€
0
V
t
THURSDAY, MAY 14. 1964
THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina
Bookmobile Schedule
Monday, Jackson Springs
Route: Miss Grace Donaldson,
9:40-10; Harold Markham, 10:05-
10:15; Terrell Graham, 10:20-
10:25; W. E. Graham, 10:30-10:35;
Jackson Springs Post Office,
10:40-10:45; Mrs. Betty Stubbs,
10-50-11:05; Miss Ethel McKen
zie, 11:10-11:20; Walter Mclnnis,
11:30-11:50; Carl Tucker, 11:55-
12:05; Mrs. Margaret Smith, 12:45-
12:55; Mrs. Veda Paschal, 1-1:10;
Mrs. Edith Stutts, 1:15-1:25; Miss
Adele McDonald, 1:30-1:35; Phil
lip Boroughs, 1:40-2:03; J. W.
Blake, 2:10-2:30; A. J. Hanner,
THINK
Arrow lightweight
dress shirts
$4.00 to $5.00
Melvin's
Men's Store
“Your Brand Name Store”
ABERDEEN. N. C.
For All Your
Needs And Gifts
Shop In
Moore County’s
Largest Men’s &
Boys’ Store
everything
FROM
HEAD
TO
TOE
2:35-2:40.
Tuesday, Westmoore Route:
Mrs. W. G. Inman, 9:35-9:50; Mrs.
David Williams, 10:05-10:15; W.
L. Scott, 10:20-10:25; M. Garner,
10:35-10:40; James Allen, 10:45-
10:55; Mrs. Audrey Moore, 11-
11:10; Talc Mine, 11:15-11:25;
Kennie Brewer, 11:40-11:50; W.
J. Brewer, 11:55-12:05; A. C.
Baldwin, 12:10-12:20; Rev. Lewis
Reeder, 12:30-12:40; Miss Mamie
McNeill, 1:30-1:40.
Wednesday, Little River Route:
Watson Blue, 9:40-9:55; James
McKay, 10-10:10; J. R. Blue,
10:15-10:25; John Baker, 10:30-
10:40 George Cameron, 10:50-11;
Malcolm Blue, 11:10-11:30; Mrs.
J. W. Smith, 11:35-11:40; D. L.
McPherson, 12:30-12:35; James
Riggsbee, 12:40-12:50; Will Hart,
12:55-1:10; Mrs. W. F. Smith, 1:45-
1:55; Mrs. Nellie Garner, 2-2:10.
Thursday, Robbins, Eagle
Springs Route: J. P. Maness, 9:40-
9:50; F. E. Wallace, 9:55- 10:05;
Raymond Williams, 10:10-10:25;
Jam.es Callicut, 10:30-10:40; Paul
Williams, 10:45-10:55; Marvin
Williams, 11-11:10, Mrs. Mamie
Boone, 11:15-11:25; John Nall,
11:30-11:40; Walter Monroe,
12:45-12:55; E. H. McDuffie, 1-
1:10; Rev. H. A. McBath, 1:20-
1::40; Bfll Poley, 1:50-2; Mrs.
Edith Falls, 2:10-2:20; Winford
Williams, 2:25-2:35.
Roger Gibbs To
Sing Sunday On
Greensboro TV
Music-lovers and TV fans are
urged to tune in on WFMY
(Channel 2) on May 18 to listen
to a performance of the Mendel
sohn Oratorio, “St. Paul,” being
performed by a Greensboro cho
rus in which a former local man
sings the lead role.
Roger Gibbs, former Southern
Pines resident now living in
Greensboro, who was music di
rector for several years of the
United Chmch of Christ and di
rector of the school glee club,
will sing the role of St. Paul in
the famous composition
The performance itself will
take place on May 24, but will be
taped previously by the chorus,
and the tape released on Sunday,
May 18, probably around 1:30,
on Channel 2 (The exact time
will be announced in Greensboro
papers.)
Besides his regular singing
duties while living in Southern
Pines, Mr. Gibbs taught on the
high school staff and took part in
many musical events.
Some Looks
At Books
By LOCKIE PARKER
RAIN IN THE WOODS and
Other Small Matlen by Glen
Rounds (WoHd $3.00). Most of us
keep out of the woods when it
rains, but Glen Rounds found
that is just when some most in
teresting things happen. Insects,
birds, other small creatures often
contrived quite ingenuous shel
ters. Others just sat it out, like
the bird below who must keep
her eggs warm and dry, rain or
no rain.
book offers much to any amateur
naturalist in fresh observations
of insects, birds and small ani
mals and some stimulating ques
tions on activities of which the
observer saw only one phase. It is
an exceptionally well designed
book with a pleasing, readable
text page. The marginal pictures
follow the text closely and are
drawn with the highly e:q)ressive
line so characteristic of this ar
tist.
