^ THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1956
THE PILOT—Souihern Pines, North Carolina
i;
PINEHURST NEWS
By MARY EVELYN de NISSOFF
Supply Ministers
During the month of August
when the Rev. Roscoe L. Prince
will be on vacation, supply min
isters to the Community Church
will include Dr. Leslie Bullock,
professor of Bible at Flora Mac
donald College, who will be here
this coming Sunday, August 5;
Mr. Neill Bain of Fayetteville
will be the guest preacher on the
following Sunday; the President
of Presbyterian Junior college.
Dr. Louis C. LaMotte, will preach
on August 19; and on August 26
the guest will be the Rev. R. R.
Gammon, minister of the First
Presbyterian church of Columbia,
Tenn. '
Travelers
Miss Ann Brechin leaves here
Saturday for New York City and
will sail Wednesday aboard the
Oueen Mary for an extensive tour
of Europe including visits to Eng
land, Holland, Belgium, Ger
many, Switzerland, Austria, Italy
and France in her itinerary. She
returns home in mid-September
aboard the Queen Elizabeth.
Former Pinehurst residents Mr.
and Mrs. C. B. S. Marr leave
their Long Island home this week
for Montreal and will board the
Empress of Scotland for a six
weeks’ visit in the British Isles.
Lloyd Smith is due to fly Wed
nesday to San Francisco, Calif.,
where he will spend some time
with his daughter and her hus
band.
Dr. J. CL Grier, Jr., returns to
morrow from a flying trip to
Daytona, Fla., where he address
ed the Southern Regional Educa
tional Conference.
George Maurice and his daugh
ter, Miss Ellen Maurice, will
leave Sunday for a stay in Utica,
N. Y.
Entertained On Birthday
Mrs. P. S. P. Randolph was
hostess Monday at a bridge-can
asta party at her home honoring
Mrs. W. Vivian Slocock on her
birthday.
Brief Itention
Mrs. Mildred Miller left Wed
nesday for a six weeks’ vacation
in the New England states, and
will visit in Hartford, Conn.,
Springfield, Mass., and Buzzards
Bay on Cane Cod.
Mrs. John von Schlegell is
planning a trip to New York and
Connecticut to visit friends, and
will leave here on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Norwood John
ston returned to their home. Cot
ton Cottage, on Monday after a
visit in Cleveland, Ohio.
Miss Marjorie Robinson of New
York City is the house guest of
Mrs. Edward C. Conlin.
Miss Callie Battley is back at
her a,partment after a visit in
Nantucket, Mass., with the Rev.
and Mrs. A. W. Craig and their
small son, Christopher.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred N. Derouin
go tomorrow to Blowing Rock
where they will spend three
weeks at Mayview Manor.
Mrs. Robert Gernold and her
son Keith and daughter. Susan,
are back at Cotton Cottage after
a week’s stay at the Ocean Forest
Hotel in Myrtle Beach, S. C.
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Snow, Bill
and Susan Snow, have moved to
High Point where they will take
up residence.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W.
Swoope and their son. Tommy,
spent last weekend at Asheville
and Fontana Dam,
Mrs. Donald Miller returns
home tomorrow after spending a
week in Saratoga, N. Y., with Mr.
Miller. Their son, Donald, Jr.,
who has been with his father for
several weeks, will accompany
Mrs. Miller home.
Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Biddle, II,
left today for Lake Placid. N. Y..
where they will visit Mr. and
Mrs. Robert McMath for a week.
Mrs. J. C. Grier, Jr., and her
daughter, Betsy, are spending
this week with relatives in Char
lotte.
Mrs. E. G. Fitzgerald is spend
ing some time in Bethlehem, N.
