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4 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1963 THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina Page THREE Eastman Dillon, Union Securities 8c Co. Membeis New York Stock Exchange MacKenzib 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 Repair Watch Graduate Watchmaker with 14 years’ experience Modern, electronically equipped shop, using all genuine factory parts All work guaranteed under reasonable conditions Oldham's Jewelry Vass, N. C. Some Looks At Books By LOCKIE PARKER ?! IS ONLY HOLDS UP TO 658 LBS. OF FROZEN FOOD! GENERAL ELECTRIC Book-Shelf FREEZER $319.95 1. Food at your fingertips! 2. Additional storoge in doer. 3. Fits in one square yard of floor space. 4. General Electric Quolity and Dependability. Gouger & Veno Electric Shop Scofield Building Pinehurst, N. C. Tel. 294-8541 BRAZIL ON THE MOVE by John Dos Pasos (Doubleday $3.9fi). This account of his ex periences in Brazil and his love affair with that country is told with such zest by John Dos Pasos that it can be read just as good travel talk or for its shrewd in sights into the life of a country that covers nearly half a conti nent and is developing its interi or with a gusto reminiscent of the opening of our own West. First, the author reminds us that Brazil was not colonized by the Spanish, as the other Latin American countries were, but by the Portugese, a very different breed. It was a mixed breed. In a small country on the tip of Eu rope and great seafarers, the Portugese had Arab and Berber blood, Celt, Jewish and French. This may account for the unusual lack of prejudice in Brazil today as to race, color or religion and the welcome given to non-refu gees from various parts of our troubled world as well as non refugees who come for work or the fascination of exploring and opening a new frontier. Dos Pasos describes one group of workmen at a barbecue as having skins “bronze, mustard, tobacco- colored, tan to ruddy.” He gives us a brief history of Brazil as background and then plunges into its current development. “Of course, he’s a little mad,” said Pinheiro of the great road- builder, Sayao. “And so am I, and so’s Kubitshek. . . It takes mad men to put through a project like Brasilia.” Brasilia is the new cap ital being built in the interior on an empty plateau, a modern city straight from the architect’s drawing board, that had to have I all roads built to it. Brasilia is not the first Brazilian city to he built that way. Goiania built “in the bush” twenty years ago is now a flourishing modem city of fifty thousand. It takes bold men to develop Brazil’s interior with its scant population and lack of communication with the populous coastal strip. The reason? A for midable chain of mountains be tween. But rich resources—mines, forests, good agricultural land- make it worth developing. This is only one area of Bra zil, though the most exciting one at the moment. There is also the .^reat tropical jungle of the Ama zon basin, the Northeast, an area plagued by droughts and poverty, and of course, Sao Paulo and the industries of the South. The author adds a lively ac count of Brazilian politics as he Now...Total Performance ’64 COnWS to Southern Pines ’64 Falcon... beau tiful new big-car look, same grand old Falcon economy. 17 models, engine choices. Our new '64 Fords are here...totally new in 4 sizes! Totally stunning in 4 sizes! 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WMNC. .640..825 1490.. 8 25 1290. .8:45 1070.. 8 25 1080. .825 1440.. 825 1460.. 825 1430 . 8 25 Mount Airy...WPAQ. N. Wilkesboro.WKBC. S. Pines WEEB. Stateville WSIC. Sylva WMSJ Wadesboro....WADE Whiteville WENC Winston-Salem. WAIR .740..8 25 .810..825 .990..825 1400..825 .1480..825 .1210..825 .1220..825 .1340..825 has observed it over two decades with vignettes of outstanding figures. This is a book of im pressions rather than an effort to give us a complete account of a completx land of sixty-five mil lion people, ranging from primi tive tribes to the highly sophisti- acted intellectuals of Rio de Jan eiro. Chiefly it gives one new in sights, stimulates curiosity and makes one feel that it is a bit stupid not to know more about a country of such size and vitali ty in our own hemisphere. THE VIOLENT WORLD OF HUGH GREENE by Colin Wil son (Houghton Mifflin $3.95). The thoughts of youth are “long, long thoughts,” and those of a mathematical prodigy and pre cocious intellectual are extra long. Such was Hugh Greene. On top of which two slightly mad uncles encouraged him in fantas tic flights of speculation and in regarding most people as fools. For example Uncle Nick assured him that “your teachers poison your mind with lies” and said to come to him for the truth. Thus the account of the thoughts, emotions and activities of Hugh Greene from the age of seven to maturity make an un usual novel. Colin Wilson has succeeded superbly in evoking the stormy inner world of adoles cence. One naturally suspects a large element of autobiography here since Colin Wilson, too, was a precocious youth and, like his hero, left school at sixteen to pur sue education on his own. In the end Hugh makes terms with life and his own desires and shows no signs of becoming as exces sively eccentric as his uncles even though one of them had left him a legacy and hoped he would carry on his work. THE DOMESTICATED AMER ICANS by Russell Lynes (Harper & Row $6.50). The author of “Snobs” and “The Tastemak- ers”—remember his highbrow, lowbrow, middlebrow—turns his gazie to the American home and its development over the past hundred years, and his account is informative and hilarious. From the prarie sod house through the boarding house up to the present day split level, his gaze is pene trating and p.erceptive. Mr. Lynes also looks into the servant problem over the years, and the evolution of the ice-box, plumbing, the bedroom, drawing room and the American parlor. [Although the whole book is vastly entertaining, it is the Am erican bathroom from its humble origin of water pitcher and basin to its present stainless steel status symbol that I found most inter esting. Some residents will remember the author’s mother who for sev eral years was social hostess at the Carolina Hotel in Pinehurst. —A.M.S. THE DEVIL TO PAY IN THE BACKLANDS by Joao Guimar- aes Rosa (Knopf $5.95). With my curiosity about Brazil aroused by John Dos Pasos I read with keen interest this novel about Brazil and some extra wild Brazilians around the turn of the century. The form chosen is the ramb ling reminiscence of an old man who as a youth had led the ad venturous life of a “Jagunco”— defined as “a member of a law less band of armed ruffians in the pay of rival politicos, who warred against each other and the mili tary.” It was a tough life, but had its attractions. There is violence in the book and suffering, but there are wonderful descriptions of the vast land, tbs joy of riding with comrades, the exhilaration of combat, the thrill of narrow es capes. I was reminded of some of the Scottish ballads. One somber thread runs through it all. In his old age, Ri- naldo has taken to thinking about good and evil and wondering wnether he did sell his soul to the devil. This is a rich, racy book and must be even better to those who read it in the original and get the full flavor. SERVICE For fifty years Girl Scouting has been a community service to youth, provided by adult volun teers who believe in the value of the spiritual, educational, and social experiences it offers girls. Girl Scout councils, which ad minister this service in communi ties across the United States, need the financial as well as the moral support of every adult who belives in the youth of our nation. SP lnt«m«tlon$l Unllorn Sunday School lessona BY DR. KEHNETH iJ&FPRENIA Human Harmony Lesson for October 6, 1963 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS Next Sunday Blblo Material: I Corinthians I through 4. Devotional Reading: Ephesians 4:1-7. O ONE needs to be told that harmony is one of the great laws of the Universe; some would say the greatest. This does not mean that we always find har mony where it ought to be, or that it is easy to produce and to maintain. It does mean that failure of harmony where W harmony should be is always baf fling and painful, and can be fatal. From the car en gine in which the cylinders do not work with the Dr. Foreman rhythm the de signers intended, on to the human being who is (as we say) “all to pieces,” loss of harmony is al ways bad. To live in harmony with yourself, your fellow men and God is the road to life, the road to peace. Broken harmonies When we look at life arotmd us, we see tragic need for harmony in the very situations and institu tions where you would have a right to expect harmony of a high degree. Look at the American family today, look at the divorce problem. This is more than a mat ter of husband and wife bickering, as if their quarrels affected them selves alone. An able probation officer in a large American city has gone on record as saying he has yet to see a juvenile delin quent from a home where there was harmony between father and mother. The capital city of our country is plagued by crime of all sorts, and the authorities lay the blame less on the police force (who are doing aU they can) than on the “breakdown of parental authority.” Homes where there is disruption between man and wife, parents and children, are no help to society, but sore places, trou ble-spots, breeders of disruption in other circles. When we turn from the family to almost any aspect of public life, what strikes the mind again is feuding—in business, social life, politics, even in the church. You would think that in the church of Christ the very atmosphere would make quarrels impossible. Yet the experience of today mirrors the experience of the early Chris tian church. The same people to whom Paul writes as “sanctified in Christ Jesus,” and “not lacking in any spiritual gift,” are quarrel ing among themselves. The first three chapters of I Corinthians are devoted to this problem of quarreling Christians. The basic harmony Paul brings out the truth that there is one basic harmony on which aU others are built. Without this basic harmony every other attempt at it falls in failure. This is the harmony between the Chris tian and God, and of course this means between the Christian and Christ. He does not so much urge the Christians to “behave” and to “make up” as he urges them to remember whose they are and whom they serve. It is through God—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit —that the jarring factions in the church find the solution of their quarrels. The more we think of other Christians as other Chris tians and not just as others—out siders, opponents, roadblocks to truth and progress—the closer we