The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 233, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 28, 1952 Page: 4 of 16
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THE ORANGE LEADER
PAGE fOUft
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1932
niiitliriWifc
---
Days of Easy Bengal Wins Over Tifto
Are Gone; Over 8,000 Furs Atttad Gam
District 84A Clubs Win Four of Five
Friday Tilts; Hold 10-14 Season Mark
District 8-4A clubs came ------i mi*
Oronge Tiger, Port Necites B Teams
MleSTrSK Tie, 6-6, For Third Consecutive rune
| U.UIM VUMOvVMHV* tu**V< **•» VI ^
.teams have battled to a tie. The
third tie of the home and home
| series between the two Sevens
! came Saturday afternoon at Port
Neche*. 3-3.
The club* met twice last season, *
i the first game ending. W. the
second, 7-fT
The even-steohen series, how-
ever, might be decided this year. *
1 The Tiger and Indian juniors have
mother game slated this season
! to be played in Orange at Bengal
I dadium,
A TD early in the second quar- **
ter gave the Indians a lead on
the Titer Cub* Saturday.
But in the fourth canto, Bobbv
G anger intercepted an Indian,
nass ami galloped about 80 yards
1 for a Tiger touchdown.
The Tiger* scored a TD on a
oas? from Dun Skidmore to Clatne
Humble in the fourth quarter, but
> d was called back on a nr'a'tv.
mid bis defenrive U«e keot the
Tigers in the game all the way •
l«$oin^ Colorado
T»es Oklahoma
' BOW PFR. f'oto (API—-Mighty
OV'shoms's five-year string of H
r. vi-tor *s in Big Seven fo^toH d
r crumbled Saturday to a 2I-T1 tie
„ with an inspired Colorado team led
i_ bv Zack Jordan, a pn«ing kkk-
ia, ing and running star bright as any ,
who eve-; played here. ,
J/| Oklahoma lest was tied in the
conference. 13-13, by Kansas in
-■ 194”, -
of 1 The Soonets haven't tout to a *
td league foe since Kansas beat them
Die Orange leader
d site *hea to? Tteere' from ** *'*'*’*• • |
ialt ret ia toed way. they jest Boto dubs bed a cheat* to sc**
lerked their heads arid reared **»?. ** neither sid
ra the steam. ■ * : «wM cover enough croamd to
It was one of ix =5*; f.-re.'usty .-rent wtehto smeli.ng tostosce «t|
>ugbt games 'staged ia Grange; fheeeJvfj roae. ■ f
oc* :b* Trge f nUtc& with' T*** Ta&sfcm rtetasraed affew w
< F Arthur Yellow Jackets hMf bfcb in writ nt their tme
s: seoscr,. r«tot toad 'and awe ptc firsS-
f rom the ®pera»g whistle, the cf the ptgshin ^ f
tdians .-.inunvred sway as- the.j T> teahte nsbbed the kwM
*ers front it , puemg yardage4 aai'Wteaaai !#»■ *h* 11I* I
•• nearly every attempt. . toe S3 tor 14 yards to pt toe |
It wasn't astir deep ia the final. r»»e totog »aw •*•** after
sorter mat she Orange defend*, s haM-4itoe res*. \
artei creasing the Port Neche* Freer, their own as. use ladtaas;
se and tare* .rg toe Kesaskstis . smarted gnawing away at yardage
* losses, ! f attest gamed by the Redsfcss,
The Indians outplayed toe Tsgw The Tigers ‘ gave up every tods of f
eon sta : to Jtoteri, <a nearly n- ptyga^y, tot it did them aoi
■y phase of toe game. On sev eral good, the Sadias* were TD bound..
xasaoox they gambled on fourth It took toe Tribe IT plays »■
•was and cans* out wianers. * f cover the 85 yards, four - of the *
The Tigers got tie game off to tries were inside toe Tiger seven,
roustr.i start. ;usr. c troir toesr Kato.cw swept hi* right end, from
through with victories. Baytown
ut down Thomas Jefferson (San
Antonio). 34-7; Pasadena's Eagles
tossed Brownsville for a 23-12
ioss; Port Arthur nudged Brack-
mrkSge (San Antonio). 12-0; and ’
Salveston beat out Texas City,!
tt-7. !
Paly f—ref the 3-4A teams
Hob McHwgC
Port Arthur
Beaumont
Ga’vaston
Pasadena
Orange* ...%,
END SDTEF—Jackie Hatourc
(Jfo. 45> cf toe Part Xecbes In-
dians attempts a tight end run
against to* Orange Tigers dur-
ing the game at Bengal stadium
Friday night. Hathors was
smeared by Tiger Fullback Jim-
my Bland who is closing is from
the ba3 carrier's left. An un- I
identified Indian is attempt.ng
to block Bland The Indians
sea 13-3. It was the Tigers' I
second defeat...and to^sr fist '.
bom* gam* of the season; (Staff
pheko by Ralph' Karnes i
St Mary's Hornets Fall
To Port Acres Team, 6-0!