H.
fifrvrKfs
CAKOLINA
Continuing through this Thurs-
day-Saturday at the Carolina
Theatre is the special documen
tary production “The Animal
World’’ in Technicolor, with the
addition of another special sub
ject, “Down Eiberty Road,” in
Technicolor
Page NINE
Industrial Relations Program Has
Ten Cardinal Points, Speaker Says
The functions and purposes off'
an Industrial Relations depart
PRISE
THEATRE
Continuous Shows Daily
SOUTHERN PINES
Ph. 2-4013
AIR CONDITIONED
For Cool Comfort
Thursday & Friday, Aug. 2-3
Dana Andrews and
Rhonda Fleming
—in—
'While The City Sleeps'
Cartoon
Shows at 3:15 - 5:12 - 7:09 - 9:05
Sat., Aug. 4—Double Feature
Bill Williams in
"Wild Dakotas"
—also—
Robert Mitchum in
"Second Chance"
Plus cartoon
Continuous shows beginning
.at 11:00
Sunday & Monday, Aug. 5-6
Robert Taylor, Richard Todd
—in—
"D-Day the Sixth
Of June"
Latest World News
Shows Sunday at 1:15 - 3:14
5:13 - 7:12 - 9:11
Mon. at 3:14 and continuous
Tuesday, August 7
William Campbell and
Mamie Van Doren
—in—
"Running Wild"
Plus cartoon and comedy
Shows at 3:15 - 5:11 - 7:07 - 9:03
Wed.. Aug. 8—Double Feature
Roy Rogers in
"Hands Across
The Border"
—also—
Glenn Ford in
"Appointment
In Honduras"
Plus cartoon
Shows at 3:00 - 5:46 - 8:32
Coming next Thursday & Fri.
Hugh Marlowe
"Earth vs. The
Flying Saucers"
—also—
Don Megowan
"The Werewolf"
Maneuvers Set At
Bragg, Mackall
By 82nd Airborne
Preparations are underway for
Exercise Pinecone, a local field
exercise to take place at Fort
Bragg and Camp Mackall, August
18-23. More than 10,000 men will
participate in the exercise, ap
proximately 6,000 coming from
the 82nd Airborne Division at
Fort Bragg.
Two hundred and sixteen
Army and Air Force aircraft will
be employed in the exeVcise.
Air Force and Air Force Re
serve units- from stations
throughout the eastern and mid-
western sectors of the nation will
form the combat airlift to trans
port troops from takeoff sites to
Fort Bragg’s drop zones during
actual exercise play.
Prior to the start of Pinecone,
personnel will move by plane and
truck to numerous airfields with
in two hundred miles of Fort
Bragg. On the 22nd of August
they will be flown back to Fort
Bragg, jumping in on all the drop
zones and at Camp Mackall dur
ing the actual tactical phase of
the exercise.
Coming Sunday through
Thursday (five days) August 5-9,
with three Sunday shows at 3,
and 9 is that exciting picture that
has just set New York agog,
“Somebody Up There Likes Me,”
an immense entertainment!
Boasting a great new star, Paul
Newman, the film' biography of
boxer Rocky Graziano is a warm,
honest and compelling motion
picture. Graced with a fresh and
appealing script and exciting per
formance right down the line, the
film is entertainment at its best.
This turbulent, exciting, yet in
spiring and heart-warming drama
of Rocky Graziano’s career from
his boyhood as an East Side
hoodlum to middleweight cham
pion of the world, is terrific en
tertainment.
Paul Newman scores an acting
triumph as the rebellious Rocky,
and there are fine characteriza
tions by Pier Angeli, Everett
Sloane, Eileen Hackert, and other
members of the exceptional cast.
■While boxing occupies a key
position in any account of Grazi
ano’s life, this is by no means a
prize-fight picture, but rather the
story of a man’s redemption
through a touching love story.
The drama is there to back up
the adjectives.
Newman’s remarkable portray
al of the nervous, inarticulate de
linquent will give his screen ca
reer a tremendous boost. Miss
Angeli is most appealing as his
wife and Eileen Heckart’s pa
thetic mother rates an Academy
Award nomination.
Farm production is expected to
drop from the record level of
1955 on the basis of conditions
at mid,-yeai\ according to the
Agricultural Marketing Service,
USDA.
