THURSDAY, NOVEIVEBER 12, 1964
THE SHOE WITH THE BEAUTIFUL FIT
the ribbed-sole wedge
feels as good as it looks
For those many hours on your feet, here’s a ribbed
sole wedge that gives you heavenly comfort.
Upper of unlined grained leather with airy perfs
and air-foam cushioned sole. Available in a tie
or slip-on. $12.99
Hubbards
SANFORD. N. C.
Central Carolina's Largest Shoe Store
-ft
USED CAR SPECiALS
ALL ARE ONE-OWNER CARS
1963 Cadillac Coupe DeVille, full power (no
air conditioning), leather upholstery, w/
w tires, wheel covers, radio, heater; 11,-
000 miles; color, maroon.
1963 Cadillac Fleetwood, full power with air
conditioning, radio, heater, w/w tires,
wheel covers, extra low mileage; color,
dark green.
1959 Cadillac 4-dr. Sedan, full power (no air
conditioning), radio, healer, w/w tires,
wheel covers; color, white.
1958 Cadillac 4-dr. Sedan, full power with air
conditioning, radio, heater, w/w tires,
wheel covers; color, blue.
1963 Chevrolet 4-dr. Station Wagon, V-8,
powerglide, radio, heater, w/w tires;
21,000 miles.
1962 Chevrolet Impala Sport Coupe, V-8,
powerglide trans., power steering, power
brakes, easy eye glass, radio, heater, w/
w tires; color, red.
TRUCKS
1963 FORD V2 ton pickup, extra clean, low
mileage; color, light blue.
1960 Chevrolet V2 ton pickup, long wheel base,
deluxe equipment, heater and defroster.
1960 Ford Falcon Ranchero pickups (2 of
these), one blue, one green.
S-P-E-C-IA-L
1956 CHEVROLET 3/4 Ton Pickup
$395
Several More Good Used Cars and Trucks
PINEHURST GARAGE CO. INC.
CARTHAGE USED CAR LOT
DEALERS Lie. NO. 652
PHONE WH 7.5435
PINEHURST
DEALER'S Lie. NO. 2027
PHONE 294-8951
THE PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina
Some Looks
Af Book
By LOCKI2 PARKER
THE HANDS OF CANTU,
writfen and illustrated hy Tom
Lea (Little. Brown $6.75). “In an
epoch when a gentleman’s met
tle and quality were best meas
ured by his conduct in the sad
dle,” in such an epoch this tale
unfolds. Its hero is Signor don
Vito Cantu, Spanish aristicrat,
and needless to say he is distin
guished for his skill and style in
the saddle; then he is equally re
nowned as a trainer and breeder
of horses, so that an Ibarra horse
“from the hands of Cantu” was
valued above all others in New
Spain.
The story is told by a hero-
worshiping youth sent by Don
Diego de Ibarra to Don Cantu’s
ranch in northern Mexico to
learn from him and be useful.
We get an intimate picture of life
on such a ranch in the sixteenth
century, the herds and the
household, the methods of train
ing the famous horses. Since the
publishers say the book is “more
fact than fiction,” we assume
that much of this material comes
from old documents.
Into this well ordered life
comes a new element. “From the.
great North came an old soldier
and a strange Indian. . . unex
pected, unannounced, unescorted
by any watcher or herder. . . in
the gray evening of Saint John
Baptist’s Day, during a gray
rain.” To the Spaniards of those
days the North was the Great
Unknown, the edge of the world.
But the old soldier had tales of
Indians to the North with horses
that bore the Ibarra brand, the
Cross-Enflanked I. This was not
to be tolerated. The Spaniards
knew that to the horseless In
dians their appearance on horse
back had been awesome and they
were determined to maintain
this advantage, so a small bold
band sets out into the vast and
desolate North to dispose of this
threat to Spanish dominion. This
is real romance and adventure
told by Tom Lea in prose with
an epic ring.
'The illustrations have the
same quality—the vast sweeps of
barren hills and plains with two
or three horsemen advancing
like bold insects. Then there are
Lea’s portraits of the men who
did this with their weathered
faces and keen, searching eyes;
there are also their horses mag
nificent in action, drawn with
affectionate care in detail. All in
all, this is a handsome book, well
designed and well printed, each
chapter decorated with the fa
mous Ibarra bran, the Cross-En
flanked I, in forms that vary
from the simplest to the ornate.
THE TREASURE OF OUR
TONGUE by Lincoln Barnett
(Knopf $5.95). English today is
the most widely spoken lan
guage on earth, the primary lan
guage of nearly 300 million peo
ple and understood by about
twice that number. Yet in
Shakespeare’s day an English
educator lamented “The English
tongue is of small reach, stretch
ing no farther than this island of
ours, nay not there over all.”
