Newspaper Page Text
Got Anything to Sell? Want
to Buy Anything? Put a
Want-Ad in the Brantley
Enterprise. 75 Cents or 3
Times $2.00.
VOLUME 37 — NUMBER 46
Youth Center Would Be Fine
Asset to Brantley County
It is my opinion that a Youth Center would be a
splendid asset to Brantley County and I hope all our
citizens will give the project fine support.
A Youth Center would be used for supervised activi
ties of Brantley County’s fine generation of young people.
It could provide for wholesome activities and “some place
to go” for our young people and thus help to keep them
from being tempted to go to “juke joints” and to ques
tionable places for amusement.
The Youth Center will cost money and also cost much
time and planning by its sponsors. Such a Youth Center
would also require time and money for its upkeep and
for supervision of its activities.
It seems that a large number of our citizens are
willing to undertake the project and they will need a
whale of a lot of help. Ours is a small county and our
finances are limited. But with everyone helping out, the
project can be accomplished.
You are requested to attend a meeting of those in
terested in the plans for a Youth Center at the courthouse
next Thursday night.
Terrific Storm Struck in
Pierce on October 2, 1898
On Sunday, October 2, 1898
Blackshear and Pierce county
was the victim of one of the
worse storms to hit this section.
According to The Blackshear
Times account of the damage,
the storm, sweeping through this
entire section, struck Blackshear
between 8 and 9 o’clock in the
evening on that day.
It left the town with numer
ous houses damaged and virtual
ly littered with fallen trees.
One person, a Mrs. Jack Dick
son, was killed when the kitchen
she was in was blown down on
her.
The following paragraphs, tak
en from the account, describe
the damage;
“Main street from Brantley’s
hardware store to Dr. Brewer’s
office has been stripped of every
China tree except one or two
and they are badly damaged.
“The school house in the pine
thicket near the residence of
William Davis was blown down,
and some one said it was turned
around.
“Mr. Ahl’s kitchen at the
‘Norman place’ was blown down
and torn to pieces.
“An old woodshop out at Mrs.
M. J. Howard’s was blown down.
“A shed-room at Joe Gray’s
was torn loose from the house
and leans from the house about
two inches.
“Mr. A. P. Brantley’s wind-mill
up at his house was blown over
and badly damaged.
“Mr. G. W. Taylor, naval
stores manufacturer, is the hea
viest loser we have heard of up
to now. He lost about 75,000
boxes besides other losses. We
haven’t seen Mr. Taylor but we
The Old Man and His Gun
By BILL ALLEN
Atlanta Journal Outdoor Editor
Spanish moss brushed into the
windows of the pickup along the
winding sand lane and tunneled
out to frame a weatherworn rec
tangular shack where a slight,
stooped, snow-thatched figure
puttered in the yard.
The smell of the Satilla came
on a breeze from the east —(the
river was only a hundred yards
away beyond the cypress grove)
—and Avery Rowell called out:
“Got your deer yet, Uncle
Charlie?”
The spry reply came back:
“Not yet, Avery. But I got some
cat squirrels ...” He was clean
ing them.
Charlie Anderson is 90. He’s
probably the oldest active deer,
turkey and squirrel hunter in
Georgia. And, make no mistake
—active he is.
Alongside his cleaning board,
leaning against a moss-hung live
oak, was the most marvelous gun
I’d ever seen. Exposed hammers
interrupted its graceful sweep of
64 or more inches. It was a Bel
gian-made beauty with the long
est barrels I’d seen in many a
year —40 inches.
“I can’t get around much since
I slipped back on my head over
at the riverside and jammed my
neck-spine,” Uncle Charlie con
fided, turning his shoulders to
look at me with unspectacled
shining eyes. “But I got the tur
key I was shooting at anyway.”
“About four years ago this
month,” he grinned, showing
white teeth, his own, “wasn’t it,
Avery?”
Avery agreed and I marveled
Brantley County — Land of Forest Products, Naval Stores, Tobacco, Livestock, Honey, Hunting, Fishing — and Progressive People.
By Carl Broome
understand that he places his
loss at $5,000 and is tempted to
abandon the whole business.
“Mr. D. J. Walker’s store down
in Patterson was unroofed and
the damage to his stock of goods
will amount to several hundred
dollars.
