Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Oct. 29, 1953, edition 1 / Page 14
Part of The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Bftwis NIW YJIB Over at the United Nations, 1 hau luncn u ,ui aonit juuet, ^mai puuiisnei or me Bowman vine uan auian statesman, who is aiso an ooserver wnn canaua s ueiegation to tne UN. ivext 10 me moueru aim ornaie surroundings of tne organ ization, 1 was impressed by ine large nunioer oi visitors who con stantly now tnrougn tne reciiy beautnul and uniijue structures. Neeing tne u.\ is sometmng every out-oi-town visitor snouid uo, 1 ni more tnan ever convinced. The hour spent for a donar with friend ly giri guiaes is wortn it. Mr. James pointed out to me tne new committee rooms and press facili ties. Alter the good lood and scen ery, I was let down by seeing an unattractive and unnecessary nude statue in the main lobby. But on the whole what you see in the UN is more pleasant than much you hear about the organization. 3 An alert and outstanding pub lisher of this column called ?in attention to what happened to him when he tried to gel train reserv ations out of New York during a busy season. He found that some of those he dealt with expected tips. So 1 took the matter up with three representative railroads. Promptly came response and ac tion from the Pennsylvania Rail road's President Walter S. Frank lin. "We want to discourage and do all we can to break up any such practice" he told me. In a conference with G. H. Brown, Jr., Assistant General Passenger Agent, I was further told, "There is no need to pay beyond established tariff rates for space on trains." F. H. Baird, Assistant Vice Presi dent of the New York Central Railroad stated, that if anyone who was faced with any apparent de mand for tips, would let his office know, such cases "will be carefully investigated." Russell Erickson, director of public relations of the Lehigh Valley Railroad told me, "I have never known of passenger of ficials attempting any gouging. Of course, with tipping being a na tional scourge throughout the country, and human beings acting human, I guess there might be a basis for your publisher's state ments." All concerned, however, urge any visitor to this city to contact their offices if any diffi culty is encountered in getting tickets at the regular price. - ' J . At the suggestion of our mutual friend, Joe Doctor, the "newspaper man of Wall Street" I dropped in to see George B. Schwab, treas urer of the Heyden Chemical Corporation. It happened to be an exciting moment in the history of the company. A new drug had been ! discovered by its scientists. It is aomctmug iiKe ameomycin aim icuaiiijctfl, bui Hoes, so loi', Uu uer lue imposing name ol "a new oroau-specuu aiuiuiouc". 1 asscu Air. suiwau to uansiaie tms lliio tngiisn tor me ana my reaaers. tie cordiauy explained mat u worxs against typnoiu tever, pneumonia ana su?ep nuoai as wen as otiier ins. utiiciais nope it is an im provement over uie oiaer drugs, since it appears to ne less unpleas ant in its reaction on some people man otner new wonder drugs. 3 Manhattan Morsels: Joe Smith alleges mat tnis is a woman s worid. Inat wnen he was born, his motner was congratulated; when ne got married, nis bride received tne guts; and that wnen he dies, his widow?who by statistics is bound to outlive him?will receive nis insurance ... at 14th Street and Broadway, 1 paused for a mo ment in lront ol the old movie theater where just 50 years ago, Adolph Zukor opened the motion picture industry's first film-show ing house ... on 72nd Street, I noticed the actor, Frederic Tozere, walking along with a bundle ol laundry under his arm, reminding me ol the tale ol Benjamin Frank lin who supposedly walked down Philadelphia streets with a huge loaf of bread under his arm. 1 Double Feature BREMERTON, Wash. (AP) ? A mother and her daughter each became mothers in the same de livery room here less than two hours apart. Baby Donna Joy was born to Mrs. Margaret Kanthack at 2:53 p.m. At 4:46 p.m., baby Teresa was born to Mrs. Marlene Rose Lind strom, the Kanthack's only pre vious child. Frank J. Kanthack, 45, a shop supervisor at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, and his i son-in-law, Ralph E. Lindstrom, < took turns congratulating each | other. "Both Ralph and I were there, of course, for the "double feature,' Kanthack said. "However, it wasn't really scheduled that way at all." He explained that Donn Joy ar ( rived a week early and his new granddaughter wasn't expected for several weeks. ! Two-Way Smile HUTCHINSON, Kan. (API ? Samuel Hirst, who's been photo graphing people here since 1884, gives this tip for photographic 1 success: "I found that in shaping chil dren's pictures, if I always had a I little smile on my face they'd soon follow ? and that works with grownups, too." LAST CIGARETTE BEFORE DEATH THIS DRAMATIC PHOTO shows the last cigarette he will ever smoke being taken from the mouth of Mohammed Ezzat Ragheb. A few min utes later he was hanged