ABERDEEN
THEATRE
WIDE Screen
"Pictures As They Should
Be Seen"
Fri., Aug. 2 Night 7:15 & 9:15
"Rock Around
The Clock"
Bill Haley and His Comets
The Platters Tony Martinez
Saturday — Matinee- 3:00
. Night 7:00 & 9:00
"The Denver And
Rio Grande"
Edmond O'Brien, Laura Elliot
Cartoons Serial
Monday & Tuesday. Aug. 6-7
Night 7:15 & 9:15
"HOT BLOOD"
Jane Russell, Cornel Wilde
Cinemascope Color
Wed., Aug. 8 Night 7:lS 8: 9:00
"The Creature Walks
Among Us"
Jeff Morrow Reason
This, picture is recommended
for weak hearts
Thursday & Friday, Aug. 9-10
Night 7:15 & 9:15
;RUNNING WILD"
William Campbell
Mamie Van Doren
SUNRISE
Never was the march of events
more desperate, the need for un
derstanding love more precious to
a pair of young lovers than in
those bittersweet days prior to
“D-Day,” the sixth of June.”
Jugt such a universal love story
is written , in heart’s blood in
Twentieth Century-Fox’s poignant
drama which will open Sunday at
the Sunrise Theatre. The movie
stars Robert Taylor, Richard
Todd, Dana Wynter and Edmond
O’Brien.
Taylor and the lovely English
actress, Dana Wyntet, symbolize
the romantics of this war in the
same expression as Hemingway’s
“Farewell to Arms” spoke about
love and war to an earlier gener
ation. The film dramatizes Lionel
Shapiro’s best-selling novel of the
tender romance between a beauti
ful English girl, who waves her
British lover off to World War 2,
j and a dashing American officer
I who already has a wife in the
United States. When the British
er returns, she is torn between a
love and duty that is^only resolved
on a flaming jaeacW in Normandy
during the first hours of the sixth
of June, 1944,
English compatriot of Miss
Wynter, Richard Todd, who scored
so memorably in “A Man Called
Peter,” portrays the shy but wor
shipful suitor who shines as a
leader among men on the battle
field. The other starring assign
ment in the skillful hands of Ed
mond O’Brien reveals with glar
ing honesty the behavior of a
rank-happy American officer
whose whims reflect with heavy
consequence upon Taylor and in
turn, his romance with the lovelv
Dana.
ment in a large corporation were
outlined to members of the Sand
hills kiwanis Club on Wednesday
by Frank R. Gramelsbach. of
Pinehurst, director of that divi
sion of the Amerotron Corpora
tion. Its efforts can spell the dif
ference between the success or
failure of a concern, he said.
It must function with two card
inal points in mind: full accept
ance of the dignity of individuals,
and the concept of the Golden
Rule.
It is a ten-point program, and
Mr. Gramelsbach outlined these
points as:
1. Public relations — the public
must be kept informed about the
organization. 2. Labor relations,
the maintenance of harmony be
tween management and its em
ployes. 3. Employment, the intel
ligent recruiting for personnel
and the fitting of the employe
into the job he can best perform.
4. Wages and salaries, the fair
setting of rates for various
groups. 5. Training program. Job
training eliminates much discon
tent, and helps the employe in
crease his earnings. 6. Safety, the
removal of job hazards. 7. Health
and medical, involving company-
financed programs for care, hos
pitalization and insurance. 8.. In
dustrial production standards
must be maintained. 9. Research,
seeking to eliminate problems be
tween management and labor,
and labor turnover, and 10, Com
munications, the dissemination of
information throughout a plant
that each department may know
what the other is doing, to avoid
misunderstandings.
“The Industrial Relations di
rection is primarily concerned
with maintenance of an efficient
working organization, that indus
trial operations may be made
profitable,” Mr. Gramelsbach
said. “Such a department is be
coming a powerful force in in
dustry, and can develop a climate
of better relationships all along
the line.”
