Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 19, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 23, 1955 Page: 2 of 22
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Mustangs Defeat Vernon
70^61, With Late Rally
Sweetwater blew a long 14-point
lead and was forced to come from
behind twice ill the final quarter
before downing Vernon, 70-61. in
district tussle here Friday night.
Dale McKeehan hit 31 for the
Poijies and many of his points
ctfne on difficult hook shots at cru-
cial stages. Kenneth Drewery sank
18 on just one field goal but 14
free throws. Gene Miller with 19
and Carl Franks with 1H were Ver-
Morris Leads Lions
Over B-Team, 47-45
Bandit Keith Mortis literally
stole the game from the Sweet-
water B-Team Friday night.
The little villain paced the Ver-
non B-Team's scoring with 15
points and hounded the Mustangs
all night as the Lions took a nip-
and-tuck 47-45 victory.
Countless times Morris stole the
ball from the Ponies before they
got it across the center line or he
either so bothered the Mustang
guards that they committed bad
passes. He generally threw havoc
into the Mustang scheme.
Even at that, the Ponies with
"Big Red" leading the way stayed
in the contest all the way though
they trailed throughout. Dale Lit-
tlefield. the "Big Ited," counted 15
points, seven of which came in the
vital last quarter.
The Mustangs trailed. 10-8, after
the first quarter: 24-21 at half-
time; and went into the last per-
iod behind, 37-33. The Ponies put
on a rally that got them within a
single point, 39-38, but they could-
n't grab the lead.
Vernon pushed the margin to
43-38 and then Littlefield sank one
to' bring it to 43-40. However, Mor-
ris provided the killing blows with
a field goal and a free throw to
give the Lions a 46-40 advantage
as the clock showed only 2:41 left.
3 10
4
0 15
3
2
9
noil's top threats.
The victory put the Mustangs in
sole possession of sixth place with
a 2-3 district record. The Ponies
were to have gotten a chance to
even that record by playing Breck-
enridge Saturday night.
The Mustangs built up a 26-12
lead with three minutes left in the
first half but the Lions gradually
chopped away at the margin and
finally caught up and went ahead,
51-50, and then again. 53-52, with
3:51 left in the game.
But McKeehan hit two straight
field goals to put the Mustangs in
command. After Charles Spear3
had countered with one for Vern-
on, the Ponies went into a stall with
three minutes left and a scant '56-
55 advantage.
The strategy paid handsome div-
idends as McKeehan chipped in
two free throws and Drewery made
a pair and the Mustangs were on
their way to 14 points in the final
three minutes and a nine-point tri-
umph.
The Lions, except for Franks
who hit three long ones, were cold
in the first quarter and the Mus-
tangs were able to build up an 18-
10 margin with McKeehan getting
three fielders while Drewery
sank a two-pointer and six free
throws.
The Ponies built it to 26-12 but
in the last three minutes of the
half, the Lions wnke up. Lead by
Miller, the Vernon five counted
twelve points tu three for the Pon-
ies and the halftime lead had
shrunk to 29-24.
The Lions began creeping up in
the third quarter and with 1:10
left they got within a single point,
44-43, of the leading Ponies.
Sweetwater built the margin back
to 50-45 early in the last stanza
but then the Lions hit three
straight field goals with Miller's
short jump shot from the side giv-
ing them a 51-50 lead.
Drewery pitched in two free
tosses but Miller put Vernon back
into the lead again. At this point,
McKeehan got his two important
field goals and the Mustangs be-
gan their game winning stall.
S'WATER (70) fg ft pf tp
Meyer 4 1 2 9
Womack .2 6 0 10
McKeehan .. 14 3 4 31
Drewery 1 14 3 16
Lamm 2 0 3 4
Totals
VERNON (61
I Pigg
Franks
Millet
Zaizek
i Graf
I Harvey
i Pearson
i Spears
j Morris
23 24
fg ft
. .0
...7
8
. .3
. .0
.3
.1
.3
1
12
pf
1
4
4
3
2
4
I
4
1
Mustang B (45
fg
ft
pf
Bredemeyer
. 4
2
3
Mounce
. 2
0
0
Littlefield
4
7
0
Cralt *
.1
1
1
Kearney
.0
2
2
Harvev
3
3
1
Holley
1
0
1
Kuykendall
0
0
u
Totals
15
15
8
Vernon B (47'
f9
ft
pf
Butler
. .5
0
5
Morris
6
3
1
Christopher
6
2
2
Lindsay
1
0
4
Dye
. 3
0
1
Dillingham
0
0
1
Rollans
0
0
ii
MuddAn
. .0
0
1
Robinson
.0
0
1
Totals
21
5
U\
Score by quarters:
Mustang B
8 i;
3 12
12-
Vernon B.
