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4 THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1964 THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina Page THREE Bookmobile Schedule December 14-17. Monday, West End, Jackson Springs Route: Miss Grace Don aldson, 9:45-10; Harold Markham, 10:05-10:15; Terrell Graham, 10:20-10:25; W. E. Graham, 10:35- 10:45; Mrs. Betty Stubbs, 10:50- 11:05; Miss Edith McKenzie, 11:10-11:20; Paul Cole, 11:25- 11:35; Walter Mclnnis, 12:20- -BIRTHS- Births at Moore Memorial Hos pital; December 1, Daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Elroy Fowler, Aber deen; son, Mr. and Mrs. Will R. Monroe, Candor; son, Mr. and Mrs. James Sanders, Robbins. December 2, Son, Mr. and Mrs. Larry B. Chappell, Ellerbe; son, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Walker, Aberdeen. December 3, Daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Gene McDonald, Southern Pines. December 4, Daughter, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Michael, Carthage; daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Mack L. Dunlap, Robbins. December 5, Son, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Yarborough, Pinehurst; son, Mr. and Mrs. George W. Williams, Eagle Springs; daugh ter, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd E. Thom as, Aberdeen. December 6, Daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Breazeale, Aber deen; daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Willie E. Allbrooks, Aberdeen. PILOT ADVERTISING PAYS 12:40; Carl Tucker, 12:45-1; Mrs. Margaret Smith, 1:05-1:15; Miss Adele McDonald, 1:20-1:25; Phil lip Boroughs, 1:30-2; J. W. Blake, 2:05-2:30; A. J. Hanner, 2:35-2:45; the Rev. J. D. Aycock, 2:50-3. Tuesday, Robbins Route: J. R. Maness, 9:35-9:40; J. P. Maness, 9:45-9:55; F. E. Wallace, 10- 10:15; David Williams, 10:25- 10:40; Raymond Williams, 10:50- 11:10; James Callicut, 11:15-11:30; Paul Williams, 11:35-11:45; D. R. Nall Jr., 1:50-12:05; Junior Bums, 12:45-12:55; Marvin Williams, 1- 1:10; James Allen, 1:15-1:25; Talc Mine, 1:30-1:40; Mrs. Mary Frank Edwards, 1:45-1:55. Wednesday, Vass, Little River Route: Vass Town Hall, 9:30-9:45; Mrs. O. C. Blackbrenn, 9:50-10; Watson Blue, 10:10-10:40; James McKay, 10:45-10:55; J. R. Blue, 11-11:10; John Baker, 11:15- 11:20; George Cameron, 11:25- 11:35; Malcolm Blue, 11:40-12:10 Mrs. J. W. Smith, 12:15-12:20 Mrs. D. L. McPherson, 1:05-1:15 James Riggsbee, 1:20-1:30; Mrs. Will Hart, 1:35-1:50; Jack Mor gan, 2:10-2:20; W. F. Smith, 2:25- 2:35; Mrs. Nellie Gamer, 2:40- 2:50. el0:405| 2cleizn Thursday, Eagle Springs Route: Mrs. Mamie Boone, 9:50- 10; Sidney Everett, 10:05-10:10; John Nall, 10:15-10:25; James Moore, 10:35-10:45; E. H. McDuf fie, 11:55-12:05; E. C. Kellis, 12:10-12:20; Walter Monroe, 12:25-12:35; the Rev. H. A. Mc- Bath, 12:45-1:10; Mrs. Edith Falls, 1:20-1:30; Melvin Bean, 1:45-1:55. Some Looks Ai Books By LOCKIE PARKER retirement living Try It out-see if you like It-ln Southern Pines, North Carolina, at the famous Hollywood. Now a residential hotel, ideally situated in the Pinehurst-Southem Pines area of North Carolina where the 4 seasons are mild and retirement living is the community life Superior accommodations for as little as $125 a month with meale Hotel facilities and convenience* in unrestricted homelike atmosphere of a resort hotel opmted ^ the Pottle family for 43 yeare Color brochure and complete information for the asking wm asatai *• MHs. Mr- tfie^ong^^ea/^f^lnss THE AMERICAN HERITAGE COOK BOOK and Illustrated History of Eating and Drinking (American Heritage Pub. Co. $12.50. pre-Xmas $9.95. Christ mas dinner at Mount Vernon was a bountiful repast with the table cloths changed between courses and some thirty odd items on the menu. This book gives you recipes for several of these, inclu ding the “King’s Soup” and “Hominy Pudding,” The ingenius editors of American Heritage have put to gether here a book which dis cusses a new aspect of our his tory. They assure you of its im portance by quoting Brillat-Sav- arin, “The destiny of nations de pends on how they nourish themselves.” Then they pay trib ute to the American woman who in log cabin or mansion used na tive materials to create new dishes—^hush puppies, shoo-fly pie, persimmon pudding—and nourished their menfolk well. The first half of the book is given over to the history of American eating from the days when the Indians taught the first settlers how to make corn pone