“Messrs. Walker and Hump
hrey, naval stores manufacturers,
the former eight miles north-west
and the latter four miles north
east, must have lost heavily
from the storm.
“One of The A. P. Brantley
Co.’s large smoke-stacks was
blown down.
“The farmers say that cotton
is beaten into the ground, cane
is lying flat on the ground, in
some places fences are down from
around whole fields.
“A chimney to the residence
of J. S. Taylor was blown down
besides other damage done to the
house.
“E. Aspinwall says the storm
damaged his turpentine business
at least $1,200.
“A portion of W. F. Raybon’s
house was carried away and the
Masonic hall was moved about
12 inches out of plumb.
“Dr. W. N. Brown came up
from Lulaton yesterday and says
that damage done by the storm
in that community is appalling.
“The town authorities have a
limited number of men at work
clearing away the debris and
putting the streets in a passable
condition. Some men have vol
unteered to remove the fallen
timber for the wood, which will
relieve the town of the most of
the expense.”
at a man who was spry enough
at 87 to hunt the .most elusive of
North America’s game—and get
Now, at 90, he was tired when
he arose and went to the mail
box, two miles away on the as
phalt highway, and didn’t carry
the rather heavy artillery of
which he was so proud.
“She’s shooting just as good as
ever. Bet you never saw one
carry and kill so far. But I
wouldn’t have needed her carry
ing strength today ... a big
back, with about eight points
met me almost at- the road and
stopped so I can say that I bag
ged him anyway ...”
Uncle Charlie’s larder could
have used that buck, too.
Soon, Uncle Charlie will move
from his beloved Satilla Swamp
and toward Miami, where his
son is doing well —“but in need
of some help, going to school like
he is, and he’s never stopped
trying to learn ...”
So, Uncle Charlie will sell his
precious 40-inch-barrelled blun
derbuss made by a great Belgique
craftsman for $75 or SBO and
something will be gone forever
for me, and for Avery—and for
a lot of others—out of the Satilla
country.
“It’s not too bad to leave here
now”, Uncle Charlie said after
I’d taken his picture. “There’s
more game here now than when
I came, actually. I used to have
to really work for turkeys and
deer. Avery is so bad about
catching 300 people a year that
they’re letting the game come
back out of pure fear. I’m not
sorry to leave the swamp in his
hands ...”
Snmtky BttaprtfiE
Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, Nov. 14, 1957
Stephens Resigns
As Policeman,
Hired As Deputy
C. T. Stephens, Nahunta day
policeman, has resigned as po
liceman and has accepted a job
as deputy under sheriff J. Walter
Crews of Brantley County.
Mr. Stephens took u his duties
as deputy sheriff Saturday, Nov.
9. Toomer Herrin of Waycross
was hired as Nahunta policeman
to fill the vacancy left by Mr.
Stephens’ resignation.
Mr. Herrin is a former Way
cross policeman, also a former
deputy sheriff under former she
riff Altman of Ware County.
Hickox - Haney
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Hickox
announce the engagement of
their daughter, Miss Myrtis Hic
kox to David Haney, son of Mrs.
Lonnie Riggins.
Miss Hickox is a graduate of
Nahunta High School and is now
employed in Waycross. Mr. Ha
ney graduated from Nahunta
High School and is now serving
with the U. S. Navy and is sta
tioned at Charleston, S. C.
The wedding will take place
December 8.
Rural Roads
Project Is
Accepted
The final construction inspec
tion of a Brantley County Rural
Roads Authority project has been
made by the State Highway De
partment’s supervising engineer.
The project consists of 5.505
miles of grading, paving and one
bridge on the Nahunta to Oak
Grove Church to Raybon Road.
Begins at State Route 23 and ex
tends west via Oak Grove Church,
thence South toward Nahunta, in
cluding 1300 feet spur west from
intersection at Oak Grove Church.
Notification of the project’s ac
ceptance has been given the Hol
land Construction Company of
Mt. Vernon, Ga., the contractor.
The Highway. Department di
vision engineer has been author
ized by M. L. Shadburn, State
Highway Engineer, to submit a
final statement to Highway De
partment headquarters in Atlanta
for payment of work done.
Final acceptance of the project
was on Nov. 5, according to Roy
F. Chalker, chairman of the
State Highway Board and Rural
Roads Authority.
