THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1964 THE PILOT—Southern Pines, NorrI* Carolina Page THREE tfn MAYTAG Sales & Service Parker Oil Co. ABERDEEN STAR - VIEW DRIVE-IN THEATRE CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE FRI. - SAT. - SUN. JAN. 1-2-3 A Shot in the Dark Peter Sellers Elke Sommer Color U.S. Highway No. 1 Between Southern Pines & Aberdeen Parker Oil Company Southern Pines nl5tf Some Looks At Books By LOCKIE PARKER » Red Pawn: The Story of No€l| Field h(7 Flora Lewis (Doubleday this book were fiction $4.95). Was Noel Field a double agent or international dupe? If this book were fiction, it would challenge one’s credulity. Be cause it is true, it is not only a remarkable spy story but con temporary history. In 1949, Noel Field, a former U. S. State Department official, disappeared in Prague. While the American government and the press demanded information about him, his brother and his wife followed him into oblivion. A year and a half later his foster daughter vanished in Berlin. And still officials in Czechoslovakia and East Germany denied all knowledge of the Fields, ifto Then, in the early 1950’s, Noel Field’s name suddenly became notorious on both sides of the At lantic. In America, during the trial of Alger Hiss, he was re peatedly named as a leading American communist. In Eastern Europe, during the purge trials, he was repeatedly named as “the American master spy.” Even to have known someone who knew Field became a death sentence for some communists. In 1955, after Stalin’s death, all four Fields reappeared from the sepairate communist prisons where they had been held. Noel’s brother and foster daugh ter went home to the United 13 THE 180 Penna* Ave. Call 692-3211 Wishes You A Happy New Year We Will Be Closed January 1 and 2 States. Noel and his wife remain ed in Hungary. But still, al though the press clamored for. the full story, no official explanation was made by either side. In this book Flora Lewis tells the whole story for the first time. To get the truth required de tective work worthy of Sherlock Holmes. Years after the fact, Americans and communists were still afraid to talk, for reasons that slowly became clear to her as she followed up each lead, however remote, in Boston, Washington, New York and all the countries of Europe where Noel Field had lived and opera ted. Flora Lewis is the wife of the New York Times foreign editor, Sydney Gruson, and has been a foreign correspondent since 1945. Her stories from both sides of the Iron Curtain won the Overseas Press Club award for the best re porting on foreign affairs in 1956, and her reports from Western Europe won the award for the best interpretation in 1962. THE ORDWAYS by William Humphrey (Alfred A. Knopf $5.95). About two years ago, Wil liam Humphrey published his first novel, “Home from the Hill,” which received praise from the critics and found a considerable circle of appreciative readers. The author the n received a Grant in Literatiure from' the National Institute of Arts and Letters and was able to take his time about a second book. Now he has produced a full-bodied re gional novel and family chroni cle. Written with quiet humor and affection, with sensitive probing into what shapes the character of individuals and com munities, we get a fascinating ac count of four generations of the' Ordway clan that had migrated to East Texas shortly after the Civil War. Clan spirit was strong with the Ordways. The book begins appro priately enough with the annual gathering to tend the graves of the ancestors, “Graveyard Work ing Day.” There were a lot of graves; for old Thomas Ordway, when he migrated from the mountains of East Tennesseee, Bookmobile Schedule January 4-7 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- 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; Ray mond Williams, 10:50-11:10; James Callicut, 11:15-11:30; Paul Williams, 11:35-11:45; D. R. Nall Jr., 11:50-12:05; Jr. Burns, 12:45- 12:55; Marvin Williams, 1-1:10; James Allen, 1:15-1:25; Talc Mine, 1:30-1:40; Miss Mamie Mc Neill, 1:50-2. Wednesday, Vass, Little River Route: Vass Town Hall, 9:30-9:45; Mrs. O. C. Blackbrehn, 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, 1:40-12T0; Mrs. J. W. Smith, 12:15-12:20; Mrs.| Eva Womack, 1:05-1:15; James Riggs- bee, 1:20-1:30; Mrs. Will Hart, 1:35-1:50; L. O. Capps, 2-2:10; Jack Morgan, 2:20-2:30; W. F. Smith, 2:35-2:45; Mrs. NelUe Gar ner, 2:50-3. 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. 