Free Listing Of Golf
I Courses Now Available
North Carolina has published
I a new listing of the 1964 golf
courses located from seashore to
mountains in the Variety Vaca-
I tionland State. The directory. In
formation Bulletin No. 184, is
available free on request at the
Travel Information Division. De
partment Conservation and De-
tvelopment, Raleigh.
At least 10 new courses have
been completed within the past
two years, and over 90 per cent
are open 12 months in the year.
Largest concentration of golf
facilities adjacent to resorts
is in Moore County, where there is
I a total of 10 courses in the South
ern Pines-Pinehurst area.
Without traveling to mountains
or jungles this author-artist ob
served any amount of wildlife as
small creatures went about their
business of getting food, avoiding
enemies, building shelters, down
by an abandoned miRpond and
a short stretch of sunken woods
road. Nor was there any lack of
drama. The tiger beetle lay in
wait for his prey and usually got
it, though sometimes the struggle
was bitter. Seen through a tele
scope a battle between ants can
be as ferocious as anything the
jungle offers. All wild creatures
lead dangerous lives and' have
their own way of protecting them
selves. The little chuckwill relies
chiefly on camouflage but when
nevertheless faced with an un
avoidable foe she does not lack
courage. This one went into ac
tion against a dog with a loud
hiss—the dog left.
k ** *;ii*.**^ . .
Designed to interest youngsters
in the world around them, this
HAROLD G. RADFORD
—Specializing In
Balanced Financial Planning Services
FAMILY WHILE ACCUMULATING EDU-
INVESTMENTS^^^^ RETIREMENT FUNDS THROUGH OWNERSHIP TYPE
Representing:
Mutual Funds of America. Inc. Pyramid Life Ins. Co.
161 Peachtree Street. N. E. Charlotte. N. C.
Atlanta. Georgia
Consultation By Appointment
Drop In At Office Or Call
Continental American
Life Insurance Co.
Wilmington. Delaware
THE BELLS OF BICETRE by
Simenon (Harcourt $4.95). This
novel begins and ends in one
hospital room. Simenon—whose
stories of Inspector Maigret’s
work in crime detection have
been praised by critics, transla
ted into eighteen languages and
bought by millions—^here writes
a novel where there is no crime,
no violence, and the only mystery
is that which a man finds in try
ing to understand himself.
Rene Maugras, publisher of an
important Paris newspaper and
two popular magazines, the kind
of man the cartoonists pictvure as
sitting at a big desk with a tel
ephone in each hand while he
dictates to his secretary, awakes
one day in a hosptial room his
mind clear, but his body paral
yzed, unable to move, unable to
speak. His doctor assures him
that he can be cured if he will co
operate. Maugras finds a certain
attraction in this state of irre
sponsibility, the chance to reflect.
From then on we follow the slow
stages of his recovery and the
moods that accompany them.
More important still, we follow
his reflections on his own life
and the lives of those about him.
Maugras is fifty-four, he has ris
en from poverty and obscurity in
a Normandy fishing village, been
twice married, acquired honors
and wealth. But what does he
really thing of himself?
To say that Simenon has made
this purely interior drama as ab
sorbing as any of his police stories
;iis an understatement. It goes
deeper and we care more about
the answers. If these are not too
definite in the end, we still feel
satisfied with Maugras that he
has asked the right questions.
MARTHA. ERIC AND
GEORGE by Margery Sharp (Lit
tie. BrOwn $3.95). Of course, one
must have read “Martha in Paris”
before this sequel which takes up
what happened to that baby
which Martha left on the step of
Eric’s Paris apartment.
Miss Sharp, whose humor has
its own special sparkle and tang,
has a lovely time in this book re
versing the roles of unmarried
mother and unmarried father, not
to mention what happens when
George gets big enough to have
a mind of his own.
BYDR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN
Take A Stand
Lesson for May 17,1964
Bsckiroand Scriptnrt: Proverb* 23:29-35 ,
Matthew 18:5-14; Bomaiu 18:11 through
14:23.
Derotional Reading: Pealm 40:1-8.
115 E. Penn. Ave.
Soulhern Pines. N. C.