Records in the office of the
Rural Roads Authority at High
way Headquarters in Atlanta,
show that under the first four
increments of RRA bonds, Brant
ley County has had three pro
jects, including those completed,
under contract or where funds
are obligated.
Total mileage of these projects
is 11.615.
Nahunta High School
Basketball Schedule
The remaining schedule is as
follows:
Nov. 15, Screven, here.
Nov. 19, Hoboken, here.
Nov. 22, Screven, there.
Dec. 3, Jesup, here.
Dec. 6, Wacona, there.
Dec. 7, Hinesville, there.
Dec. 10, Manor, here.
Dec. 13, Folkston, here.
Dec. 17, Camden, there.
Dec. 20, Patterson, there.
Jan. 7, Glynn Academy, here.
Jan. 11, Hinesville, here.
Jan. 14, Manor, there.
Jan. 17, Folkston, there.
Jan. 18, Darien, here.
Jan. 21, Jesup, there.
Jan. 24, Nicholls, there.
Jan. 28, Camden, here.
Jan. 31, Hoboken, there.
Feb. 4, Wacona, here.
Feb. 7, Glynn Academy, there.
• Feb. 11, Patterson, here.
Feb. 14, Regional Tournament.
Hoboken High School
Basketball Schedule
The basketball schedule of Ho
boken High School has been an
nounced as follows;
Nahunta, there, Nov. 19.
Blackshear, here, Nov. 22.
Surrency, here, Nov. 26.
Camden, here, Dec. 3.
Folkston, there, Dec. 6.
Coffee County, there, Dec. 7.
Patterson, here, Dec. 13.
Waycross, here, Dec. 14.
Waresboro, there, Dec. 17.
Folkston, here, Jan. 10.
Odum, there, Jan. 17.
Waycross, there, Jan. 18.
Screven, here, Jan. 21.
Camden, there, Jan. 24.
Blackshear, there, Jan. 28.
Nahunta, here, Jan. 31.
Patterson, there, Feb. 4.
Wacona, here, Feb. 8.
Wacona, there, Feb. 11.
Auto Crash
On Bridge
On Route 301
Two cars sideswiped one an
other on Little Satilla bridge six
miles north of Nahunta Sunday,
Nov. 10, at about 2:00 pm. The
State Patrol estimated the dam
ages to the two vehicles involved
at $3,200.
Investigators said one auto pul
ling a house trailer was travel
ing South on 301. The driver of
this vehicle was identified as
Walter L. Simpson of New
Brunswick, N. J. The other auto
was driven by Thomas Plato
Fletcher of Kingsport, Tenn, and
was traveling North on 301.
The two vehicles met on Little
River Bridge and both apparent
ly swerved toward the center of
the highway and sideswiped, the
Patrol said. The Fletcher vehicle
crashed through the railing and
hung suspended over the side of
the bridge.
Drivers of both vehicles mira
culously escaped injury. Troopers
R. P. Terry and A. K. Dasher
investigated for the Patrol. Simp
son was charged with driving too
fast for conditions and Fletcher
was charged with failure to have
vehicle under control, the Patrol
reported.
An ambulance from Chambless
Funeral Home, Nahunta, carried
Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher and their
two children to a Jesup hospital
but only the little girl Evelyn
Fletcher was found to be injured.
She had suffered a cut on her
chin.
Third District
PT A Congress
Meets Nov. 16
The Third District of the Geor
gia Congress of Parents and
Teachers Association will meet
at the Nahunta High School Sat
urday morning, Nov. 16.
The announcement is made
jointly by Mrs. Bill White and
Mrs. Dan Jacobs, presidents of
the Nahunta Elementary PTA,
and the Nahunta High School
PTA, whose clubs are hosts for
this meeting.
Registration will be held from
9:30 until 10:00 a.m. in the high
school lobby. The meeting will
be held in the school library.
Presiding over the meeting will
be Mrs. T. H. Weatherly of Bax
ley, director of the Georgia Con
gress of PTA from the third dis
trict.
This meeting is a workshop on
Parent Education. Mrs. J. R.
Pinson Jr., of Baconton, Georgia,
who is chairman of Parent Edu
cation for the Georgia Congress
of PTA, will conduct the work
shop. She will be assisted by
members. Mrs. Weatherly, Mrs.