11 Veal? • to ring in another nete year,.. and time to turn aside from workaday routine to wish (dl our friends real happiness and prosperity. Your loyal "patronage is always genuinely appreciated, and we want you to know how vary much we value our pleasant association* May it long prevail. Pinehurst Laundry Ph. 294-3561 Pinehurst, N. C. brought along the ashes and tombstones of his dead kin. On Graveyard Working Diay their stories were told again along with comments on those who had died in the new land and on Thomas himself whose memory still haunted the town. The time is the early 1930’s and the ^ace Clarksville, Texas, which lay “on the edge of the blackland prairie. . . the first clearing they (the Southerners) came to out of the canebrakes and towering pines.” It was as though they had stopped there appalled by the unfamiliar look of the great plains, “the flat and fea tureless immensity spread before them.” Three generations later, this symbolises their cultural her itage, too, a place where two myths met, those of the South and those of the West. The characters, varied and vig orous, show this heritage of Southe rn pride and Western au dacity in talk and action as Wil liam Humphrey develops the plot of this rich and readable book. CANARY YELLOW by Eliza beth Cadell William Morrow $3.95). Mrs. Cadell has a delight ful way of making the most ex traordinary things happen to the most ordinary people. In this case, Elaine Tracy, wearying of a five-year engagement in which she and her fiance were always saving to get enough to marry, blows her savings on new clothes and a trip to the Canary Islands. It works. Soon she has two men competing for her attention on shipboard, makes some other in teresting acquaintances, gets mix ed up in a murder mystery and winds up with a rich and hand some husband. If the author stretches coinci dence and our credulity at times, it does not matter because this is obviously a grown-up fairy tale. The conversation sparkles, the background is lovely and even the villain is far from repulsive. THE LONG ESCAPE by Irving Werstein (Scribner $3.50). This is a story of war written for a new generation of young people who did not live through those days. To people of forty and up it often comes as a shock that the Second World War is to the youth of to day something vaguely heard about or some facts in the history book. This author makes the war vivid, appallingly vivid, not the war of the battle lines but the devastation to a peaceful coun tryside, the disruption of fam ilies, the suffering of the inno cent. The story centers around a true episode, involving the fate of fifty children who were living in a home for convalescent chil dren near the Belgian coast when the Germans invaded Belgium. They were under the care of Jus tine Raymond and her helpers. It was a brilliant May morning when they heard at breakfast that war was declared and a few hours later came the first air raid. How Justine led the children from Heyst to Ostend along refu gee-choked roads, and again fled from Ostend to Dunkerque where they were eventually evac- Strange Kingdom Lesson for January 3, 1965 Backg^round Scripture: Matthew 3. Devotional Reading: Isaiah 40:1*11. H ave you ever heard so much about a person you have never met, that it almost seems that you have met person ally, after all? Let’s suppose you have a friend — call him Bill — who in turn has a friend named John. In the course of a year or two Bill has told you so many stories about John that you feel you know him. You know how he thinks, how he acts; you can guess what Dr. Foreman he would do in an emergency; you may think so well of him that you want noth ing better than to arrange to meet him. And yet Bill has never given you the whole story of John’s life. What he has given you are living glimpses into the character of a real man. The New Testament gospels are like that. Strictly speaking, the gospels do not give us the story of Jesus’ life. What they do is to give us a number of short stories about him, a number of remarks he made. They tell us so much — every bit of it revealing — that we feel we know the vital facts about Jesus. Occupied country Each of the four gospels puts together a different set of stories and reminiscences of Jesus; and each mosaic comes out a differ ent (but not contradictory!) pic ture. The portrait in Matthew comes out showing Jesus, a child born “across the tracks” so to speak, a young man earning his living for years as a carpenter, being all the time a King. This was astonishing, and it would have astemished you, too, if you had been there. Jesus lived in what would nowadays be called an occupied country or territory — occupied by the military of a foreign nation, that is. Rome and the Romans were everywhere. Now the Romans had one Caesar and that was enough. (In future years that was not enough, but that’s another story.) The point is that every Jew in the place ground his teeth every time he thought of the hated Romans and their insolent soldiers. The question is, how could Jesus or any one else claim to be a King without getting entangled with the Romans? Great expectations There were two reasons in par ticular why Jesus did not imme diately get pounced on by the watchful Roman security police. One was that