S 9 fS> r # I » I %; THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 1963 THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina Page THREE Some Looks At Books By LOCKIE PARKER RLLERBE NATIVE HEADS EFFORT Contractars Of Carolinas Backing Training Program For Skilled Jobs the other side or the RIVER: Red China Today by Ed gar Snow (Random House $10.00). For information on China today its industries, farms, schools, what its people are thinking—from Mao Tse-Txmg and an ex-Emperor to peasants and housewives—we have had no book to equal this and probably shall not for a long time. The author has not only col lected information but he has checked it as far as possible and has thought long and hard about its significance. We need not ac cept some of his conclusions but we can not safely shut our eyes to the fact that this nation of nearly 700 million people is mak ing notable strides toward indus trialization, though by methods we dislike, and gaining power and prestige in Asia and Africa. Meanwhile, we refuse to recog nize it as a legitimate govern ment, and the Clunese consider that the United States is its Ene my No. 1. Edgar Snow does not claim that he has the recipe for ending our mutual antagonism. He does not even claim that the statistics he gathered are accurate. There are, as he explains, reasons why com parisons between China and the STOP DRIPPINO PIPES STOP FREEZIN6 in krUf cold onop* USE WRAP-ON Vk' Insur'fe Jnstant' hot and col<i v/afcer by insulafing aM pipes. Prevent water waste. Save expensive hot watw Gnoof tnav/afio/t /s 3 ■ //f&f/me /nuesfyne/rt. S|op package provides I double insula+ion on iTft o-f yx" pipe. Burney Hardware Co. South St. Aberdeen United States are difficult, and the gathering of accurate statis tics is not too well understood in some parts of China. Of this much he is sure: great and fundamental changes have been made in China since the Communists came to power in 194F, so fundamental that the clock can never be turned back and the old ways restored. Setbacks and mistakes there have been, but they have not altered the main trend. Certainly, as an experienced correspondent who knew China well fi-om earlier days and the first of these old hands to get per mission from our State Depart ment and Chinese officialdom to return, he had unusual opportum- ties. More than this, he had in terviewed Mao Tse-Tung^ in the thirties when Mao was living in a cave in remote Sinkiang, the head of a tattered army that had fled from the Chinese regulars and was disavowed by the Russian Comintern but kept a burning faith that they did not know how to regenerate China and were steadily gaining a foundation of peasant support. This is not to say that Edgar Snow is a Communist. He long held the respectable post of an Associate Editor of the Saturday Evening Post. He was barred from Stalin’s Russia because of his crit icisms. What he has tried to give us, aside from the facts he could gather, is a view of how the situ ation looks from “the other side of the river:’’ He does not dodge difficult questions — Americans held as prisoners, the Tibetan question, or the Indian border dispute. He does teU how these matters look to the Chinese— sometimes in the exact words of Mao Tse-Tung.or other high au-' thority. We welcome this book as an honest attempt to give Americans an unprejudiced view of China, a view notable for depth as well as extent. The Carolinas’ construction in dustry, faced with a critical short age of skilled manpower within the next five yearn, has initiated an intensive program of recruit ing and educating prospective skilled workers. Carolinas Branch, the Associa ted General Contractors of Amer ica Inc. annoimced today the es tablishment of a Construction Ed ucation Division and the hiring of an education and training direc tor. The new director, 29-year-old Baxtor G. McIntyre, is charged with the