FRIDAY. MAY 6. 1955 THE PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina Seven Assets Of Town Listed By Local Hotel Man Seven assets of Southern Pines as a tourist attraction were cited by George Pottle, co-owner and operator of the Hollywood Hotel, speaking to the Rotary Club last Friday on what visitors like and don’t like “as heard over the front desk” of the hotel. Mr. Pot tle was introduced by Garland Pierce at the regular luncheon meeting in the Country Club. The assets: climate, well-kept town, library, good shops, at tractive theatres, first class hos pitals and fine churches. The hotel man cited as .attrac tions the Golf Carrousel and the increasingly important hunting and steeplechasing activities. Southern Pines needs to strive for better golfing facilities, Mr. Pottle said and mentioned dam age to local courses due to drought. He thinks that special water rates should be offered to golf courses by the town. A larger town appropriation for advertising was recommended and more publicity matferial, in cluding pictures, should be sent out from Southern Pines, he be lieves. ' Mr. Pottle analyzed the hotel business in detail, telling how a dollar taken in by the local hotel is spent, leaving a seven per cent return on the investment. Prices for oats, barley and sor ghum grain probably will average below the 1954 levels this sum mer. Large acreages are in pros pect for these crops and supports have been reduced. SUNRISE THEATRE CONTINUOUS SHOWS DAILY OPENING AT 3:00 SATURDAY - 11:00 SUNDAY - 1:00 Friday, May 6—^Lasi Day Sterling Hayden and Alexis Smith —in- 1 ? 'THE ETERNAL SEA" Saturday - Double Feature Herbert Marshall -in- 'Gog The Killer' —also— Zachary Scott -in- 'Treasure of Ruby Hill' Wi SUNDAY. MONDAY. TUESDAY—May 8. 9. 10 SHOW STARTING AT 3:00. 5:10. 7:20. 9:30 2.0tA Ce/iAu/^-Fox Aas cteafec/ or Ar?o'/fo/i p/cTt/A'G t/jcrF cap/iz/'izs a// tAa ^h^ous pooue^ o^c/ /-/cAes oF tAs Aea/'t' oF Miss Mary Cook Dies At Pinebluff; Funeral Thursday Funeral services for Miss Marj Letitia Cook of Pinebluff were held Thursday morning at Em manuel Episcopal Church, con' ducted by the Rev. Charles V, Coveil. Miss Cook died Monday afternoon at her home in Pine bluff, after a long illness. Crema- ticn was to follow the services and the ashes will be buried in the family plot at Cambridge Mass. Born in Rhode Island in 1872 the daughter of Edward H. and Sarah Letitia Clark Cook, Miss Cook lived in her youth at several places in New England, including Cambridge, and was graduated from the Massachusetts Normal Art School, Boston, specializing in architecture and teaching art. She was director of art educa tion in the public schools of Mid dleboro. Mass., and in other towns, later going to Ohio as a firector of religious education for the Episcopal Diocese of Southern Ohio. Subsequently, Miss Cock did church parish work in Ken tucky, Detroit, Mich., and Park ersburg, W. Va., using her train ing in art and dramatics to stage cageants, conduct project in sum mer schools and increase the ef fectiveness of her church activi ties. She retired in 1932 to live at Cambridge, Mass., with her sister. Miss Olive Cook who taught ir the Cambridge public schools for about 35 vears. Together they went to Chapel Hill in 1940, vis iting in Pinebluff, and returned to Pinebluff to buy a home in 1941. Thereafter, they made their home in Pinebluff, gcing to Bre vard for a portion of each sum mer. Miss Marv Cook underwent a major operation 10 years ago and another oberation two years ago Her sister is the onlv close rel ative. A cousin. Miss Florence M.i Cook of Framinghami Center Mass., came to Pinebluff this week and attended the funeral. PAGE SEVENTEEN »fir AIKf S CAROLINA A story filled with human in terest, intrigue and suspense, set against highly impressive, eye filling backgrounds in VistaVi- ,sion and Technicolor, with James Cagney in the kind of role that established him as an .all-time favorite is in “Run For Cover,” at the Carolina this Thursday, Fri day and Saturday, May 5-6-7 at 8:15 p. m., with a Saturday mati nee at 3. Periodically, the motion picture screeen is made the beneficiary of a feature which, because of its subject miatter, locale, action and suspense, must be classed as a Western; but which so transcends the average entry in that category even many of the so-called su oers—that its dramatic qualities make it a film apart, and such is the case with “Run For Cover.” Cagney is ably supported by a superb cast including -Viveca Lindfors, John Derek, Jean Her- sholt. Grant Withers and Jack Lam.bery. Decked out in CinemaScope and Eastman Color with Stereo phonic Sound and featuring some of the brightest talent on the jvj. j minister of rj.ivr I1-.+ “Wit tviq rr,York Avenue Church in Washington, D. C., where eight presidents, including Abraham production, “Hit The Deck” wiU have audiences leaving the thea tre humming and delighted with the dancing of Ann MiUer, who stops the show with her interpre tation of a red-hot production splash called “Lady from Bayou.” SUNRISE The management of the Sunrise Theatre has announced the book ing of “A Man Called Peter,” a Twentieth Century-Fox Cinema scope production in De Luxe col or, for presentation starting Sun day. This picturization of Cath erine Marshall’s biographical novel, which has been on the best-seller list since it was first published in 1951, has been hailed as one of the most unusual pic tures to come out of Hollywood in a long time.