down to the end of the nine teenth century when Rector’s, Sherry’s Delmonico established their reputations in New York and Diamond Jim Brady estab lished his as “the greatest gour met of his time.” Contributors to this historical panorama include authors old and new from Mark Twain to Cleveland Amory. As anyone familiar with Heritage publications would expect the text is lavishly illustrated. There are reproductions of old bills of fare, contemporary drawings, photographs and paintings in full color. The second half of the book gives some typical menus from different sections of the country and five hundred traditional recipes adapted for the modem kitchen. You do not have to cook your corn pone in the ashes, they OLD BILLS Got You Down? See us for a Personal Loan Things could brighten up for you in a hurry with a convenient, low bank rate personal loan from The Citizens Bank. Drop in soon and discover how simple it is to get your head above water. THE CITIZENS BANK AND TRUST COMPANY SOUTHERN PINES, N. C. MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION 132 N. W. Broad Street 600 S. W. Broad Street any man’s child is his second chance.” 'The book is illustrated by the author’s own photographs of mother and child, photographs notable for their grace and dig nity. KEEP UP WITH LATE VALUES IN PILOT ADS tell you how to do it in an elec tric oven, though whether the flavor is the same will long be a debatable question. WHO SPEAKS FOR THE SOUTH? . by . James McBnde Dabbs (Funk & Wagnalls $5.95). In these kindly and penetrating reflections on the people of the South the author uses historical events as a moving screen before which he presents “The Forma tion of the Southern Character” as a vital drama with major crises in race relations during four centuries. Mr. Dabbs is personally involv ed in the past and the future of his native region, so that he ex presses its spirit while he ex plains its problems. Born and reared on Rip Raps Plantation in South Carolina he is active in civic and church affairs, serving formerly as president and now as a member of the executive com mittee of the Southern Regional Council. Down through the years the tensions which have shaped white Southerners are analysed to reveal the strain of each gen eration, leading them down paths that diverged from the national and international roads of devel opment. They felt such tensions as these: love of home against the pull of the frontier, attachment to the land against ventures in industry, yearning for aristoc racy against commitment to democracy, regional pride against national loyalty, and political practices against spiritual values. The author sympathetically in terprets the character of the South as it emerged through the years. Repeatedly he describes parallel developments in New England. With deep insight he explores the complex social forces enmeshing white South erners. Then he turns to the Ne gro Southerner, “The Stone the Builders Rejected,” and confronts “the American Dilemma” of to day. The subtle shades of social relations in the South are de scribed in gentle phrases with humor and sensitivity to- the in dividual qualities of human be ings regardless of color. The main thesis of this timely book- is firmly stated: “The great est words of our state documents have to do with freedom and equality. . . Thus the Negro, en tering public life today, is heal ing the age-old breach in the South between religion and poli tics. . . what we see then in the advance of the Negro. . . is the South advancing toward the uni fication of its culture.” —^Beryl Parker LITTLE CHRISTMAS by Ag nes Slight Turnbull (Houghton Mifflin $3.00); A CHRISTMAS STORY by Richard Burton (Mor row $2.50); THE FIRSTBORN by Laurie Lee (Morrow $2.00). Each year at this season there appear a few books especially devoted to the Christmas theme. Usually they are slight in size but pleas ing to the eye, a sort of glorified Christmas card, y b “Little Christmas” even comes with a simulated red ribbon on the cellophane wrapper. Mrs. Turnbull tells of a mother who has just had her grown-up chil dren home for Christmas and is feeling let down. Remembering that it is Twelfth Night, “Little Christmas” as the Russians call it, she decides to have another celebration on her own and brings down from the attic toys and Christmas tree o(rnaments from the days when her children were small. How brooding over these she comes to a truer under standing of her grownup chil dren