he did not at first lay claim to a throne, and when people called him Messiah (which meant something like King-Elect) he would vigorously hush them up. Another reason was that he lacked the things most pretenders to a throne would be expected to have, such as an army and a squadron of dip lomats. But the real reason why it was so long before the Romans took notice of him was that he turned out to be so different, and his kingdom so different, from the king and the kingdom the people were looking for, that his own people, the Jews themselves, did not recognize him. Reality What they got, or what they were offered, was something. Some One, far better than their greatest expectations; addng who would not only be the legal heir to David’s throne, — which Jesus was — but one to whom “all authority in heaven and earth” had been given. They expected a Kingdom, right away, in which every evil which torments man would be destroyed, and right maintained by force. What they got, or what they were offered, was a kingdom of the heart, — a realm that might have to wait centuries to be fully established, yet one which could begin now — and does exist in the hearts of faithful people everywhere.' The news of this kingdom is never expressed as a second- best, or as a disappointment; it is always good news, — for that is what “Gospel” means. It is the best news there is. The kingdom of Christ is as near to you as your next prayer; it is as power ful as the Spirit of God. (Based on outlines eopyrishied by the Division of Christian Education, National Counci! of the Churches of Christ in the U. S. A. Released by Commnniiy Press Service. > Attend The Church of Youi- Choice Next Sunday METHODIST CEUKCH Midland Road A. L. Thompson. Minister Church School 9:45 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 Avenn# Sunday Service, 11 a.m. Sunday School, 11 a.m. Wednesday Service, 8 p.m. Reading Room in Church BnUding 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 10:80 , Daily Mass, 7 a.m. (except Friday, 11:16 a.m.); Holy Day Masses, 7 aja, and 5:30 p.nt.; Ckinfessions, Saturday, 4:S0 to 5:30 p.m. and 7:30 to 8:80 p.m. Men’s Club meeting: 3rd Mr>nday eaab month. Women’s Club meeting. Ist Monday, 8 p.m. Boy Scout Troop No. 878, Wednesday. 7:30 p.m. Girl Scout Troop No. 118, Monday, • p.m. MANLY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sunday School 10 a.m., Worship servlae 11 a.m. ana 7:30 p.m. PYF 6 p.m.; Women of the Church meeting 8 p.m. second Tuesday. Mid-week service Thnrs^y 7:80 p.m.. choir rehearsal 8:80 p.m. EMMANUEL CHURCH (Episcepal) East Massachasetts At#. Martin CaldweU, Reator Holy Communion, 8 a.m. (First Sundays and Holy Days, 8 a.m. and 11 a.m.) Family Service, 9:80 8.m. Church School, 10: a.m. Morning Service, 11 a.m. Young Peoples' Service League. 4 p,w». Holy Communion, Wednesday and Holy Days, 10 a.m. and Friday, 9:80 a.m. Saturday 4 p.m.. Penance. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH New York Ave. at Soath Aabe ft. John Dawson Stone, Minister Bib]« School, 9:45 a.m.. Worship Sarriet 11 a.m., Training Union 6:80 p.m., Era* ning Worship 7:30 p.m. Youth Fellowship 8:30 p.m. Scout Troop 224, Monday 7:80 p.m. Mid*w'iek worship, Wednesday 7:80 p.m.i choir practice Wednesday 8:16 p.m. Missionary meeting first and third Tasa days, 8 p.m. Church and faml^ sappsvt, second Thursday, 7 pjtt. OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH U.S. 1 South Jack DmI, Paator Worship Service, 11 a.in. Sunday School, 9:45 a.m. L.G.W. meets first Monday 8 y Ch jir pr^tice Thursday 8 pjn. ST.JAMES LUTHERAN CHURCH (Missouri Synod) 983 W. New Hampshire Are, .)ohn P. Kellogg, Pastor Sunday School, 10:30 a.m. Worship Service, 7:00 p.m. BROWNSON MEMOR^L CHURCH (Presbyterian) Dr. Julian Lake, Bolster May St. at Ind. Ave* Sunday School 9:46 a.m.. Worship Serriat 11 a.m. Women of the Church meeting* 8 p.m Monday fcillowkig third Sunday, The Youth Fellowships meet at 7 o'eloeir each Sunday evening. Mid-week service, Wednesday, 7:80 pm THE UNITED CHURCH OP CHRIST (Church of Wide Fellowship) Cor. Bennett and New Hampshire Carl E. Wallace, Hinlater Sunday School. 9:46 a.m. Worship Service, 11 ajn. Sunday, 6:00 Youth Fellowship Women’s Fellowship meets 4th Thursday at 12:30 p.m. uated to England makes a heroic story of fortitude and suffering, of great cruelties and great kind nesses. It should impress any one with the madness of war as a solution for any problem. SUBSCRIBE TO THE PILOT. MOORE COUNTY'S LEADING NEWS AND ADVERTISING WEEKLY. —This Space Donated in the Interest of the Churches by SANDHILL DRUG CO. JACKSON MOTORS, Inc. SHAW PAINT ford Dealer & WALLPAPER CO. CLARK & BRADSHAW A & P TEA COMPANY PILOT ADVERTISING PAYS LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a cer tain deed of trust executed by HERBERT SMALL and wife, MARY HELEN SMALL to ROG ER CONNELL, Trustee for De luxe Homes of