Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Dec. 12, 1963, edition 1 / Page 3
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n ' s THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12. 1963 THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina Page THREE Some Looks At Books By LOCKIE PARKER Bookmobile Schedule HANDTAMING WILD BIRDS AT THE FEEDER by Alfred G. Martin (Wheelright $5.00). This intriguing book comes from Maine where the author has achieved very chummy relations with a number of wild birds—they not only eat from his hand, some of them play games with him. He says there is no difficulty about your doing as well, all you need is patience and know-how, and he offers you the latter in this book. The first and basic rule con cerns your attitude toward the bird, “Whether you believe it or not, always try to behave as if a bird can and does reason, as if in some things he is smarter than you. If you do this, you will have little trouble in hand - taming him.” Other rules are less subjective, such as speaking softly and steadily to the bird as you ap proach, moving slowly and al ways having his favorite food in your hand. Mr. Martin discusses the right foods for different kinds of birds and also has some em phatic things to say about wrong foods. As a frequent physician to ailing birds, he has found that birds sometimes eat what is not good for them. He also describes how he constructs his feeders so as to give the small birds an equal chance, and he gives you a diagram of the ideal bird bath. Apologizing for the litereuy style of his book, the author says that in his youth he spent his time studying birds instead of correct speech. Actually the writing is fresh, direct and force ful. Mr. Martin leaves you in no doubt about what to do with nui sances, hawks or humans, nui sances to the birds, of course; he seems to be genial enough with well-behaved visitors, especially small boys. He recounts his experiences in wooing some of the more diffi cult bird characters with such feeling that the reader becomes ready to cheer his success. With a final word of warning not to be discouraged if your first attempts fail, he wishes other bird watch ers the same pleasures he has had. THE TREASURE HOUSE OF EARLY AMERICAN ROOMS by John A. H. Sweezey, (Viking $8.50). This handsome book is truly a find for admirers of early American crafts and furniture. It shows rooms, furniture, fabrics, ceramics, pewter, glass from the right and remarkable collection of Henry Francis duPont at Win- thertur near Wilmington, a house now open to the public as a mu- roum. Enlarging the early nine teenth century house which he had inherited but keeping its ar chitectural character, Mr. Du Pont brought to Winthertur from many states authentic examples of different periods from the sev enteenth to the early nineteenth century and of different types BOOKS for CHRISTMAS fun to select, a joy to receive, easy to wrap and most inexpensive to mail. Stunning illustrated books on antiques and animals, food, sports and people. Small gift books of verse, humor, sentiment, wisdom. and all kinds of books for children at the 180 W. Penn. Ave. 692-3211 son, 10:20-10:30; Clyde Auman, 10:35-10:45; L. M. Hartsell, 10:50- 11; W. E. Jackson, 11:05-11:10; Arnold Thomas, 11:20-11:40; Mrs. Joyce Haywood, 11:45-11:55; S. E. Hannon, 12-12:10; the Rev. Don Bratten, 12:45-12:55; Mrs. Herbert Harris, 1:05-1:15; Coy Richard son, 1:20-1:30; Vernon Disk, 1:40- 2:40. Tuesday Dec. 17, Murdocksville Route: R. F. Clapp, 9:35-9:45; Ed ward Black, 9:55-10:05; Tom Clayton, 10:10-10:20; W. R. Dun lop, 10:25-10:55; Dan Lewis, 11- 11:10; Earl Monroe, 11:15-11:20; Mrs. Helen Neff, 11:25-11:35; Haitold Black, ll:40vll:50; Art Zenns, 11:55-12; Sandy Black, 12:10-12:20; Mrs. Lillian Whitak er, 12:25-12:30; H. A. Freeman, 12:35-12:45. Wednesday Dec. 18, Cameron Route: James Hardy, 9:30-9:40; M. M. Routh, 9:45-9:55; Lloyd Thomas, 10:05-10:15; Mrs. J. A. McPherson, 10:20-10:30; Mrs. H. D. TaUy, 10:35-10:40; Mrs. Archie McKeithen, 10:45-11; Mrs. Isa belle Thomas, 11:05-11:15; Walter McDonald, 11:20-11:25; Mrs. El len Gilchrist, 11:30-11:35; Wade Collins, 