’"pHREE questions are asked ^ sooner or later by every thoughtful person. What can I know? What can I believe? and What shall I do? During the next three months these Bible studies, in which more than 80 de nominations join, ir'l 8 working on that third ques tion. All Chris tians are agreeo that the standard - for our life and Dr. Foreman action in this world is to be found in the Bible. But here the difficulties and hard questions begin. What part of the Bible, Old or New Testaments? The teachings of Moses or the teadiings of Jesus? the Law or the Gospel? the Ten Comniand- nienis or the Spirit of Jesus? Can a Christian be described as one who has outgrown the Ten Oon niandments? Ko conflict All this either-or o.i., e .i p. i„s in the wrong direction. If the Brst Christians had thought that- the gospel did away with the Ten Commandments, they would not have kept the Old Testament, If the people who wrote the stories of Jesus and his teachings had supposed they were in conflict with the word and will and law of God as they found it in the Old Testament, they would not have undertaken to write the New. It is not a case of “either the. Ten Commandments or the Spirit of Jesus.” It is not a question of Moses versus Christ. Saint Paul calls the Law “holy and just and good" (Romans-7:12.). Jesus said that not the least part of the. Law should pass away “till all be ac complished" or “tin iits purpose is complete” as J. B. Phillips translates it. What we have is rather the Law in the Gospel (i.e. in the whole New Testament teaching), the Law as interpreted by the gospel, the Law seen in the light of the gospel, the Ten Commandments' -.mderstood as Jesus understood them. Never obsotete Confusion about the Ten Coin mandments would dear away considerably if people realized that they are not like the laws and statutes of our nation or states and cities today. Our taws become obsolete because they are confined to one particular situa tion, and when the situation no longer exists, the law just fades away. For instance, it used to be required by law in various com munities that drinking-troughs be provided for horses. When horses were replaced by horsepower, the horse-troughs vanished. A certain school in New York State, about the year 1845, had among its regulations one that forbade all students to enter “taverns, gro ceries or other places of enter tainment.” It is safe to say that that school long since dropped that rule. Grocery stores in the village have changed quite a lot in the past 100 years or more. Now the Ten Commandments never were intended to be like rules and regu lations. In the Old Testament, they are given three different times, and each time differently. (Ex. 20, Ex. 34, and Deut. 5.) The careful reader will see that al ready the dommandments were being revised, as we would say, to fit new situations. They repre sent principles rather than rules, and so are immortal. A frash baginaing In the great summary of Jesu.si’ teaching which we have in the Sermon on the Mount, while Jesus had a good deal to say about in terpreting the law of God, he did not begin with this. He did not be gin with laws of any kind. He began (as everybody knows) with “Beatitudes." That is, he starts off by describing those to whom God’s kingdom belongs, those who will see God, those who are right ly called the sons of God. If you have the wrong kind of people, no amount of laws will improve matters much. You do not get a better world by saying the Ten Commandments louder and fast er. You get a better world not by improvements in laws, but by improvements in people. “Im provements" is too weak a word. Radical change is more what Je sus is calling for. Only those who are so close to the mind and will of God that they can be called “sons of God,” only those who are growing in Godlikeness, are the kind of per sons who have discovered what it is to live. ecprrIfkUd Me DIvUlsn of Chrletlan EdneaUon, National Coancll of tbo Cbarehco of Christ In the U. S. A. Released hr Cemmnnilr Press Serrles.) FOR RESULTS USE THE PI- LOTS CRJIcSSlFXEO COLUMN PILOT ADVERTISING PAYS WEST END NEWS intamatlonAi Unitorm Sunday School Luon* BY DR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN Bible Material: Kxodus 32; 34; Deu teronomy 3:1-21; Matthew 5:1-20. Devotional Keadiiif: Matthew 15:l-9e 19-20. By SALLY AUMAN At home for the Holidays was A 3c Eugene Dunn who will leave soon for a seven weeks’ school at Ft. Leonard 'Wood, Mo. Also spending the holidays with the Dunn family were Mrs. Beulah McRae of Rockingham, A 2c McRae of Rockingham, A 2|c Jeffrey N. Brill of Wilkes-Barre, Pa., and A 2 c William R. Borke of Racine, Wise., all of whom are stationed at Charleston, S. C. A|3c Eugene Dunn, Brenda and Jimmy visited the Bruce Dunns, West Point, Va., the Carroll Hogges in Warner, Va., and the Wauiechou- skis in Richmond, Va. this week. Miss Sue Hoffman of Irvington, Va., a student at WCUNC, and Gary Truver, Freeport, Pa. and UNC were weekend guests of the Clyde Aumans. Mrs. E. R. Outland attended the ' funeral Sunday of her cousin, John McNair, of Rockingham. With the Hawley Pooles for the New Year weekend were Mr. and Mrs. Paul Davis of Urbanna, Va., and the Sam Pooles of Chapel Hill. Spending Thursday with Miss Treva Auman was Mrs. Archie McLean of Wagram and Tuesday dinner guests of the Aumans were Ralph and Miss Minnie Currie of Laurel Hill. William Jackson has returned to Albany, N. Y. where he is serv ing as an intern in the Senate un der the guidance of Columbia University. The North Lewis family has re turned from Chicago. Next Sunday FIRST BAPTIST CHUBCB New Y»rk Ave. at Soath Aaha St. Majrnarrf HatiKaai, Mlnlater Bible School, 9:46 a.m. Worship 11 a.in. I’raininjt Union, 6:S0 p.m. Ehreninv Wor ship. 7 :30 p.m, VoBth Fellowship, 8:80 p.in. Scout Troop 2*4. Uonday. 7:80 p.m.: ntd-week worship, Wednesdar 7:»0 p.m.: rhotr practice Wednesday 8:15 p.in. Missionary meeting, first and third Tues days, H p.m. Church and family suppers, second Thursday, 7 p.m. CBRlSTfAN SCIENCE CHUKCH New Hampshire Avenue Sunday Service, li a.m. Sunday School. H a m. Wednesday Serviee, 8 p.m. Reading Rfiom in Church Building open Wednesday. 2-4 p.m. MANET PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sunday School a.m. Worship Sere ne 11 a.m, and 7:80 p.m. Women of the Uiuech meeting. 8 p.m. second Tuesday. M^-week serviec Thursday, 7:80 p.m. Choir Itehearsal, Wedne8