THURSDAY. MAY 24. 1956 THE PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina Funeral Services For Mr. Shaw Held At Union Church William A. Shaw, 54, died Sun day at Moore County Hospital fol lowing a lingering illness. Funeral services were held Wednesday morning at Union Presbyterian Church, between' Vass and Carthage, conducted by the Rev. L. B. McKeithen, Jr., as sisted by the Rev. C. K. Taffe, a former pastor. Burial was in the church cemetery. Mr. Shaw was born at Cameron, son of Angus and Celia McDonald Shaw. Surviving are his wife, the for mer Alma Frye of Moore County; three daughters, Mrs. Walter Holt of Sanford and Mrs. Ted Klingen- schmidt and Miss Rebecca Shaw of Southern Pines; one son, James GOLF NEWS AND COMMENTS At Southern Pines Country Club By DAVE WAGENVOORD See Grover Jack Garty hits golf balls too hard. Garty, who. recently gave up golfing at the country club due to the “excessive timber” has been banned at a local driving range from hitting wood shots of any kind unless he brings his own clubs. A.mbition Herrmann Grover has flung G. Shaw, Wichita, Kansas; his mother, Mrs. Celia Shaw, Cam eron RFD; eight grandchildren, two sisters and two brothers. Mr. and Mrs. Shaw formerly re sided near Cameron, but in recent years had made their home with their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Klingenschmidt on Midland Road, Southern Pines. G&W STAR 90'IVoof GsW SEVEN STAli 90 PROOF «3 86 BLENDED WHISKEY • 37^% STRAIGHT WHISKEY 6 YEARS OR MORE OLD • GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS • GOODERHAM & WORTS LIMITED, PEORIA, ILLINOIS CAROLINA THEATRE Southern Pines Carol Ormont, Jody Lawrence. Tom Tryon "THE SCARLET- HOUR" (VislaVision) Thurs.-Satur.—8j15 P.M. MAT. SAT. AT 3:00 g6?5, IfiiNOB ' i# w . in SUNDAY - WEDNESDAY—MAY 27-30 3 Shows Sunday - 3:00 - 7:00 - 9:00 P. M. Week Nights at 8:15 Mat. Wed. at 3:00 Walter Pidgeon. Anne Francis, Leslie Nielson— "FORBIDDEN PLANET" (CinemaScope-Color) STARTING THURSDAY NIGHT, MAY 31—8:15 away his amateur standing. Gro ver is now a professional golfer working at Shaw Air Base in Sumter, S. C. “It all happened so fast,” said Charlie Clapp, of WEEB, “Grover shot a pair of 72’s at the club and got so carried away that he de cided to make, golf a career.' Herrmann spent part of his first week at the base driving balls down the 6,000 foot runway of the airfield trying to make good his lifelong ambition of “hitting oftie aanile^’ According to word re ceived at this writing he still has not done it and is waiting for what he termed “the correct at mospheric conditions.” Maples Back Pro Gene Maples returned from Camp LeJeune for a few days and easily defeated one of the clubs fworer tall golfers who wished to remain anonymous. Andy Page also played with Maples and scored a remarkable 70 despite a dislocated shoulder which kept drawing up near the end of the round. First Time Frank Buchan scored a two on the 445 yard sixth hole. It was the first eagle ever made on the tough par four. He hit the record setting shot with a two iron and the ball traveled more than 200 yards before settling into the hole. Caddies Tournament In the annual caddies tourna ment. George Turner scored a fine 78 on his second round. His first round score was not disclos ed. More than 100 caddies and spectators turned out for the event. Exit Quick Otis Quick of Milo, Maine, has temporarily disappeared from the local scene. He was last seen on the fourth tee of the Sanford golf and country club. However it’s expected he will return soon to pick up the manuscripts for his new book which are still with Roy Grinnell. Page SEVENTEEN alii i '.fs , ■si nirviKis CAROLINA Coming — Thursday through Saturday at the Carolina Theatre, is “The Scarlet Hour,” in Vista- Vision, featuring the new stars of the screen, Carol Ohmart, Tom Tryon, Jody Lawrence and James Gregory. ii* WILLIAM B. WARNER Farm real estate values in No vember, 1955, averaged five per cent higher than a year earlier. Duke Scholarship Won By Graduate Of Local School William B. Warner of Southern Pines has been named one of five