FRIDAY, JANUARY 22, 1954 e-^e==:=s=s=====s I HE PILO r—t>o iihern Pine&. North Carolliui •fT- !tc'' By LOCKIE PARKER Social Security Soiti0 Looks Bookskerresentative Changes Office fagi rlREE A STILLNESS AT APPOMAT TOX by Bruce Calton (Doubleday $5). This begins with a ball given on Washington’s Birthday, 1864, at th? Rapidan camp of the Army iful, sad, hard, and seemed to us altogether too bad.” KISS ME. KATE, A Musical Play. Book by Samuel and Bella Spewack, Lyrics by Cole Porter. of the Potomac, a last gayety be- (Knopf $2.75). It is amazing that fore the spring campaign, which would start another year of war. You get a close-up /iew of the of ficers, the varied personalities, their moods, their plans, their am bitions. Then comes a review of a musical play can be read so en- joyably as a book. The reason is that Shakespeare, the Spewacks and Cole Porter are all congenial and that, while most lyrics in musical comedies are written just the men in the ranks, the grim as songs, these advance and help veterans whose three-year terms were running out, the new men— a few volunteers, some draftees and the "bounty” men, the last pretty hopeless material for mak ing soldiers. Cattton writes un commonly well and has you pro foundly interested in both officers and men before you finish the first chapter. His book is extensively docu mented but most of the quotes . are from personal letters—some unpublished—and from company histories. He. seems to have been primarily concerned to know what the battles of the Wilder ness, Cold Harbor, Petersburg looked like to the men who were fighting them rather than to ar gue military tactics or rehash of ficial versions. He succeeds in making very real to the reader those long, grueling months from May 5 when the army crossed the Rapidan imder Grant’s leadership until the end of the war, eleven months during which ‘there was marching and fighting every day and very often both tojether.” Catton points out plenty of bungling in high places Dut is not especially bitter about it seeming to regard tljis as usual in war. He gives Grant credit foithe grim wUl to drive on and enc the war and has ungrudging almiration 'for Robert E. Lee’s miliary abil ity. The latter’s develo)ment of trench warfare upset tte plans of more than one general until the Yankee army took to t, too, with equal enthusiasm, (he officer described his men diging in a|; the end of a day’s mrch with out any instructions ad conclu ded that they “though'a rifle pit a good thing to have inny family with small children.” Such touches of sober humor lighten this stirring nd vivid chronicle, but Patton Ever once minimizes the completi grimness of the ordeal right up 1 the last forced mairch through lud and dust when these tired len pur sued the Army of Nonem Vir ginia until Lee surrended at Ap pomattox. ’Then as oj soldier wrote, there was nofrenzied cheering, the tired men t on the ground and looked ffoss at “those courageous Soutirn men who had fought for fouiong and the story. The introduction itself is worth the price of the book, for it is an extremely amusing ac count of the way in which the idea of using Shakespeare 'came to the Spewacks and their efforts to persuade Mr. Porter to under take the lyrics. The new light thrown by the introduction makes reading the play just as charming as seeing the performance. Thene hcis probably never been a more successful collaboration than that of these four people, as the play has drawn audiences of nvore than four million and still lives on in summer and winter stock, tents and arena productions. —JANE H. TOWNE RING ROUND THE MOON, A Play by Jean Anouilh, Translated by Christopher Fry. (Methuen $1.50). This play is called a char ade with music because the au thor “conceives his plays as bal lets” and it must be taken as an amusing interlude such as one finds in music. It is beautifully translated by Christopher Fry. The French title, L’invitation au Chateau, seems to me a better title than the one used in England. The play itself is charming* but it is so light and ephemeral that it did not prove good material for Broadway. Even with understand ing actors, it was not as success ful as in Paris and London. —JANE H. TOWNE THE UNTIDY PILGRIM by Eu gene Walter (Lippincott $3.50). This is a Southern novel you can really enjoy because the author likes it here, especially Mobile, Alabama—a sonorous name that he rolls over his tongue with rel ish. Mr. Walter says that he had “for some time been bored slap dash to death by the Sad Cypress school of Southern writing,” so he