and helps one daughter through a crisis in her married life makes a moving story and reminds us again that Christmas is the day when a child was born who would prove a Saviour. That Richard Burton, distin guished for his acting in motion pictures, should turn to the pen is a real surprise. But this Christ mas story from his childhood in a Welsh mining town has an au thentic ring. No one could have invented the uncle they called Mad Dan with his tags of learn ing and appalling fluency. With humor and tenderness Richard Burton tells of one special Christ mas Eve when he was sent out into the night with Uncle Dan to celebrate at the miners’ bonfire and came home to find a new baby. Laurie Lee’s “The Firstborn” is not strictly a Christmas story but it is so close to the theme of the season that it seems appropriate to mention it here. Exquisitely written in prose that has the emotional resonance of poetry it tells what the birth of his first child has meant to him—“the late wonder of my life.” He broods over her strange little face and wonders what she will become, how she will change him—“for Attend The Church of Your Choice B Y HR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN Three Friends Lesson for December 13, 1964 Background Scripture: Philemon. Devotional Readingr: Galatians 3:23-29. ’I^HO KNOWS how to find the book of Philemon in the Bible? It is one of the shortest “books,” less than a page long. Who can name two Bible books that are shorter? Without looking it up, who knows who wrote it, and what it’s all about? Well, it’s about three men and their strange friendship. Strange because as most people would look at it, they didn’t have much in com- mon. One was a Dr. Foreman slave, one a pris oner (on false" charges; the prison was real enough), and one a free man. What was it these three men had in common? The Thief and the Victim One of these three was a man of property. He was at least rich enough to own a slave. The rich man was named Philemon, the slave Onesimus. The name was a kind of joke, perhaps, for the word Onesimus in Greek means useful or beneficial. Perhaps Philemon hoped Onesimus lived up to his name. Perhaps he thought — like a modern man who has gone to the wrong used- car dealer — that he had been gypped in the used-slave deal and been stuck with a slave who would never in the world be of any real use. Anyhow, this One simus had decided to go to Rome. Naturally he did not con sult his master about this. Rome was a long way from Colossac where he lived, so he borrowed the money (again without men tioning it to Philemon). So he became a wanted man; wanted as a runaway slave, wanted as a runaway thief. Somehow or other he got into jail at Rome, probably because he had com mitted some other illegal act But in jail, besides all the usual jail birds, he met a most unusual man named Paul, who “by chance” knew Philemon and per haps had seen Onesimus loafing about the house. Now the strange thing here is that Paul and the thief Onesimus actually became friends. No less than Paul tried to bring together and reconcile the thief and his victim. What was it that made Paul think he could possibly persuade the two men to live together as brothers? Above the law? Take another look at those three men. One of them, to judge from Paul’s attitude to him, lived well within the law. You would have been surprised to hear of Philemon in jaiL Onesimus was another sort of bird. Finding him in jail was a shock to no body. He lived outside the law. Neither Philemon nor Onesimus, when you come to think of it, paid much attention to the law. Philemon didn’t because he didn’t need to. He was already a better man than the Lw re quired. Christ is the answer At the risk of insulting the readers’ intelligence, let us sug gest the answer — it is all the same one — to the questions that have been asked. What did these three men have in common? At first, perhaps little. In the end, Christ. They were all three slaves (as Paul would put it) of Christ, they were Christ’s men. He is the answer to the question: how can we get over the barriers be tween man and man, class and class? Again, what made Paul think he could reconcile a thief and his victim? The answer is, Christ had come into the life of Onesimus. He intended to live up to his name. Christ had made a new man of him. Or again: what law is higher than the highest human court of justice? It is the law of Christ, which means the law of love. In this short letter