shall come to that harmony which in its perfection we shall never see in this world. The churjh can not come before God with its dif ferences all ironed out, its har monies restored, and offer God its self-made harmony and peace as a gift from us to Him. On the contrary, the church’s disharmo nies, quarrels, factions, once we are trffiy united to Christ and de voted to His cause, will begin to perish for lack of pride, the essen tial diet of dissension. Motives What motives inspire those who seek harmony especially with their fellow-Christians? Is it that we don’t want to be bothered by arguments? Is it for efficiency’s sake that we lay our feuds aside? Is it that we want to present a solid front to the world? These may be motives, but not the best. Paul speaks of two motives pro moting true Christian harmony between man and man, in the church or out. One is the “fellow ship of our Lord Jesus.” We be long to Him, every Christian does. We belong neither less nor more than others. Boasting and shoving are out of order. The other mo tive is service for Christ. As Paul and Appollos are very different men, worked each in his way without conflict, so may all of us unite—not always in ideas, but always in Christian service. (Baaed on outlines oopjrifhtod bj the Division of Chriatian Edoeailon, National Connell of the Chnrehes of Christ In the U. 8. A. Reloasod bp Community Press Service.) METHODIST CHURCH Midland Road A. L. Thompson, Minister Church School 9:45 a.m. Worship Service 11:00 a.m. Youth Fellowship 6:16 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. Readint; Room in Church Building open Wednesday, 2-4 p.m. ' ST. ANTHONY’S CATHOLIC Vermont Ave. at Ashe St. Father John J. Harper Sunday Masses 8, 9:15 and 10:30 a.m. Daily Mass, 7 am. (except Friday, 11:15 a.m.); Holy Day Masses, 7 a.m. and 5:30 p.m,; Confessions, Saturday, 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. and 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Men’s Club meeting: 3rd Monda> each month. Women’s Club meeting. 1st Monday, 8 p.m. Boy Scout Troop No. 873, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Girl Scout Troop No. 118, Monday, $ p.m. MANLY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sunday School 10 a.m.. Worship service 11 a.m. and 7 :3p p.m. PYF 6 p.m.; Women of the Church meeting 8 p.m. second Tuesday. Mid-week service Thursday 7:80 p.m.. choir rehearsal 8:30 p.m. OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH Civic Club Building Corner Pennsylvania Ave. and Asha 8t. Jack Deal, Pastor Worship Service, 11 a.m. Sunday School, 9:45 a.m. U.L.C.W. meets first Monday 8 p.m. Choir practice Thursday 8 p.m. 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, 9:39 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, 9:80 a.m. Saturday 4 p.m.. Penance. BROWNSON MEMORIAL CHURCH (Presbyterian) Dr. Julian Lake, Minister May St. at Ind. Ave. Sunday School 9:45 a.m.. Worship Service 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 p.B. THE UNITED CHURCH OP CHRIST (Church of Wide Fellowship) Cor. Bennett and New Hampshire Carl E. Wallace, Minister Sunday School, 9:45 ajn. Worship Service, 11 a.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 Mangnm, Minister Bible School, 9:45 a.m.. Worship Service 11 a.m.. Training Union 6:80 p.m.. Eve ning Worship 7:30 p.m. Youth Fellowship 8:30 p.m. Scout Troop 224, Monday 7:80 p.m. Mid-week worship, Wednesday 7:80 p.m. i choir practice Wednesday 8:15 p.m. Missionary meeting first and third Tae»> days, 8 p.m. Church and family suppers, second Thursday, 7 pjB. —This Space Donated in the Interest of the Churches by— SANDHILL DRUG CC. JACKSON MOTORS. Inc. SHAWPMN-i roux FORD Dealer & WALLPAPER Civ CLARK & BRADSHAW A & P TEA CC. WANTED: Persons interested in services of Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod, Church of the Lutheran Hour. Write c/o Rev. John Trojian, Jr., 507 Underhill, High Point, N. C. s2fitfc GIRL SCOUTING TODAY MAKES BETTER CITIZENS TOMORROW GIVE! NEW STORIES FOR BOY AND GIRL SCOUTS from Boy's Life and The American Girl Football Stories Mystery Stories First Date Horse Stories Pat Downing The Time Machine $1.95 each €9WlIfEY B99£SB9P 180 W. Penn. Ave. 692-3211 TYNER A BIBEY PAINTING - DECORA'nNG WALLPAPERING 650 N. Bennett St. Southern Pines PHONE Southern Pines 692-7352 or 695-6402 FREE ESTIMATES "No Job Too Large Or Too Small" J20tfc To Our Patrons— who have so overwhelmingly accepted our new menu, we would like to express our gratitude. The comments in regard to the new decor have been most welcome. To our friends who have not visited the “Golden Door Dining Room” lately, we offer this portion of our new dinner menu. Gourmet Features Calves Liver, Sauted in Butter 2.65 With Bacon Strips Cutlets of Veal, Breaded and Sauted .... 2.65 With Tomato and Pepper Sauce Tender Cuber of Beef with Burgandy Sauce 2.50 With Tender Cooked Vegetables Fricassee of Chicken in Patty SheU .... 2.50 Served in Casserole Baked in Jacket or French Fried Potatoes Green Garden Vegetable or Tossed Green Salad with Choice of Trio of Dressings Above Served with Choice of Appetizer, Dessert and Beverage The Golden Door Dining Room of Howard Johnson's U.S. 1-15-501-211 Between Aberdeen & Southern Pines
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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Oct. 3, 1963, edition 1
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