tries to steer a course between the somber violence of some mod ern writers and the sentimental, romantic school of white columns and magnolias. For my money, he succeeds— don’t be misled by the jacket. The book is very alive, very mod ern but full of the color and fra grance of Southern seasons and a deep admiration for some indiv idual aristocrats who are products of the Old South. Miss Fifty, “with sweet anarchy in her soul,” Now Meeling Public At Town Hall; Other Services There Listed E. M. Mote, Federal Social Se curity field representative for the Southern Pines area, who has been visiting the post office here periodically, changed his office this week from the post office to the second floor of the town hall where he has been assigned a room. He will be there to discuss all Social Security matters with the public on the second and fourth Wednesday of each month, > from 10 a. m. to noon. ! Using this same office at town haU is D. A Clark, driver’s li- i cense examiner \ls?ho is in South- ■ ern Pines each Friday from 8:30 to 5:30 p. m. Also meeting the public at the town hall is Mrs. Smith, repre sentative of the North Carolina Employment Security Commission who works out of the Sanford of fice, handling unemployment in surance payments and other em ployment matters. She is at town hall the second and fourth Thurs day mornings of each month. Her office is reached by the rear en trance of the town hall building. The public is reminded by the police department, with offices on the second floor cf the town hall, that there is no State Highway Patrol office in Southern Pines SP BY DR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN Scripture: John 4:1^2. Devotional Reading: Romans 1:8-16. Grossing Barriers Lesson for January 24, 1954 ■^rOT all walls are made of brick -*■ ^ and stone. Some walls are not to be seen at all. but they are there. Have you ever been a shy young girl, a stranger perhaps, at a party where everybody seemed to be having a wonderful time? To your mind it almost seemed as if there were a sort of conspiracy against you. Everybody seemed to see the point of jokes you could not see at all. Everybody else felt at ease but you did not in the least. It seemed as if you could feel the wall that shut you in. Or consider another kind of party, a dinner in a home of some wealth. The guests at ta- Dr. Foreman ble are friendly and frank, they talk about matters that perhaps concern the servants who are waiting on the table; but there is a wall (here no one can see. The „ ... , servant would not for the world in- Persons with cars to be inspected,, terrupt, because she is not sup Dosed to hear. The guests talk as by patrolmen should communi-1 cate with Col. M. S. Parvin at the Patrol office in the courthouse at j Carthage. Highway Patrolman E. ■ G. Shomaker, telephone 2-4145, is | a resident of Southern Pines and I may also be contacted. Patrolmen j may occasionallv be reached through the Southern Pines or! Aberdeen police stations, but they do not have regular hours at I these stations and the public is advised to' contact them directly except in emergencies. if she were not there. young people in the book and j give them a reason for living with personal integrity instead of by' mass standards, 'The story is told in the first person by a country boy who came to Mobile He says that it could all have been sum marized in one line, “How I com menced to be me.” dreary years all so stublimly, so j and Uncle Acis, living as he liked bravely and so well. . . tyas piti- | at Bayou Clair, outshine the N \ Wiiipllllliilii iiiiiii pi li u 1 «> id w W: Drs. Neal and McLean VETERINARIANS Southern Pines. N. C. MILL SU>LY DIVISION GENERA FOUNDRY " AND ,CHINE CO. 202 Maple Ave. Sanford Phone; 700' Weatherstrip WINDOWS AND DOORS NOW Weatherstripping pays for itself in fuel savings FREE ESTIMATES CAMERON & RICHARDSON SOUTHERN PINES. N. C. Tel. 2-4263 Box 425 Shop located at Manly How fo Cross Barriers On the other hand, many man made barriers are bad in their effects. They act as prison walls, behind them men and w’omen sink into dark and poisonous air, wilt ing without the sunshine that comes to those living beyond the wall. Such a wall, in ancient times, was erected between the Samari tans and the regular Jews. It was an invisible wall; but it had no doors and no one crossed it. Yet one day Jesus walked right through that barrier and several other walls all at the same time, to talk to a Samaritan woman. Between were the walls of sex- gentlemen did not speak in public to women; of morality—she