11:40-11:50; Lewis Mari on, 11:55-12:05. Thursday Dec. 19, Mineral Springs, Sandhill Route; W. R. Viall Jr., 9:45-10; the Rev. W. C. Neill, 10:10-10:25; J. W. Greer, 10:30-11; E. T. McKeithen, 11:10- 11:25; S. R. Ransdell, Jr., 11:30- 11:40; Richard Garner, 1-1:15; Mrs. D. H. Hall, 1:25-1:35; Mrs. Bertha Harms, 1:45-1:55; Ed Smith, 2-2:15; Mrs. W. E. Munn, 2:30-2:40; W. M. Chriscoe, 2:45^ 2:50. December 16-19 Monday Dec. 16, Doubs Chapel Route: John Willard, 9:40-9:45; Frank Cox, 9:50-10r F. L. Sut- phin, 10:05-10:15; John Thomp- from two-room farmhouses to the stately mansions of southern plantations. Woodwork was salvaged from old houses and carefully used as it had been in the original rooms, then the room furnished in the same period and style. “I have tried,” says Francis duPont in his introduction, “wherever I could to put Philadelphia furniture in a Philadelphia room and to have the furniture as nearly as pos sible of the same period. It is more interesting this way and it is much less confusing.” The result is a series of rooms —eighty-five of them are photo graphed here—so harmonious, so livable that one does not realize at first how choice are many of the small objects u&ed. A running commentary on the illustrations by John Sweezey calls attention to the most notable ones, and some ar.2 photographed separate ly and printed in the margins of the text pages. This is a beautifully designed book, and the printing of the photographs, wh^her color or black and white, is remarkably clear in detail and yet subtle in shading. Incidentally it is an ex- C‘3ptionally elegant book for the price. LOVE, LET ME NOT HUN GER by Paul Gallico {Doubleday $4.75). “The new Gallica” is in' deed a new Gallico. Fans of the author’s popular “Mrs. ’Arris Goes to Paris” and “The Snow Goose” will see a different and less whimsical Paul Gallico in this latest novel. It is the harsh realities of liv ing and loneliness and the strug gle for survival that are portray ed in this story of a tattered group of circus performers stranded in Spain by a destroying storm. Human dignity and moral character, savagery and self-sacri fice are brought out by the crisis i- r, ■, . Ai-t- among different members of the ^.^^f^tati^Zebra^ by ^Ahsta.r circus troupe. Assorted types of Next Sunday BY DR. KENNETH J. F0liEMAttf| Faith To Share Lesson for December 15,19G3 Bible Material: Acts 15:t-35; Gu)atlnn$ 1 throuerh 2. Devotional Reading: Romans 1:8-17. A ll RELIGIONS are shared re ligions. That is, if in any re METHODIST CHURCH Midland Road A. ti. Thompson, Minister Church School 9:45 a.m. Worship Service 11:00 a.m. Youth Fellowship C:16 p.m. WSGS 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 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 a.m. (except Friday, llil6 a.m.); Holy Day Masses, 7 a.m. and 5:30 p.m.; Ck>nfe8sion8. Saturday, 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. and 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Men’s Club m'»eting: 3rd Monday 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. Books Added To Adult Collection At Local Library Books added in November to the adult collection at the South ern Pines Library are listed as follows by Mrs. Stanley Lam- bourne, librarian: circus animals sometimes serve as catalysts for the conduct of as catalysts for the conduct of Like Picasso’s series of vulner able harlequins, which seem to have come to life in “Love, Let Me Not Hunger,” Mr. Galileo’s characters could easily convince ’us that all the world is a circus. How Much Money Will You Have When You Are 65? (Insured Savings) LOOK how fast Savings grow at Amount Saved Per Month Amount At End Of 1 Year Amount At End Of 2 Years Amount At End Of 3 Years Amount At End Of 5 Years Amount At End Of 10 Years $10.00 $122.61 $250.18 $ 382i90 $ 664.65 $1,474.85 $20.00 245.22 500.36 765.80 1,329.30 2.949.70 $30.00 367.82 750.54 1,148.70 1,993.94 4,424.54 $40.00 490.44 1,000.72 1,531.60 2,658.60 5,899.40 $50.00 613.07 1,250.91 1,914.50 3,323.24 7.374.24 Calculations based on semi-annual dividends of 4% per annum added to savings accounts and compounded semi-annually. Open a savings account here for your