Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
BANNER - HERALD
SPORTS
R e . Sports Editors
Crax Defeat Barons
Asßears Widen Gap
You would have a hard time today convincing the New
Orleans Pelicans that Mobile’s snarling Bears aren’t sure
fire winners of the Southern Association pennant, "
The battle for first place, which
began so auspiciously for the Pels
Maongay with a 2-0 shutout, end
ed last night in disaster, New Or
leans pitching fell apart and Ed
Head’s ambitious Brooklyn farm
hands swept to 10-2 and 12-2 vic
tories, increased their league lead
to two and a half games and sent
the Pels stmbling into third place
behind idle Little Rock.
Chattanooga downed Nashville,
7-5, and Atlanta topped the Bir
mingham Barons, 4-20 Wet
grounds forced a second succes
sive postponement of Little Rock’s
game at Memphis.
Chunky Charlie Coles, a 20-
éfl-old outfielder from the Class
Piedmont League, paced the im
portant Mobile victories. He
drove in five runs with four blows
Georgia Golfers Top
Tech Linksmen
With sizzling sophomore Frank Stevenson leading the
way with a blazing five-under-par 67, Coach Howell Hol
lis’ Georgia golf team smothered Georgia Tech’s linksmen
here yesterday on the country club fairways, 2414-214.
It was the worst defeat ever
handed the Jackets by a Bulldog
golf team.
Athens' Griffin Moody was sec
ond place medalist with a two
under-par 70.
SUMMARY
(With Approximate Medal Scores
In Parentheses)
First foursome—Moody, Georgia
(70) beat Harrison (75), 3-0;
Stevenson, Georgia (67) beat Fer
ris (72), 3-0. Georgia won the
foursome, 2'%-1%.
Seeond foursome—XKelly, Geor
gia (74) beat Bachman (77), 2-1,
Richardson, Georgia (75) beat
Cole (78), 3-0. Georgia won the
foursome, 3-0.
Third foursome—Hay, Georgia
'('7s) beat Rudolph (77). 3-0. Blair,
Georgia (75) beat Milan (79), 212,
15, Georgla won the foursome,
214-1%,
Fights Last Nite
By The Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS — Tommy Sa
lem, 127, Cleveland, outpointed
Auburn Copeland, 126, Detroit, 8.
NEW YORK (Sunnyside Gar
den)~—Johnny White, 228%, Jer
sey City, outpointed Lee Q. Mur
ray, 208%, New York, 8.
Seme scientists think of the
world as three peninsulas radiat
ing from the central Asiatic land
mass; 1. the Americas, 2. Europe
and Africa and 3. the “drowned
peninsula” of islands which term
inate in Australia. .
Botanically, apples are close
relatives of pears.
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.ve«nh: DANE OLARK--BEN JOHNSON--PETER GRAVES
By The Associated Press
during the doubleheader. Two of
his wallops went for extra bases.
Veteran lefthander Bob Ludwick
annexed his third straight vietory
in the seven-inning opener, and
Nicolis, picked up his second de
cision in the second game, al
though he required relief from
Bob Banton,
Chattanooga’s victory at Nash
ville proved extremely costly.
Lookout second baseman Leroy
Dietzel slid into the plate in the
eighth inning and broke his left
leg in the same spot where a
similar break occurred last year,
Rookie Ray Crone became the
first Atlanta pitcher to go the dis
tance in six games. The young
righthander threw a six-hitter at
Birmingham and won despite six
Atlanta errors.
Quartet Of
Yanks Meet
In NS Semis
PINEHURST, N. C., April 25—
(AP)—Four Yankee invaders took
over the semi-finals of the 52nd
North and South Amateur Golf
Tournament today after routing a
quartet of Southerners.
The 36-hole pairings had Frank
Strafaci of Flushing, L. 1., shoot
ing it out with Harry Haverstick
of Lancaster, Pa., and Frank
Stranahan of Toledo, Ohio, brack
eted with Mal Galletta of St. Al
bans, N. Y,
Five North and South cham
pionships were represented in the
lot. Strafaci turned the trick in
1938-39. Stranahan won in 1946
and '49 and Galletta was the 1944
winner.
Haverstick was medalist two
years ago. He won Pennsylvania
State titles in 1938, ’4B and ’SO.
Yesterday his one up victory over
Billy Joe Patton, 1951 runnerup
from Morganton, N. C,, was the
major surprise. He was one un
der par for the par 72, No. 2
Country Club course measuring
7,007 yards.