.10 14 31 10—47
Plainview Leading
1-AAA Cage Chase
By Two Full Games
Friday night action in the Dis-
trict 1-AAA cage race left defend-
ing champion Plainview undefeat-
i ed and in full command of a two-
game spread over four teams that
were tied for the runner-up spot.
The Bulldogs polished off Big
Spring, 58-50, to run their record to
5-0. The Steers fell into a four-way
' tic for second with Snyder, Level-
iand, and Lamesa all of which now
own 3-2 winning marks.
Sweetwater after beating Vernon
i ranks sixth with a 2-3 record, the
(Lions are in seventh with 1-4, and
Breckenridge trails with 0-5.
Snyder moved up into second
5 with a 64-25 victory over the Buck-
aroos Friday while Levelland was
upsetting Lamesa. 60-59 in a
j squeaker.
Top scorers in Friday's action
i were Sweetwater's Dale McKeehan
with 31, Plainview's Billy Wall
with 24, Levelland's Tommy Oerh-
| lein with 21, Big Spring's Al Kol-
! ven with 21, . and Lamesa's Wa.v-
i land Reeves With 19.
Saturday night action was to
have pitted Sweetwater and Brec-
ke'nridge, Vernon at Snyder, Plain-
i view al Lamesa. and Levelland
| at Big Spring.
Totals 26 9 24 61
Score by quarters:
Sweetwater .18 11 19 22—70
Vernon 10 14 21 16—61
GAY GIBSON
does the first dress oj jummtr
Here's a beautiful little sleeveless dress in two tones of Bates
Disciplined Cotton. With airline tucking on the bodice, a soft
pleated skirt. Combinations of purple, moss and teal. Sizes 7 to 11.
$17.95
. ).«t—
Eighth Grade Bests
San Angelo, 28-15
Reagan Junior High's Eighth
i grade Colts, who hardly know what
j it is to lose at anything, bowled
over another foe Friday night.
| This time it was Edison of San An-
' gelo. and the count was 28-15.
A balanced attack of Ardis Gaith-
er with five and James Parker and
Don Bishop with six each helped
enable the Colts to capture their
! eleventh verdict of the season
against only two defeats.
The Colts were ahead throughout
i and increased their scoring punch
: and lead in every quarter. The
| Eighth graders scored five in
i the first, six in the second, seven
in the third, and ten in the final
quarter. They lead 5-2. 11-7, 18-11.
! and won it. 28-15.
Coach Dalton Hill's second team
: saw a good deal of action and
j contributed well to the scoring.
Reagan Eighth <28 > fg ft pf tp
| Scott 1 0 2 2
I Parker 3 0 2 6
I Gaither 2 1 2 5
Bishop 2 2 3 6
1 Hardin 0 0 0 0
Moser 0 0 0 0
Harvey 1 1 0 3
! Crenshaw 1 0 0 2
| Creech . .0212
] Whittenburg 0 0 0 0
1 Mullins 1 0 0 2
Totals .
San Angelo < 15i
Jarrad
Redfield .
McCoulskej
Gass .
Kelley
Bradshaw
Edwards
Evans
Cartwright
Starkey
11 6 10 28
fg ft pf tp
2
.0
, .0
1
1
. 0
.0
.0
1
0
12 15
Totals 5
.Score by quarters:
Reagan 5 6 7 10—28
San Angelo 2 5 4 4—15
Patterson Bout Cancelled
HOLYOKE. Iviass., Jan. 22—UIJ
—Tuesday's scheduled 10-round
teat tire bout between Floyd Patter-
son cf Brooklyn, N.Y. and Elmo
Lincoln, ol Newark, N.J., at the
Valley Arena here has been can-
celled for lack of sanction by the l
Massachusetts Boxing Commis-
sion. Matchmaker Jim lliggins j
cancelled the whole card when in-
formed the Commission did not
consider Lincoln "sufficiently J
strong enough" to mcel Patterson.
