The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 103, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 1, 1955 Page: 9 of 34
thirty four 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:
*r « ' * . •
PK&-V*-
,.,..... . .. jumtuwm
,. .. ,
foifc
Matches With
m|
Beaumonters
Are Planned
After returning home with nine
awards from the sectional shoot
at Joinerville last Sunday, the
Sahine Rifle Club, junior divi-
sion, is now preparing for a
snoulder-to-shoulder i n t e r c 1 u b
- matches with the Trinity-Neches
-rifle club in Beaumont.
As yet, exact dates for the
matches haven’t bben set, but the
Orange ( riflemen will continue
holding bi-monthly shoots
throughout the season.
The locals practice on the first
and third Sunday of each month
at the National Guard Armory.
Members of the Orange team
who took part in the sectional
.shoot included Lyndon Robinson,
'Nathan Kuhn, Gail Terry, Susan
Black, Marianne Taggart, Murrey
Taggart, Steve Swearingen, Ann
Nelson, Rudy Mathews, Glen
Mathers, Linda Sue Robinson,
David Copleland, Skipper Robin-
son, Rickie Allen, and W. A. Coon.
Other active club members in-
rm?'
Three-Year-Old Cries
To Smoko Stoggios
. “PALTO, dL (AP)—Mrs.
Earl C. Welton admIU she made
a mistake In teaching her son
Gene to smoke more than a
rear ago Maa a stunt.”
She lays Gene, now *H,
“spends one dollar a week for
cigars. He wonM rather have
them than candy. He stand*
and bawls until I get him one.
That’s how much he likes
them.” 'r
She said the family doetor
told her the smoking wouldn’t
hurt the hoy.
Bobby North, Jaimes Hanscom,
David Bell, Donal Frenzel, Ned
Cameron, Dickie Davis, Alien
Richard, Mary Lynn Finnell, Ron-
nie Martell, Donnje Martell, Bar-
bara Martell, Steve Bell, Barry
Levine, Phillip Quinn and Barry
Mays.
The Orange team is sponsored
by the local Kiwanis Club.
Thin hamburgers, cooked and
cooled, make good lunchbox fare
when they are sandwiched into a
~ --------------------... rojl with pickle’ relish or chili
elude Bobbie Osgood, Don Howard, sauce.
1JAIUEM
SELECTED GROUP
REG. $1.10 VALUES
COSTUME
JEWELRY
SUNDAY. MAY 1. H»_THt OHANGt UADIS
69
PLUS
TAX
CHOOSE NOW FOR
MOTHER'S DAY GIFTS
HUNDREDS OF STYLES
IN LATEST FASHION
sTAiyrs
J E W 'EJlR Y
105 FIFTH ST. — (Holland Hotel Bldg.) - DIAL 8 2107
Your Authorize4 "KEEPSAKE DIAMOND" Dealer
— Lrtdtr Photo by Bob Axtlton
REALLY NOTHING TO IT
Proud Levingston Employes and Model Drilling Tender They Built
Oil Show Will Feature Model Built at Levingston
Hospital Employe .
Applications Out
The first concrete results, i visi-
ble in a physical sense, accomp-
lished by the board of managers of;
the $2,500,000 Orange Memorial
Hospital was noted Friday after-
-
A total of 1,000 printed forms to
be used by all applicants fqr em-
ployment’ and the medical staff
were delivered to County Judge
Charlie G. Grooms, ex-officio
board member. They were printed
by the Clough Co. here.
The employment application
forms are similar to those used
in processing personnel at the
local Du Pont Sabine River Works
plant. A board committee worked
for several weeks designing flj
form to> insure that all pertinent |
information was obtained.
A space is provided for attach-!
ment of a photograph and infor-!
mation is required on education,
family members, military service,
previous employment reeprd, ref-
erences and arrests.
PACT NINt
BREAKS HIP IN FALL day afternoon at har heme which
Mrs. H. S. McCormick, M, of 102 j resulted In a broken hip. She toil
•— *> ■»— * * a*>-
City Hospital following a fall Frl- I bar ambulance. \
\ ——i'*"'
Beverly's Shop
• TOTS *N' TEENS
• BABY GIFTS ■'* %
Beverly's Shop
BEVERLY PARISH, Owner
Next to Orange Drapery Shop
201-B SEVENTH ST. PHONE 6^1060
mm
I MM
OKS
Sixteen Levingston Shipbuilding
Co. employes have worked an es-
timated 600 man hours to produce
a scale model drilling tender to
be placed on exhibition in the
forthcoming International Oil Ex-
position opening Tuesday in
downtown Houston.
