THURSDAY. AUGUST 11. 1955
THE PILOT—Southern, Pines. North Carolina
(SracLs of cJ^igLi
By TOM O'NEIL
IIH AJKJ S
CAROLINA
Received in the mail the other
day a little magazine called THE
DAY. It is published by the
Episcopal Church people. It is
written in this magazine, AND I
QUOTE, “The Episcopal Church
does not demand that her mem
bers accept the story of the crea
tion of Adam and Eve as true.”
UNQUOTE . . . Very good, now,
'The Original Sin and The FaU of
Man, wiU have a tough time hold
ing its head up. Gee! What a glo
rious feeling to be able to get up
in the mornings and line up our
own sins to take care of, instead
of tp^ing to get that other fellow
straightened out . . . We can now
forget about the fall of man, and
start to think of THE RISE OF
MAN, and believe me, if we put
as much work to THE RISE OF
MAN as we did to THE FALL OF
MAN, we’ll go places in a hurry.
REGARDING PSYCHIC PHE
NOMENA;
The true researcher thinks
nothing of ghosts atop his garden
fence; he sharpens the posts to
see what happens. . .
Two million years from how the
scientists can start a row by
claiming that the creatures of the
period descended from man.
Hew many remember the ex
citing episode of the specially in
vented bomb so designed that it
would bounce along on the water
and finally resulted in blowing up
the Ruhr dams that crippled Ger
many’s war industries, in World
War 2? Coming to the Carolina
Theatre, this Thursday, Friday ^
and Saturday, at 8:15 p. m. with]
a Saturday matinee is “The Dam
Busters,” in which is told, with
power and authority, this thrilling
story of man’s dream to cripple
Germany’s heavy industry by de
stroying its source of water pow
er.
The film will grip audiences
anywhere. Splendidly acted by
Richard Todd, (of “A Man Called
Peter”) Michael Redgrave and
Ursula Jeans, and based on fact,
it provides an engrossing balance
of taut action and intelligent
well-played drama. Not a single
German is shown and stock clich
es have been skillfully avoided.
There is neither mock heroics nx^r
displays cf cowardice. Human,
emotionally satisfying, Jiumorous,
gripping and thrilling—^this is an
lenthralling peep behind the
scenes of a top secret enterprise.
beautifully depicted in Cinema-*17, with a matinee at 3 and a
Scope and Color, with actors of night show at 8:15, is the already
great ability who can wear cos- famous hard-hitting drama about
tumes of the period as though juvenile delinquency in the
born to them, a story that carries schoolroom, “Blackboard Jungle,”
conviction while it unfolds on the. starring Glenn Ford, Anne Francis,
screen. Action is fast and charac
teriaztions very good.
Produced on a lavish, spectacu-
Margaret Hayes and Richard
Kiley. In this fortitudinous filmi,
the issue is forthrightly and in-
lar scale, the picture offers Ann telligently faced, and with a
Blyth, Edmund Purdom, David | praiseworthy paucity of preach
Niven, George Saiiders and Roger ment.
Moore, and is bound to satisfy
the theatre going public inasmuch
as a time-tested swashbuckling
formula has been taken and turn
ed into a picture which delivers
excitement.
There are occasionally musical
interludes that accord welcome
breaks in the hard-boiled, ex
citing, actionful development of
the story, and also spots of hu
mor.
Starting Wednesday, August
God doesn’t judge man until
the end of his ^ays, then all he
says is, “Soul, go into the back
room and give yourself what you
think you deserve!”
(Advertisement)
STAUVIEW
Drive-ln Theatre
Between So. Pines-Aberdeen
INDIVIDUAL SPEAKERS
Friday, Saturday Aug. 12-13
"A Bullet Is Waiting"
(Technicolor)
Rory Calhoun - Jean Simmons
Sunday, Monday Aug. 14-i5
Bud Abbott and
Lou Costello
Meet
Dr . Jekyll & Mr. Hyde
with
Boris Karloff
Tuesday, Wednes. Aug. 16-17
"The Caine Mutiny"
(Technicolor)
Humphrey Bogart
Van Johnson
Coming Sunday through Tues
day (3 days) is the CinemaScope-
Btereophonic Sound production in
^Eastman Color, “The King’s
Thief.” a drama laid in London,
Thursday Aug. 18
Dangerous Crossing"
Jeanne Crain
Friday, Saturday Aug. 19-20
The Man From
The Alamo"
(Technicolor)
Glenn Ford, Julia Adams
TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY
SHOW STARTS AT 7:00 P.M.
Children under 12 in cars Free
ABERDEEN
THEATRE
WIDE Screen
"Pictures As They Should
Be Seen"
Friday, August 12
Night 7:15 & 9:15
'Love Me or Leave Me'
Doris Day, James Cagney
Saturday—^Double Feature
Continuous from 3:00
"Kentucky Rifle"
Chui wais
—also—
"SKABENGA"
Filmed in the Heart of Africa
Monday 8c Tuesday, Aug. 15-16
Night 7:15 8t 9:15
Strange Lady In Town
Greer Garson Dana Andrews
Wednesday, August 17
Night 7:15 8c 9:15
"The Asphalt Jungle"
Sterling Hayden
Marilyn Monroe
Thursday 8c Friday, Aug. 18-19
Night 7:15 8c 9:15
"Soldier of Fortune"
Clark Gable, Susan Hayward
SUNRISE
THEATRE
SOUTHERN PINES
Ph; 2-4013
CAROLINA THEATRE
SOUTHERN PINES
AIR-CONDITIONED
Richard Todd - Michael Redgrave - Ursola Jeans
—in—
"THE DAM BUSTERS"
Thursday - Saturday, August 11-13—8:15 p.m.
