Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / July 26, 1956, edition 1 / Page 14
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Smoky Mtn. DRIVE-IN THEATRE Balsam ltd. Dial GL 6-5146 THURS. & FUI., JULY 2fi & 27 ' TEXAS LADY" (Iii CinemaScope A; Color) Starring CLAl DETTE COLBERT I1AHRY SULLIVAN ? ALSO ? :? COLOR CARTOONS ? SATURDAY, JULY 2S DOUBLE FEATURE "JOHNNY GUITAR" (In Color) Starring JOAN crawford sterling hayden ?plus? "HOLD BACK TOMORROW" Starring john alar (leo moore ? SUNDAY and MONDAY. JULY 2!< and .10 "FOREVER DARLING" (In Color) Starring lucille hall dezi arnaz Plus Selected Short Subjects i^^AYNESVILL^^ FIRST SHOW AT DUSK Till RSIUY ONLY ? Julv 26 "TRIAL" Starring (;ij:n\ ford ? dorothv Mc(;i irk ? FRIDAY ONLY. .H'l.Y 27 9 SATURDAY ONLY, JULY 28 DOl'HLE FEATURE! OAKY COOPER >URT LANCASTER "LUM AND ABNER ABROAD" ? SUNDAY ANI) MONDAY. Jl'LY 29 and :5ft "DUEL IN THE SUN" (Color by Technicolor) Starring GREGORY PECK ' JOSEPH GOTTEN JENNIFER JONES New Electric Math Board Knows All The Answers! ARITHMETIC MADE rv\SY?Robert Kinrh m.ith teacher, looks on as students do multiplication on electric hoard. ?HAMILTON'. Ohio tAP' Robert Kinrh mathematics leather at Roosevelt Junior High School. lias devised an electric hoard to aid his pupils' to learn the muliplication tables. Tin- hoard also works on geography, vooabularx and English questions The principle of I he hoard allows one pupil n> pick out the prob lem by touching a metal screw with the end nt .? point in whiJe the second child selects the answer and louche- the metal lor that answer II the solution is correct, a buzzer sounds If tin ? ecnnd pupil .selects the wrong answer, hhc buzzer is silent. The board cover; all multiplication tallies for numh< r- 1 through fl Each problem has a metal -crew sticking through the board, and on the back is attached a piece of lamp cord wire I'h.d wire extend across the metal screw placed at the correct answer to the problem. The end of each pointer held by the children i- metallic, to w hich is attached a wire running between each stick and to the buzzer, and on a dry cell battery. When the two pointers touch- the proper screws the buzzer sounds. Kinch says Use of the board has aroused greater interest of the children in their lessons Amateur Beekeeper CHATTANOOGA, .Te.no 'AT' An estimated 8000 to 10,000 hers swarmed atop a downtown traffic linlit and sent pedestrians scurry ? i' K Charles McOhee, a lens grinder to, an optical company, cleared up the jam when he got a box and ladder from a nearby store and after about half an hour coaxed the queen and her followers into the makeshift hive McOhee. an amateur beekeeper, later transferred the swarm Jo a lux e at his home Too Far ClfAHI.F.STON U \.i. A!'' Johnny Stuart pi ides himself on friendly servire .it lit', filling sta tion hut ho thought the six South Carolinians wont t?>0 far. Four nu n and two women pulled into his station aliout I a 111 to got a now fan bolt When Stuart went to wait on another car. the southerners loft without paying for the hell and helped themselves t > a hox ol toot two tiros and a ?wheel, all valued at SltiH PARK Theatre Program LAST TIME today thl us. july 26 "SCARLET HOUR" j Starring fOII TRYON CAROL Oil MART ? mm day, july 27 "THE LUSTY MEN" Starring ROllERT MITCH I'M SUSAN HAYWARD ? Plus TI1E HEST IN SELECTED SHORT si ILIECTS ? S \TURDAV JULY 28 DOCHLE FEATURE "LAW OF THE TRAIL" Starring IMLL HOYD As "HOPALONG CASSIDY" "KANGAROO" (In Color) Starring PETER LAW FORD M AI KEEN O il \IIA ? SI N.. MON. and TI ES.. JULY 2!?. .10 and .11 "JUBAL" (In CinemaSoope and Color) Starring OLENN FORD ERNEST HOK(.NINE STRAND THE A TRE PHONE 6-8551 THURSDAY. JULY 26 LAST DAY TO SEE M \Rh SUEYENS In "TIME TABLE" ? FRIDAY and SATURDAY July 2< & 28 DOUHLE FEATURE! 1st HIT RARKER-HESTON 2nd Hit It W DOiril SCOTT "FIGHTING MAN OF THE PLAINS" ? Also ? Cartoon and Chapter 9 Dick Traev G-Men ? SI V. MON.. TIES.. Jl'l.Y 29. 20. 21 BR THE GREAT F|^ BESTSELLER Kym OF LOVE I k m m m I 7 V IS ON THE L SCREEN! HmwwnM Wmm I THE SIXTH J9n I OFJUNE^jffr ICINemaSCOPE^V *tk JOHN WIUIAMS CHARUS 8RACMTT MfNRv'iuDSU* IVAN MQffAf wd HARRY BROWN I VHHHT . . ?____ Movie At Strand Sunday Features Story Of D-Day Most good war stories are in reality !o\r stories played against the background or within the forces of a war. and they become war stories only to the event that the disrupting strains of an armed conflict impinges upon the lives of the lovers. So it is with "D-Day, ; tin Si\th of June,, which opc.'s Sunda' at tlie Strand Theatre. This is tile modern story of love and dutv that parallel's lleming way's earlier A f arewell to Arms." Starring Robert Taylor. Rich ard Todd, Dana Wynter arid Kdmoiul O'Rilcn. "D-Day, the Sixth of June" focuses primarily on tlit' bittersweet love story be tween an American army captain end a beautiful English girl who meet on tin- etc of the invasion There r- also tire rejected hero-j Inter and the bombastic army ' superior whose frailties conquer liim in I lie hours before D-Day, as well as the iiiisly old Brigadier v.I.o can't go on solely as an eye witness to war AJiitfht Problem READING, I'a <AP? ?