Ate af 3-4A, wfO hatk be Idle.
From reports; 8-4A should spilt ]
Friday night, claiming two vie-
‘ones and losing the same number.
Orange and Beaumont are figured ;
to be beaten, and Galveston and j
°asadena are expected to come
through, gaining additional pres-
tige for teuito 8-4 A
SEASON STAXINNGb
Teams— Wtm Lost
Baytown 3 0
own ST-yard line down ®-ta* In- the to.ee far the score. ■
diass' two-yard matter But at; TrimbSe’* coneemm ' attempt
that poute. the Incsms ss.d ~No.” wa* btoctad by Ttger Tackle Ho-
and M ust it Then they tossed • pat Wharton, and ..with most of
the Tigers fix' a 10-yiid and ; toe test naif of toe game remain •
took over on torsi ots 12. .iag. tbaJbsdtem ltickad <rff to toe
Frew then an. the retag got Tigers holdiag a 13-* lead
rrewh bat the Tigers got a Tae cteb* bounced froer. one end
break TV Indians owned mm%~ of to*'field to the other to* bal-
ing toward Bengi.1 tomwry. *n*e ©f the thirS .quarter, with all
rearhtn* theW U. «twa to* fire* |oal-ane anves being c.-sofced off.
r*t2tr2iTrrt; .-rsanrssirss
cers didn't As the te btaj fine, toe Tigers took to the air.
When the payers were pusie-d A ..tests paw frets Mast te
oit the p.icu;. that retailed ut toe Bobby Bowman biought tomb-
frantic srrarrg.js "rcr the fuxaahtd inm twin Orange (am te
bdH. Tiger l.uuback Jimmy Biand torii feet. With ~r*winr br-
w;a* w.apped arc tod the pigskav tween knit and toe goal fine.
That gave Orange possesaos oa Bowman tinblkrt toe i«» aroud
the Indians' 35. m Gager lips and finally'
Quarteruc.es ; reesnap OcLane test'll Jmt a few yards away •
qmflwf a rt to toe first ptey • freui toe double sute*.
arfd^toe Titers were set beds tour D^Laa* tried his heaving ara
yaras. ^ net again, bet Hathdrc fertwq2st
Bat Flaa.: ges iv. s .mo toe x*wt. the pas* to give to* Ir^ians
lame trt-m toe 33 aaa rintirrinl; ;iri isniMmi •
toe tor... of toe .lur O- aage The Tret* drove doom t© the Ti-
hfis. 'he took a' a»d-oif kad: jm' 21 beftsre fatwr.g nahed ana
crashes the iru-die. he was siow- a» Tigs** toes tned a couple
ed down lerrjxrar.^, js .to ahooc. jaore g.q<atd play*, tnpn mturaed
several woe u-Sv tacitere ofl"' A*: to Shear "nesial attack. Bit «ac*
toe c in i ,v trie ’ stii, iaga, »n i3*Lmse's w*ound up
Blitoa duciei .-a rew ana .sept w.'tise. hands.af, aPon JSeche*.tea-
charging. 1 Ibis' tbte* Triisaie to&ik R and he
.And rnidruD oat of ai) toe ebarpod ' to toe 37 before b«r.*
ontotsrten wt a.teaipied hrin stc.py«d.
through a gaping hoi* and gallop-
ed over the goal-line for the
games only touchdown, A line
nlunge failed to add the extra
11 point.
V
s A pass interception stopped a
. Ft Mary * d.ive after the next
rickofl Port Acres put together
r two first downs to march to the
[: Saint 19 before'a fumble put toe
, Hornet* "back in -pasressk* of the
; baH. Forced to kick, the Hornet*
"helped themselves to another
chance when Paul BUnda inter-
, copied a jump pass on ius own
5 28. The half ended .before they
-i could do mo e than plow to one
first down.
Pass Intercepted
. | Lcte in the third quarter W
Keeney intercepted an Eagle pass
I and returned to his 38. Four plays
; later a finable enabled the Eagles
J to start a new march at midfield
| m the quarter ended
An exchange of punts left the
Vidor Takes
26-7 Licking
From Aldine
Tors Play
First Game
Wednesday
VIDOR (Spl) — Vidor's Pirates,
still fumbhng in the dark for a
victory receipt, suffered their third
consecutive defeat of the season,
filling to the Aldine high school
Mustangs. 26-7. in a p.e-seasen
warmup tussle at Buc stadium
Friday night
________.. _______It wasn't until the second quar-
, . __ Sa^es in possession on the St ***- ‘hat toe Mustangs discovered
banded Texas 1 Marv's 37 Two line plays made the Buc weeknessce. Sod after that
if first down on toe Hornet 11. the Pomes went TD berserk.
