The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 39, Ed. 1 Friday, February 14, 1958 Page: 6 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 23 x 18 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
PAGE SIX
TWfe ORANGE LEADER
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY U, 193t
,
I
Bobcats Host Opener Tonight
China Lions
71-B Title
Favored
TV China Lions, who dasher W at forward; P. I. Ptfveto. 6-4, Hhe b 8«c-at.. player on the floor In
through District 71-B south plav at c.' sttr. a id Roger Pricer. >8 I. Peveto. th# Non* will poascss
without a defeat, win rule as e i;rd Herbert .LaPoint, M, at the an overall luiftiit advantage in tne
The Bobcats will clash with the 26 pa.ntsin a zone showdown with;Dsweyv|lle tw.ee in four. day*.
Lions in the first game in the Or-;Fannet! iast week, and Junior Their triumph was in direct con-
angefield Gymnasium at 7:30 p.m Sathcnburgcr, outside,sn-shot art- .rast to what happened two years
The second tilt will be unreeled ir \st a.d outstanding floor man. ago. In /9,6, th IHweyvIlle •?*'
Chin, next Tuesday night Ratherburner wo* selected on the rates trimmed the Bobcats by
C^cii fe liSSrtSwJK !m»'im*£ SS iSum
JKSSYIL K’TSrSflSJIS' d'1A!ihou-h Oranicfield will havp playoffs, in which they lost to Pan-
nett. i
The winner of the best two-of-
thrce-gtmc scries is expected to
face tough Barbers Hill in bi-dis-
trict before -the regional tourna-
ment begins at Brenham.
Carr's Girls Volleyball
Tournament Set Tomorrow
Greenies Face
JacketsToday
District 23 - A
* * ' »>’
Cage Race In
Home Stretch
By JACK MORGAN
The West Orange Chiefs and Warren’s Warrior*—nech
and-neck in a race for the District 23-A basketball chanr
pionahip—gallop into the home stretch tonight aa th
topsy-turvy campaign nears a climax.
In the West Orange dribble palace, the Chiefs, pact
by all-district hotshot Jimmy’ ~
Chiefs visit Sout Lake.
On the other hand. Warren ma.
face not only Anahuac tonight bi
Davis, entertains the lowly
Hull-Dalsetta Bobcats, win-
ners of but four bouts in 15
conference outings.
* T w8Vvir SZH* District 23-A team winnir
Warriors, who lost their anp.^n the conference title this
Bridge City next Tuesday and tf
Kountie J.fons the following Thur
By ED FOREMAN Nederland Si’sbef; and host Carr.
The Carr Invitational Volleyh-ill I • rst round matches will begin
Tournament will be held tomorrow at 3 a m., with the final rounds
in the Carr Junior High School beginning at 3. p.m
gymnasium. I 'll school will enter three
Twelve girls ' teams from fo tr-7 earns, composed of seventh,
area schools will compete in the c-ghlh and' ninth grade studentr.
oiie-dav classic, including Groves. Terms v.ill V div.ded into two
brackets. Eujh it and ninth grade p0;t Arthur’s conference ciam-
:t m.- w.ll cotiocte in one bracket. „ .i;os. Sculh par!>s Greenlee
even i g*aae units in anotnci, and Beaumont visits Galveston as
, n'JTL rirr 'hr District ll-AAAA basketball
>Uf Anderson. coacnos of tiie C srr » jb » . t,au tnniphi
epms and directors of the tour- camPa,Sn grin<\% to a halt tonight.
ney, reported that first, second Today’s act on will finish the
and consolation trophies will be cage season for all league mem- .... .
presented in the eighth and ninth bers except the Yellow Jackets. Df\rf Arthur IC V irtim
grade division, while only a cliam- whose district title has earned rwfi Wi limi *J f »v»* ***
bom giant named Jan Loudermilh p onship trophy will b? given in th»m a trip to tlwnRate playoffs,
is leading Big Spring High Schoo" the seventh grade bracket. Qoath Pete Pence’s Jackets are
to the most successful basketball Plasers on Carrs first and sec- the state's defending Class AAAA
season t,he school has experience I dl’d tcSfms and the seventh grade champions.