- Richard Todd and Jean Peters are the stars in this story of Peter Marshall, the Scottish immigrant who came to America, dug ditch es, stoked furnaces, corrected proofs on a Southern newspaper, was staked to $50 a month by his Bible class for his first two years at Columbia Theological Semin ary at Decatur, Ga., preached in Covington, Atlanta and within 10 years of his arrival in the United States became the minister of the DRIVE CAREFULLY — SAVE A LIFE! Bennell & Penna. .^ve. Telephone 2-3211 FOR GRADUATES Books of Permanent Value Bible - Dictionary - Atlas Thesaurus Classics of Literature Also books on youth’s problems—THE POWER OF POS ITIVE THINKING FOR YOUNG PEOPLE by Norman Vincent Peale; BE YOURSELF by Anne Heywood; FIRE ON A DRUMHEAD, a year of sermons for boys and girls by Carl S. Weist. G-M lot, “Hit The Deck’’ coming to the Carolina Sunday through Thursday, (five days) May 8-12 with three Sunday shows at 3, ’ and 9 p. m., is a happy musical show designed to cure the blues in a straight forward fashion with girls and songs. The girls are Jane PC'well, Ann Miller and Debbie Reynolds and the boys are Tony Martin, Vic Damone and Russ Tamblyn, and the songs are some of the greatest ever written for the musical comedy stage by Vin- vent Youmans and assorted lyri cists such as Leo Robin, Clifford Grey and Irving Caesar, including Lincoln, worshipped. Peter Marshall, known as “the charming young Scot with’the silver tongue,” wound up the elected chaplain of the U. S. Sen ate and was known as ‘"The con science of the Senate.” Twentieth Century-Fox mount ed this tender love story with its Horatio Alger touches with every possible advantage in tal ent and technique. Henry Koster directed from a script by the Academy Award winning writer. such favorites , as “Hallelujah”) Griffin, under the aegis “Why Oh Why,” “Sometimes I’m | Samuel G. Engel. In Happy,” “More Than You Know” CAROLINA THEATRE SOUTHERN PINES YOUR INTIMATE THEATRE James Cagney, Viveca Lindfors, John Derek In the Vista Vision-Technicolor Production, “RUN FOR COVER” Thur., Friday, Saturday*, May 5-6-7—8:15 p.m. Matinee Saturday at 3:00 U. S', milk production this year is expected to be near the 1954 total of 124 billion pounds if weather is normal. and “Lady From The Bayou.” Lending support to the stars are (charmin’) Kay Armen, as Da- mcne’s widowed mother, J. Car rcl Nash, her aging suitor; Walter Pidgeon, the admiral who learns about life from his children, and Gepe Raymond, doing a comic turn as Miss Powell’s designing host-in-the-pent-house. Wrapped up in a tasteful Joe Pasternak the stellar cast are Marjorie Pambeau and Jill Esmond. >1 G&W Private Stock Straight BOURBON Whiskey 90 PROOF ' 4/5 QT. PINT ABERDEEN T HE A T R E WIDE Screen "Pictures As They Should Be Seen" Friday Night 7:15 & 9:15 "Underwater" Jane Russell - Richard Egan Saturday - Double Feature Continuous from 3:00 'Outlaws of the Panhandle" Charles Starrett —also— Robert C. Ruark's "Africa Adventure" Mon. & Tue. Night 7:15 & 9:15 'Seven Angry Men" Raymond Massey Jeffrey Hunter Wednesday Night 7:15 & 9:00 "Khyber Patrol" Richard Egan .■ Dawn Adams Thur. & Fri. Night 7:15 & 9:15 "The Eternal Sea" sterling Hayden - Alexis Smith VIC DAM0NE-6ENE RAYMOND ANN MIUER-RUSS TAMBLYN KAY.ARMEN • 1. CARROL NAISH • RICHARD ANDERSON • JANE DANWELL __________ AN M-G-M nCTUIIt ■ Sunday thru Thursday (5 days) May 8-12 Three Shows Sunday at 3:00, 7:00 & 9:00 Week Nights at 8:15. Matinee Wednes. at 3:00 S YEARS OLD [^GOODERHAM & WORTS, LTD., PEORIA, ILLINOIsl From the Studioe of 20lh CENTURY-POX QINema! RICHARD TODD-JEAN PETERS itirrifts Produced by Directed by Screen Ptay by SAMUEL G. ENGEL - HENRY KOSTER • ELEANORE GRIFFIN Wednes. — Double Feature Bill Elliott —in— "DIAL RED O" —also— Allan Lane —in— "Silver City Kid" Thurs. & Fri., May 12-13 Raymond Massey and Debra Paget —in— "SEVEN ANGRY MEN" Wsiorv'stnorf THE COTSWOMANI By INGLIS FLETCHER Author of Sleigh’s Eden Here is the romantic North Carolina story of the "savior of the Stuarts.” Here Flora MacDonald re-enacts her r61e in a fascinat ing and almost forgotten chapter of our revolution. For the first time an historical figure is the heroine of an Inglis Fletcher novel •—her finest novel. 53,95 HAYES BOOK SHOP STARVIEW Drive-In Theatre Between So. Pines-Aberdeen INDIVIDUAL SPEAKERS Friday. Saturday, May 6-7 "The Lusty Men" Susan Hayward Robert Mifehum Sunday. Monday, May 9-9 "Behave Yourself" Farley Granger Shelley Winters Tuesday, Wednes., May 10-11 "Scudda Hoo - Scudda Hay" June Haver - Lon McCallister Thursday, May 12 'Duffy of San Quenton' Louis Hayward - Joanne Dru Friday, Saturday, May 13-14 "The Big Sky" Kirk Douglas TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY SHOW STARTS AT 7:00 P.M. Children under 12 in cars Free KENTUCKY WHISKEY-A BLEND u raooF. tin GiHjii Honjui sunns, scheniev oist, ms.. nuiiKion,».