Ameche, Guglielmi
Likely To Be Top
Choke In Pro Draft
CHICAGO, Jan. 22—UP—Wiscon-
sin's Alan Ameche or Notre
Dame's Ralph Guglielmi where
shoo-in choices Saturday for the
honor of college football's most
valuable player of 1954 in the an-
nual National Football League
draft.
Which one will become the bonus
pick of the NFL depends upon
which of the four pro clubs eligible
for the "gift" choice picks the
lucky ballot out of the hat.
Should Baltimore or Pittsburgh
get the plum, it was likely
i Guglielmi w o u 1 d be selected;
j should Green Bay or the Chicago
Cardinals win the bonus, Ameche
i probably would be chosen.
Chance for Both Stars
The Cardinals had a one-in-four
chance to gel both of the stars. The
club finished the 1954 season with
the worst record in the league and
hence gets the first regular dif.it
pick. Should the team gain the bo-
nus too, it could get both Guglielmi
and Ameche.
Quarterbacks again .vere expect-
ed to be the premium players in
the draft and Ohio State'-: Dave
Leggctt, who stood out in the Buck-
eyc Hose Bowl victory, was ex-
pected to be one of the first 10
players selected. Other signal cal-
lers apt to go early in the lottery
were George Shaw of Oregon and
Florian Helinski of Indiana.
Several halfbacks were apt to he
in the first 10 choices, including
Michigan State's LeRoy Bolden,
Notre Dame's Joe Heap, Ohio
State's Bobby Watkins, Alabama's
Corky Tharp, Southern Methodist's
Frank Eidom, Colorado's Carroll
Hardy, and Washington State's
Duke Washington.
Fewer Linemen to Be Picked
Fewer linemen were apt to be
i picked in the top ten, but some
J standouts were listed by the pro
i scouts.
Among these were tackles Buck
| Lansford of Texas, Sam Palumbo,
j a defensive star at Notre Dame,
and Nate Borden, Indiana, ends
! Frank McDonald, Miami, Dean
Dugger, Ohio State and Max Boyd-
! son Oklahoma, guards Jim Heich-
; enbach, Ohio State and Jim Sals-
berry. UCLA and center Kurt Bur-
ris, Oklahoma.
Several other collegiate stars
probably would have gone high in
the draft this year, but they we're
chosen in the pro picking a year
ago and hence already were in the
I reserve list of one club or another.
Among these were halfback Bob
I McNamara of Minnesota and
tackle Ray Smith of Baylor, draft-
ed by the champion Cleveland
Browns, end Charles Hare
I ol Georgia Tech. drafted by Los
Angeles, guard Frank Mincevich
of South Carolina, picked,(hy San
' Francisco, quarterback Paul Lar-
I son of California, selected by the
'Cardinals, and quarterback Jack
Sumner of William and Mary,
! picked by the Chicago Bears.
Strikeout Artist
Will Get Chance
With Cleveland
CLEVELAND, Ohio, Jan. 22—UP
; —Rookie pitcher Herb Score head-
| ed Saturday lor an almost' certain
I tryout with the Cleveland Indians
| and a chance to pick up the strike-
| out mantle once worn by Bob
Feller.
The Indians bought Score's con-
tract from their Indianapolis farm
team Friday night. His triple-A
record had practically assured him
ot a tryout with Cleveland at Tuc-
son, Ariz., in the spring, and the
transfer of his contract made it
almost a dead certainty.
Association batsmen said Score
could throw a baseball past them
taster than any other pitcher they
ever faced. None remembered Fel-
ler, of course, for he broke in with
Cleveland 20 years ago and he
never played minor league ball.
Score threw a third strike past
330 batters during the 1954 season
to set a new American Association
record. He won 22 games and lost
live as he helped Indianapolis to
run away with the race. The Asso-
ciation voted him its most valuable
player and rookie of Ihe year.
Sporting News awarded him its
minor league Rookie of the Year
citation.
2
Swesiwale. Sepo.ifei, Texas. Sunday, January 23, i9S5
Flash! Freshmen Win!
ip San Angelo, 46-44
This is a different story.
The Freshman eagers won!
The victory-starved Pony Frosh
finally, after ten straight losses,
broke into the winners circle Fri-
day night when they bested Edison
of San Angelo, 46-44.