rCne^fCe.hrUhV.vsen«oU1 visits whe‘l*r “ *>« Weal Orange orWa
Cypress three da>* **£•/'*“ ren-or perhaps even Little C
Anahuaf for an engagement with __ ft. Kt th victor in rV
the Anahuac Panthers (6-9). ^24 A in^Vn ®gime "iud”
(7-2) to the tune of 34-27. "B
BiaSpring
jSfant Has
615 Points
BIG SPRING (ft—A California
in a quarter of a century.
Loudermiik, Who now makes hi
club are as follows:
First team: Peggy Fades. Bev-
CARR'S BRAD MCCLAIN' DRIVES TOWARD B \SKET
Port Arthur's Bill Fle.Jter (left) Moves In
Carr Junior High Cagers Sweep Doubleheader
*1s
The Orange Tigers, fifth mem- Carr Junior High School’s has-thur counterparts 39-21 in the fi-jed in 16 points, 12 of them coming
jin a sizzling Second half surge.
the Carr Gymnasium.
lowed by Drew Norwood with 4, Henry with 4. ►
The eighth grade Carr Tornadoes Gene Locke with 2 and Tommy Tommy Phillips and David Nutt
’ ‘ ’ - ’------‘‘’gh
the Tornado attack with ers included Jimmy Sherwin with
near here, scored 615 points in the ™r,v ur.i™s’ .......... ....." ................ ........” --- --- - --
Steers’ first 26 games this season ’ Vpi3./,'’Pm ollvi. , inscnmh ence hrswl. the Carr Gyi
Spring*ion%goMv“iames. '* * !nf1a ^en"'’ VharVttc^Noah esGofV^th‘lSrk wS b'the'un came from fthtadTnWiiecondKing withL Bill Flecker was high were tops for the losers with 9 and
The G-feet-6, 215-pounder ha.‘;.lldv. GaIr*l,> C.harlo'te . Noah; t ' f S l^u ^ k . b‘ th , half to nip the Wilson eighth grad-for Port Arthur with 10. 8 points, respectively.
sxssuttwK: Sk!.!!! :l
competed since his junior high
school days
Tigers Lose to French Buffs
In Final Game of Year 47-35
Seventh grade team: Bettv Bur- merely shove them deeper into the
nett Joy Holt. L.i''da Russell. Ann district cellar.
oik,/ is: -"Si;
seasm. ht bucktltd 7S pomo. on, tirit-romnl „h,i.le in th, 0,eSn ,Mth ’ '
■ -I,.^^t0rajsa*
ton ball and bacutball coach, powered in the last half to drop men finished the year with a 17-9
Port Arthur 6-5 forward, Carroji a 47-35 decision in Purple Gymna- win-loss record. Last night’s defeat ort Ar,n“£]
Broussard, an all-state center last i«ium here last night. was their fifth in a row,
year. alrc3('v has the district scor-; The engagement concluded the Sparked bv .Lon Craft and ad- p . .
in*, tit'e se vod tip. 1937-58 basketball season for both district guard Lindlev King, the r 1 A _r
Brousrard has accumulated 147 the Bengals of District ll-AAAA Bcngals fought the Herd on even
go its for an even 2l-pomt per and the Buffs, champions of Dis- terms through the first 16 min-
gab’e B’ crage His nearest rival trict ll-AAA. utes of play, and even went out
s teammate Brooks Por;er, 6-6, The nonconference fracas left at halttime enjoying a 20-l< ad-
’ . ’ French with a gaudy 27-6 record vantage.
LC Sextet
Needs One
Win for Tie
LITTLE CYPRESS (Spl)-
The Little Cypress sextet,
boasting an unblemished 15-6
record, can clinch a tie for
the championship la the Dis-
trict 2J-A girls division to*
night.