Rites Held Today
For Mrs. MeMillan
Mrs. Susan Delano McMillan,
81, of Southern Pines^ died Mon
day at Pinehurst Convalescent
Home. Funeral services are being
held today (Thursday) in Boston.
Surviving are her husband,
John W. McMillan of Southern
Pines, and one brother. Judge
Raymond P. Delano of Boston.
Formerly residents of Pine-
bluff, Mr. and Mrs. McMillan
moved to Southern Pines a few
years ago.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Public notice is hereby given
that the Town of Southern Pines,
Office of the City Manager, will
receive bids up to twelve noon
August 9, 1956, for approximate
ly 700 feet of 8 inch cast iron
water pipe. For specifications
contact undersigned. The Town
of Southern Pines through its
City Manager reserves the right
to reject any and all bids.
LOUIS SCHEIPERS, JR.’
City Clerk
aug 2
Coconu-f Isle
SUNDAE
Crinkly-chawT coconut . , . cmooth
DoiiT Quoon goodnoasl What a
promiao it holds I At tho pUaauro polls
it's tho Coconut Islo by a landslidol
©1954, NATfONAL DAIRY QUEEN DEVELOPMENT CO.
nniRV QUEEN
U.S. 1 between Southern Pines
and Aberdeen
PILOT ADVERTISING PAYS
STARVTEW
Drive-In Theatre
Between So. Pines-Aberdeen
INDIVIDUAL SPEAKERS
Friday, Saturday, August 3-4
"River of No Return*'
(Technicolor)
Robert Mitchum
Marilyn Monroe
Sunday, Monday, August 5-6
"Daddy Long Legs"
(Technicolor)
Fred Astaire
Tuesday, Wednesday, Aug. 7-8
"Love Is A Many
Splendored Thing"
(Technicolor)
William Holden, Jennifer Jones
Thursday, August 9
"The Lasl Frontier"
(Technicolor)
Victor Mature
Friday, Saturday, August 10-11
"Blood Alley"
(Technicolor)
John Wayne, Lauren Bacall
TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY
SHOW STARTS AT 7:00 P.M.
Children under 12 in cars Free
BARGAIN DAY CONTINUES
Children’s DRESSES, $3.98 to $8.98, now $2.98 to $4.98
Ladies’ DRESSES, $4.98 to $10.98, now $3.98 to $5.98
SEE OUR 11.00 BARGAIN TABLE
New Fall Shades in Dyed to Match SKIRTS and SWEATERS
3 piece $18.95
Convenient lay-away
Open all summer
Wellesley Bldg.
Pinehurst, N. C.
CAKCLINA
THEATRE
Southern Pines
AIR-CONDITIONED
The Special Documentary Production,
"THE ANIMAL WORLD"
(In Technicolor)
Also—The Special Short Subject,
"DOWN LIBERTY ROAD"
(In Technicolor)
THURSDAY - SATURDAY—8:15 P. M. Mat. Sat. at
3:00
THE THRrLLING LIFE-INSPIRED STORY
IS ON THE SCREEN !
there likes me
Scarring New Star
Paul Newman
Pier Angeli
Aa M-CM Picture
SUNDAY-THURSDAY (5 Days) August 5-9
3 Sunday Shows at 3:00 - 7:00 - 9:00 P. M.
Week Nights at 8:15 Mat. Wed. at 3:00
sew-easy
way to
sendfliein
Nice COTTONS, 25c and 39c yard.
Prints and solids, including Dan
Rivers.
CORDUROY—Plain, 98c yard.
Printed, 40 in. wide, $1.29 yard.
nylons, beautiful patterns, 69c yd.
MEXICAN PRINTED BORDERED
MATERIAL FOR SKIRTS
69c yard.
NEW FALL
GOODS
ARRIVING DAILY
Take your back-to-school
sewing bee now, and
take advantage of
great savings.
COME IN AND
BROWSE AROUND
AND SAY HELLO
TO US.
Mill Outlet Store
Penn. Ave.—Across from A&P
SOUTHERN PINES