THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1963 THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina Page THREE a I f' , 'i Bookmobile Schedule Monday June 17, Jackson Springs Route: Harold Markham, 9:40-9:55; TerreU Graham, 10- 10:10; W. E. Graham, 10:15-10:20; Jackson Springs Post Office, 10:25-10:35; James Hicks, 10:40- 10:50; Mrs. Betty Stubbs, 10:55- 11:05; Walter Mclnnis, 11:10- 11:30; Carl Tucker, 11:35-11:50; Mrs. Margaret Smith, 12:30-12:40; Mrs. Veda Paschal, 12:45-12:55; Mrs. Edith Stutts, 1-1:15; Adele McDonald, 1:20-1:25; Philip Bur roughs, 1:30-1:55; J. W. Blake, 2-2:20; A. J. Hanner, 2:25-2:35. Tuesday June 18, Westmoore Route: Mrs. W. G. Inman, 9:35- 9:50; Mrs. Ardena Bums, 10:05- 10:15; James Allen, 10:20-10:30; Mrs. Audrey Moore, 10:35-10:45; J. B. Dickey, 10:50-11; Talc Mine, 11:05-11:15; L. A. Brewer, 11:50- 12; Kennie Brewer, 12:05-12:15; W. J. Brewer, 12:20-12:30; Roland Nall, 1:15-1:30; Baldwin Store, 1:40-1:50; Carl Brown, 1:55-2. Wednesday June 19, Little Riv er Route: Watson Blue, 9:40-9:55; James McKay, 10-10:10; J. R. Blue, 10:15-10:30; John Baker, 10:35-10:45; George Cameron, 10:55-11:05; Alex McFayden, 11:10-11:20; Julian Smith, 11:25- 11:30; Mrs. Kenneth Womack, 11:35-11:45; Malcolm Blue, 11:50- 12:15; Mrs. J. W. Smith, 12:20- 12:25; D. L. McPherson, v:20-l:30; James Riggsbee, 1:35-1:45; Mrs. Sylvia Jones, 1:50-2; Will Hart, 2:05-2:20; Clara Brooks, 2:25-2:30; Mrs. Mary Pope, 2:40-2:50; W. F. Smith, 3:05-3:15. Thursday June 20, Robbins, Eagle Springs, West End Route: J. P. Maness, 9:40-9:50; F. E. Wallace, 9:55-10:05; Raymond Williams, 10:10-10:25; James Cal- licut, 10:30-10:40; Paul Williams, 10:45-11:20; Mrs. Irene Williams, 11:25-11:35; Mrs. Janie McNeill, 11:40-12; Marvin Williams, 12:05- 12:15; R. N. Nall, 12:20-12:30; G. S. Williams, 12:35-12:40; Mrs. Mamie Boone, 12:45-12:55; John Nall, 1:05-1:15; Walter Monroe, 1:55-2:05; the Rev. H. A. McBath, 2:10-2:30; West End, 3-3:30. Some Looks At Books By LOCKIE PARKER WOODROW WILSON: A Brief Biography by Arthur S. Link (World $3.95). This is the first book in a proejcted series of brief biographical studies of the out standing Presidents under the editorship of Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., woll known historian and now special assistant to the Pres ident. It sounds like a good idea. The author of this book can speak with authority. He is now editor-in-chief of the papers of Woodrow Wilson and has written several books on special phases of Wilson’s career. In this one he seems embarrassed by the con densation required—the book has less than 200 pages—and it reads almost like a summary. It is packed wtih facts from the maneuvers in faculty disagree- nvents at Princeton, the policies and personalities of the New Jer sey Democrats who nominated Wilson for Governor in 1910, right down to the small events and rare statements of Wilson’s last days in retirement. What is missing is a living portrait of the man him self—his humanity, the quality of his indomitable spirit. We are told that he had these things, that, for example, James M. Cox said that no one could talk to President Wilson about the League of Nations without “be coming a crusader in its behalf,” but We are not made to feel it. them Since the devotion of the au thor to his subject cannot be doubted, perhaps what is lacking is literary skill or perhaps he has leaned over backward in his effort to be the impartial histori an. He says in his introduction that he will refrain from “assess ment of Wilson’s significance in modern history,” but surely this is just what the non-scholarly reader of a short biography is looking for . You can give him both sides of the question and material to argue with you but he does want to know why this man is important to him, what he has contributed to making the nation we know today. It is hoped that later volumes in the series may be equally judicious in choice of material but make more impact on the imagination of the reader. THE AR’nST by Jan de Hart- og, drawings by Joseph Low (Atheneum $5.00). This is an un usual book, and the publishers have emphasized this by giving it an unusual format—square pages of thick white paper that give a fine background for the strong drawings by Joseph Low. Joost Jansen was instinctively an artist even as a small boy liv ing beside the Zuider Zee. He saw the world as an artist sees it. He loved to reproduce what he saw and, as he had a wonderful imagination, he liked even bet ter to draw the things he imagin ed all mixed with the real. But he had also early decided to become a sailor. It was oddly enough while he was in training