Paul mentions One simus about fotir times, but Christ eleven times. Our human problems would not be wiped out, but we would be on the way to solving them, if Christ were invited into every tense and an gry situation. (Based an MtUnes eepyrUlited bv ibe Division of CbristUn Edneation, National Conndl of the Churehes of Christ in the U. S. A. Beleased br Commnnitr Press Service.) MBTHODIST CHUBCB Hldlmad Road A. L. ThoMpoon* Mlntator Church School 9:46 a.m. Worship Service 11:00 a.ni. Youth Fellowship 6:16 p.m. WSCS meets each tiiird Monday at 8:66 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 CATHOUC Vermont Ave. at Ashe St* Father John J. Harper Sunday Masses 8, 9:16 and 10:80 aJU. Daily Mass, 7 a.m. (except Friday, 11:16 a.m.): Holy Day Masses, 7 am and 6:89 p.Di.; Confessions, Saturday, 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. and 7:80 to 8:80 pm. Men’s Club meeting: 8rd Mr^iday eneh month. Women’s Club meeting, let Monday, 8 p.m. Boy Scout Troop No. 87S, Wednesday. 7:30 p.m. Girl Scout Troop No. 118, Monday, I p.m. MANLT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sunday School 10 a.m., Worship service 11 a.m. ana 7:80 p.m. PYF 6 pm.; Women of the Church meeting 8 pm. eeeond Tuesday. Mid-week service ThursdAy 7:86 p.m.. choir rehearsal 8:80 pm. EMMANUEL CHURCH (Epiacepal) East Massachasette Ave* Martin Caldw^ 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: am. Morning Service, 11 a.m. Young Peoples* Service League. 4 pm. Holy Communion, Wednesday and Holy Days, 10 a.ra. and Friday, 6:80 am* Saturday 4 p.m.. Penance. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH New York Ave* at South Ashe St* John Dawson Stone, Minister Bible School, 9:46 a.m., W<wship Serrlee 11 a.m.. Training Union 8:80 pm., Kv^ ning Worship 7:80 p.m. Youth Fellowship 8:80 p.m. Scout Troop 224, Mond^ 7:80 pm* Mid'W^k worship, Wednes^y 7:80 pm* I choir practice Wedneeday 8:16 pm. Missionary meeting first and ^ird Tun^ days, 8 p.m. Church and family sappsuu, second Thursday, 7 pm. OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH U.S* 1 South Jack Deal, Paster Worship Service, 11 am. Sunday School, 9:46 a.m. L.C.W^meets first Monday 8 pm Choir pr&tice Thursday 8 pm ST. JAMES LUTHERAN CHURCH (Missouri Synod) 983 W. New Hampshire Ave* John P. Kellogg, Pastor Sunday School. 10:30 a.m. Worship Service, 7:00 p.m. BROWNSON MEMORIAL CHURCH (Presbyteriau) Dr. Julian Lake, Innleter Mey St* at lud* Ave. Sunday School 9:46 a.m., Worship Bervfue 11 a.m. Women of the Church ineetinp. 8 p.m Monday fcllowfcig ttod Suuduy. The Youth Fellowships me^ at 7 o'elorit each Sunday evening. Mid-week service. Wednesday, 7:86 pm THE UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST (Church of Wide Fellowship) Cor. Bennett and Now Hampshire Carl E. Wallace, lOnlMer Sunday School, 9:46 am* Worship Service, 11 am Sunday, 6:00 '^.m.. Youth Fellowship Women*B Fellowship meets 4th Thursday at 12:80 p.m. —ThU Space Donated in the Inlereit of the Churches hr— SANDHILL DRUG CO. JACKSON MOTORS, Inc. Advertising helps to reduce consumer demand for sceirce com modities by diverting public de mand to other more readily available commodities. -BD SuiqDBa) SuiuuBid stuapntg SHAW PAINT & WALLPAPER CO. Your FORD Dealer CLARK & BRADSHAW A 8e P TEA COMPANY Clarendon Gardens Charlotte — Linden Road. Pinehurst, N. C. — Fayetteville Landscape Design & Planting — Nursery Sales Tree Moving — Tree Care Camellias — Hollies — Azaleas — Rhododendron All Sizes — Priced from $1.25 up. REAL BARGAINS IN QUALITY PLANTS. We Build Beauty Into Your Furniture Particular hand workmanship Goes into all our upholstering Automotive & Boat Upholstery Convertible Tops Pickup and Delivery Service Free Estimates Custom Upholstery Center US 1-A South Southern Pines (Next to Almond’s Tire Service) CHRISTMAS BOOKS ot all sizes, shapes, subjects and prices from the colorful, rollicking ANIMAL MOTHER GOOSE ot Richard Scary $1.95 to LAROUSSE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF MODERN HISTORY - $17.50 Calendars, Bookplates, Christmas cards 180 Penna* Ave. Call 692-3211 FREE DECORATOR SERVICE MRS. DORIS COX Want a “Yummy” come hither room everyone will love? Ask our help! We specialize in rooms guests rave about. Dossenbach’sJ KENDALE SHOPPING CENTER SANFORD
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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Dec. 10, 1964, edition 1
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