Telephones: Office 695-5451
Home 692-3506
ml4tf
Some 64,000 orphans of veter
ans who died from service-con
nected causes have entered train
ing since the War Orphans Educa
tional Assistance program super
vised by the Veterans Administra
tion was started.
Colonial Furniture Co
S. W. Broad Street
Phone 692-6895 Southern Pines, N. C.
ALL FURNITURE MUST BE SOLD
CASH and CARRY
(We Will Deliver For Slight Extra Charge)
ALL SALES FINAL
T^HE BIBLE was written in a
A simpler era than ours. Many
people would think the Bible
world ideal. At least it would
seem like a world which lacked
many of what are now often con
sidered sources of human evils. It
was a rural
world; in Pales
tine there were
comparatively few
cities and none
that would be rec
ognized as such
today. It was a
world where alco
holic drinks were
everywhere used
Dr. Foreman even by the best
people. It was a time before the
invention of whiskey and other
beverages high in alcoholic con
tent. Drinking was confined to
wines and beer or their equiv
alent. It was an age without
motor cars or machinery, a
leisurely hand-crafting age. Yet
even in that world, the writers of
the Bible had something to say
about drinking. The point of all
this is: If alcoholic drinks v/ere
known to be dangerous in a sim
ple rurtd world, how much more
dangerous it can be in our com
plex civilization!
The speed of the problem
There was once a stage magi
cian who used to say over and
over as he was doing his stuff,
“It’s the speed of the problem and
not the problem itself.” Some
thing like that is true of the world
we live in. This has a great deal
to do with the alcohol problem.
For instance: Time was when men
would_ gather in taverns or at par
ties, just as they do today; and
some of them would get drunk, as
many do today. But when the
party was over, in the good old
days the friends of the man who
bad had too much would dump
him into his wagon and get the
horses started. That animal knew
his way home and (being sober)
knew enough not to speed. (Did
you ever hear of horses organiz
ing a race meet by themselves?)
But nowadays—whoosh!!! That
noise you heard was the sound of
our friend who was just telling us
that one more drink couldn’t do
any harm. He took off in his high-
powered car and he’s likely to be
a statistic by morning. There’s
nothing funny about this. It hap
pens. Now the stories reported
don’t always tell the whole truth;
but the police will tell you if you
ask them that alcohol figures hi
many smash-ups on the highways.
Why men drink .
It is said often that the real
problem is not drinking itself, but
in the question: What drives men
to create for themselves a drink
ing problem? Again the speed of
our civilization has something to
do with it. The intensity of com
petition, tension on the highways,
tensions at home, the sense of be
ing pushed all the time, get on a
man’s nerves and he starts to
drink just a little more and a
little oftener than he would have
otherwise; and the first thing he
knows, he not only has all the
worries that pushed him at the
outset, but he has the alcohol
problem besides. Every problem
drinker you find is (perhaps un
consciously) expressing hate and
contempt for the kind of civiliza
tion he is forced to live in. Rather
than contribute to it or to work
for a better kind of life, he tells
the world a rude, crude farewell,
all he thinks of is to get out. So
he takes the route of temporary
suicide. There’s no essential dif
ference between a man who seeks
refuge in alcohol and one who
seeks refuge in opium, or mari
juana.
Well, somebody says, you are
talking about alcoholics. Yes, and
more besides. Alcoholism—if we
call it a disease—^is a disease more
widely spread than any other dis
ease in America except three and
the number of alcoholics is in
creasing yearly.
WjwiHfaM jnrtlthM hr tt«
niTiiien ^ Ovbto Bdiieatio]i, NaUonid
^■mdl of tlM ChwchM of Christ ia tho
IMnm4 tr GmmaaUr Fwm
Page THREE
Attend The Church of Your Choice
Next Sunday
METHODIST CRUBCH
HtdlMiil RtNid
Ao Lo TboMpflon. MinUter
Glkureh SehoM 9:45 ajn.
Worship Servieo 11:00 «.ia.
Youth FeUowship 6:16 p.m.
WSCS meets each third Monday at 8:09
p.m.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH
New Hampahiro Avenao
Sunday Service, 11 a.ra.
Sunday School, 11 ajn.
Wednesday Service, 8 p.m.
Reading Room in Church BnUdlng
Wednesday, 2-4 p.m.
ST. ANTHONY’S CATHOLIC
Vermont Ave. at Ashe 8U
Father John J. Harper
Sunday Masses 8, 9:16 and 10:80 a.iB,
taly M^, 7 (except Fridar,
11.15 a.m.); Holy Day Maasn. 7 aja.
and 5:80 p.m.; Confeasioiu, Saturday,
4:30 to 6:30 p.m. and 7:80 to 8 >80 pja.