Long void of scoring punch, the
Frosh found their shooting eyes in
the final half to wipe out a 24-17
lialftimc deficit and capture the
narrow but sweet triumph.
I The Ponies narrowed the margin
I to 36-31 at the end of the third
quarter and then spurted to 15
points in the final stanza to catch
and pass the San Angelo team.
Neilson Greer and Jimmy Law
paced the game-winning rally by
Hodges Says He'll
Shoot For Fences
During Coming Year
By UNITED PRESS
Gil Hodges, Brooklyn's "man of
all muscles," thinks he has a
chance to win the National League
home run championship next sea-
son.
I The big first baseman, who al-
ready has established himself as
| the greatest Dodger slugger of all
I time, signed his 1955 contract for
a substantia) raise to about $30,000
and announced he was ready to
"shoot for the fences."
"I think I've got a chance one
of these years to lead the League
in homers," said Gil. "Of course
I've got to have some help from
the other fellows."
"What other fellows?" he was
asked.
"Ted Kluszewski. Ed Mathews,
and Stan Musial," Hodges said,
j "They'll have to have bad years
and I'll have to have an awful good
one. But seriously, I think 1 have
a chance to make it. I never felt
j better and some of those right
handed pitchers don't bother me
J as much as they used to."
Hodges was one of a group of
j big league big shots who camc to
: terms Friday and Saturday.
The Cardinals signed Stan Mu-
J sial and Red Schoendienst and the
| Phillies brought Robin Roberts to
j the pen and ink stage for $40,000.
Davey Williams, the Giant second
baseman signed for $15,000.
Musial signed for approximately
S80.000 while Schoendienst made
$40,000.
Hodges, the only Dodger in his-
| tory to drive in 100 or more runs
for six seasons hts done it six
! times in a row. Last year he ham-
! mered in 130 and had 42 homers.
25 of them in Brooklyn That is
! the all-time high for a season for
| a player in Ebbets Field. Hodges
also has a lifetime total of 212
homers, tops in Brooklyn history.
Elsewhere, catcher Andy Semi-
uick, who hit .235 in 86 games last
season, signed with the Cincinnati
Redlegs and outfielder-first-base-
man Sam Mele came to terms with
the Boston Hed Sox. Mele hit .318
, for the Red Sox last season after
joining them from Baltimore in
July.
contributing seven and five i>oints
i in the final eight minutes.
Greer was top scorer for the
Freshmen of Coach Bill Davis with
13 points Leon Fitts and Thomas
Mayo had eight apiece. Fitts car-
ried the scoring load in the first
quarter by making all six of the
points scored by the Frosh in (hat
period.
Coach Dalton Hill's Eighth grade
team, who are use to winning,
stayed over after their game in
San Angelo Friday and formed a
rooting section that helped spark
the Frosh to their come-from-be-
hind triumph
FROSH (46> fg ft pf tp
Reed 2 2 2 6
Mayo .3 2 5 8
Greer .6 1 1 13
Law .3 1 0 7
Fitts 3 2 5 8
Gerald 0 0 1 0
Daniels . 0 0 0 0
Clark .2024
TotaK
.19 8 16 46
SAN ANG. <44> fg ft pf tp
Flores 2 2 2 6
Villareal 1 0 3 2
Milliken 2 0 3 4
Sheen 4 2 3 10
Martinez 6 4 1 16
McClug 1 2 2 4
Johnson 1 0 0 2
Totals 17 10 14 44
Score by quarters:
Frosh 6 11 14 15—46
San Angelo . . .10 14 12 8—44
Kerbel Resigns
At Breckenridge
Joe Kerbel announced his re-
signation as head coach at Bre-
ckenridge High School Satur-
day in order to accept a
similiar position at Amarillo
High School.
Effective date of his resigna-
tion was not immediately
known.
Kerbel had been head coach
at Breckenridge for three
years. In 1952 and this year his
teams wen the conference AAA
football championships. In 1953
his team tied with Big Spring
for the District 1-AAA title.
The Amarillo High School
where he will now coach is the
older of the two schools there
and is in conference AAAA.
'60-Mile Banquet'
Slsied To Be Held
Moday At Abilene
ABILENE, Tex.. Jan. 21—UP—
Two state championship football
■ teams and one runner-up will bo
honored here Monday night in a
joint affair labeled "60-mile ban-
quet" because all three schoolboy
elevens come from within a 60 mile
radius of Abilene.