was beneath even “ordinary” respecta bility; of , nationality and race— he was of pure blood, she of a de cidedly mixed breed of intelli gence—she must have had a pret ty low I.Q. But Jesus talked with her—not small talk, which she would have preferred, but some thing far more serious and search ing. Jesus was always doing this kind of thing. How did he man age it? By the. simplest way in the world: he would go right through these man-made barriers as if they were not there, because he knew that walls which man’s mind has made, man’s good-will can make to disappear. (Based on out'inos copvrii-hted by the Division of Christian Education, Na tional Conncil of the Churches of Christ in the y. S. A. Released by Communitv Press Service.) WMi “Ikfi-imfj It takes a lot of energy to wield a rattle. It takes even more to crawl across the room. A fellow just has to take a time-out once in a while That’s an important lesson for all of us to learn. It is nothing short of suicide to let one’s work and recreation rob his body of the natural opportunity to replenish its resources in rest. Our souls also need a frequent time-out. Life depletes our spiritual resources. Man needs regular times for worship, for prayer, and for religious inspiration. The Church is meeting this need in the lives of many of your neighbors and friends. Are you—and your whole family—taking advantage of the time-out for spiritual replenishment which the Church offers? We invite you to attend the church of your choice next Sunday! UJE CHOHCH FOB AU. . FOR THE CHURcai Church is on earth for i lac character and Without a strona democracy ®®dher survive. There *f“**°" pp" fegsone why evei^t»/°“'' I®™'' attend services should for his children's sate Cil .f®'' his °‘ his comm“ iiy^^/°L he sate .For the sate of thrCh^°“u"- 3“ SS.,“',;rrs “S read your Day N- Sunday Exnd Chapter Verses ■ ■ ?»odus s, „ BROWNSON MEMORIAL C-HURCH (Presbyterian) Cheves ^K. Ligon, Minister Sunday school 9:45 a. m. Wor ship service, 11 a. m. Women of the Church meeting, 8 p. m. Mon- 'lay following third Sunday. The Youth Fellowships meet at 7 o’clock each Sunday evening. Mid-week service, Wednesday. 7:15 p. m. HRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH ‘ew Hampshire Ave., So. Pines Sunday Service, 11 a. m. Sunday School, 11 a. m. Wednesday Service, 8 p. m. Reading Room in Church Build- ng open Wednesday 3-5 p. m. THE CHURCH OF WIDE FELLOWSHIP (Congregational) I!or. Bennett and N. Hampshire tev. Oswald W. S. McCall, D.D., Litt.D. Interim Pastor Sunday Worship, 11 a.m. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Sunday, 6:30 p.m.. Pilgrim Fel lowship (Young people). Sunday, 8:00 p. m., The Forum. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH New York avenue at South Ashe David Hoke Coon, Minister Bible school, 9:45 a. m. Worship 11 a. m. Training Union 6:30 p. m. Evening worship, 7:30 p. m. Scout Troop 224, Monday, 7:30 p. m.; midweek worship, Wednes day 7:30 p. m.; choir practice Wednesday 8:15 p. m. Missionary meeting, first and third Tuesdays, 8 p. m. Church and family suppers, second Thurs days, 7 p. m. MANLY PRESBYTERIAN CHiraCH Grover C. Currie, Minister Sunday School 10 a. m. Worship Service, 2nd and 3rd Sunday evenings, 7:30. Fourth Sunday morning, 11 a. m. Women of the Church meeting, 8 p.m. second Tuesday. Mid-week service Thursday at 8 p.m. Wedn Sd y., Acts X EMMANUEL CHURCH (Episcopal) Holy Communion, 8 a. m. (ex cept first Sunday). Church School, 9:45 a. m., with Adult Class at 10 a. m. Morning Prayer, 11 a. m. (Holy Communion, first Sunday). Wednesdays: Holy Communion 10 a. m. ST. ANTHONY'S (Catholic) Vermont Ave. at Ashe Father Peter M. Denget Sunday masses 8 and 10:30 a. m.; Holy Day masses f and 9 a. m.; weekday mass at 8 a. m. Con fessions heard on Saturday be tween 5-6 and 7:30-8:30 p. m. OUR LADY OF VICTORY West Pennsylvania at Hardin ' Fr. Donald Fear on, C. SS. R., Sunday Mass, 10 a. m.; Holy Day Mass, 9 a. m. Confessions are heard before Mass. -This Space Donated in the Interest of the Churches by- GRAVES MUTUAL INSURANCE CO. SANDHILL AWNING CO CLARK & BRADSHAW SANDHILL DRUG CO. COLONIAL OIL COMPANY SHAW PAINT & WALLPAPER CO. CLARK'S NEW FUNERAL HOME CHARLES W. PICOUET MODERN MARKET W. E. Blue HOLLIDAY'S RESTAURANT & COFFEE SHOP BARNUM REALTY COMPANY DR. and MRS. GEORGE HEINITSH JACK'S GRILL & RESTAURANT CAROLINA POWER & LIGHT CO. CITIZENS BANK & TRUST CO. UNITED TELEPHONE CO. JACKSON MOTORS. Inc. Your Ford Dealer McNEILL'S SERVICE STATION Gulf Service PERKINSON'S. Inc. Jeweler ' SOUTHERN PINES MOTOR CO. THE PILOT