Men's Club meetins; 3rd Urjaday etch
month.
Women's Cluh nwetin,. 1st Monday,
8 p.m.
Scout Troop No. 878, Wednesday,
7:30 p.m.
Girl Scout Troop No. 118. Monday, t
p.m.
MANLY PBE8BTTEKIAN CHUBCH
Sunday School 10 a.m.. Worsbln serrica
U mm. and 7 :S0 p.m. PYP 6 pja.; Women
of the Church meeting 8 pja. aeeoiui
Tucs^y. Mid-week servies Thursday IM
p.m.. choir reheard 8:80 pja.
EMMANUEL CHURCH (EpiaeaMi)
Emt Masaachaaetts Ava.
w , “•'W" CaWwalL Rcetar
J i? 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.
Mornlns Service, 11 ajn.
Youna Peoples' Service Lessue. 4 p.m.
Holy ^mmnnion, Wednesday and ^Iv
Dw. 10 a.m. and Friday. 0:10 ajm
Saturday 4 pju.. Penanea.
THE UNITED CHUBCH OF CHRIBT
(CImreh of Wide FeUowaUp)
Cor. Bennett and New Hampri^
Carl B. WaBaea, HiatiUir^”
Sunday School. 9:46 »■»
Worship Servi^ 11 a.*.
Sunday. 6:00 pjn.. Youth Fellowship
n«aota 4th Thnnday
ex j,4:90 p.Bia
-^Thi* Space Donated in the
SANDHILL DRUG CO.
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH
Civic Chb Balldlmr
Cornar Pannsylvanla Ava. and Aaha Bi.
Jack DeaL Pastor
Worship ServiceTu
Sunday School, 9:46 aja.
L.C.W. meets first Monday 8 p w,
Choir practice Thursday 8 pja.
BROWNSON HEHORUL CHURCH
(Prasbyterian)
Dr. Jallan Laka. Miaiatar
ot lad. Are.
Sonday School 9:46 a.m.. Worship Sarvlaa
11 a.m. Women of tho Chureh nnollna
8 p.m Monday following third Enduy.
The Youth Fellowships meet at 7 </sloMl
each Sunday evening.
Mid-week service, Wednesday, TtSf p.m,
FIRST BAPTIST CBUmCH
New Yerk Ave. at Seatk AAs St.
Bihle School, 9:46 ajn.. Worship Ssrviss
11 a.m., Training Union 8:80 pjn.,
niog Worship 7:80
Youth Fellowship 8:80 p.m«
Scout Troop 224, Mond^ 7:80 p—.
Mid-wvsek worship, Wednes^ 7:80 pA.i
choir practice Wednesday 8:18 p m.
Missionary meeting first aikd third Tsit-
days, 8 p.m. Church and family Mppsrse
second Thursday, 7 pjm.
IntarMt of tho ChuxehoR bf—
JACKSON MOTORS, Inc.
Your FORD Dealer
SHAW PAINT
& WALLPAPER CO. CLARK Sc BRADSHAW
A Sc P TEA COMPANY
AMERICA’S GARDENS
Color Photographs of famous gardens, four in North
Carolina, advice on your own. $9.95
GARDENING WITHOUT
POISONS.
the answer to pesticides by
Beatrice Hunter $5.00
WILD FLOWER
CULTIVATION
Taylor and Hamblin - $6.95
A FIELD GUIDE TO THE STARS AND PLANETS
Donald H. Menzel $4.95
180 W, Penna, Ave. 692I-3211
TIME NOW TO HAVE THOSE^ WINTER
CLOTHES CLEANED & STORED
The
Valet
Where Cleaning and Prices Are Betlerl
Your VOTE is Precious
Get MOORE for it....
DAN MOORE has more experience than any
other Democratic candidate for Governor. This
is ihe reason^ I am supporting him.
Ton't You Join Me?
LLOYpMcGRAW
Carthage
Our Southern Pines Office
has been consolidated with our
Charlotte Offiee,
Harold E. Hasseufelt
will serve the Southern Pines area from Charlotte.
The address is 110 South Tryon Street and the
telephone number is 333-5492. Mr. Hasseufelt will
also be available for consultation in Southern Pines
on the weekend. He may be reached at Oxford
2-3261.
We invite you to make use of our services.
Established 1925
Investment Bankers
Members New York Stock Exchange and Other Notional Exchanges
110 South Tryon Street Charlotte, N. C Tel. 333-5492