in Cairo, Egypt, one of two former govern ment officials executed as traitors to the new regime. (International) 27 Million Children In U.S. Lack Church Training By uhaul.es w. mekcek NEW YOltK (AP)?The nation's Sunday scnooi leaders are taking stock of a enallenging problem: U. S. Sunoay scnooi enrollments are at an aniline nign?well above itie 32 million mark. Yet 27 million other American children and youths receive lutie or no cnurcn school training. And, ot the one million children who each year get into trouble with the law, the vast majority have no record of regular religi ous instruction. As in the public schools, Sunday church schoois in many cases are overcrowded and handicapped by a lack 01 teachers. With these tacts in mind, churches throughout the nation last week observed Christian Edu cation Week with strong drives tor new Sunday school members ? and teachers. It was sponsored by the National Council of the! Churches ot Christ in the U. S. A., with 40 denominations co-operat ing. "As a Christian nation, we can not ailord to let a single child go without his spiritual heritage," said Dr. Gerald E. Knoll, execu tive secretary of the National Council's Division ot Christian Education. "All children net-d God, and it is the task of parents and churches alike to give them every opportunity to weave spiritual and religious values into the fabric of their lives." Citing the latest surveys of Sun day school attendance, Dr. Knoff pointed to a 6V& per cent gain in Sunday school enrollments in the last year. Many clergymen in individual churches, however, emphasize two tieeus, u their Sunuay schools are to work effectively: auequate train ed teachers and proper space. Among the heroes and heroines of Christian etiort few are less praised than the volunteer Sunday sctiool workers. Today tney number almost 2,600,000. Tney are the early risers every Sunday. Most work under imperfect conditions: Too small quarters, too large clas ses, too short time, too little co operation from parents. To teach a child faith in God ' often is a difficult assignment under any conditions. To teach, for example, in a crowded cloak room where junior is easily be mused by the idea of hitting a hat with a spitball does not make the assignment any easier. But religious education leaders emphasize that placing a child in a spacious and well-equipped room will not automatically give him a greater understanding of spiritual values. In other words, the great re sponsibility falls on the teachers themselves?on their understand ing of children and youths as well as on an understanding of their subject. Mindful of juvenile delinquents' lack of religious training, the 10 million members of the United Church Women of the national council are joining with the Chil dren's Bureau of the Social Secur ity Administration in studying the problem in their own communities. Another effort to bring religious education to a wider audience of children has been launched by the division of some missions of the national council. It is administer ing Protestant work in industrial defense communities at Savannah River, Ga., and South -Carolina, at Paducah, Ky? and in the Chil licothe-Portsmouth area of South Waynesville DRIVE-IN THEATRE Children Under 12 Admitted FREE Show Starts At 7:00 P. M. THURSDAY, OCT. 29 "My Cousin Rachel" Starring OLIVIA DE HAVILLAND RICHARD BURTON ' ? FRIDAY, OCT. 30 "Never A Dull Moment" Starring IRENE DUNNE FRED MacMURRAY ? ALSO ? 5 Color Cartoons' SATURDAY, OCT 31 DOUBLE FEATURE "Fort Vengeance" (In Color) 3tarring JAMES CRAIG RITA MORENO ?ALSO? . "Rogue's March" 1 Starring PETER LAWFORD RICHARD GREENE ? SUN. & MON., NOV. 1 & 2 "All Ashore" (In Color) ? Starring MICKEY ROOftEY News and Cartoon Smoky Mtn. DRIVE-IN THEATRE Balsam Rd. Dial GL 6-5446 "Western North Carolina's Newest." Children Under 12 Admitted FREE Show Starts At 7:00 P. M. THURS. & FRI., OCT. 29 & 30 "Destination Gobi" (In Color) Starring RICHARD WIDMARK DON TAYLOR Color Cartoon ? SATURDAY, OCT. 31 DOUBLE FEATURE "Gunsmoke" (In Color) Starring AUDIE MURPHY ?ALSO? "Aaron Slick From Punkin Crick" (In Color) Starring ALAN YOUNG DINAH SHORE ROBERT MERRILL ? SUN. & MON., NOV. 1 & 2 "Never Let Me Go starring CLARK GABLE .GENE TIERNEY Cartoon ? Comedy PARK Theatre Program THURS. & FRI., OCT. 29 & 30 "Kansas Pacific" (In Color) Starring STERLING HAYDEN EVE MILLER ?ALSO? News and Selected Short Subject * SATURDAY, OCT. 31 DOUBLE FEATURE "My Darling Clementine" Starring HENRY FONDA VICTOR MATURE ?ALSO? "Village Barn Pance" Starring LULA BELLE & SCOTTY And Radio Stars ? SUN. & MON., NOV. 1 & 2 t mo I Sttoand ^Iteatsie LAST DAY ? OCT. 29 "TERROR ON A TRAIN" GLENN FORD ANNE VERNON FRI. & SAT., OCT. 30 & 31 DOUBLE FEATURE "ARIZONA RANGER" STARRING TIM HOLT JACK HOLT PLUS "LOAN SHARK" WITH 1 GEORGE RAFT CHAP. 7 OF "SECRET CODE" SUN. & MON., NOV. 1 & 2 "BACK TO GOD'S J COUNTRY JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD'S < FAMOUS STORY < IN VIVID 1 TECHNICOLOR ' STARRING ROCK HUDSON MARCIA