The local girls will clash
with the Kountze sextet lo the
flret game of a douMeheader
In the Little Cypress Gym at
7 p.m. The beys varsity fra-
cas follows about 8:15 p.m.
Coach Jackie Bond's girls
need only to beat Ksuntie to-
night and Hull-Dalsetta next
Tuesday night for the district
crowo.
Hull-Dalsetta's ferns carry
the second best record In the
conference, a 1H mark.
Humble Wildcats ne:d only
more triumph to advance to t
district.
The winnc’- of the single bi-di
trict fray will partic'nste in a r
Ton-1! tournament at Bryan, ' i
which four clubs representins eifl
Class A cage powers will battlo
out to see who goes to the stti
finals at Austin.
Standings
Teams—
W
L
West Orangt
i3
2
Warren
_ 13
2
Little Cypress
______ 12
3
Kountze
............... 9
6
East Chambers
..............._ 7
8
Bridge City
6
9
Anahuac
............ 6
9
Hull-Daiaetta
........... 4
It
Hardin
4
1!
Sour Lake
....... 1
14
Tuesday’s Results
Little Cypress 48, Warren 46 ''
West Orange 59. Kountze 56
East Chambers 51, Hull-Dai9e
(a 35
Bridee City 62. Anahuac 55
Hardin 45. Sour Lake 37 j
Today’s Schedule
Kountze at Little Cypress
fers from’ virtually every college n j-n a m.—Carr (No 1) vs Sils-
in Texas, a$ well as Navy. Wake 2).
Forest and the University of San in a ni —Nederland (No. 2) vs
Francisco, among others. Silsbre (No. 1).
-----10 59 a m — Nederland (No. 1)
North Carolina State nunters av* vs.- Crov s (fid. 2'.
erased 37.8 yards on 67 kirks dur- S'*-en*h Grade
ing the 1957 foothill campa-gn Its II k m — Orr vs. Gtvcs
opponents also pun'ed 67 Lines ’1130 a m—Nederland vs. Sils-
Focs averaged 3VI *per try. F'-e.
bine Junior High School Districts
with an unblemished 14-0 won-loss
record.
The Hurricanes finished second
in the district, behind Port Neches, j
with a 12-2 record. Their only loss- Ljons reidy t0 move into the
tl1e hands 0( pop) cjlampionsi1ip picture again should
(Warren and We*t Orange falter
along the way.
T-ts The Bears have a firm hold on
3_20 ,hird P'*c« *n District 23-A stand-
ing* with a 12-3 won-loss record,
5 7 12 1 5-39 iust * *in8'® «ame behind the
4 5 5 7—21 pace-»etters. , . _
?* ®,he: Ffme*,c‘r In lAiirn^mAnf
arters
rade)
I II 6
4 8 5
(Ninth Grade)
Hurricanes
West Orange at Hull-Daiaetta
Bridge City at Sour Lake
Warren at Anahuac
East Chambers at Hardin
Orange Womei
who has a 15 3 average.
STANDINGS
Teams— W
Port Arthur
Beaumont
Orange
Galveshn
South Pari;
Tuesday's Results
Port Arthur 82. Galveston 38
Beaumont 48, Orange 38
South Park, open date
Thursday's Results
* ★ ★
Two Battles
To Complete
11-3A Race
King dumped in seven points in
the first quarter and Craft, who
earns off the bench to sub for
regular Philip Hobbs, who had
broken an arm the day before,
added six points in the second
State Quail
Hatchery Is
Paying Off
cuit, the Bridge City Cardinals (6-
9) will clash with the hapless Sour
Lake Warriors (1-14) at Sour Lake
By EARL GOLDING
Warn Times-Herald Staff
Today's Schedule
Beaumont at Galveston
South Park at Port Arthur
Benefit Games
Set Saturday
8>Fwm £THarrd,nBfor8a nu^B^umoIt W^?.* ill!!