- Tom Die dure wanted a traffic liglit on Stiiuyllkill Avenue near bis home. So he look his problem to City ( oiincil "li s vert bus1, and I'd like a traffic light there," he informed the founeitmen. "Sometimes you can hardlt get acrn-s the street." Tom is 10 years old. He goes to school near the busy intersection. Democrats Working On A ' National Farm Program I; i ? ?_?'? i By BILL WHITLEY POLICY. A group of the Na- 1 tion'a best farm experts met in 1 Washington during the weekend, to hammer out an overall agrirul- ' tural program for the Democratic Party's fall election campaign. Claude Wickard of Indiana, former Secretary of Agriculture, is head of the committee, which in cludes North Carolina's Commis sioner of Agriculture L. Y Ballen tine. The two-day session was largely devoted to devising ways and means of arousing interest among farmers in pressing farm proh- ! lems. COMPLACENT Members of the committee, representing all sec tions of the Nation, agreed that ; many farmers are complacent I about the low farm income situa tion. This situation exists, *hey feel, because many farmers believe the revised farm program of the Eisenhower Administration, especi ally the soil bank program, will bring farm income back up to its ] normal level. 1 , The committee also agrees that once the crops are in this Fall, | V termers will realize that their net j. income is as low as last year. I During the two-day session, the committee held conferences with , Hep. Harold D. Coole;,, chairman sf the House Agriculture Commit- j tee, and Sen. W. Kerr Scott, a ' member of the Senate Agriculture ( Committee. j TOBACCO. A report just re- I \ leased by the U. S Department r af Agriculture says that Commu- a nist China is increasing its tobacco production by leaps and bounds. In spite of an acute shortage of food, the report says. Commu nist China is emphasizing tobacco production and is exporting a large percentage of lis tobacco to other Soviet Rloc nations. Soon, it says. China can he ex pected to move into many of the markets of Western Europe, which are now supplied largely by Amer ican tobacco. HEADING. Some of the most Interesting reading that is avail able from the Government Printing Office is a little book of prayers that were given in the U. S. Senate by its late chaplain, the Rev Peter Marshall. ,r From time to time, we plan to ! aclude ont of the prayers from he - book in the Washington Re- ( . >ort. |. The Hrayer that is quoted today t las given in the Senate by the tev. Mr. Marshall January 10. s 947. t "Lord Jesus. Thou has promised '' o give us the Holy Spirit if we re willing to open our hearts and ' e* Him in. Make us willing now hat things of eternal significance I nay begin to happen here. We I mow deep down in our hearts that ' vithout Thy guidance we can do 1 irthing. but with Thee we can do i ill things. Let us not be frightened i A TV Takes A Kidc SPRINGF1KLD. Ky. (AP>? Mr. ind Mrs. Andrew Grundy were just tilling time until their favorite t levision program would be on. They took the kinds out for a ihort drive. When they returned be hunt for the television set be jan. A thief walked off with the set luring the family's drive. )y the problems that confront us, ?ut rather give Thee thanks that Ihou hast matched us with this tour. May we resolve, God help ing us. to be part of the answer, ?nd not part of the problem." 1 I IF YOU MISSED SEEINfi THE I TAPPAN ELECTRONIC RANGE 1 SEE IT NOW! Demonstrations Daily I MARTIN ELECTRIC CO. Tired of promises that don't pay off ? THEN TAKE A LOOK AT THIS : ? ' ? We're selling the finest car in its field_THE BIG M. We're selling it at a fair price?fair to you, fair to us. And the actual cost of THE BIG M is less than most so-called "deals." We're giving the highest trade-in allowances possible. And, most important, we have no hidden costs, trick prices or extras. Come in today. See if this isn't better than any so-called "bar gain" you ever heard of. THE BIG M MOVfS FORWARD AT MIDSEASON, WITH: ? NEW HIGHER HORSEPOWER _now up to 235 hp. ? NEW WIDER CHOICE OF MODELS_18 models in four price ranges. ? NEW PHAETON 4-DOOR HARDTOPS in all price ranges new Custom Series convertible, too. ? NEW FLO-TONE COLOR STYLING. Now available in all models and in all series. BIG NEW SHOW ? NOW GOING ON AT OUR SHOWROOM. DON'T MISS IT! Now is the best time to buy the big Mercury WAYNESVILLE MOTOR SALES, INC. Main Street FRANC'HISK1) DKALKK ? LICENSE NO. 129 5 Waynesville BAY S ANNIVERSARY SALE ^week ? . k
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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July 26, 1956, edition 1
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