at the Naval Col lege that he met two artists who taught him a great deal and in fluenced the shape of his life. One of these drew with meticu lous accuracy and had a steady sale for his work at modest sums, the other painted with bold aban don and came to a bad end. Jan Joost prudently followed the example of the first, became a harbor pilot and methodically ' saved for the day when he could retire and devote himself to painting. Fifty years later he was free for this, had his own house boat and, after a voyage through Mrs. Cadigan, 76, Dies, Co-Owner Of Residential Hotel Funeral services for Mrs. May- belle Bates Cadigan, 76, who died Friday at St. Joseph’s Hospital, wer.a held Monday morning at the Powell Funeral Home. Offi ciating was the Rev. Martin Caldwell of Emmanuel Episcopal Church. Burial was in Mt. Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Cadigan had been associ ated with her sister. Miss Doro thy Bates, in ownership and oper ation of the New England House, residential hotel on W. New York Ave., for the past 17 years. She moved from Milton, Mass., in 1946 following retirement as a commercial artist. Simviving are two sisters, Mrs. Homer S. With- ington of Milton, Mass., and Mis.s Dorothy Bates of Southern Pines, and one brother, Chester M. Bates of Manchester, N. H. owner BVBry thirty seconris! OTNAMIC 38 HOLIDAY SEDAN EoingOmS Isths * EoingJhlng! We could say “nearly 1,700 buyers a day,” or “over 10,000 new owners a week!” Fact is, Oldsmobile sales are really soaring! And why not? It was a dollar-saving Olds Dynamic 88, for instance, that swept Class “G” in the 1963 Mobil Economy Run ! Add stunning, go-places style . . . sensational Rocket performance. No wonder value-wise people are going Olds at such a fantastic rate. FRfC SS-PASt HAND mcNAUr KOAD ATIAS— git yom at yaar OUs Dialir’s iriitti nypty laitsl THERE’S “SOMETHING EXTR,V’ ABOUT OWNING AN OLDSMOBILE! • SEE YOUR OLDSMOBILE QUAUTY DEALER!—^— STILL OLDSMOBILE-PONTIAC, INC. 795 S. W. Broad Street Southern Pines. N. C. Dealer's License No. 2216 Holland, Belgium and northern France, he moored his boat by one of the bridges of the Seine in Paris, the city of his dreams. His first walk in Paris was to the Tuileries where he saw an exhibi tion of the Impressionists and found the originals of paintings that were familiar to him in copies incredibly radiant, vibrant, soul-shaking. He went back to his houseboat and began drawing. But the next morning when he looked at his sketchbook, he was chilled by the lifelessness of his own drawings. What else happened to him in Paris is a fable and a fairy tale and yet astoundingly real. His as sociation with the characters who lived under the bridges and who are depicted with relish by Jo seph Low give a rich background for the crucial incident. That was a meeting with a stray dog, a miserable, dirty, bandaged dog much too large for a houseboat. How the dog adopted him and proved irresistible because of its need and its trust makes a mov ing and significant story as Jan de Hartog has told it. How for this sickly dog, Jan Joost became willing to defy the police and the whole might of the French gov ernment and what this unprece dented flare of devotion and heroism did for Jan Joost as a man and an artist is superbly told here. CAREFUL, HE MIGHT HEAR YOU by Sumner Locke Elliott (Harper & Row $4.95). This book arrived with a letter recommend ing it to the reviewer’s attention because the publisher felt it had unusual merit. This would tend to make me regard the book with suspicion, as I think all publish ers must believe the books they single out for publication are un usually good or they would not bother to publish them. But this was one time when I had to agree with the editors of Harper & Row. This is an unusu al story and a book of outstand ing merit. The setting is Aus tralia and concerns four women, sisters, who fight to possess a six- year-old boy. When the story opens, “P. S.” Marriott lives in content with his Aunt Lila and her husband, George. His two other lovable and odd-ball aunts, Vera and Agnes, live nearby. His mother had died at his birth and his charming, irresponsible fath er, Logan, is off digging for gold and has never seen P. S. Into the boy’s warm and fa miliar world comes a determined character. His rich Aunt Vanessa returns from England with the announcement that she intends to take over the care and education of P. S. As the motives and character of each of the aunts is revealed, the reader is caught up in grow ing concern for the fate of a very real and lovable little boy. The climax of the book comes as a shocking surprise. Like a story of high suspense, it is not easy to start this novel and then put it down. This is the author’s first novel, though he has written plays that appeared on the Broadway and Sydney stages. —A.M.S. « BUILDING? +BUYING? 