neers (7-8) will be at Harain Jor a r.
date with the Hardin Hornet. (4-
The Warren Warriors appeared L?"es ^ere-
well on their way to the cham- The tourney will run throuj
pionship a week ago after tripping Sunday, with 40 teams making s
______________ _____ West Orange 57-48. Both entered the Saturday competition and I
P'jr.od to put Orange out in front. Written for The Associate"*! Press that fracas with identical records doubles and 106 singles slated o
French had trouble finding the MEXIA tf>—Two years ago. the and each sharing a portion of the Sunday,
range throughout the first hall. The Game Commission invested $200,- leadership. . ! F°ur taams, 9 doubles aa
second half was a different story. 000 in a quail hatchery near Tyler.! Then on Tuesday night. Little Cy- 18 singles from Orange have «
- ,«-« K..k.,K.|i (M,nn' In the third period, the Buffs hoping to do something about the,Dress helped West Orange recap- tered the meet,
win™ m.tn. for four mem ouiscored the Tigers 13-6 to pass sad plight of the bobwhite sports-ture the share they lost nipping Three games across six alley
3 Orange and go into the final eight men in this state. the Warriors 48-46 at Little Cy- for each event will decide tip
h PArt Nprhes Ind^ns dash, niintites with a 30-2G mark. Now. enough time Iijs passed pr«'y , , . , . year's champion. A handicap i
,nr wuh arrh.nvni Nederisnii in French tossed in 17 more potnts to suggest that the hatchery has Going Into tonight s contests. 70 per cent 0f the difference in
hpvrtiinpr 'n (he final quarter while limiting done a job. Here are signs of Warren and th* Chiefs will each tween the entrant’s actual av«
In the mher fracas Coach Jess «*»* visitors to a skimpy 9. progress. be-carrying 13-2 records. a and 200 will be used.
Wh-e e*. v'dor Pi rat?s t.nn|e James Barrum with three noor J. W. Elliott. theMexia man Two more ?a'n” This handicap will then be add*
wJh the Si£e Tiger, on the -r!51nt,L m8m" t<> (he contestant's Kore bowlei
‘‘port* NeXs be at'emotmc Gilbert put the Buffs in front to the'e is no question about the re- Should Wert Orange and Warren
tFr&m&S.«Sj-zzZ'ZSJKr'SJi-!tATtf'Jf’.S — »»o.,„
Bruce, James C.rajbbe and Jimmy term on the
commission says bers afterjonjeht's battles. and the outcome will decide th
stion about the re- Should Wert Orange and Warren ,
ord. can finish the campaign in
_ second place with a victory.
Faculty team* from West Or-' XUS* tTmZk
snge and Little Cypres* High l.n._,h*ja f ' 3 4 k
’craft'»’;? first
• 1 a ..... a 11.. ___I •___ 1 *: . r»__a..a1I __________ nf a,-, <vt vrvl 1 e!i inn that And tinm a.aa _ _
S:W p.ai.
with 10
Aiie
joints, followed by King Pen-raised quail apparently sur- of accomplishing that end. aince * »• a.«.
- -- .... ..... Cypress High ""J ^t\:'rr'nA wth 7. Charles Alexander with 6. vive in spite of warning* to the'heir last two games—like tonight’s Tr.Un .(•urtm.
S-hopl will clash in the second of /L*n, Buddv Street with 4, Garlin Frank- contrary issued by opponents of brawl—will find them pitted N#)tc„, alc,xu uurtm* on ah«-
tf*0 benefit cage games be K*! „d the Pbltei whio S i• lin with s- Charles Brewer and the hatchery plan when it was against a weak opponent. * i"?,!0!*,,. <hM M A„.
played in the West Orange Gvm- fjnine* ,nd ,he Plr*tf* *mp Sik Brooks Hi„ wjth 2 each, and I arry first pushed 1 Next Tuesday. West Orsnge will „*>’'*• 1^“* - ^ "urtln* “ A1I*i
' ‘Ve band Our pen-raised birds entertain the Herdin Hornets, while st’,vi>*r
con- at the hatchery/' Elliott says, in the finale next Thursday, the ib.oWm »m sihOm om;>
......
