PERSON COUNTY TIMES ■ i >- Tr |, r |—• X'NorthCaroUna vK />MSJ ASSOCIATION^ A PAPER FOR ALL THE PEOPLE J. S. MERRITT, EDITOR M. C. CLAYTON, MANAGER THOMAS J. SHAW, JR., City Editor. Published Every Thursday and Sunday. Entered As Second Class Matter At The Postoffice At Roxboro, N. C., Under The Act Os March 3rd., 1879. —SUBSCRIPTION RATES— One Year W*so Six Months 75 Three Months 50 NattoMl AdvsrtMaf Repmentatlva Naw Y«h i i Detroit i V 'Atlanta i Phi!*. Advertising Cut Service At Disposal of Advertisers at al times. Rates furnished upon request. , News from our correspondents should reach this office not later than Tuesday to insure publication for Thursday edition and Thursday P. M. for Sunday edition. SUNDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1941 First Steps In A Program In the words of S. G. Winstead, Mayor of the City of Roxboro: “If we are not war-minded now, we ought to be.” Greatest difficulty will be for most of us realiza tion of what “war-mindedness” means, but we are of opinion that the score or more County and City civic leaders who attended Friday’s civilian defense meeting at the Person Court House had no trouble in grasping first principles of the three-point, police, fire and utili ties program now being set up in this area and through out the Nation. Acting under the State Coordinator, who is work ing directly with United States and State agencies, Mayor Winstead is the local head of an emergency governing body having supervision of telephone con trols, air-raid warning and police and fire and utilities protection. Working with the Mayor are the City Man ager, the Chiefs of Police and Fire Departments and the Superintendent of the Municipal Water Plant, and under these respective leaders are countless citizens, whose duties will be more detailed execution of various necessary tasks such as: control of city and county traffic, Red Cross work, including first aid, disaster and rehabilitation; the evolution of a more complete fire protection system and the sustaining of a com pletely supervised water-plant program. Tentative defense plans have been discussed in the —United States ever since September 1939 when World War II began, but the situation is different now; these plans, together with others of a drastic nature, must be and are being swiftly fitted into the Nation’s way of life. And this is at it should be, for in this war, as in no other war, military units are effective only inso far as they are supported by home defense units. We are sure of the adequacy of our military de fense. We must be just as sure of our civilian defense and there is no escaping the fact that it is oUr job. On With Life Uppermost in the minds of ail American citizens today is war, but we think that most of us must sooner or later come to realization that insofar as it is pos sible, normal activities must be continued. Children still believe in Christmas, and they must not be dis appointed. Older people, whose active participation in the war program is circumscribed by physical limita tions, must be thought of as they spend long days and hours in their homes, and the rest of us, who are now just beginning to be engaged in the super-human effort to keep business and social and religious life going and to contribute in time, service and cash to the “all-out” effort for defense, must have moments of respite, so long as they are possible, if we are to do our best work with the double tasks we are facing. This does not mean that we are to think careless ly of the serious business at hand. This does njot , mean that we are not to be sympathetic to those to whom war brings an extra measure of sorrow. This does not mean that we are to be selfish. This does not mean that we are to be what the early Christians and some others have called “worldly ” In the program of sacrifice with service, whether it be in the military or non-combatant units, or through the Red Cross or by means of cash contributions to Defense, it is possible that this our life will have a new meaning and that in the two-edged task will be found again a fellowship frequently lacking in ordered routines of peace. Those in other countries who have been experiencing the destruction of normal life-ways have told us of the new fellowship that is now ours to discover, provided we keep a sane balance and go on with life’s program. Christmas Music .*... Being given today in Roxboro are two of a series of Christmas musical programs designed to express the more spiritual joys of the holiday season. Important in any year as reminders of the original reason for the celebration of Christmas, these concerts have this year an especial significance on account of war events of the past week. As one of the few remaining international links, music, Christmas music, in particular, has an import ant function to perform. English-speaking people are today in conflict with those whose native speech is German and Italian, but on Christmas programs in the United States and in the British isles the German “Si lent Night” and the Italian “Jesu Bambino,” as beauti ful today as they were yesterday, will have their place. And this is as it should be. Men may war against each other. They may kill each other, and call each other foul names in belief that they are creating per manent hatreds, but they cannot destroy forever the records of their higher aspirations in music and art and literature. These records remain and will remain, against the time when sanity returns and men can speak one to another in the other languages God gave them. Words Baltimore Evening Sun The “English Vocabularly Builder,” a book issued by the Human Engineering Laboratory of Hoboken. N. J-, contains lists of words totaling 1,118, grouped according to how the words are known to adults. The first list for 55 words which all adults know; group 2 consists of 15 words unknown to 1 per cent; in group 3 there are 16 words unknown to 2 per cent. The last i list consists of 27 words which, according to the Hu man Engineerings Laboratory wizards, are unknown to 99 per cent of all adults. This list includes these: lambent, unwonted, anfractous, polity, quizzical and ascetic. Concerning the misuse of words the Human En gineering Laboratory declares that 8 per cent of adults think statute means a monument, while 4 per cent think it refers to physique; 2 per cent think conversant means unacquainted with; 15 per cent believe that gar rulity means feebleness. - “Ghosting” In Washington , New York Times V Secretary Knox has given the expected answer to the charge that he made a personal profit out of mag azine articles appearing under his name and revealing information which had come to him as the result of his official position. He caused the articles