HENDERSON 1 PLUS NEWS ? CARTOON William Lunoigan William Lundigan, who will be seen witn itnouua iteming and nouert nyan ut me 4 Dimension, 'i ecnnicoutr i-tcture "imerno ' at tne far* 'ineatre isunuay ana Ditnaajr. Inferno' Best 3-D Thriller Yet Shown 3-D action, color and sound have never been Deiier served than tney are by "lnierno," the outdoor inriiier presented by Twentietn oentury-rox winch opens Sunday at tne Park Theatre, filmed in tnree dimensions and in coior by Technicolor and equipped with stereophonic sound as a comple mentary match to its stereoscopic or "depth' photography, "lnier no" makes use of the new won ders of the screen to telling dra matic eflect. , For this is no mere "trick" film, though it is replete with spectacu lar trick effects it is a solid piece of dramatic improvisation, distin guished by characters of real-life dimension, intriguing and original situation, good dialogue, tense direction and expert and unusual photography which frequently bor ders on the amazing. The story of a spoiled, spiteful and "soft" millionaire who learns to be a man the hard way when his faithless wife and her secret lover leave him to die in the middle of the Mojave Desert on the pretense they have gone to get help for him after he is handicapped by a broken leg, "Inferno" is continu ously vivid, exciting and suspense ful. The acting is superb. Robert Ryan, always the equivalent of any film actor both in talent and the rugged ability to handle himself in physical action, scores on both counts. Rhonda Fleming, a beau teous redhead, has never been seen to better advantage than with the full effect of the "round" 3-D cam era to show her off. And lanky Wil liam Lundigan, in a change of pace that gives him one of his best film parts, neatly etches the character of the other man who joins Miss Fleming in the crime against Ryan. In the course of developing the story points of the Francis Cock rell screen play, director Roy Bak er and producer William Bloom have made full use of the precipit-' ous rock cliffs as they begin to i slide when dislodged by Ryan and ! appear to be coming right out at the audience, as well as of a burn ing brand thrown in the viewer's direction, a climactic fight scene in a blazing cabin, a knife thrown at a robbing coyote but presum ably aimed out into the seats. AH these, and other, stunning effects give the spectator some added thrills as they emerge from the screen, but all ire inherent in the action depicted and are not arti ficially imposed on the proceed ings. With "Inferno" the effect never displaces the purpose: a good cast does a fine job of an expert script, well produced and directed. The supporting players who do well in clude Larry Keating, Henry Hull, Carl Betz and Robert Burton. All told, "Inferno" is the best 3-D pro ject to date, worth experiencing at the Park Theatre. ern Ohio. Nearly 100,000 persons I have been drawn Into each of these areas where the Atomic Energy Commission has plants un der construction. Trained religious workers have brought in trailer chapels, estab lished mothers' clubs and under taken story hours and church school programs for the children. A Vista in the early days of New Mexico was a Christian outpost visited periodically by a padre i prlestl who lived elsewhere. avimiinistkaTORS NOTICE Having qualified as administra tor of the estate of Rufus E. Coch ran. deceased, late of Haywood County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhiit them to the undersigned it Waynesville, care of Haywood County Health Department. North Carolina, on or before the 27th lay of October, 1954 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their re :overy. All persons indebted to laid estate will please make im mediate payment. This the 27th day of October. 1953. C. JACK ARRINGTON, Administrator of the Estate of Rufus E. Cochran, deceased. 1380?O 29 N 5-12-19-28 D 3. AT GARRETT'S $5.00 DEUVERS ANY HEATEI IN OUR STOCI With These Nationally - Famous Makes Sensationally Low-Priced! mm r /ViPv*/Vi^V V#^V9VPtVTtttM ^7 Brown's Tropic Sun Makes its own coke . . . burns 24 to AO hours . . . pays for itself. Uses less coal. Beautiful exclusive design . . - in beautiful walnut grain enamel. TWO SIZES si095?& $12950 ? OPEN AN EASY, CONVENIENT BUDGET ACCOUNT TODAY ? Duo-Therm HepplewhB No. 954 I Here is a rorffeous console oil healer distinctive charm of the finest period ture. Its superb performance gives job ? high in comfort. 50,000 BTU output. ONLY $1299S| Heaters Oi All TyPW sizes and descriptions . . . and at prr?>^^J Select yours from the many now on disi^^r Prices Start C 4 A,9^6 From X y V EXTBA BARGAINS I IN OUR USED STOVE DEPARTMENT. SELECT A V USED HEATER THAT IS FULLY GUARANTEED AT OUR REDUCED PRICES! B m Buy Your Heater Now While Stocks Arc Complete For The Best Selections ?1 The Best Price! m GARRETT Furniture ? Dial GL 6-5325 -m
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 29, 1953, edition 1
14
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75