■ j ers were from birds released in
1956...meaning those birds made
thu KMorrusa « cu»«d to m tor* *oc«it *wt sip t h*u nit too
costs SO t*t»* »ND COMtS WITH G0104N HCt(* (A*.
/ <1
Slim,Trim and Handsome! It’s the
Old Kentucky Tavem
POCket FlSSk-smart way
to have this fine Bourbon always
SHI SH
High School football stadium T^ruVfmnnt " * °"d ** S«ete by Quarters it through one season and into
The first game, to get under tk. .tA« for th» Hrrd is * Orange 13 7 6 9—35 the worst drought the state has
ss-12 513-,w
*"d. death- affair—against Bay City at
Cage
Scores
j* tss <i'^,Th.',,rs "m' Ss» ASTrrS.«:
win begin about 8.15 p.m gay Cjty jf the ,it!
include Leroy Owens. E^ »-*—* District 12-AAA, having
Member* of the facu
Bay City is the title-holder in LOITIOT TCCfl
Golfers Start
.....
Prince, Malcolm R«ctor —1 *Ji’ Th* w,nner or
ton Lambeth.
The Tyler hatcherv it equipped
lo turn out 50.000 birds a year.
ear, 27,000 birds
finale
i During the past y
were purchased by Texans at the
rate of 50 cents per bird, returning
about $13,000 to the commission
The cost of producing each bird
Name-
May if I Foster
Eatrllf Stephana
Rob* Campbell .
Tavern# Hubbard
Dornthar Welch ...
Mary Sorrell* ___
Helen Daniels
Irene Kim
Juanita Wilson ...
Lucille Fannell
l;ll pm.
Start
Name—
BEAUMONT (Spl) — Candidates is about 97 cents.
Bav City- *or Lamar Tech’s 1958 varsity^olf
,nd H‘»-Fr^ w'-dUtHct brawl "will mrit I *»'■ L[‘ri? *(!5>,.“rday at ^ ^beli^foNTE*1 Pa^rB-^fn ad
the winner of the Smiley-Killeen; The ,cst Wl11 ^ over the BELLEF0NTE- Ea •»*—In ad
vance of their high school match.;
Bellefonte wrestlers mailed a par-'
•i AaaociATED raast
Kaal
NUfara 76, Set on Rail §5
St Johns, Bkn 77. Manhattan «6
Middlebury §7. Norwich S4. I overuaea
ARSumption M. American Inti. R2
Holy Cron 71. Quinllto «5 Mortlyn *trfk»
Boih.ny 1» W«t*rn Hor.rv, <7 H.r-1 MrN.m.r.
Wr*t V». W11 tl. Dovl*-glkin* M aoO0wm ..
A®mth Ahlrle*’ Ple-ce
North C.rolln. M W.kf forf.t *7 8mllh ,
Maryland 77. Cloiraoa M Pit p,rk„
Contra M Btraa 7*
Lau *7 Ttilona <1
Contanary 77. Northneat. La 71
MMnoat
Whratoa S* Laala 7*
South Dakota lot. Omaha M
S:Slt p.m.
Bin It
a Or
— |
______I
I
Barbara Ountrr
: Tackla Klttrrlj
t!
t*
- 14
INDIAN READY FOR RACES
MIAMI. Fla. to—The first of th
r* li a I . fracas for the regional crown and 72-hole route.