Jacobs and Mrs. White invite all
parents to attend this workshop
and to bring your PTA manual,
notebook, pencil and your own
questions concerning Parent Edu
cation.
The local PTA clubs are serv
ing lunch to all guests attending
the meeting. Hostesses from the
local clubs are Mrs. Avery Strick
land, Mrs. Cecil Moody and Mrs.
Woodrow Hendrix.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Chambless
had as their guests over the past
weekend Mr. Chambless’ .mother,
Mrs. Vera L. Chambless and sis
ter, Miss Barbara Chambless of
Tallahassee, Fla., also Mr. and
Mrs. J. George Bailey of Ridge
land, S. C. They returned home
Monday.
Mrs. J. Roy Chapman of At
lanta and Mrs. and Mrs. Paul
Chaffin of Waycross visited Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Broome on Sun
day.
» * *
Among those from Nahunta at
tending the Georgia-Florida foot
ball game in Jacksonville Sat
urday of last week were: Clar
ence Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Her
schell Herrin and son, Wendell,
Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Mizell and
their daughter, Marvine, Coach
Harold Scott, Mr. and Mrs. S. K.
Allen and Charles and Terry, and
Jane Strickland.
Miss Marvine Mizell of Atlanta
has been visiting her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Mizell.
Mrs. Gibson Honored
At 83rd Birthday
Celebration
The many friends and relatives
of Mrs. W. R. Gibson, affection
ately known as “Aunt Sarah”,
celebrated her 83rd birthday at
her home in Waynesville Sunday,
November 10.
Those present were: Mr. and
Mrs. Marion McKendree and An
nette of St. Simons Island; Mrs.
Jack Quaterman, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Lewis, Andy Quaterman,
Kathryn Nisi and Libby Lewis
of Waverly; Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Anderson, Lloyd and Lou of
Jesup; Mr. and Mrs. Lyde Tho
mas, Statenville; Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Strickland, Eddie and
Dorothy Jean of Blythe Island;
Mrs. Jewel Robinson of Miami,
Fla.; Mrs. Jean Richie and son
of Gainesville, Fla.; Mrs. Marie
Anderson, Mrs. Mattie Benjamin,
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Harrison,
Debby and Carol, Mr. and Mrs.
C. E. Gibson and William of
Tampa, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Edgy, Mr. and Mrs. Doodle Wil
son and Faye of Brunswick; Mr.
and Mrs. Cecil Tucker of Wood
bine; Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Kizer,
Mrs. E. K. Ham, Mrs. Agnes Dru
ry, Mrs. T. J. Kaney, and Her
bert of Nahunta; Mr. and Mrs.
H. D. Wiggins and Dyer, and
Miss Agnes Wrench of Jackson
ville, Fla.; Mr. Tillman and Jim
mie Leur’s of Hyattsville, Md.;
Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Gibson and
Charlene, Mr. and Mrs. F. W.
Gibson, Freddye Lou, Sarah Anne
and Tom, Mr. and Mrs. P. J.
Gibson, Bill, John, and Don, Mr.
and Mrs. E. A. Hunter, Eddie and
Beth, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Walker
and Patsy, Judy Dowling, Jim
mie Walker, Mr. Robert Kelly
and Mr. Elmore Kell}, Mrs. Jim
my Jones, Lynn and Jimmy Jr.;
Mrs. Spencer Drury, Janice,
Stanley, Mrs. S. C. M. Drury,
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Nail, and
Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Robinson of
Waynesville.
A basket dinner was enjoyed
by all.
Eighth District
Legion Meets
At Waycross
The Eighth District American
Legion Meeting will be held at
Waycross, Georgia, Post No. 10,
on Sunday, November 17, begin
ning at 2:00 p.m.
A complete schedule is listed
below:
Saturday, Nov. 16, dance at
the Post Home of Waycross Post
No. 10, beginning at 9:00 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 17th —10:00 a.,m.
—Attend church of your choice
in Waycross.
2:00 p.m. — Opening of Eighth
District American Legion Meet
ing at Post Home of Waycross
Post No. 10.
2:05 p.m. — Invocation by Rev.
Michael J. Kippenbrock, Eighth
District Chaplain, Christ Episco
pal Church, Valdosta, Ga.