To op honored guests at the ban-
quet will be the players and coach-
ing staffs ol Class AAAA champion
Abilene, Class AAA winner Breck-
enridge and Class A runnerup
Albany.
Albany is 35 miles northeast of
Abilene and Breckenridge is 24
miles east of Albany.
The Booster Clubs of the three
cities and the Abilene Chamber ol
Commerce are sponsoring the
affair.
There will be no speeches, but a
radio and record team ol Homer
tnd Jethroe vyill present a 30-min-
i ute stint an'H 15-minute film high-
! lights of the three state champion-
i ship games will be shown.
6-Club Mexican Loop
To Start Operations
COLUMBUS, Ohio, Jan. 21—UP
—The six-club Mexican League
Saturday became the first circuit
composed of all foreign teams
speaking a different language to
be admitted to organized baseball.
The application of the Mexican
League, submitted to the National
Association of Professional Base-
| ball Leagues a year ago, was
i granted by a unanimous vote.
The south-of-the-border circuit
! will start its Class AA operations
as a member of the minor leagues
on April 14 at Mexico City. The
Mexicio City Reds will oppose Ihe
! Monterrey Sultans in the season
1 opener amid a big fanfare.
Also playing in the Mexican
League, which was organized in
1935, will be the Mexico City Blues,
Vera Cruz Aguila, Merida Yuca
tans and Nuevo Laredo Tecolotes.
Anuar Canavati, owner ot the
Monterrey team and the League's
vice president, said elaborate
I ceremonies were planned for the
' season opener. He said he would
invite leading U.S. baseball offi-
: cials to attend.
The circuit had planned to play
only 80 games, but minor leagues
I President George M. Trainman it>-
l sisted it schedule at least 100 con-
tests this year. A live-gam:' weekly
schedule will be drawn up, with
the season ending Aug. ) 8. Then
the Shaughnessy Playoffs would
start,
Canavati said a proposal tele-
vise games at Mexico City was
under consideration. He also said
a new ball park may be built at
Monterrey in a year or so
Lower TIL Classes
Will Play Bi-Dlslrict
Contests This Year
AUSTIN, Jan. 22—UP—The size
of Ihe regional tournament fields
in Classes AA, A and B ot school-
boy basketball will be cut in half
this year with inauguration of bi-
distriet play in those divisions.
Instead of each of the state's 32
A A and A and 96 B districts send-
ing a team to the regional tourna-
ments, the district champions will
play bi-district games—1 playing
{ 2, 3 meeting 4, etc.
The same will be true in the girls
I division, which will determine three
state champions this year instead
! of two as in Ihe past.
University lnterscholastic League
Athletic Director Rhea Williams
; said the new plan would allow
some schools to eliminate some
loss of school time and travel
expense.
The district champions must be
decided by Feb. 19 with the bi-
district games being played either
j Feb. 21 or 22 in the case of boys
I tetms and a week later for girls
: teams.
The state tournaments will he
held at Austin March 3-5 for hoys
| and March 10-12 for girls.
There will be no change in Class
j AAAA and AAA, which have only
! eight districts and which have
played bi-district games hereto-
fore .
There will be four teams each
certified to the state tournament
from Classes AAAA, AAA, AA and
A and eight teams irom Class B—-
24 in all as in the past. In the
girls division there will be eight
teams from Class B and four each
from Classes AA and A.
Each AA and A regional will
have four-team fields, but the size
will vary in Class B where eight
teams will go to Regions 1 through
. IV, six to Region V and four each
I to VI, VII and VIII.
Class B regionals will be at West
Texas State, Canyon; Howard
Payne, Brownwood; Southern
Methodist. Dallas; Kilgore College,
St m Houston State, Huntsville;
Southwest Texas State, San Mar-
cos; Texas A&l. Kingsville, and
Odessa College.
Two-Year-OIrK Nominated
ALBANY, Calif.. Jan. 22—UP—
General Manager Charles E.
Coughlin of Golden Gates Fields
announced Saturday that 488 nom-
inations have been received for the
track's three stakes events lor two-
year olds during the spring meet-
ing which opens March 11.