Strafaci had to go 19 holes to
put out Ben Goodes of Reidsville,
N. C.,, who drew even on 17 and
dropped a 12-footer on 18 to stay
even. It was the third successive
one~-up match for the New Yorker,
1935 Public Links champion.
Stranahan started in shaky two
over par fashion to lose the first
two holes to Hobart Manley, the
defending champion from Savan
nah, Ga. But the Ohioan played
the next 13 holes in three under
par figures to score a 4 and 3 vic
tory.
Galletta foungh off a late bid
by Ed Gravely of Rocky Mount,
N. C,, to gain a 4 and 3 decision.
Gators Top Bulldogs,
4-2; Satterfield Stars
Major League
l.eaders
By The Associated Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Batting—Schoendienst, St. Lou
is, .481; Robinson, Brooklyn, .478;
Hatton, Cincinnati, .429; Cam
panella, Brooklyn, .394; Baum
holtz, Chicago, .393.
Runs—Adams, Cincinnati, 10;
Cox, Brooklyn, Torgeson, Oston
and Hatton, Cincinnati, 9; Robin
son, Brooklyn, Ramazzotti, Chi
cago and Thomson, New York, 8.
Runs batted in—Kluszewski,
Cincinnati, 13; Campane!la, Brook
lyn, 12; Sauer, Chicago, 10; Snider,
Brooklyn and Adcock, Cincinnati,
8. .
Hits—Cox, Brooklyn, 15; Cam
panella, Brooklyn and Schoen
dienst, St. Louis, 13; 5 players
tied with 12 each,
Doubles—Cox, Brooklyn, 5;
Marshall, Boston and D. Rice, St.
Louis, 4; 5 players tied with 3.
Triples—Cox, Brooklyn, Addis,
Chicago, Adcock and Kluszewski,
Cincinnati, Thomson, and Mueller,
New York and Del Greco, Pitts
burgh, 2.
Home runs—Pafko, Brooklyn 5;
Campanella, Brooklyn, 2; 16 play
er. tied with 2 each.
Stolen bases—Thompson and
Mays, New York and Slaughter,
St. Louis, 2; 12 players tied with
1 each.
Pitching—Roe and Van Cuyk,
Brooklyn, Raffensberger, Cin
cinnati, Maglie, New York and
Staley, St. Louis, 2-0, 1.00.
Strikeouts—Van Cuyk, Brook
lyn, 17; Maglie, New York, 16;
Rush, Chicago, 14; Wilson, Boston,
i 0; Surkont, Boston and Raffens
berger, Cincinnati, 9.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Batting — Baker, Washington,
.409; Coleman, New York, .394;
Valo, Philadelphia, .379; DiMaggio,
Boston, .362; Piersall, Boston,
.350.
Runs—Piersall, Boston, 11; Di-
Maggio, Boston, 9; Dropo, Boston,
7; Lenhardt, Boston and Boone,
Cleveland, 6.
Runs batted in—Lenhardt, Bos
ton, 9; Dropo, Boston, 8; V.
Stephens and Thronberry, Boston
and Fox, Chicago, 7.
Hits—DiMaggio, Boston, 17;
Piersill, Boston and Rizzuto, New
York, 14; Dropo, Boston and Cole
man, New York, 13.
Doubles—Piersall, Boston, 5;
Lepcio, Boston and NMcDougald,
New York, 4. 5 players tied with
3
Triples—l 9 players tied with 1,
each.
Home runs—Easter, and Rosen,
Cleveland, 3; Lenhardt, Dropo
and Lepcio, Boston, Moss, St. Lou
is and Vernon, Washington, 2.
Stolen bases—Rizzuto, New
York, 3; Mullin, Detroit, Valo and
Fain, Philadelphia and Rivera, St.
Louis, 2.
Pitching—Parnell and Henry,
Boston, Wynn and Lemon, Cleve
land, Raschi, New York, Garver,
Cain and Byrne, St. Louis and
Moreno, Washington, 2-0, 1.000.
Strikeouts—McDermott, Boston,
13; Pierce, Chicago, Feller, Cleve
land, Garver, St. Louis and Mo~
reno, Washington, 11.
Action Heavy
In “Y” Night
League Play
Bob Terry paced the vaunted
Sluggers in the YMCA Night
Softball League to an 8-7 win over
the Muleheads in last night’s play.
Bob’s batting record was three
hits for four times at bat, followed
closely by batsmen Fain Slaugh
ter, Allen Barber and Perry
Knight, who each tapped out two
hits during the course of the fray.