responsibility of seeing that a predicted shortage of about 50,000 trained construction work ers in North and South Carolina does not become a reality. McIntyre wUl work in two main areas. He will see to it that prospective, educable workers are made aware of the job openings and opportunities for advance ment in the industry; and he will work with educational institu tions and contracting firms to see that adequate training curricula are established and maintained. These curricula will be design ed to provide Skilled training on all levels, ranging from on-the- job apprentice training programs to technician education courses in state industrial education centers and four-year, college-level con struction engineering courses. In addition, McIntyre will work with high school guidance coun selors and Employment Security Commission offices in both states to set up procedures for testing and placing prospective construc tion craftsmen. McIntyre is a native of Ellerbe and a 1955 graduate of the Uni versity of North Carolina, where he majored in sociology. He has done graduate work in occupa tional information and guidance, and will be a candidate for a mas ter of science degree in June. For the past 27 months, McIn tyre has been area coordinator for the Piedmont Construction Ap prentice Council. He also served two years as a guidance counselor at the Umstead Youth Center in Butner. Carolinas Branch, AGC is a trade association representing the majority of the building, highway and public utility contractors in North and South Carolina. It maintains offices in Charlotte, Greensboro and Raleigh, and Col umbia, Greenville and Charleston, S. C. It has member firms in all principal towns and cities in North and South Carolina. 'Ht InMTTMlMnAl Untlona Sunday School iMsont Bookmobile Schedule BY DR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN Biblf Materi.l: Mark J:l ihrnu?f ‘ 0«,'utl»nal R.adiBis (I Corlnttn^n- Next Sunday FIRST BAPTIST CHtJItCB N.w Y«k At*, at V?* HsFnsrd MlnijUr BiW. School. 9:46 a.m. Worship 11 a.au IralDinK Union, 6 :S0 p.m. BT«nin* Wor ship. 7:30 p.m. Youth Fellowshtp, 8:80 p.m. Scout Troop 224, Monday. 7:80 pjn.. mid>we«k worship, WednssiUy 7:10 PaM.. choir practice WednesdaT 8:15 p.m. Missionary ma«ting, first and third Tuss- daya. 8 p.m. Church and family suppsrs, second Thursday. 7 Making Enemies Lesson for January 20, 19SS ( Monday, Jan. 21, Jackson Springs Route: Harold Markham 9:40-9:50; Terrell Graham, 9:55- 10; W. E. Graham, 10:05-10:10; Jackson Springs Post Office, 10:15-10:30; Mrs. Betty Stubbs, 10:35-10:45; Walter Meinnis, 10:50-11:05; Carl Tucker, 11:10- 11:25; Mrs. Margaret Smith, 12:05-12:10; Mrs. Vida Paschal, 12:15-12:20; Mrs. Edith Stutts, 12:25-12:35; Miss Adele McDon ald, 12:40-12:45; Philip Burroughs, 12:50-1:10; J. W. Blake, 1:15-1:35; A. J. Hanner, 1:45-1:55. Tuesday, Jan. 22, Westmoore Route: Mrs. W. G. Inman, 9:30- 9:45; Mrs. Ardena Bums, 10-10:05; James Allen, 10:10-10:15; Mrs. Audrey Moore, 10:20-10:30; J. B. Dickey, 10:35-10:45; Talc Mine, 10:50-11; L. A. Brewer, 11:25- 11:35; Kennie Brewer, 11:40- 11:50; W. J. Brewer, 11:55-12:05; Baldwin Store, 12:10-12:15. Wednesday, Jan. 23, Little Riv er Route: Watson Blue, 9:40-9:50; James McKay, 9:55-10; J. R. Blue, 10:05-10:15; John Baker, 19:20- 10:25; George Cameron, 10:30- 10:40; Malcolm Blue, 10:55-11:20; Mrs. J. W. Smith, 11:30-11:35; D. L. McPherson, 12:20-12:30; Jamfis Riggsbee, 12:35-12:40; Will Hart, 12:45-1; Mrs. Mary Pope, 1:10- 1:15; W. F. Smith, 1:25-1:30; Mrs. Nellie Garner, 1:35-1:40. Iliursday, —Jan. 24, Robbine, Eagle Springs, West End Route: J. P. Maness, 9:40-9:50; Raymond Williams, 9:55-10:05; Paul Wil liams, 10:10-10:20; James Callicut, 10:25-10:30; Mrs. Irene Williams, 10:35-10:40; . Marvin Williams, 10:45-10:50; R. N. Nall, 10:55- 11:05; Mrs. Mamie Boone, 11:10- 11:15; John Null, 11:25-11:35; Walter Monroe, 12:30-12:35; the Rev. H. A. McBath, 12:45-1; West End Post Office, 1:10-1:30. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH New Hanpihlra AT.nn* Sunday Service, 11 a.m. Sunday School. 11 n.m. Wedneaday SarTica. 8 p.m. Readins Room in Churab BnUdln* opan W^ueaday, Z-4 p.m. I WAS CICERO, by Elyesa Bazna in collaboration with Hans retironnent living Try it out-see it you like it-in Southern Pines. North Carolina, at the famous Hollywrod. Now a residential hotel, ideally situated in the Pinehurst-Southern Pines area of North Carolina where the 4 seasons are mild and retirement living is the community life. Superior accommodatioris for as little as $125 a month with meals Hotel facilities and conveniences in unrestricted homelike atmosphere of a resort hotel operated by the Pottle family for years. Color brochure and complete information for the asking Wits Stwi* W. PMtto, Mp. Nogly (Harper & Row $3.95i). This unique spy story is not only true but hilariously funny. Elyesa Bazna, a Turkish national, is a valet in the British Embassy in Ankara, Turkey in 1943 while Turkey is still a neutral nation. But by night, Elyesa or “Cicero,” the code name given to him by the Germans, is busy photographing top secret documents of the allies, “Operation Overlord” (the D-Day Invasion) and the Stalin-Roose- velt-Churchill agreements, among others, and selling them to the Germans. His contact at the Ger man Embassy, Herr Moyzisch, has also written his memoirs of “Op eration Cicero,” but this is the first time we have had the story of the day-to-day events by “Cic ero" himself. From his secret meetings with Herr Moyzisch to a thrilling chase in the winding streets of Ankara to his romantic interlude in his love-nes>t. called “Villa Cicero,” this story will keep you intribued and hysterical. How his identity is finally dis covered, at the hands of a German girl working for the Americans in the German Embasy is a spy story within itself, and an ironic end for “Cicero,” Actually this story was written because “Cicero” wanted the money to sue the Federal German Government for cheating him by paying for his wartime services in counterfeit British currency. Wait till the movies get hold of this one! — a 9.09'^ ae,0@- ..AG YOURSELF A BARGAIN TODAY AT YOUR FORD DEALER'S USED CAR SUPERMAFUiET SALE! 1960 Ford Country Sedan Excellent Condition. 1960 Ford Countiy Squire Wagon 9 Passenger — Air Cond. Excellent Condition. 1960 Ford Fordor Hard Top Air Cond. Full Power 1957 Olds 4-Door Hard Top 1954 Ford Pick-up Truck JACKSON MOTORS, INC. ox 5-5522 Mfg. Lie. No. 1909 _ ^ Southern Pines. N. C. THE SMALL MINE by Menna Gallie (Harper & Rowe $3.95). 'This is a fine book written with such skill that it seems simple. It has humor and tragedy and great compassion for the com monplace, confused people involv- in the tragedy. The scene is a coal-mining vil lage in the Welsh mountains. The central figure is Joe Jenkins, a strong young man bubbling with life, the joy and pride of his sharp, fussy little mother and his slow old father. Joe is not a very re markable fellow—he goes to work in the colliery like the others, his immediate ambition is to save enough money for a car of his own; but he is friendly and open- hearted, popular with the men at the pub and the small boys of the town, has a girl he is beginning to love and is the best singer in the community singing, a recrea tion dear to the Welsh. Joe’s life is snuffed out in a mine accident. Some of the townspeople, miners for genera tions, just sigh and repeat the traditional “That’s the price of coal, see, people don’t know.” But the circumstances of the accident are unusual. Ugly ru mors begin to circulate in the pub, over the back fences. What becomes of these rumors is su perbly told. Whether Mrs. Gallie is giving us women’s gossip, the men talking at the pub or the chatter of small boys, it rings true and shows a keen apprecia tion for