Lillington, North Carolina,, dated February 20, 1963, and recorded in the Moore County Registry in Mortgage Book 167 at page 396, and under and by virtue of the authority vested in the undersigned as Substitute Trustee by an instru ment of writing, dated Decem ber 11, 1964, and recorded in the Moore County Registry, default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secur ed and the said deed of trust be ing by the terms thereof subject toforeclousure, the holder of the indebtedness thereby secured having demanded a forclosure thereof, for the purpose of satis fying said indebtedness, the un dersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the Court House door in Carthage, North Carolina, at 12:00 Noon, on the 21ST DAY OF JANUARY 1965, the land conveyed in said deed of trust, the same lying and being in the Town of Southern Pines, Moore County, North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows; BEING Lots Nos. 5 (Five) and 6 (Six) in Block S&13 as shown on a map entitled “A MAP OF SOUTHERN PINES, MOORE COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA” which map is duly recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of Moore County in Map Book 1, Section 2, at page 70. This property fronts on Gaines Street between Michigan and Lowe Avenues in the Town of Southern Pines, N. C. and being more particularly described as follows: BEGINNING at a stake in the northerly line of Gaines 'Street; the common corner of Lots 6 and 7 and located S. 53-15 W. 100 feet from the intersection of the northerly line of Gaines Street with the westerly line of Michigan Avenue, running thence with the northerly line of Michigan Avenue S. 53-15 W. 92 feet to the south corner of Lot No. 5 and the alley, N. 36-45 W. 150 feet to the center square; thence with the center square and the north line of Lot No. 5 N. 53-15 E. 42 feet to the east cor ner of the square; thence S. 81- 45 E. 70.65 feet to the corner of Lots Nos. 6, 7, and 9; thence with the common line of Lots Nos. 6 and 7, S. 36-45 E. 100 feet to the beginning, being Lots Nos. 5 and 6 in Block S & 13 as shown on a map entitled “A MAP OF SOUTHERN PINES, MOORE COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA” and recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds for Moore County in Map Book 1, Section 2, at page 70. This sale is made on account of default in the payment of the indebtedness secured by the said deed of trust. The successful bidder will be required to deposit with the Clerk of the Superior Court as earnest money, ten per cent (10%) of the first ONE THOUS AND ($1,000.00) DOLLARS of his bid and five per cent (5%) of the excess over ONE THOUS AND ($1,000.00) DOLLARS. Dated this 18th day of Decem ber 1964. ARTHUR R. ROWE. Substitute Trustee D24,31,J7,14c NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA MOORE COUNTY The undersigned Bessie C. Kel ly having qualified as Executrix of the Estate of Hume Foster Kelly, deceased, late of Moore County, North Carolina, this is to notify all {Jersons, ‘ firms or cor porations having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned at Southern Pines, North Carolina, on or before the 10th day of June, 1965, or this no tice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms or corporations indebted to said estate will please make immedi ate payment to the undersigned. This the 8th day of December, 1964. Bessie C. Kelly, Executrix Estate of Hume Foster Kelly D10,17,24,31c NORTH CARIOLINA MOORE COUNTY NOTICE The undersigned, Jane D. Vale, having qualified as Executrix of the Estate of Harry Marshall Vale, Jr., deceased, late of South ern Pines, Moore County, North Carolina, this is to notify all per sons, firms or corporations hav ing claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 25th day of June, 1965, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corpora tions indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 21st day of December, 1964. Jane D. Vale, Executrix Estate of Harry Marshall Vale, Jr., deceased Southern Pines, North Caro lina. Pollock & Fullenwider Attorneys for Estate D24, 31, J7,14c NORTH CAROLINA MOORE COUNTY NOTICE The undersigned Glennie K. Perry having qualified as Admin istratrix of the Estate of Mamie C. Keith, deceased, late of Moore County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons, firms or cor porations having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned at Route 2, Perry Circle, Wake Forest, North Caro lina, on or before the 17th day of June, 1965, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All personss, firms or corpora tions indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 18th day of December 1964. Glennie K. Perry, Adminis tratrix, Estate of Mamie C. Keith, deceased. Perry Circle, Route 2, Wake Forest, North Carolina D31,J7,14,21c

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