The offshore drilling fender,
complete to the most minute de-
tail, is a replica of the first non-
self-propelled tender, the J. C
Craig. Supervising construction of
the tender was Bob Fogal, assis-
tant yard superintendent.
Employes in the photograph who
aided in construction include Fo-
gal, J. W. Covington, O. C. Dug-
gan, Jessie Perea, Roscoe Harri-
son, E. V. Wise, R. C. Merington
and G. M. Duggan in the front
row of the picture above. Those
in the back row are H. L. Fair-
child and Larry Cosby. Other
workers who helped to build the
model but were not present in-
cluded H. L. Ray. Don Hoffpauir,
TRADE -I N FOR YOUR OLD WASHER
REGARDLESS OF CONDITION ON A NEW
KELVINATOR
.
FULLY AUTOMATIC
WASHER
29995
s60°°
TRADE
IN
NEVER BEFORE
SUCH BEAUTY
AT SUCH A LOW
. . . LOW PRICE!
‘t
lb# datiliny, new
model AWV Automatic
Wother it all the beauty
and advanced ityliny erd-
inarily found In hiyher-
priced wathert.
SHAMPOO
WASHING ...
Civat clothe* a tpecial
pra-wathiny action in con-
centrated lather to lee ten
•he mett itubbem dirt.
X-CENTRIC „
AGITATION . . .
It lib* hand wathiny..,
gently floret and tyueeiet
the clothe* far parfact
laundariny.
OVERFLOW
DikieikifT
tida af
rinte watai
tub. Na
Maurice Bryant, Cecil Smith, J. C.
Guidry and Roy Hilton.
The model, one of the most au-
thentic constructed to date, will
depict the operations of an off-
shore drilling tender adjacent to
its drilling platform. Built on a
scale of Vi-inch to a foot, the
model measures 10 feet, 8 inches
long, 2 feet, 3 inches wide and 7
inches modeled depth at the sides.
It will be in simulated drilling
operations in mooring position
and will be joined to a scale mod-
el of a drilling platform. Upon the
platform, will be-.an oil well der-
rick, 7 feet, 4 inches tall, complete
with crown block, traveling block,
swivel and kelly joint. In addition
the rotary will be in actual opera-
tion.
The drilling tender model will
be complete in detail with the
actual vessel including the pipe
rack, loaded with drill stem, cas-
ing, oil drums and the helicopter
landing deck with a model heli-
copter in position with rotor
blades in action. The entire unit
will be installed in a water tank,
19 feet long, 6 feet wide, 9 inches
deep, containing over 600 gallons
of water, with special underwater
lighting to give the viewer the
illusion of blue Gulf waters.
The exposition, Houston’s first
oil show in 16 years, will feature
the latest equipment for uranium
and tidelands oil explorations.
There will be 400 exhibits from
22 states and five foreign coun-
tries. Exhibitors today are setting
up production, drilling, refining,
petrochemical, tidelands and ur-
anium exhibits in and near the
Sam Houston Coliseum.
Attendance the first four day*
of the show, ending next Sunday,
will be restricted to oil and Indus-
trial personnel. The general pub-
lic will be admitted only on May
7-8.
Labeled as an “oilman’s show
for the oilman,” an estimated
100,000 to 150,000 attendance is
predicted. Among the exhibits
will be an 85-foot drilling rig de-
signed for work that normally
requires a 120-foot rig,,
the majority of those attending
will come from the oil-rich Hous-
ton and Gulf Coast area but tick-
et requests have been received
from 40 states and several foreign
countries.
Grover Halliburton
Seriously Injured
Grover Halliburton, 23, of Or-
ange, student at the University
of Texas, was seriously injured
early today in an accident near
Houston.
He is the son of Mrs. Bertie
Robinson, 6 Circle S. Attendants
at Community Hospital in Jacinto
City, where Halliburton was ad-
mitted, said he had a broken leg.
concussion and possible fracture
of the skull.
Halliburton tvas riding with
another Texas U. student, Bill
Lee Warrick, 21, of San Angelo,
when their automobile crashed
into the dead end of the Maxie
rqad and overturned during an
early morning fog. Warrick also
was injured.