The second game last night was
won by the Foulers, who dropped
the Sluggers with an 11-7 score.
Westy Westervelt and Johnny
Upchurch led the Foulers in the
attack with two safeties each. Fain
Slaughter shone in the batting
department for the defeated Slug
gers, rapping out a perfect three
hits for three times up. The Foul
ers wrapped up the game with a
big sixth inning rally in which
they brought in four runs to end
the game’s scoring. The score had
been tied at 7-all at the beginning
of the seventh,
With Jim Ha¥ and Chester Lea
thers leading the batters for the
Nats, that team defeated the Liz
ards in last night's play with a
safe margin of 13-7. Hall was ac
credited with two for three, while
Leathers tapped out two hits out
of four times up to the plate. Lou
Lanard, versatile batsman, led
Lizard hitting, getting three for
four.
In regular class play in the Cub
league yesterday the Jalopies
dropped the Terrors with a size
fble score, 15-3. Jerry Jackson
ed the Jalopies with three hits
WORLD’S BEST
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194 W. Clayton
Righthander George Reed’s 4-2 victory over the Georgia
Bulldogs gave the Florida Gators their 14th straight win
of the season yesterday afternoon in their final game of a
two-game series played on Ag H¥l.
The Gators now move into At
lanta for a series with Georgia
Tech this afternoon and tomor
row. The Bulldogs meanwhile, are
through this week and are pre
paring for three meetings next
week with the Mercer Bears and
Georgia Tech.
Mercer opens next week's action
on Thursday afternoon on Ag Hill,
Friday the Bulldogs go to Atlanta
for their first meeting with the
Engineers and Saturday they re
turn to the Hill for the second.
These will be the first games of
the year with Tech and the second
meeting with the Bears svho lost
to the Bulldogs earlier this sea
son.
In yesterday’s action, Reed went
the full nine innings on the mound
for the Gators who finished their
four game action with the Bull
dogs this season with three wins
and a tie game.
A home run by Heyward Sull
ivan with one on in the first inning
provided the winning margin for
the Gators who scored once more
in the first and once in the third
to complete their scoring,
The Bulldogs scored once in the
third and again in the seventh on
a line drive by centerfielder Har
ry Babcock.
Dick Dozier, Georgia lefthander,
started on the mound for the Bull
dogs but was relieved in the fourth
after allowing the Gators four
runs. Marvin Satterfield came on
in the fourth and turned in his
best performance of the season in
the five innings that he worked,
giving up only one hit.
Dozier was credited with the
loss for Georgia and Reed gained
credit for the victory. The Bull
dogs tabbed Reed for seven hits
and Dozier and Satterfield allow
ed the Gators nine.
Despite the wet playing field
only five errors were made alto
gether with the Bulldogs contri
buting three and the Gators two.
The Gator victory gave them
eight conference win against no
losses and just about cinched them
for the conference eastern sector
title. In competition outside the
conference they have six wins
against no losses for the season.
Florida: 301 000 000—4—9—2
Georgia: 001 000 100—2—73
Batteries: Florida, Reed and
Sullivan; Georgia, Dozier, Satter
field (4), and Dozier.
Durocher,
Bickford
Thumbed
NEW YORK, April 25—AP)—
Manager Leo Durocher of the New
York Giants and pitcher Vern
Bickford of the Boston Braves,
rivals on the baseball field, shared
a mutual case of high blood pres
sure today and for a mutual rea
son—an umpire.
Both Durocher and Bickford
bitterly attacked plate umpire Art
Gore for thumbing them out of
yesterday’s game at the Polo
Grounds, won by the Braves in
ten innings, 6-3.
“If 1 had-a player who didn’t
follow my signals any better than
these umpires follow the rules,”
stormed Durocher, “I wouldn't
keep him five minutes.”
Durocher was ejected at the top
of the sixth inning for protesting
that Boston pitcher Warren Spahx%
threw a ‘“‘quick pitch” to Gian
outfielder Willie Mays at the bot
tom of the fifth.
Durocher contended this should
have been called a balk and Bob
by Thomson, on third, should have
been allowed to score.
Gore threw him out of the game
for what he called abusive lan
guage. gl
Durocher said he didn't wuse
abusive language until he had
been tossed out and “then I let
himm have it—l called him every
name I knew.”
Bickford was ejected from the
Boston bench after he protested
that Gore and first base umpire
Bill Stewart had failed to see Bos
ton’s Earl Torgeson tag the Giants’
Max Lanier on a hidden ball play.