to be written, he says, because he considered it part of his job to “publicize and popularize the Navy.” He divided the money received between the men who did the actual writing and a worthy and appropriate charity, the Naval Relief Society. He frankly admits that his part in the authorship was merely to “check it over,” and in the case of a story disclosing that an American naval officer was aboard the Catalina plane which helped lo cate the Bismarck he obviously did not even do that. Mr. Knox can cite ample precedents not only in the sporting and business worlds but in official circles even more august than his own. They are precedents that ought to be re-examined. Every journalist knows that there are many men who have important ideas but can’t write them. Such men are entitled to all the help they need, provided that the ideas remain their own and the public is not deceived. We are all more or less accus tomed to the spectacle of wise old owls singing like larks, jmd know just what it signifies. What seems to many of us questionable is the practice of retailing of ficial information to selected clients. If such infor mation is to be made public at all it ought to go freely to all who are interested. Facts about the Army, the Navy and foreign relations are either publishable or not publishable. If they are publishable they should not be subject to any private copyright. WANT ADS CALL OFFICE FOR RENT Over BUCK JONES Peebles Department Store. By FOR Wilburn & Satterfield. nil* tt i * i2-ii-i4 Fublic Hauling i OR FOR RENT: One desirable room, close in, steam heat, all TVcHlsfcr Service conveniences. Mrs. S. F. Nicks. tt HpMar M] PHIICO 3SOT -EXCLUSIVE Plnlco FM System. Double I. F. Xj Radio Circuit. Built-In Super Aerial System. 6 Electric Push-Buttons. Powerful Oval Shape Electro-Dynamic Speaker. Automatic Volume Coo trol. Many other features, all in a gorgeous Wal nut cabinet of new design. See it] % Hurry . . . our quantity is limited! HALL’S HARDWARE COURT STREET PERSON COUNTY TIMES ROXBORO, N. C. Sunday School LESSON From The Adult Student To speak of a “giving” Christ ian may be to use a rather awk ward term, but the term is jus tified because it is so exactly descriptive of what ought to be. Stewardship is giving. If you do no give, you are no proper stew ard. If you are a steward, giving will be the proof of it. This is what Paul is talking about. A selfish Christian is a complete contradiction. The heart of Christianity is love, and love gives. But it gives joyfully, cheerful ly, or, as Paul’s word really means, with abandon—“hilarious ly.” Morose giving is not Chris tian giving. Even “giving until it hurts" is a questionable per formance. It ought not to hurt us to give, unless the word "hurt” is sued in the sense of “sacrificial.” But the sacrifices of love are joyful sacrifices. Love “loves to give.” The very hurt becomes a joy. Giving brings its own reward. The Fundamental Gift Stewards of our lives—this is the basic fact. “The gift with out the giver is bare.” It is bet ter to give something than to give nothing, because the little gift may lead to the greater gift. Nevertheless, the Christian life is not mere giving; it is self-giv ing, self-dedication, self-surren der. There is a very real sense in which our Lord says to us; “It is not your gifts I want; it is you.” The Christian life is primarily a relation between the soul and Christ. We are in grave danger of forgetting that. It is so easy to externalize our religion; but when we externalize it, we de stroy its power. Has something happened deep down inside the man? Has he met Christ in the way? It is well for us to talk about the stewardship of our time, of our gifts, and of our money. But we ought to be clear on the quqestion of the funda-! mental stewardship. Hove you first given yourself? You lay a dollar upon the altar. Splendid! But have you ever laid yourself upon the altar? fI a TOMMY O*64*6/ ® £ Bi*m ft \ \ H WM daggone it! ive got>^ IlilL TO 6ET OUT OF BED JUST ■Li 0 SATISFY A WOMAN'S ! if WHAT ARE VOU WANNA JOIN .ME IN A NICE ; V* DOING UP AT THISY l*M SANDWICH MADE WITH m t HOI Ift TnMV\Y?/UUMgPV ]|||| ifmmfpS &*&**£/ jgj J|l| I Try Our Enriched Bread j ROXBORO BAKERY CO. I J The Consequential Gifts ■ “First to the Lord, and 'then j unto us.” What does Paul mean ; here by “us”? He would seem to mean “the Church.” The Mace donian Christians, he says, “pray ed us to receive the gift.” We must not force the interpretation, but we can at least say that these Chirstians were concerned to give to the Church because they had already given them selves to the Lord. It is Hardly possible to separate Christianity and the Church. It is still through the Church that Jesus Christ is making his most effective impact upon the world. The Christian is expected to give of himself to the Church, be cause the Church is the “body” of that Christ to whom the Christian claims to have given himself. The Christian is a stew ard and he will exercise his stewardship, in the first place, toward the Church. The Stewardship of the Church The Church, however, through which we exercise our steward ship, is itself a steward. The im plication of the giving Christian j is a giving Church. I give my self to the Church in order that the Church may give itself to the world. For according as my Church give itself to the world, I too give myself to the world. This does not mean that the Christian makes no impact upon the world except as he does it through his Church. He may give and serve and act in a hundred ways through other channels. But in the end he does all of this because of his love for Christ and because of his de votion to Christ’s Church. The Church giving itself for the world is an extension of the giving Christian, just as the giv ing Christian is an extension of the giving Church. In a word, all Christian stewardship is of a piece. It all springs from the same root. It is all inspired by the same purpose. It all con tributes to the same goal—the exaltation of Christ through the spread of his influence in the world. The Motive of Giving Paul would have the Corinthi an Christians follow the exam -1 pies of the Macedonian Chris tians. It is as if he said to the Corinthians, “This is how Chris tians ought to exercise their j stewardship.” SUNDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1941 But this example does not give him his final argument. He is not ; concerned just to promote church rivalry. He does not say to the wealthy Corinthians, “See if you cannot beat those poor Mace donians.” To base stewardship on personal, pride is hardly a Chirstian grace. No, Paul directs the attention of his readers to the one example that never palls. 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