cherished dream: a home, automobile, education, or what ever you desire. CURRENT DIVIDEND RATE (Why invest your money out of Moore County? This is as high a rate as paid by any Savings institution in the area.) Money saved by the 10th of the month earns dividends from the 1st. Southern Pines Savings & Loan Assn. MacLean, ’The Eternal Now by Paul Tillich, The Domesticated Americans by Russell Lynes, Es cape from Red China by Robert Loh, Alfred Hitchcock Presents Stories My Mother Never Told Be by Alfred Hitchcock, Cassell’s New Latin Dictionary (Latin- English, English-Latin) by D. P. Simpson, Run Scared byMignor C. Eberhart, Florentine Finish by Cornelius Hirschberg, A Survey of the Moon by Patrick Moore, Beyond th-s Atlas by John Trench. The Banker by Leslie Waller, The Prophets for the Common, Reader by Mary Ellen Chase, He Who Flees the Lion by Jacob Klein-Haparash, A Choice of As sassins by William B. McGivern Other Winters, Other Springs by Flora Sandstrom, Beat the Last Drum; The Siege of Yorktown 1781 by Thomas J. Fleming, Land of the Beautiful River (translated from the Swedish) by Helmer Linderholm, George C. Marshall by Forrest C. Pogue, Brazil on the Move by John Dos Passos. The Laconia Affair (translated from the French) by Leonce Peil- lard, Jenny and I: A Novel of Suspence by Jennette D. Letton, Never Cry Wolf by Farley Mowat, Bridge of Sand by Frank Gruber, Careful, He Might Hear You by Sumner L. Elliott, Of Good and Evil: a Novel by Elmest K. Gann, The Neon Haystack by James M. Ullman, The Margaret Rudkin Pepperidge Farm Cook book, The Princes by Manohar Malgonkar, The Prisoner’s Pleas by Hillary Waugh. The Most Dangerous Game by Gavin Lyall, Black Cloud, White Cloud: Two Novellas and Two Stories, The Age of Magnificence: the Memoirs of the Due de Saint- Simon by Louis de Rouvroy, Due de Saint-Simon, I Chose Capitol Punishment by Art Buchwald, Tha Bizarre World of European Sports by Robert Daly, Success Story: The Life and Times of S. S. McClure, The Perennial Phila delphians: the Anatomy of an American Aristocracy by Nathan iel Burt, The Old Trails West by Ralph Moody. Change, Hope and the Biomb by David E. Lilienthal, Decision- Making in the White House: the Olive Brnach or the Arrows (foreword by John F. Kennedy) by Theodore C. Sorenson, Young Americans Abroad by Roger H. Klein, John Doe, Disciple: Ser mons for the Young in Spirit by Peter Marshall, The Game: the Official Picture History of the National Football League by Hamilton (Tex) Maule. Tel. 695-6222 205 S.E. Broad Street ligious group, large or small, the notion got around that the best thing you can do with your faith is to keep it a kind of happy secret between yourself and God, then that religion would vanish from among man kind in less than a hundred years. Religions persist from generation to generation be cause those who are religious share their faith Dr. Foreman with other people But religions differ in their an swer to this question: With whom do you share your faith, or with whom are you expected to share it? Some share their faith with their children only. You cannot, for instance, become a convert to the religion of the Parsees, not even by marrying one. Only the children of Parsees can become Parsees. Other religions share their faith within definite geo graphical bounds, or racial limits. The Christian religion is one of the very few which its possessors are expected to share with all men high and low, all men of all colors and races and conditions in life, all human beings all over this globe. You can’t call this sharing If you are a Christian, then, you have a faith to share ... that is, if you have the faith. You can’t share the money your grandfather had and spent. You can’t share en thusiasm you haven’t got, you can’t share your grandmother’s faith, hope or love. YOU can share what YOU have, not what somebody else has. You can pass on ideas without believing them yourself, though they won’t be very con vincing; but you can’t pass on faith you don’t have yourself. But there are two ways in which people, who do have some genu ine personal relig'ous faith, try to share it, without su'icass. One wrong way is to