outstanding college students in the Carolinas to win regional scholarships to the Duke University Law School. The awards, worth $1,000 each per year, are renewable for the succeeding two years of study if winners maintain high academic marks. Warner, son of Mrs. Ruth War ner Swisher and the late William B. Warner, is a graduate of South ern Pines High School. He took his B.A. at Harvard in 1952 and will receive his Master of Busi ness Administration this year. In tests across the South. “FI” double cross hybrid new corn, the kind that the farmer buys from the seedsman, outyielded second year (crib corn) by an average of 33 per cent. STARVIEW Drive-In Theatre Between So. Pines-Aberdeen INDIVIDUAL SPEAKERS Figiday, Saturday, May 25-26 "Smoke Signal" (Technicolor) Dana Andrews Sunday, Monday, May 27-28 "The Eternal Sea" sterling Hayden, Alexis Smith Tuesday, Wednes., May 29-30 "Silver Lode" (In color) John Payne, Lizabeth Scott Thursday, May 31 'Prisoner of War' Ronald Reagan Friday, Saturday, June 1-2 "Hangman's Knot" (Technicolor) Randolph Scott, Donna Reed TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY SHOW STARTS AT 7:00 P.M. Children under 12 in cars Free Cash receipts from farm mar ketings in North Carolina amounted to $936,830,000 during the calendar year of 1955 and ex ceeded similar receipts for 1954 by about one per cent. The big entertainment news Sunday through Wednesday, May 27-30, at the Carolina, is the ■movie debut of television comic George Gobel in “The Birds and the Bees.” Lonesome George is rated a very funny man in the medium of video, hence his first opportunity to cavort in the vast er reaches of the VistaVision screen is an eagerly awaited event. A star-studded cas‘t, lavish Technicolor production, and two of the year’s best tunes are the solid accompaniment to GobeTs unique, laugh-provoking talents. Heading the parade of star talent are Mitzi Gaynor, David Niven, Reginald Gardner and Fred Clark with Harry Bellaver and Hans Conried featured. GobeTs TV fans who come to see his first cinema outing will also be delighted to see the screen’s fastest-developing musi cal star, Mitzi Gaynor, sing, dance and clown her way all over this lavishly mounted, broadly played comedy from Paramount. ■■‘The Birds and the Bees” is a new adaptation of “The Lady Eve” whih was such a riot of fun with Barbara Stanwyck and Hen ry Fonda back in 1941. Starting 'Thursday night. May 31, is “Forbidden Planet” in Cin emascope ,and Eastman Color, starring Walter Pidgeon, Anne Francis, Leslie Nielsen and War ren Stevens. SUNRISE Columbia Pictures’ “Jubal,” the story of a drifter to whom trouble always came in the shape of a woman, is due soon at the Sunrise Theatre. “Jubal” stars Glenn Ford, famed for his work in “The Blackboard Jungle,” Ernest Borg- nine, voted “best actor” by the New York Critics for his per formance in “Marty,” and Rod Steiger, who won an Academy Award nomination for “On the Wlaterfront.” “Jubal” introduces two pro vocative newcomers, Valerie French and Felicia Farr. Filmed in Cinemascope and color by Technicolor, the emotion-power ed drama features Basil Ruys- dael and Noah Beery, Jr. Based on a novel by Paul I. Wellman, ‘'Jubal” was written for the screen by Russell S. Hughes and Delmer Daves; the latter also directed. William Fadi- man produced for Columbia. lot conveyed to the said Town of Southern Pines by U. L. Spence and Mary Worthy Spence, his wife by deed dat ed June 21, 1945, and record ed in the office of the Register of Deeds of Moore County in Book of Deeds No. 203, at page 316. This sale shall remain open for ten days following the date of sale as set forth above, pending any increase or upset bids, and said sale shall be subject to approval and confirmation by the Town Council of the Town of Southern Pines. This 18th day of May, 1956. LOUIS SCHEIPERS, JR., Clerk, Town of Southern m2431j714c Pines % iiiii m m CAROUSEL illi CINEMASCOPE 55—Twentieth Century-Fox, which three years ago introduced the revolu tionary cinemascope, has again developed a new photographic technique called Cinema scope 55. It is being