In this book, Lincoln Barnett,
distinguished for his lively but
authoritative writings on science,
shows how English became the
lingua franca of the world and
why it is easy to learn and dif
ficult to use with consistent
grace and precision. He discusses
the origins of human language
in the light of new anthropolo
gical discoveries. He traces the
evolution of English from the
primordial Indo - European
tongue, through the modifica
tions imposed by the numerous
invaders of Britain, to its full
flowering in Elizabethan times. In
a section on how American Eng
lish came to differ from British
English, Mr. Barnett shows that
“Americanisms” are sometimes
Elizabethan archaisms and
sometimes borrowings from the
American Inians or from Dutch,
Spanish or French settlers.
The book ends with a highly
controversial discussion on the
future of the. English language
and of the current assault on it
by advocates of certain modern
teaching methods, the editors of
of Webster’s Third New Inter
national Dictionary” and the
structoral linguists.
THE FLAGS AT DONEY by
Harris Greene (Doubleday $4.95)-
A convincing gallery of Italian
types from housemaids to gov
ernment ministers add a special
flavor to this novel of intrigue
and adventure. The key incident
at the root of it all had occurred
eleven years before in World
War II when a small band of
Partisans behind the German
lines were ambushed and wiped
out, along with an American of
ficer who was leading them. It
was believed to have been done
by the Germans but a dying
Communist sends Antonella who
had lost a father, husband and
brother in the affair two objects
which make her wonder.
Since the war Antonella had
become a leading Communist
herself and was Mayoress in her
native town of Bellona. She gets
in touch with Tom Linden, an
other person whose life had been
tragically changed by that same
ambush but for very different
reasons. Then things begin to
happen, and the repercussions
shake up Communists headquar
ters and perturb the American
Embassy and high government
circles in Italy. The story moves
along at a good pace with dashes
of humor and some unexpected
twists of the plot.
A BOOK OF DWARFS by
Ruth Manning-Saundlers (Dutton
$3.50|). This is another fine col
lection by the story teller who
gave us “A Book of Giants” last
year. 'This time we have dwarfs,
some as big as a child of five and
some as little as Thumbkin who
rode in a horse’s ear; some act
very much like us and some
have magic powers which they
may use maliciously or, if they
like you, they may suddenly
bring you fabulous gifts, for they
know all about the gold, silver
and jewels under the earth.
These are fine stories to read
aloud, polished by generations of
storytellers and reproduced here
with a nice rhythm of language.
They have enough meat in them
to interest children up to ten but
are a shade too long for children
under five. They are pleasingly
illustrated but do not depend on
pictures to carry the story.
Bookmobile
Schedule
Monday, Doubs Chapel Route:
John Willard, 9:40-9:45; Frank
Cox, 9:50-10; F. L. Sutphin,
10:05-10:15; John Thompson,
10:20-10:30; Clyde Aunian, 10:35-
10:45; L. M. Hartsell, 10:50-11;
W. E. Jackson, 11:05-11:10; Ar
nold Thomas, 11:15-11:35; Mrs.
Joyce Haywood, 11:40-11:50; S.
E. Hannon, 11:55-12:05; the Rev.
Don Bratten 12:45-12:55; Mrs.
Herbert Harris, 1:05-1:15; Coy
Richardson, 1:20-1:30; Robert
Richardson, 1:35-1:45; V. L. Wil
son, 1:50-2:50.
Tuesday, Murdocksville Route:
R. F. Clapp, 9:35-9:45; Edwin
Black, 9:55-10:05; Tom Clayton,
10:10-10:20; W. R. Dunlop, 10:25-
11; Dan Lewis, 11:05-11:15; Earl
Monroe, 11:20-11:30; Mrs. Helen
Neff, 11:35-11:45; Harold Black,
12:30-12:45; Art Zenns, 12:55-
1:05; Sandy Black, 1:10-1:20;
Mrs. Lillian Whitaker, 1:25-1:35;
H. A. Freeman, 1:40-1:50.
Wednesday, Cameron Route:
James Hardy, 9:30-9:40; C. R.
Bennett, 9:45-9:50; M. M. Routh,
9:55-10; E. F. Carter, 10:05-10:15;
Lloyd Thomas, 10:20-10:25; Mrs.
J. A. McPherson, 10:30-10:35;
Mrs. H. D. Tally, 10:40-10:45; Mrs.
Archie McKeithen, 10:50-11; Mrs.
Isabelle Thomas, 11:05-11:15; H.