try to force it on other people. In the Middle Ages the clturch used to c-onduct soma strange evangelistic campaign.s. They would get t)ie police to round up a dozen or so Jews, tiic jews would be tied together and taken to church and made to listen to “Christian” preaching for a number of Sundays, and then they would take those Jews out and dunk them in the fountain in the public square, by way of Chris tian baptism. Then they would chalk it up in their staiislics—so many Jews converted this year. No, there were no converts by that route. Forcing religion is like forcing food; it’s not sharing. Sharing by talking For all that, talking about our faith is one way to share it. Take the Apostle Paul for example. He preached, he taught, he visited from house to house. He wrote let ters, more than a dozen of which have been preserved in the New Testament. He was one of the greatest talkers-for-Christ known to history. There is a difference between talking about our faith in such a bragging way as the Phari sees had, and talking about it in humble but radiant enthusiasm as Paul alw’ays did. A Pharisee might thank God he was not as other men; a converted Pharisee, such as Paul could say to a king: “I wish you were in my place—only without these chains.” • Sharing by living It’s very doubtful whether any one ever became a sure-enough Christian without living for a w’hile with a real Christian. Most of us are not converted by some thing we read, first of all, it’s rather by what we have seen and heard. Christianity is a life, not a theory. Everything that is Chris tian, which is to say every Chris tian truth and grace, is in a person before it is in a book. Jesus Christ came before any books were writ ten about him. Christianity is not something you can cut into slices and pass around like cake. Chris tianity is like enthusiasm which just has to be caught rather than taught. There is no such thing as Christianity that’s not in people. And an unsharing, ingrowing, self ish life can never share a warm and joyful faith. It comes back to where we started; You can share only what you have. (Based on outlines copyrighted by th-' Division of Christian Education, Nation 1 Council of the Churches of Christ in 'he U. S. A. Released by Community Press Service.) MANLY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sunday School 10 a.m.. Worship service 11 a.m. and 7:80 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 Biiildinv Corner Pennsylvania Ave. and Ashe BL Jack Deal, Pastor Worship Service, 11 a.m. Sunday School, 9 :45 a.m. L.C.W. meets first Monday 8 p.m. Choir practice Thursday 8 p.m. EMMANUEL CHURCH (Episcopal) East Massachasetts Ato. Martin Caldwell, Rector Holy Communion, 8 a.m. (First Sundays and Holy Days, 8 a.m. and 11 a.m.) Family Service, 9:80 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. Are. Sunday School 9:45 a.m.. Worship Servleo 11 a.m. Wometi 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 pjB. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH New York Ave. at South Ashe St. Maynard Mangum, Minister Bible School, 9:45 a.m., Worship Serriee 11 a.m.. Training Union 6:30 p.m., ning Worship 7:30 p.m. Youth Fellowship 8:30 p.m. Scout Troop 224, Monday 7 :80 p.in. Mid-week worship. Wednesday 7:80 p.m. v choir practice Wednesday 8:16 p.m. Missionary meeting first and third Tua THE UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST (Church of Wide Fellowship) Cor. Bennett and New Hampshire Carl E. Wallace, Minister Sunday School. 9:45 ajn. Worship Service, 11 ajn. Sunday, 6:00 p.m., Youth Fellowship Women’s Fellowship meets 4tb Thursday days, 8 p.m. Church and family suppers, at 12:30 p.m. second Thursday, 7 p.m. —Tbit Space Donaied in Ihe Interest of the Churches by— SANDHILL DRUG CC. JACKSON MOTORS, Inc. Tour FORD Dealer SHAW PAINi & WALLPAPER Cw CLARK & BRADSHAW A & P TEA C. a GIFT for the HOME Gifts for the home bring joy to All the family Here are a few suggestions from our wide variety. 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The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 12, 1963, edition 1
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