2:15 p.m. — Principal address
by Congresswoman Iris F. Blitch,
Eighth District of Georgia.
At close of meeting - Free
Dinner will be served by Legion
Members and Auxiliary Members
of Post No. 10.
Negro Man
Arrested in
Lottery Case
A Negro man was arrested by
deputy sheriff Stephens Saturday,
Nov. 9, charged with operating a
boledo or numbers game.
Deputy Stephens found a car
parked beside the road a mile
south of Nahunta Saturday.
While he was checking the car,
a Negro came out of the woods
nearby and claimed the car. The
deputy had found numbers rac
ket equipment in the car and
jailed the Negro who later con
fessed to operating a numbers
racket, according to deputy
Stephens.
The Negro then took officers
back to the scene in the woods
near where the car was found
and helped them locate $350
hidden in the woods. State Troop
er Dasher assisted in the investi
gation of the case.
The Negro said he had picked
up the money in Jesup but re
fused to implicate his accom
plices if any.
Mrs. C. B. Beam of Citrus
Heights, Calif., has been visiting
her mother, Mrs. C. I. Rhoden
for two weeks. Mrs. Rhoden will
accompany her daughter to her
home in California on Wednes
day, Nov. 13, where she will
make her home for the present.
OFFICIAL ORGAN BRANTLEY COUNTY AND CITY OF NAHUNTA
Nahunta 4-H Team, Coffee
County Take Top Fair Honors
Hortense PTA
Makes Plans for
Christmas Party
The Parent-Teacher Associa
tion of the Hortense School met
for their November meeting on
Wednesday afternoon, Nov. 13.
Mrs. Raulerson, president, pre
sided. Mr. Carl Highsmith, the
seventh grade teacher, gave the
devotional.
Mr. Bob Strickland, principal
of the school, introduced the
guest speakers; Mrs. Herschell
Herrin and her panel speakers,
Miss Myra Strickland, Miss Dar
lene Drury and Miss Caroline
Smith. The topic was Parent-
Teenage problems.
Mr. Bob Strickland showed
film on T.B. in connection with
the drive which is soon to begin.
Plans were made for a Christ
mas party to be given in the
school lunch room on Friday
night, December 13, at 7:30. The
ladies are asked to bring a gift
for a lady and the men to bring
a gift for a man.
The hostesses were: Mrs. Eva
Rowell, Mrs. Lucille Harris and
Mrs. Agnes Strickland. They
served fruit cake and soft drinks.
There was a good attendance
of members, and Mrs. Katie Grif
fin from Nahunta Elementary
School was a guest.
Baptist WMS Will
Hold Study Course
And Banquet
The WMS of the Nahunta Bap
tist Church will have a study
course and banquet at the church
on November 26 beginning at 6:30
p_m. and through nine o’clock.
The banquet will consist of a
covered dish dinner.
The Sallie B. Lary Circle with
Mrs. Monsie Herrin as circle lead-
er; Rebecca Circle, Mrs. Marshall
Strickland, leader; Frances Gold
fench Circle, Mrs. Harry De-
Pratter, leader; Business Wom
en’s Circle, Mrs. Nellie Griffin,
leader; and the WMS of sur
rounding communities are invit
ed to attend. Mrs. Walter Crews
is president of the WMU.
The study will be a “Book on
Foreign Missions” to precede the
Lottie Moon Week of Prayer.
Youth Center
Is Planned
For County
A number of Brantley County
citizens are working on plans to
establish a Youth Center as a
place where the young people of
the county can go for recreation
and amusement.
Several meetings have already
been held to make plans for the
project and another meeting will
be held at the courthouse next
Thursday, Nov. 21, according to
Mrs. DeWitt Moody, the publicity
chairman.
The plans for the Youth Cen
ter call for erecting a building
suitable for sports and amuse
ment for young people.
All the people who are interest
ed in helping to provide a Youth
Center for the young people of
Brantley County are requested
to attend the meeting at the
courthouse next Thursday night,
Mrs. Moody stated.
“The Youth Center will bene
fit everyone in the county,” Mrs.
Moody said. “Please give it your
support.”
Hickox HD Club
Gives Shower for
Miss Anderson
The Hickox Home Demonstra
tion Club entertained with a
miscellaneous shower on Wed
nesday afternoon honoring Miss
Maryse Anderson who became a
bride last week.