Matinee Saturday at 3:00
Cl NemaScoPE AND IN
M-G-M’s duilling true story of a soldier-
COLOR
of-fortune who'courted a high-born beauty!
fflE KINGS THIEF
ANN BLYTH EDMUND PURDOM I,
NIVEN GEORGE SANDERS!
DAVID
An M-G-M Picture
Sunday - Tuesday (3 Days)—^August 14-15-16
3 Sunday Shows—3:00 - 7:00 - 9:00 Week Nights 8:15
1
A
DRAMA
OF
TEEN-ADE
Terror
I
M-G-M’s
BLACKBOARD
JUNGLE
GLENN ford
ANNE FRANCIS
LOUIS CALHERN
Starting Wednesday, August 17
Matinee at 3:00 Night at 8:15
Continuous Shows Daily
Opening at 3:00
Saturday 11:00 Sunday 1:00
Thurs. 8c Friday, Aug. 11-12
Ralph Meeker
and Cloris Leachman
—in—
'Kiss Me Deadly'
Cartoon
Sat., Aug. 13—Double Feature
Keith Larsen in
"Son of Bell Starr"
—also—
Jon Hall in
Phantom of the Jungle
Cartoon and serial
Sunday 8c Monday, Aug. 14-15
Joan Crawford 8c Jeff Chandler
—m-
'Female On the Beach'
News
Tuesday, Aug. 14—Only
William Bendix
Arthur Kennedy
"Crashout"
Cctrfoon and Sport Short
Wed., Aug. 17—Double Feature
Lash LaRue in
"Dead Man's Gold"
—also—
Richard Denning in
"Air Strike"
Cartoon and Serial
Thursday 8c Friday, Aug. 18-19
Joel McCrea and Miroslava
Stranger on Horseback
Cartoon - Comedy - Short
SUNRISE
In the past 12 months Walt
Plsney has turned out “The Van
ishing Paririe”; “20,000 Leagues
Under the Sea”; a weekly hour-
long television show which zoom
ed into the top ten; and the first
feature-length cartoon in Cine-
maScope, “Lady and the Tramp,”
which will open at the Sunrise
Theatre Sunday, August 21.
. Hailed as the greatest of his
cartoon features, “Lady and the
Tramp” is a sprightly tgle oi love
,and laughter in the dog world and
features an entirely new cast of
animated characters.
The film, in color by Techni
color, is based on a novel by
Ward Greene and is distributed by
Buena Vista.
North Carolina farmers should
he thinking about what they’re
going to do with land made idle
by the removal of excess crops.
SUBSCRIBE TO THE PILOT—
MOORE COUNTY'S LEADING
NEWS WEEKLY.
Hemmer Photos
In New Exhibit
Photographs by Jphn Hemmer
of Pinehurst are represented in a
new photographic exhibit, depict
ing North Carolina from the
mountains to the coast, which had
its first public showing at the
Pack Memorial Library in Ashe
ville.
The photos, all produced by the
North Carolina News Bureau, to
tal 64 prints in sizes from 11 by
14 inches to hall a dozen 30 by 40
murals. They were chosen from
the News Bureau’s files for photo
graphic quality and coverage of
the state’s scenic attractions and
varied localities.
FOK RESULTS USE THE Pb
LOT’S CLASSIFIED COLUMN
SUMMER aEARANCE SALE
Continues Through August 13
MEN, fake notice:
All sport shirts, slacks, shoes, hats
and a great assortment of BOYS'
summer and winter wear
REDUCED TO COST
STYLE-MART STORE
Southern Pines, N. C.
Kentucky Blended
Bourbon Whiskey
$3.85
THE BOURBON DE LUXE CO., LOUISVILLE, KV. 86 PROOF, 49X GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS.
mmvK/s
r
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY IN S ANFORD Read This And Save At WILLIAMS - BELK
FREE PRIZES
1947 PACKARD AUTOMOBILE
JUST REGISTER
NOTfflNG TO BUY
Man s $25.00 Suit Free or Equal Value in Merchandise.
YOU DO NOT HAVE TO BE PRESENT TO WIN
RELK’S ‘‘REMODELING CELEBRATION” Lasts Through August 20th
SHEETING
5 yds. $1.00
TOWELS
2 for $1.00
STRAW HATS
$1.00
SPORT SHIRTS
$1.00
SOCKS
2 pair $1.00
LADIES' SHOES
$1.00
GLOVES
$1.00
PAJAMAS
$1.00
BOYS' SHIRTS
$1.00
10 PIECES OF
DINNERWARE, $1
Table
Children's
Summerwear
$1.00
LADIES'
RAYON PANTIES
5 pr. for $1.00
LADIES' PLISSE
PETTICOATS
2 for $1.00
125 Brown Brooms
while they last . 50c
All SUN GLASSES
V2 OFF
ALL LADIES'
SUMMER HATS
2 for $1.00
WILUANS-BELK of Sanfonl
Secret Special will
be whispered to you
by your clerk
LADIES'
Spring and Summer
SUITS, $7.00
LADIES'
Broadcloth BRAS
2 for $1.00
1 11
Odds & Ends
Ladies'LINGERIE
just $1.00