L. Phillips, 11:20-11:25; Wade
Collins, 11:30-11:40; Lewis Mari
on, 11:45-11:55; Mrs. M. D. Mc-
Iver, 12-12:10; Arthur Gaines,
12:15-12:25; Wesley Thomas,
12:30-12:35.
Thursday, Mineral Springs',
Sandhill Route: W. R. Viall, Jr.,
9:40-10:10; Dr. W. C. Neill,
10:20-10:40; J. W. Greer, 10:45-
11:15; Mrs. E. T. McKeithen,
11:20-11:35; S. R. Ransdell Jr.,
11:40-11:50; Richard Garner,
1:15-1:30; Mrs. Bertha Harms,
1:40-1:50; Frank McDonald, 1:55-
2:05; Ed Smith, 2:15-2:45; Mrs.
W. E. Munn, 3-3:10.
The teaching-training hospital
ship SS HOPE concluded a ten-
month visit to Ecuador in Sep
tember and is going to Conakry,
Guinea, to begin a year-long
medical mission there.
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.
Page THREE
f 6Y DR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN
Workman
Lesson for November 15, 1964
Background Scripture: H Timothy 2:1
through 3:9, 14-17.
Devotional Reading: Isaiah 49:6-11.
A SOLDIER, an athlete, a
farmer: what do they have
in common? They are all mas
culine, for one thing. They are
strong and active; they do often
what is unpleasant or even dan-
g^us at the time. And they all
are valuable to
the society in
which they live.
It is interest
ing that the au
thor of II Tim
othy does not
liken Christian
men to angels,
students, mem-
Dr. Foreman berS of an au
dience, or women ho matter how
good. He sees in the soldier, the
athlete, and the farmer symbols
of what the Christian is intended
to be. Christian life is a battle;
it is a game (played seriously,
as games should be); it is making
a crop. Hence the Christian is
said to be soldier, athlete and
farmer. The Christian life in
short is a doing life, a working
life. The Christian knows what
not everyone knows; he thinks
and says what most people do
not either think of, or say. But
above all and with it all the
the Christian is a doer.
For every good work
This little letter to Timothy
was written to a preacher by a
preacher. Then why read it if
I’m not a preacher? Well, it’s
more than a matter of looking
over Paul’s or Timothy’s shoulder
to see what preachers talk about
when they are by themselves.
Paul speaks of the man of God.
(And if you, layman or not, don’t
think you are God’s man, then
whose man are you?) Paul speaks
of equipping the Christian for
every good work. Now the work
of a preacher is not the work of
the housewife, not the work of
the scientist or the business man.
But if the church had thought
that Paul was writing for one
preacher and for no one else,
they never would have preserved
the letter and eventually put it
into the Bible. “Every good
work” means EVERY good work
— what we do for a living and
what we do for others in our off
hours — whatever any man does
that is good.
The well-equipped workman
There never yet was a work
man, professional or do-it-your
self type, who couldn’t improve
his work by using better tools.
Now the tool or tools for the
Christian’s good work is nothing
less than the Bible. The better
a man learns to use his Bible,
to understand it and to live by it,
the better his workmanship will
be.
Don’t and do
How the Bible operates is
shown in one of the best-known
and often quoted sentences in
the letters to Timothy. First of
all Paul says it is inspired. That
is, the Bible’s power does not lie
■ in its literary polish nor in any
of the qualities that go to make
what we call a strong book. The
power of the Bible is the power
of God who speaks through it.
Paul says further that it is a
teaching book, — he does not
call it mainly a preaching book.
As a teaching book, it works in
two ways. First is “reproof.” A
sincere reader of the Bible will
come to thoughts — in parables,
poems, stories, letters*— which
pierce his armor of self-satisfac
tion and bring him up short. For
the Bible brings in many ways !
the judgment of God on many of !
man’s cherished ways and cher
ished delusions. It is like a red
light above a highway that says
STOP!
But the Bible does much more
than show us what is wrong with
us; it shows what the right way
is. The Bible was not written by
or for people on a tropical island
who can live ideal lives without
running into resistance. The
Bible was written by men who
knew what it is to try to live a
good life in a bad world. If the
Bible did nothing else for us, it
would be priceless for the inside
stories of men “of like passions
with ourselves,” who in the midst
of an uncertain and sin-infested
world, were able to live above
and through it all as sons and
daughters of the Most High. For
God^j book brings God’s life to
God’s men.
(Based en osllines eopyrlKhied by the
Division of Christian Education* National
Couneit of the Churches of Christ in the
XT* S*. A. Released by Community Press
Service.)