the flavor of the local language. It also builds up, builds to insight into the life of each per son and a critical confrontation of human values. SUBSCRIBE TO THE PILOT, MOORE COUNTY'S LEADING NEWS WEEKLY. WHITE'S REAL ESTATE agency ESTHER F. WHITE, Broker Phone 692-8831 H OW can goodness be hated How can God make enemies God is perfect goodness. God i (.ov'e and still He has enemies 11 is not as if God were shut off b 4onie inaccessible heaven, so tha we could not set his goodness, li God came to this small earth in a form we could understand. He would still make enemies. Wh> that is we do not know. But God did come to this earth Or. Foreman in a form we can understand, He came as one of ourselves. It is true, God is every where and has always been every where. Indeed you might well say that God created Everywhere. Biti Jesus of Nazareth for the first time showed what God-as-man is like . . . and still made enemies Reading Minds It is not quite precisely the truUi to say that Jesus "made” ene mies. That sounds as if He de liberately stirred men against Him. That was not the story. H- made enemies in the sense tha) on account of things He said or did, some people were mightily angry with Him, so much so that in time they reached the murder- point. It is worth our time to look into this. How was it that the Son of God, the one human being who perfectly mirrored the Eternal Love—how was it that, of all peo ple, He made enemies? Mark’s Gospel tells a group of short stories all on the same theme, at this point. One incident after another brings out the fact that Jesus was up against a dead waU of resistance—and we can see why. First among the reasons was that He dared to say what only God would have a right to say. He was bold enough to tell a young man, lying paralyzed on a mattress: “Your sins are for given.” To be able to say that to any one implies two other things. The one who says this, if it is true, must be able to read another man’s mind . , . and he must be able to read the mind of God. He must know the man wants to be forgiven, he must know that God is ready to forgive, and does for give. Now you might think that everybody around would rejoice that a man’s sins had been for given. But instead, the people who heard Jesus say this were con vinced that Jesus was a bias phemer. He was “playing God. You see they assumed to begin with that He was lying. But wiiat if He told the truth? That they refused to believe. Jesus knew what God meant Many times Jesus made ene mies by what He did on the Sap- bath, the sayenth day of their week, the day sacred to God_ Tl"e pharisees had it all ngurecl out that on that Holy Day it was hardly right to do anything at all but go to the synagogue and back. Eat Jesus’ disciples were on a walk and hungry one .Sabbath day, and did what any one might have done, picked a few heads of wheat and chewed them up. (They must have been really hungry to do that.) The watching Pharisees, who seem to have been always around, Uke gnats, pounced on this harmless act. They Jesus for breaking the Sabbaliv !t never occurred to them that if it is not wrong to give food to the hungry, it is not tgrong for the Hungry to do whatever it lakes to satisfy their hunger. How )8sus Met His Enemies So it went. Jesus’ enemies were always belitUing. They always put out the w'orst possible explanation ot aU He did. They assumed in advance that He was a bad niun. rhey were not prepared to lieheve anvtliing good of him. Suen men with such an attitude make mean enemies. There is hardly any hope of winning them over. The better Jesus was, the worse they be came The kinder He was. tiie more bitter they were. These sto rics suggest to us some .simple plain truths about enemies. One K There is no escaping them, it Jesus the Son of God made ene mies his followers may expect the same . - if, of course, they are as active in doing good as He was. The people who are “good, but good for nothing,” have no enemies—and no friends either. You can neither love nor liate a vegetable. But if you go about doing good, strange to say you won’t have every one with you But you can do with your enemies what Jesus did with His—go right on doing good as long as you live. (BMtd «■ e«W'Mfhted bj the DtTUlon of ChrlstUB Eduoatlou, National Council of tho Chutv.hcM of Christ In the U. S. A. Belonsod hr Commonltr Prooo Soreloo.) manly PKEaBYTRUIAN CHURCH Donald Moennschio, lUniotuF Sunday School 10 n.m. Won^p oerrloo H a.ra. and 7:80 p.