Present were Mrs. Marshall
Strickland, Mrs. Jos. B. Strick
land, Mrs. Mollie Highsmith,
Mrs. E. L. Sears, Mrs. John Da
vis, Mrs. Horace Jacobs, Mrs.
Claude D. Smith, Mrs. C. F. Al
len, Mrs. W. W. Hendrix, Mrs.
O. A. Jones, Mrs. N. W. Hendrix,
Mrs. W. L. Bohannon, Mrs. Vir
gil Strickland, Mrs. M. L. Ander
son, Mrs. Lula Brown and Miss
Anderson.
Mr. and Mrs. Jasper O. Willis
of Jacksonville visited relatives
in Nahunta on Wednesday of this
week.
Keep up with the News
About Your Home County.
Subscribe for the Brantley
Enterprise, $2.50 a Year,
$3.00 Outside the County.
(Plus Sales Tax)
A Nahunta 4-H Club judging
team and a Coffee County High
School FFA boy won top honors
in connection with the 10-county
livestock show held last week at
the Okefenokee Agricultural
Fair.
Four 4-H boys trained by
Brantley County Agent George
Loyd won the champion Hereford
bull offered to the prize winning
livestock judging team.
The champion 4-H’ers were
Jimmy Thomas, Aley Lee, Tom
my Jacobs, Wayne White. They
were awarded the Hereford bull
given by the C. L. Cross Jo Su
Li Farms. Mrs. Cross made the
presentation. Ravenal Winge pre
sented awards.
The top judging youth in the
show was Jimmy McDonald,
FFA Youth of Coffee County
High School.
Second high boy in the judg
ing team was Jimmy Thomas,
4-H boy of Nahunta.
The Bacon County High School
4-H Club of which Harvey John
son is county agent won second
place in the FFA-4-H judging
contest.
A Waresboro FFA team with
C. P. Hamilton instructor, and a
Coffee County High School FFA
team headed by J. L. Goodman
and J. W. Walker, vocational ag
riculture teachers, tied for third
place.
Tap Bennett, agricultural rep
resentative of the Central of
Georgia Railroad, and Bob Bla
lock, agricultural representative
of the Standard Oil Company,
served as judges of the livestock
show at the f r in Way cross last
week which they described at
one of the b .st irt the state.
Brantley and Glynn
Homemakers Meet
At Legion Hall
Miss Audrey Morgan, family
life specialist from the Extension
Service in Athens, was in our
county last week to attend a
combined meeting of Brantley
County and Glynn County Home
makers held at the Legion Hall
in Nahunta.
Those attending were: Mrs. G.
E. Hardy, Mrs. P. B. Homan,
Mrs. Virginia Mclntire, Mrs. E.
M. McGregor and Mrs. Bernice
E. Grant, all of Glynn County.
Mrs. Essie Thrift, Mrs. Marvin
Purcell, Mrs. Allie Wainright,
Mrs. M. M. Manning, Mrs. Neil
Hendrix, Mrs. Bill White and
Denise, Mrs. Geneva Melton,
Mrs. Lonnie Aldridge, Mrs. Mar
garite Jacobs, Mrs. E. A. Hunter,
Miss Sarah Simpson and Miss
Morgan’s mother of Athens.
A covered dish lunch was en
joyed at the noon hour and cof
fee was served by Miss Simpson.
Mrs. Neil Hendrix, reporter.
Royal Theater
All Pictures in Cinemascope or
wide screen.
Show time: 7:30 P.M. week days;
On Saturday two shows,
7 P.M. and 8:30 P.M.
Sunday 3:30 P.M. only.
Admission adults, .45;
children .20
SUNDAY ft MONDAY,
NOV. 17 and 18
“FRIENDLY
PERSUASION”
WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY,
Program
FRIDAY & SATURDAY,
NOV. 15 ft 16
“DRAGOON
WELLS
MASSACRE”
With BARRY SULLIVAN
and MONA FREEMAN
With GARY COOPER
and DOROTHY McGUIRE
CLOSED TUESDAY
CLOSED TUESDAY
NOV. 20 and 21
“SPOOK
CHASERS”
With HUNTZ HALL
and THE BOWERY BOYS •