4% f Current Dividend Rate LOW INTEREST — CONVENIENT TERMS NO DISCOUNT FEES Southern Pines Savings&Loan Assn 205 S. E. Broad Street Tel. 695-6222 Bible Material: Pialma 11: 72; 82: 106; Amos 5; 8. Devotional Beadlnc: Psalm 87. OEOPLE who talk about the* *• separation of church and state | often do_ not know just what they > are talking about. As the founding ( fathers of America saw it, there ^ is a danger in the possibility of the state’s supporting one church or one form of re-; ligion against all others. The fram ers of the consti tution had seen some examples of state religions and they did not want to make the same mistake „ „ here. However, it Dr. Foreman uqj their in- tention to rule religion out of pub-; lice life. These were the same' people who started the custom of inaugurating presidents and other high officials with religious oaths and public prayer. These were the same people who adopted tlie motto “In God we Trust.” « Justice is demanded In the view of the Bible, justice is not optional. When the prophets' spoke of justice, they were speak-' ing of it as a requirement, not op tional but demanded. The prophet ■ Micah speaks of justice as one of; the three great requirements of| religion along with mercy and humility before God. Justice is woven into the Ten Command ments and into American ideals. A man dare not fancy himself re ligious, he dare not fancy that he can please God, if he is not just in all his dealings, so far as he< is able. All forms of Christianity* have this (and much else, to be sure) in common with one an-' other and with the religion of the Jews: Religion and right conduct go hand in hand. Religion that is . genuine calls for a life devoted to justice. This does not mean that every man is called to be a lawyer or a judge. It does mean that ev ery day every person is faced with : some decision, perhaps many, in which he is tempted to Le unjust. Jus.'i:s is There is one very interest'ng feature of the Bible's in.ejest in justice. It is hardly ever de.dned as simple fairness; it is more oft en seen as taking sides. It is the notion of some people, though how tliey can think so is a puzzle to any who knows a bit of history,— a notion that justice so to speak is automatic. There is something in the nature of things that works toward justice—so this idea sup poses—so that we do not have to try hard, much less fight, for jus tice. Everything will come out right in the end if you will just leave everything alone! Of com'se. it does not. Whenever injustice, in any form, has passed away or be come less, it has because some one was bold enough and strong enough, not only to speak up for the victims of injustice, but to stand up for them. Justice, men tioned in the Old Testament so oft en, means taking sides when one side is unfair to the other; “ffie poor,” “the needy,” the oppress ed” these words are common. The Ten Commandments begin with an introduction to God. “I am a just God.” Rather, “I am the Lord thy God who brought thee out of the house of bondage.” God is the kind of God indio is every where and always on the side of the oppressed and against those who do the oppressing. Justice, if you believe in it, often demands that you fight for it. Justice is de fense. • Justlea Is divins Unjust people seldom think of themselves as unjust. Every one knows in his heart of hearts that injustice is wrong. Every one re sents injustice fast enough if he is the victim; very few people can see injustice being done when they are the oppressors, not the oppressed. Injustice has many evil consequences, but itself is rooted in selfishness. In the days when society was organized in the feudal pattern, nobody thought it wrong that the serfs; at the bot tom of the ladder, were cruelly treated. “Noblemen” would re sent, at sword’s point, the kind of treatment they gave the serfs ev ery day. If you asked a nobleman about this, he would have said it was no injustice, he was so much superior that he deserved supe rior treatment. In every age those who battle for justice have the equivalent of the feudal so-called noblemen against them. There is one comfort for the fighter for justice: He may be sure that the God who hates injustice is on his side. (Based oo eatlines oopfrifhted by the DtrlsloD of Christian Edneatlon* National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U. S. A. Released by Community Press Seryloe.) Mrs. Nancy Hatch, Longtime Resident, Dies Suddenly Funeral services were held at the First Baptist Church Sunday afternoon for Mrs. Nancy 'W. Hatch, 81, who died suddenly Friday at her home here. Officiating was the pastor, the Rev. Maynard Mangum. Burial was in Mt. Hope Cemetery. She was a native of Chatham County, who had lived for many years in Souhtern Pines. Her hus band, J. M. Hatch, died in 1939. Mrs. Hatch moved to Moore Coun ty 50 years ago and had been a CARD OF THANKS 'We wish to express our sincere thanks for the many deeds of kindness and expressions of sym pathy shown us at the time of the death of our mother. The family of Mrs. Nancy Welch Hatch resident here for the past 30 years. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Marlin Kemmerer of Philadel phia, Pa.; six sons, Elwood, of Silver Springs, Md.; Jesse of Granite Falls; and Lawton, P. V., Joe and Javer, all of Southern Pines; six grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Next Sunday METHODIST CHURCH Midland Road Robert S. Mooney, Jr., Minister Church School 9:45 a.m. Worship Service 11:00 a.ni. Youth Fellowship 6:15 p.m. WSCS meets each third Monday at 8:00 p.m. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH New Hampshire Avenue Sunday Service, 11 a.m. Sunday School. 11 a.m. Wednesday Service, 8 p.m. Reading Room in Church BuUdinff open Wednesday, 2>4 p.m. ' ST. ANTHONY'S CATHOLIC Vermont Are. at Ashe St. Father Francis M. Smith Sunday Masses: 8 and 10:30 a.m.; Daily Mass 8:10 a.m. Holy Day Masses, 7 and 8 a.m.; Confessions, Saturday, 5:00 to 6 p.m.; 7:30 to 8 p.m. Men’s Club Meetinir, 3rd Monday each month. Women’s Club meetings: Ist Monday 8 p.m. Boy Scout Troop No, 873, Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Girl Scout Troop No. 118, Monday, 8 pjn. MANLY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sunday School 10 a.m.. Worship service 11 a.m. and 7 :30 p.m. PYF 6 p.m.; Women of the Church meeting 8 p.m. second Tuesday. Mid-week service Thursday '^:S0 p.m.. choir rehearsal 8:30 p.m. OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH Civic Club Building Corner Pennsylvania Ave. and Ashe 8t* Jack Deal, Pastor Worship Service, 11 a.m. Sunday School, 9:45 a.m. U.L.C.W. meets first Monday 8 pjn. Choir practice Thursday 8 p.m. EMMANUEL CHURCH (Episcopal) East Massachusetts Ave. Martin CaldweU, 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. 4 p.m. Holy Communion, Wednesday and Holy Days, 10 a.m. and Friday, 9:30 a.m. Saturday 4 p.m.. Penance. BROWNSON MEMORIAL CHURCH (Presbsrterian) Dr. Julian Lake, Minister May St. at Ind. Ave. Sunday School 9:45 a.m.. Worship Seryioa 11 a.m. Women of the Church meeting, 8 p.m Monday following third Sunday. The Youth Fellowships meet at 7 o’clock each Sunday evening. Mid-week service, Wednesday, 7:80 pJM. THE UNITED CHURCH OP CHRIST (Church of Wide Fellowship) Cor. Bennett and New Hampshire Carl E. Wallace, Minister Sunday School, 9:45 a.m. Worship Service, 11 n-m, Sunday, 6:00 p.m.. Youth Fellowship Women’s Fellowship meets 4th Thursday at 12:30 p.m. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH New York Ave. at South Ashe St. Maynard Mangum, Minister Bible School. 9:45 a.m.. Worship Service 11 a.m.. Training Union 6:30 p.m.. Eve ning Worship 7:30 p.m. Youth Fellowship 8:30 p.m. Scout Troop 224, Monday 7 :30 p.m. Mid-week worship, Wednesday 7:30 p.m. ^ choir practice Wednesday 8:16 p.m. Missionary meeting first and third Tuee- days, 8 p.m. Church and family suppere, second Tliursday, 7 pJB. —This Space Donated in the Interest of the Churches by— SANDHILL DRUG CO. SHAW PAINT & WALLPAPER CO. A & P TEA CO. JACKSON MOTORS, Inc. Your FORD Dealer CLARK & BRADSHAW PERKINSON'S, Inc. Jeweler About 58 per cent of rural homes have telephones. About 79 per cent have automobiles, 67 flush toilets 78 per cent inside water, and 77 per cent washing I > machines. ■ Keep children happy and busy with CRAFTS and HQBBIES NATURE CRAFTS WILD ANIMAL PETS $1.99 each for these Big Golden books ^ Also Easy Reading Books at 59c up 180 W. Penn. Ave. OX 2-3211 Give Dad what's coming to him ... a well- chosen gift from our wide variety ... on Father's Day, June 16. TOILETRIES Max Factor sets $1.60 up Old Spice Sets $1.25 up Stag Sets $1.00 up Buy a set or single items ELECTRIC RAZORS Remington — Norelco — Schick also the popular new Gillette Slim Razor with super blades . . . $1.50 PIPES Kaywoodie and Yello-Bole TRAVEL KITS Waterproof lined $2.98 Other Styles $1.98 - $4.95 FULL LINE OF Men’s Billfolds — Cameras Pen-Pencil Sets Fountain Pens — Tobaccos Hallmark Father’s Day Cards Mm 't vtiU □ PUG5 PRE.SCP.IPTIOW DRUa-Q-teTg Main Street Aberdeen, N. C.