•rssrarjs'sa
“ taB “‘^uTSSTiTf
Cohn reached the velvet leone
for the second time, scooting 54
yards, and then D. McManus went
over for a third Mustang TD. cli-
maxing a 51-yard drive.
In the fading minutes of the
. . . third canto, a 71-yard pass from
—Part Acre* Quarterback B. Wadsworth to B
. J. Lloyd | Nance accounted for the Mnstan-s*
K. W<df fourth and final score erf the game.
J. Lake1 ......
C D Anderson
RG Sib Greer
RT C. Myers
RE B Uoyd
Q p. J. Arnaud
LH _ M. Comeaux
RH P. Uughlin
FB A. Schmkttke
Other Flayers
Substitutions St. Mary's — L.
Chatagnier, James Broussard, W.
Keeney and N Sonnier. Po t Acres
—Sid Greer, K. LeB’anc, J.
LOS AAGKLSS ?AP) — The
JCLA Bruins I_________ _____
Chrshan .university its tecood
.'jaight strut out • ir. a row Satur-
day.
The-score was 14-fl 'tor toe Pa- : "a«s reHHHI
ific Coast conference team ia the Purt Acres team.
ziLZKi sjgtrs! „r”, s=a sisss
939 TCU bowc-i 13-©' to Kansas j down, the Eaglet were binging
■42 -WeMt. ■ i £ gainst the St. Mary's forward*
Not since' 1947 have the passing j without success as toe. gam* ended.
,'exans from Fort Worm been i Sterling L
. lacked twice in a tuule season, i St Mary’s—
The game, played before 34.15S , J. Fontenot . LE
•Ian* under cool and cloudy skies. J. Brousard
showed toe coast team with a H. Fiaette
tetter a H-around running and P. Blanda
massing attack against TCU's cf* D. .Mires
feme, which wai effective only in V. Kiekar
.he air. ,, W. Kennedy
Midway ia the third period toe J Methner
Bruins broke -'up...a...scoreless, bat*IT. .Viite^t -
tie. Safety man Pete Dailey ran H. Hebert
a punt back 18 yards to the Frogs' T. Gunn
Phillies Best Giants
Aldin*
____ u
S Open Cookie Poles Three
j-y Homers for Braves
ba(A«u.ia 1*4,4 j —*> CMBteKie
The rv.n-*« . third baseman Ed adathews beiteu
in ret home runs Saturday as toe
Boston Braves spoiled.. Joe Black's
World Series tuneup by titrasniirg
me National iei*«uc s Pennant-
wiruung Brooklyn Dodgers. 11-3.
Mathews struck out ia toe first,
ftomered in the third, sixth aao
O.her NuHH-Busb StjUt
from suss
SALMAS (AF)
Texaste. -Stis state's first major
prsfeaolmted ioctoafi team, open
t*?* Xatscne! kagste season here
today, rraetiag the ciaa that's fa-
vored to »» toe American confer-
tw* ,csaasE|Msatoip — the mighty
New Task Gants..
The Twbbis sr* to the National; eighth, mnuigs and grounded out
iKoSerestee but the game wito the! an toe ninth.
GaaSs <mms. m toe chaanp«nshin i Mathews te the first rookie to
rtaarfhags, itoe fetetory of"the league to'sock-
A keae st toe Goats' roster’ three hiiase raev in one game,
might uaahtaae toil to* deb was4 Only other players to hit three
ate aptey naesto-Ha has, aimret asi Breners ia one..game this reason
***y Texams as toe Texan*' res-; em Hank Sauer • of toe Chicago
tear- Aaxssg .tot® are a cacpie ofCubs and A1 Rt*sea cf, the Clevc-
teetoaesrt ssssovtito theand ladter-.
gross XjSe Bote usd that passu:' ■ —— -1----- .
rsfi® * Sfcwshwest csetenstwe Ms-* WWm IE Sagdte. .new Nstiop-
tory. Fredtoe Besawre. ;*j it*®* am pi-re, wark* «s a
A crowd it S&Jbi to 3&AM te % dsehing satewwa curing the off-
expecteh . ; rewsoc..
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 233, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 28, 1952, newspaper, September 28, 1952; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth558803/m1/4/?q=music: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.