“They lost the ball entirely and
then said time was called,” com
plained Bickford.
Gore left town for another as
signment immediately after the
game and couldn’t be reached for
comment.
out of five times up, including the
only round-tripper of the game.
Barry Wenzel, Larry Ferguson
and Billy Nunnally got two hits
each, -
The Terrors were in a batting
slump, with no player getting
more than one safety during the
course of the game.
Other kames of the day in the
Cub class saw the Rockets edge
out the Bums, 12-10; and the Hot
rods beat the Ballhawks, 17-6. The
Rockets won their fray by virtue
of a big sixth inning In which
they scored seven runs.
Sammy Callaway and Billy
Gambrell were big guns for the
Hotrods, getting valuable homers
to pace the team's rout of the
Ballhawks. Tommy Wilkins got
three for four for the Ball hawks.
HARLEM
Friday & Saturday
Triple Program
NO. 1t
“MAN FROM COLORADO”
NO. 2: “FLYING MISSLE”
NO. 3: “OVERLAND WITH _
KIT CARSON”
Late Show Saturaay 10;15 PM.
“WHITE ZOMBIE”
BY ALVA MAYES, JR.
Athens High
Tennis Stars
Win Titles
Athens High tennis stars Marian
Hopkins and Louis Smith copped
Region 2-A singles titles here yes
terday in the regional meet held
on the Georgia varsity courts.
Hopkins was the regional champ
last year while Smith was a mem
ber of the championship doubles
team. Hopkins won bher second
title yesterday, beating Canton’s
entry in the first round and oust
ing Mary Cole of Gainesville in
the finals, 6-1. 6-2,
Smith won his first round match
in three sets from Oganton’s Jack
Hawkins and beat Stephens coun
ty’s singles player, 6-3, 6-3 in the
finals. .
Athens’ doubles entries lost in
the finals. Pat Messer and An
nelle Williams, defending region
al titleholders, lost a close three
set match to Gainesville in the
finals.
Bobby Duncan and Marbut,
Trojan boys doubles team, lost a
close match to Stephens County.
On the basis of games won by
each school Athens High's girls
received the regional girls’ trophy.
Stephens county took the boys’
trophy by one game over the Ath
ens contingent.
Winners and alternates now go
to the state meet in Macon some
time in early May.—POUND.
Sl it e v B e s e AY.
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Bl /Nl S ARt & s£B T Tl B g
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VAN DO NN s R ety A e e L
t’ }o‘ .S?eam.&
Expensive Shotgun Becomes Oar
MACK ROZIER, highly successful Brunswick business
man and widely known sportsman, is one of those easy
going, agreeable fellows. When a friend asked Mack to help
him out of a jam, he agreed. The jam was
S g Mr. Big, a wealthy Atlantan who wanted
B % to go marsh hen hunting. All Mack had
¢ N e to do was act as guide.
' 1¢ there is marsh hen shooting to be done,
e Mack likes to do it. He is one of the best.
PR T Taking an amateur out to mess up good bird
Bl Y'Y shooting territory isn't Mack’s idea of an
BB 5 hilarious occasion.
RSI 3 At the appointed hour, the Big Wheel stepped
“‘& - : out of his great big automobile in style, right down
s ' to a chauffeur. He wore new hunting clothes and
sported as faney and as expensive a gun as you
will ever see. “Hey! Guide,” he greeted Mack,
“let’s get going.” For a split second Mack’s face reddened and then
he grinned. It was amusing.
As Mr. Big stepped into the boat, Mack noticed he had but one
box of shells. “Is that all the shells you've got?” Mack Asked.
“Do I need more?” Mr. Big answered. “I've got 25 shells and the
limit is 15. It’s like shooting a frying-sized chicken, isn’t it?” Mack
restrained a very loud laugh. “If you don’t mind, I'll take along
five boxes of shells. 1 can’t shoot that good,” Mack remarked.
One hour later, Mr. Big was out of shells and had seven birds.
“Listen, Guide,” Big Wheel pleaded, “how about selling me some of
your shells?” Mack wasn’t interested. He told his “boss” it was his
time to paddle. The Atlanta man was frustrated but exchanged places.
It was a fatal move. In some way, Mr. Big knocked the motor off the
boat‘&'nd" it disappeared in salt water.
When Mack saw his motor go, his trigger finger became nervous.
What a temptation! He could claim it was an accident. But he was
to exact payment for that motor in another way.