unveiled to the public in the motion picture “CAROUSEL” showing Sunday and Monday, May 27-28 at the Sunrise Theatre. The above photograph shows the greater efficiency of •55mm photography. It is acknowledged that 55mm is deeper, richer and clearer and carries four times more photographic information. (1) The images are radi antly bright and sharp and there is a greater feeling of audience participation than anything seen so far. (2) The backgrounds are as clearly in focus as the foregrounds. (3) The illusion of depth is greater and (4) There is no distortion. Every seat in the theatre becomes a per fect seat. Legal Notices NOTICE OF SALE OF SURPLUS REAL ESTATE BY TOWN OF SOUTHERN PINES Under and by virtue of the au thority contained in General Stat utes of North Carolina 160-59, and pursuant to resolution adopted by the Town Council of the Town of Southern Pines in regular session assembled on the 8th day of May,: 1956, by which the property here inafter described was declared to be no longer needed for any pub lic purposes and that it would be in the best interest of the Town of Southern Pines that said property be sold and once again placed upon the tax rolls of the town, notice is hereby given that the undersigned Clerk of the Town of Southern Pines will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the front door of the Town Office in th^ Town of Southern Pines, Moore County, North Carolina, at 12:00 o’clock noon, on the 19th day of June, 1956, the property to be sold being in the Town of Southern Pines, County of Moore, McNeills Town ship, and more particularly de scribed as follows: Being the lot designated, in the plan of said town as num ber One (1) in Square or Block Q and Nine (9) on a Map entitled “A Map of Southhern Pines, Moore County, North Carolina,” said lot fronting on Iowa Avenue and Hale Street and being the ABERDEEN THEATRE WIDE Screen "Pictures As They Should Be Seen" Fri„ May 25 Night 7:15 & 9:15 "The Last Hunt" Stewart Granger, Debra Paget Cinemascope Color Satur., Continuous from 3:00 "Man From Bitter Ridge" Lex Barker. Stephen McNally Cartoon Serial Monday & iHiesday, May 28-29 Night 7:15 & 9:15 "The World In My Corner" Audle Murphy, Barbara Rush Ne-ws CFirtoon Wed.. May 30 Night 7:15 & 9:15 "Garden of Evil" Gary Cooper. Richard Widmark Cinemascope Color Thursday & Friday, Ma'y 31- June 1—Night 7:15 8c 9:15 "The Bottom Of The Bottle" Van Johnson, Joseph Colten Cinemascope Color . Kentucky Straight Bourbon YEARS OLD Whiskey ilOM jJOW m 4/5 QUART W 86 PROOF J.T.S. BROWN’S SON CO. EARLY TIMES, KY. SUNRISE THEATRE CONTINUOUS SHOWS DAILY THURSDAY & FRIDAY—MAY 24-25 fL ANGELS WITH STEELTALONS! Losfy personal story of | the BAIL-OUT- FOR t. BATTLE GUYS! f i '' yy^< TOM TRYON JAN MERLIN • ALVY MOORE MARTIN MILNER • JACQUELINE BEER AN ALLIED ARTISTS PICTURE Cartoon and Comedy Shows at 3:20 - 5:16 - 7:10 and 9:01 FRIDAY NIGHT—LATE SHOW—10:45 Nat "King" Cole - Lionel Hampton - Joe Turner Dinah Washington - Ruth Brown Larry Darnell - The Clovers - Duke Ellington “ROCK ’N ROLL REVUE” SATURDAY, MAY 26 — Double Feature Wayne Morris Spencer Tracy 'Cross Channel" "Broken Lance' Cartoon Continuous Shows starting at 11:15 SUNDAY-MONDAY—MAY 27-28 20th Century-Fox presents CAROUSEL COLOR by DE LUXE --. GORDON MacRAE • SHIRLEY JONES Directed by HENRY KING In tin Wonder of STEREOPHONIC SOUND THE FIRST ;M0TI0N PICTURE IN THE NEW ’ MOHE THAN YOUR EYES HAVE EVER SEEN Shows starting at 1:15 - 3:50 - 6:25 - 9:00—Sun. - Mon. TUESDAY. MAY 29—ONLY THE Man Who Nevei WA$4 CLIFTON GLORIA WEBB ■ GRAHAME CINEIVIaScOPE" oftuxE*’'' Released by 20th Century-Fox FOR 10 YEARS THE BEST GUARDED SECRET! THE INCREDIBLE BUT TRUE STORY OF THE CABAL THAT PERPETRATED THE GREATEST DECEPTION IN THE ANNALS OF NAVAL ESPIONAGE! Shows starting at 3:15 - 5:11 - 7:07 - 9:03 WEDNESDAY, MAY 30 — Double Feature EVERY MAN \ WAS HER TARGET! PEGGY WUIW MjtiHE CASTLE-TALMAN-WINDSOR DALE ROBERTSON ^ DEBRA PAGET M THOMAS GOMEZ , rrinf by TECHNICOLOR Hilaied b; 20tb Century-Fo J Cartoon CONTINUOUS SHOWS STARTING AT 3:00 COMING NEXT THURSDAY & FRIDAY ™ RETURN OF JACK SLADE’