«. RYF 8 pjn. Women of the Church meetins * oecond Tueoduy. Mid-week Thuro- day 7 p.m.: choir rehearsal 8:80 p.m- ST. ANTHONY’S CATROLIC Vermont A»o. at Aoho Sunday Masoee: 8 and 10:80 a.m.; Dally Mase 8:10 a.m. Holy Dm Mm^. 7 * • ii.m.: Confesslona, Saturday. 8:00 to SiS* p.m : 7:30 to 8 p.m. Men’s Club Meeting 3rd Monday each month. Women'e Club meetings: 1st Mooda> ^ioy Seoul Troop No. 878. Wednaadaf 7:30 D.m. Girl Scout Troop No. 118 Monday. I P.m. the united church of chhiry (Charch of WWo FcMwMRr) Cor. Bonnett and Now Bampdhiro Carl B. WhUaeo. SfinlotM Sunday School, 0:4S njm. Worohip SorTleo, 11 Sunday, 8:80 pun.. PU*rto. FWlowohm (Young People). Sunday. 8:00 p.m.. ’The Forum. EMMANUEL CBUHCB vEptMopal) £a*t MuMachawtto Aoo. Martin CaldwoU. Rortor Holy Communion, 8 aosa- (Vlrst Budaye and Holy DuyA 8 n-m. and U AOO.) FamUy Ser#*, 9:80 a.m. Church School. 10 aJB. Morniag Service, 11 u.m. Young Peoples’ Servtoe Laagno. d P-m- Holy CommunioiK Wedneodmyo and Holy Dura. 10 a.m. and Friday, 8:80. ^turday—8 p.m. Pona&OA brownson memorial church iProabytoriaa) Dr. Julian Lake. Minittar Sunday School »:4B ^ Worship ice, 11 a.m. Women of the Ohapsh mast' ing, 8 p.m. Monday following third Smnday. The Youth FsUowshlpa maat at 7 o’aioa* each Sunday ovsniag. Mid-week sorvloo, Wtdaosday. 7 il8 p.m. OUR BAVIOtlR LUTHERAN CHURCH Civic Club Balldlag Coraer Pennsylvania Avs. aud Aaha It. Jack Deal. Paator Worship Service, 11 a.m. Sunday School. 0:45 a.m. U.L.C.W. meeto firat Monday 8 FJH. Choir practice Thurodayo 8 P.¥i —This SpacR Donatsd ia tb* CLARK & BRADSHAW SANDHILL DRUG CO SHAW PAINT k WALLPAPER CO. A k P TEA CO. METHODIST CHURCH HUlaad Road Bebort C. Mooaay. Jr.. MlaMm Chureb School 0:48 A. H- Worohip Service „ Youth Fellowohip 8:15 V. M. WSCS moots each third Moaday at I.Of ^’Methodist Men meet snob fourth SaiMmv at 7:48 aJt. . ™ . Choir Rehearsal each Wedneaday e* 7:30 P.H. laMMit ul Ih* Church*# bf— JACKSON MOTORS, lac. Your FORD D*al*r MCNEILL'S SERVICE STATION GuU SccrlCH PERKINSON'S. lac. JciVHlw F R O N T R A N ^ North Carolina in the Civil War by Glen Tucker, illustrated by Bill Ballard $3.00. GHOSTS OF THE CAROLINAS by Nancy Roberts $1.95 THE SAND PEBBLES by Richard McKenna $5.95 A fresh shipment of pretty note paper 180 W. Penn. Ave. OX 2-3SJ11 FLOOR SANDING And REFINISHING J. B. SHORT Box 382 Southern Pines * Phone OX 5-6411 Floor Covering Hardwood Floors Installed Wall Tile Ceramic & Plastic Counter Tops Aluminum Windows Screens and Doors All Work Guaranteed Estimates Free tin Eastman Dillon. Union Securities 8c 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 Crinsultations by aoonintment on Saturdays TIME NOW TO HAVE THOSE WINTER CLOTHES CLEANED FOR COLD WEATHER 'Valet The' MRS. D. C. JENSEN Where Cleaning and Prices Are Better! WATCH OUR ADS . . YOU'LL FIND IT! NOTICE We have purchased the painting, decorating and wallpapering business of the late George W. Tyner and are now operating as TYNER 8c BIBEY We plan to give the same fine service as was given by the late Mr. Tyner, and will appreciate your patronage. EDWARD C. TYNER and JOHNNY P. BIBEY TYNER bibey Phone Southern Pines 695-7653 or 695-6402 All work done by skilled mechanics and P. O. Box 1048 covered by Workmen’s Compensation,

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view