“You have played H—,” Mack remarked, looking as glum as pos
sible. “Now, do you know what is, going to happen? We have no oars
and this boat is heading for the middle of the Atlanti¢ ocean. We can’t
stop it. About day after tomorrow, you, my friend, are going to be
a very thirsty man. Then you are going to get hungry. Oh, so hungry”!
Mr. Big’s face registered terror. The pair sat there in silence
for a few moments. Then, the “guide” spoke, “Mister, do you know
how to yell? Well, you had better commence.” Mr. Big opened his
big mouth and Mack vows you could have heard him in Cedartown.
Mack stuck his fingers in his ears and enjoyed it.
Terror strickem and hoarze, Mr. Big whispered from & raw throat,
“What do we do now”?
The boat continued to drift out to sea. “Take off your shirt and
wave it,” Mack suggested.
There have been things waved along the Brunswick coast, but not
like that Atlanta man waved his shirt. He waved it until it was almost
rags. One more item and Mack would consider the motor paid for. “The
only thing left to do,” Mack offered, “is to grab some of this marsh
grass and slow down this boat”!
Mr. Big spread out flat in the boat and reached down in the salt
water, grabbing grass. He held on grimly, straining every muscle.
Up came the grass. Down went his hands for a new supply. Up it
came., “You've got to get more grass,” Mack encouraged. The
panicky man grabbed all the grass he could. It held for a moment,
then, up it came. At times, his chin touched water.
Disgusted and scared stiff, the man now slumped over on the boat
seat. His eyes rested on that brand new, expensive gun. Without a
word, he grabbed tHe gun, stuck it in the water and began to paddle
furiously. Shortly after, Mack’s friends rescued the pair as he knew
they would, all the time. For Mr. Big. it was the end of his marsh
hen hunting. For Mack, well—he is still laughing.
B A
Sharpshooting Lightning
Tom Wooten and Jack Smith, a pair of faithful fishermen at Elber
ton, were on a big lake recently working their favorite lures. Tom took
note of heavy clouds and remarked, “We might get some rain. What
would we do”?
Across the lake on the far bank, there was a large tree. The
only one in sight. Jack pointed to the tree and suggested that, in
case of rain, they get under that tree.
“We couldn’t do that,” Tom answered, “lightning might hit it.”
Jack was silent a moment.
“It’s just one tree. It would be a mighty small target,” Jack replied
confidently.
- * * - *
Rabbit Box Scores
Georgia has no law to control or, what’s better, eliminate rabbit
boxes. The innocent rabbit box does not call its shots. One operator
reports his box, in one season, took 38 squirrels, 18 o’possums, two
muskrats, one mink, one tomcat and a small dog, in addition to more
rabbits than you would believe one box could catch. . . . That new
Reefer plug might be the Jure of the year. It has everything. Trouble
is finding one.
B e e
He’s the type of fellow you don’t like when you first meet him,
but after you get to know him—you hate him.
Leap year advice—Don’t shave or visit jewelry stores, and stay
out of moenlight. Also sell car, stay sober, don’t use phone, say
“no” and start running.
i
— P —
| WRECKER SERVICE |
| ALWAYS CALL |
SILVEY MOTOR COMPANY B
\_Phone 246 Dai Phone 3932 Niiht l
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
* * *
Independent
Action Heavy
Over Weekend
Athens Independent League
action gets underway tonight at
Commerce when the home team
tangles with Bogart at 8 p. m.
Because Commerce, a néw
team in the league, cannot play
on Sundays, their games will be
played under the lights at Com
merce on Friday nights.
Pitching for Bogart against
the Commerce team will be Dan
De Santis with Charlie Johnson
behind the plate. L. C. England
or Fred Kidd will umpire.
Saturday afternoon’s action
finds Monroe at Bogart, Wat
kinsville at Good Hope, and
Colbert at Commerce on Satur
day night. Avery Harvill and
Johnson will make up the Bo
gart battery, Pete Tarpley and
Shannon Thomas the Watkins
ville battery and Chandler and
Brown the Good Hope battery.
Flay Betis and Bill Walsh
will handle the battery chores
for Colbert and Al Hicks and
Winford Wilson for Commerce.
Umpiring at Bogart will be
Roy Parr and at Commerce,
Wilbur Paul.
Sunday, Colbert is at Wat
kinsville and Good Hope at
Monroe. Elko Thompson or Wil
lis Panter will hurl for Colbert,
while Chappell Tate and T. Z.