MAYTAG
Sales & Service
Parker Oil Co.
tfn
ABERDEEN
Attend The Church of Youi’ Choice
Next Sunday
MBTBODIST CHURCH
Midland Road
A. L. Thompson. Minister
Church School 9:46 a.m.
Worship Service 11:00 a.m.
Youth Fellowship 6:15 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.
Reading ^ora in Church Buildiny open
Wednesday. 2-4 p.m.
MANLY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Sunday School 10 a.m.. Worship servieo
11 a.m. and 7:80 p.m. PYF 6 p.m.; Women
of the Church meetinsr 8 p.m. second
Tuesday. Mid-w<^k service Thursday 7 :S0
p.m.. choir rehearsal 8:30 p.m.
EMMANUEL CHURCH (Episcopal)
East Massachusetts Ave*
Martin CaldweU, Reirtor
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.
Morninsr 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.ffi.
Saturday 4 p.m.. Penance.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
New York Ave. at South Ashe flt.
John Dawson Stone. Minister
Bib]”^ School. 9:45 a.m.. Worship Serviee
11 a.m.. Training Union 6:80 p.ra., Eva*
ning Worship 7:80 p.m.
Youth Fellowship 8:80 p.m.
Scout Troop 224, Monday 7 :80 p.m.
Mid-w<»ek worship. Wednesday 7:80 p — \
choir practice Wednesday 8:16 pjn.
Missionary meeting first and third Tusa
days. 8 p.m. Church and family sappers,
second Thursday, 7 p.m.
—This Space Donated in the
SANDHILL DRUG CO.
ST. ANTHONV’S CATHOLIC
Vermont Ave. at Ashe St.
Father John J. Harper
Sunday Masses 8. 9:15 and 10:80 a.B.
Daily Mass. 7 a.m. (except Friday,
II :15 a.m.) ; Holy Day Masnes. 7 a.a.
and 6:30 p.nt.; Confessions, Saturday,
4:30 to 5:30 p.m. and 7:30 to 8:80 p.m.
Men's Club m<»eting: 3rd Mr^nday eaeh
month.
Women’s Club meeting. 1st Monday,
8 p.m.
Boy Scout Troop No. 878, Wednesday.
7 :30 p.m.
Girl Scout Troop No. 118, Monday, I
p.m.
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH
Civic Club Bailing
Corner Pennsylvania Ave. and Ashe St.
Jack Deal, Pastor
Worship Service, 11 a.m.
Sunday School. 9 :45 a.m.
L.C.W. meets first Monday 8 p4m.
Choir practice Thursday 8 p.m.
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.in.
BROWNSON MEMORIAL CHURCH
(Presbyterian)
Dr. Julian Lake. Minister
May St. at Ind. Ave.
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.. Worship Servieo
11 a.m. Women of the Church meeting.
8 p.m Monday fcllowhig third Sunday.
The Youth Fellowships meet at 7 o'eloeb
each Sunday evening.
Mid-week service. Wednesday, 7:89 pjm
THE UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
(Church of Wide Fellowship)
Cor. Bennett and New Hampshire
Carl E. Wallace, MiniaUr
Sunday School, 9:46 ajn.
Worship Service, 11 a.m.
Sunday. 6:00 p.m.. Youth Fellowship
Women’s Fellowship meets 4tb Thursday
at 12:30 p.m.
Interest of the Churches by—
JACKSON MOTORS. Inc.
Your FORD Dealer
SHAW PAINT
& WALLPAPER CO. CLARK & BRADSHAW
A & P TEA COMPANY
THE WORLD OF BIRDS
by James Fisher and Roger Tory Peterson
Biology - Behavior - Distribution Maps - Techniques
of Watching $22.95 (pre-Xmas $17.95).
THE VOGUE BOOK of Menus
and Recipes for Enierfaining
$6.95.
THE GAME by Tex Maule. Re
vised edition including 20 pages
of color Photographs $10.95
Beautiful Christmas Greeting Cards and Notes
Come early for best selection
180 West Penna. - Phone 692-3211
PLAY GOLF at
Richmond County Country Club
U.S. Hiway 1, 24 miles S. of Southern Pines, 6 miles North of
Rockingham, N. C.
Green Fees: $3, Sun., Wed., Sat., $2 other days
$1.50 for 9 holes, $2 all day
18 Holes—Tifton Greens—No starting time necessary
Carts and caddies available
GET A BEAUTIFUL
11X14 PORTRAIT
I
BY TEENY TOTS
THURS. - FRI.. SAT.
NOV. 19, 20, 21
Photographer's Hours 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
• Complete Selection of Poses
u Portraits Delivered at Store
Within A Few Days
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Lee's 5 &. 10
Aberdeen, N. C.