Open 6:30 — Show 7:00
TOBACCO ROAD 7:20
GRAPES OF WRATH 9:20
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I' it lit I *li r <1 evrulng tiofit Saiurilaj, sail Mumla/ Hinrtiliii k# il*« BwMt
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An/ frronnouii reflection upon ili# rlmraricr or r i uini lou of anf (ler^u. fltifl
tir corporation, whlrli ma/ appear hi the column* of lb* hneciwaicr Ifeporier 1I
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• foe^r wr/iter «m1 a<1Jo'*ilng couuflcn It j mall: ivtft ua« v ar: rarrlir, IS# *r
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Furgol, Patton
j Will Be Given
Golfing Awards
NEW YORK, Jan. 22—UP—
Bon Hogan and Bobby Jones, the
! two greatest golfing champions of
i all time, will present perpetual
| awards to two of last year's cham-
j oions—Ed Furgol and Billy Joe
Patton af the Metropolitan Golf
vY l iter's Association third annual
dinner next Thursday night at the
Hotel Plaza.
Furgol, who won the National
Open despite a withered left arm,
will be awarded the "Ben Hogan
Trophy," which is presented an-
nually to the person in golf who
made the greatest comeback over
a physical handicap and who was
the greatest inspiration to others.
The Gold Key award will be pre-
I sented Patton as "The Outstand-
I ing Personality in the Game in
■ 1954." Patton, winner of the North-
South amateur tournament, man-
| aged to come within one stroke of
tying Sammy Snead and Ben
! Hogan for the masters playoff.
To be honored with Furgol and
Patton are Babe Zaharias. Wom-
en's Open champion; Chick liar
bert, PGA champion; Barbara
Bruning. New York State women's
champion; Frank Strafaci, seven-
times Met amateur champion; El-
lis Knowles, six times Met senior
champion. Otto Griener, Met Open
champion; and Mrs. Sophie Unter-
meyer, Met women's champion.
OU's Burris Named
'Lineman Of Year'
PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 22—UP—
Kurt Burris. 210-pound senior een
ter of the University of Oklahoma
football team, was chosen Lineman
of the Year Saturday by the Phila-
delphia Sports Writers Association.
Burris nosed out Jack Ellena, |
UCLA tackle, by two votes in the j
poll in which more than 100 foot- j
ball coaches throughout the conn-1
try took part. He will receive the j
award at the sports writers' 51st S
annual dinner at the Broadwood!
Hotel Jan. 31.
Arkansas' Bud Brooks came in
third in the balloting. Others re- \
ceiving votes included Navy's Ron
Beagle. Maxwell Club Award win-
ner; Hal Easlerwood, Mississippi
State: Gene Lamone, West Vir-
ginia; Jim Salisbury, UCLA; Max i
Boydston, Oklahoma, and Sid Four-
net, Louisiana State.
Last year's winner, also an Okla-1
homa lineman, was J. M. Roberts,
now on the Sooners' coaching j
staff.
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JUNGLE RAIDERS No. 5
tMI
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"The^KK^Forld't Mott Beautiful Animal
We Give s&h Green Stamps
Russell's Dept.
Store
110-14 Locuit
Piggly-Wiggly
307 Ptcr 1113 Lsmir
Geep's Gulf Sta.
401 E. Broadway
Bowen Drug
Oe«ch«r Bida-
| BENDIX
! Laundrymatic
•07 E. Broadway
Globe Cleaners
m I. Irtf
Cox Jewelry
110 E. Broadway
Briley & Brown
Furn.
117 Oak
Lone Mobil Ser.
101 E. ird
Hortgrave Bros.
Firaitona Sarvica Stora
Harvell Mobil Ser.
1011 Lamar
.■i ■ ■ i i ■ i —■— i i i
FLAMING MSSIOMS and VIOLENCE IN LUSTY. LAWLESS ROME I
All hail th« moat honored picture ol lh« yoor...
W-O-M praientt William Shakaipaare't
JULIUS CAESAR
Starring
MARLON BRANDO
JAMES MASON
JOHN GIELGUD
LOUIS CALHERN
EDMOND O'BRIEN
and
GREER GARSON
DEBORAH KERR
An M-C-M hcUrt
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Directed by JOSEPH t.. MANKIEWICZ« Produced by JOHN H0U?EM*N
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STARTS
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Phone 2141 or 4142
Box Office Opens 6:30
TODAY S. MONDAY
- BIG DOUBLE FEATURE -
First Feature
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Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 19, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 23, 1955, newspaper, January 23, 1955; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth284343/m1/2/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.