Veale will comprise the Wat
kinsville battery.
The tuataras of New Zealand
are the last living remnant of a
group of fossil reptiles which had
three eyes. In the living species
the third eye on top of the head
is represented only by a group of
scales.
-
Bosox Rival Browns
ForC back Of‘s2
oruomenac O
BY JOE REICHLER
Associated Press Sports Writer
Those beautiful Browns are not the only amazing te:
in the American League. How about those upstart Bost,
Red Sox?
Lou Boudreau’s pink-cheeked
Bobby Sox have been knocking
the stuffings out of the opposition
right from the start, but they have
been overshadowed by the tre
mendous surge of the St. Louis
Browns.
It took a Brewnie postpone
ment to cast the spotlight on Bos
ton’s comeback. The Red Sox
hurled a “move over” challenge
at the Browns yesterday by whip
ping the World Champion New
York Yankees, 3-2, to sweep their
two-game series.
It took the Red Sox 11 innings
to do it but in the end they had
their third consecutive victory
stored away to boost their season
record to nine triumphs and only
two losses. That actually put them
a half game in front of the
Browns. St. Louis, however, re
mained in first place percentage
wise. The Browns showed a 7-1
.875 mark to Boston’s 9-2 .818.
In the day’s only other activity,
the Boston Braves overcame a 3-0
deficit with three tallies in the
eighth and three more in the 10th
to defeat the New York Giants,
6-3 at the Polo Grounds.
Rain and cold weather can
celled all other games in the ma
jor leagues.
A double by rookie Ed Mathews
with the bases loaded in the 10th
broke up a 3-3 tie and enabled
the Braves to snap a three-game
losing streak. Lew Burdette, who
relieved Starter Warren Spahn in
the seventh, was credited with his
second victory. Dave Koslo was
the loser.
| Starter Max Lanier of the
Giants had a shutout until the
eighth when Earl Torgeson hom
ered with two out.
Dixie League
Enters Second
Week Of Play
The Dixie League enters Ifs
second week-end of play Sat
urday afternoon, Whitehall goes
to Comer to meet the local club
there, Diamond Hill plays Dr.
William Green’s Oglethorpe
county team in Lexington, Bar
bersville goes to Nicholson, and
Farmington plays host to Win
terville. All games are sche
duled to begin at 3 p. m.
ALMOST PERFECT, BUT
SAN FRANCISCO, April 25 =
(AP) — Elmer Singleton pitched
no-hit, no-run ball for 12 in
nings last night and stood on the
threshold of baseball’s hall of
fame. Then—bang—three Sacra
mento singles in the 13th turned
glory into a 1-0 nightmare defeat
for the 31-year-old San Francisco
righthander.
Doors Open pAL Ac E
12:45
”, 4
ONE OF THE ALLTIME GREATS
» . Ever-new joy for all to enjoy ...
) ;:\?&g laughs, romance and songs. ... .
% ,@_s's?., gay with the frantic pranks of
..\ ) Dopey and his pals!
o ETTIE o
a Ny 5 ‘ ,
AR
"& » and the g
7 RGN G |
[\ o
- GRS SRR [
// l 5 flcflN/GOl%*'\‘ :'-0 Walt Disney
j ‘ :‘»:"i‘:“;;‘/" on s ,‘,"v “5 .:‘ Productions
e ) > j $ you'll sing agoint
- - ' “Whistle While You Work
o S 7y “Heigh-ho"
‘ “Some Day My Prince Will Come”
Plus: “FUN AT THE SEA” Special “LATEST NEWS EVENTS
Athens Drive-In Theatre
TODAY ONLY
1 A
FRED LENOR ,’,
Mo MURRAY - PARKER |
‘ P '
5 ][]
B
i ) ?
R, A
y-Fos - ?.N
PIus—CARTOON '
FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1952.
[T
Features: 1:00, 2:43, 4:28,
4:09, 7:52, 9:35.
Doors Open 12:44
TODAY ONLY
STAGE ONLY
2:20, 4:00, 5:40, 7:20 and 9:00
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Don ‘RED'
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HOLLYWOOD SHOW
You've seen him. ..
FIGHTIN' « ROPIN'
SHOOTIN' « ROMANCIN
Now...Nere’s Your Big Chance...
To Soo Him... IN PERSON!
ON THE SCREEN:
“BARBARY PIRATE"
with Donald Woods
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SATURDAY
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Also: Cartoon & Serial
SATURDAY
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And—GOOFY CARTOON