Gene Mears Named {ornament0 ^"AusHn'" ,hf 5,,,,e l^ticdirector' who afso tutors^he cel containing a cream puff' to w>»mrito»n. nd tj. w.hpoton scimca Rreat Native Dancer’s offspring i
French, Bay City, Smiley and golf and tennis teams, said he j *l,e'r Coclt Haven opponents. When j inttaHi 1 ready for the races at Hialetfi
Killeen represent ftegion 3 The plans to pick the lowest seven or j they met a few day* later. Lock
teams voted to have a playoff eight shooters as his varsity per- , vcn..'T®n .1 °* "** ** m*tches
Coach at Amarillo
back this year, along ■
: or so promising shotmakers at-l
j lending Tech for the first time.:
AMARILLO to — Oklahoma's — ----— ----- - —. — — -------- ,—
1944 football captain. Gene Mear*. series rather thsn a tournament, formers. Others also may be se. for a 25-18 victory, than went back
is going to reiom his old high: Site for the French - Bav City lected. he said. to its dressing room to cut up the
school coach as a staff aide here *»me was decided at a meeting: Lamar’a ‘‘big six” of 1957 are cream puff as a victory feast.
March 1. of school representatives at La back this year, along with a dozen
School trustees hired Mears, 26. Porte yesterday,
yesterday to work as line coach 1 STANDINGS
i under Homer Simmon*, new men-j Teams— W I,
tor of Amarillo High School, for French 8 0
whom he once played schoolboy Port Neches -............. 4 3
football at Seminole, Okla. Mears Vidor ...........,..... 3 4
has been a coach the past two Silsbee 2 5
• years at El Campo, Tex. Nederland I 6
-—^—--' j ' Tuesday’s Results
23-A ji French 65. Nederland 36
a nr s>. ri»*ittt( 7a. at. Mictisfiv He i* Eaat Indian. Unlike his graj
»»n<i«ri«i as. atndrtx *o coated daddy, the 2-year-old is
jr»r | pure bay In color. But he has th
EJJV.TI h’ I same wide quarters, short bat
oar.'iia is. a«>tti« p*eiti< *a and a good-sized head.
mvivi Returning from the winning club
of last year are Butch Baird. Cyj
jia Northrop. Eddie Langert, Hugh I
/|
Teams To Ba Feted
WINNIE (Spl)—Members, of th*
Port Neches 45, Silsbec 38
Vidor, open date
Thursday's Results
.571'
4 »q . • • ’ I
.,aa Scarborough, Clint Airey and Har-
old Blake.
A busy season is lined up for the
: Cardinal players. Thev mike their!
' scion's dehut at the Border Olym- .
pic* invitation tournament at La-,
redo March 7 and 8. Lamar finish-1
Fly 7*t.
French 47, Orange 35 (non-dis- ed sixth in th»* meet last vear,
timed to perfection
7 full years! f
\I!-District 23-A football teams of trict)
U->57 will he honored a. a hanou'-l^^ Today'. Schedule
o he held here Saturday nich' Nederland at Port Neches
• with the East Chambers High Vidor at Silsbec
School grid squad as host. _—
Tvo Orange County players WAY TO SAVE STROKES . j ,ion 0f Intercollegiate Athletics!
were named to the_al!tstar age re- TULSA. Okla. i*-Wilbtir Good- title fo* the second time io a row.
aii’ It/vnl/oH a nolf chot on/l I*. ... - •— - -■**
Titch 's team had an 11-3-3 record j
last year as It copr>ed th" Lone
S'ar Conference crown for the
fifth straight time and followed up
! by winning the National Ascoc;a-
iIntercollegiate a*kui,>«
jgat’ons. Job Boh Isbell of Little now hooked a golf shot and it!-
Cypress was se'ected as fullback landed in the routh.-He looked up
on the offensive unit and t.annv in time to see a fpx running away
.Talbert of Bridge City was chosen with the ball in its mouth. The fox
halfback (on the defensive team. Iran toward the green and Goodnow
cautiously followed. When the ani-
ORGANIZER REACHES *8 mal got near ‘ ~
"'O'AMERICAN AIRLINES DC-7«.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 39, Ed. 1 Friday, February 14, 1958, newspaper, February 14, 1958; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth558186/m1/6/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.