One study indicates that a cow
will eat 125 pounds of grass a day
in pasture where the grass is five
inches high but only 45 pounds
where it i* three inches high.
WE HAVt IT!
AfXIN WaSNCH HIT . . . T-ylMM
yttkiS In * Manatonl yUtUc aar-
rylas «»M with nip, »lt«t S-M thm
V* Inrh. tptelnl at only Me.
ORANGE SUPPLY CO.
mi run rt *-**n
STORE
FURS
NOW!
Give them the
Benefit el Maximum
Protection in Our
Modern Storage Voults!
Don't wait until moths begin their damage!
Don't wait for warm days to dry out the pelts!
Store tham early in our modern cold-storage
vault* for complete protection. Call now for
a Bonded messenger!
PHONE 8-SMt
IfT ONE CALL DO IT ALL!
SUPPLYi
LAUNDRY
COMPANY
MocARTHUR DRIVuIKlVjWI
PARK at 10th STRICT
PHONE B-2M2
113 FIFTH STREET
303 FOURTH
uOW;
■
for LIFE*
...or *20,000 IN CASH!
GUARANTEED ANNUITY PROVIDED BY THE FAMOUS
NORTH AMERICAN LIFE AND CASUALTY CO.
Henwe financial aecurity . . . the chance to travel, enjoy your favorite
holibiea, really live. *Once you reach 65.
3d Q3QB&
Round trip d expense PARIS
vacation for 2 via TWA Mriines!
Pint $300 to spood as yon please!
Glorious two week vacetion. Thrilling
flight on famous conhtkllatiom! Stay
at luxury hotel in Paris, visit night
clubs, restaurants, museums, theatres’
swan!
1955 MCMRD Carftbeao Ceovertftle!
Meat IxcHiflf Bn# Car hi the Werid!
276 h.p. engine. Mightiest V-8 in n
modern automobile! Leather uphol-
stery, 2 and 3-tone color combinations!
Torsion-level ridel
... AND X SmlyPOSTUREPEDIC WILL IE GIVEN
FREE TO ONE WINNER IN THIS STONE!
Over 1900 grbas hall withe givaal
Come in for your official entry blank which must bo used to enter this contest!
DOP HERE’S ALL YOU DO TO ENTER I
H JoW wrSa a hit tea Far rite Ut/y Afiai
H ■ ^ _____ onci rou SUM on a wait, roust iay.
1 "WHAT A AlAITaSISt ITS SYilCTlY OKAYT
NttYMM TOO SOTT NO* HAW
WTTN ITS MW COMfOtT-SAM.
(tot write a toe aarite* la ward Ibot rfcyaaaa wte “ehmi".
Han't a tooi*le< “ITS TNI ONI TO KHP SACK-ACHM
AWAYr VaaW prabaMy teteb of away atom, ta *et abated!
Nothing to hvyl...5e ooey to eatorl
****
The newly improved
Stab POSTUREPEDIC with
exclusive COMFORT-GARD
... Automatically adjusts
your body to comfortably
correct sleeping postuft!
*79“
JS-VLAR wniTTSM
7 WMIMm.
in sera
Here's the new Sealtj
POSTUREPEDIC story
with all the facts
you need to WIN1
i ta U>a watte *aal*sad
mrstaat ta yaa art tit. taaawaaUyt
» faateriva COMKMT-OABO Maaaat
Yaa tlea» mtatNy ■.. tea way yes
tlaaa aoateartaMyt
•Bra AaNaa* aoria tea paalata a*.
•iw«mim*summi aiwaasiM*
ttr umnv sur aunassi
cnaasi suit rat.
TVU-rUfKT nun
Itprnaileaa ta"coo- h'a matter a “bard- Yob CAb’T alaap
form” to your body, tnad-ap ..aabar niuaiatUr on a Poa-
bot frequently lata with no acteatific turapadic tbaaka
yoa iag all aight doateal Ite rock-Uka to Saaly atitetifw
sflsasis: ssfiSs.’s; fssi.fsa;
yaa atee. aarraeUy! aumar.! in* o. a CVmd.
*Oaatei
raasteemOi
Small Down Paymant—Easy Tanas
■PflTVL ★ FREE DELIVERY
2fmTIi ★ FREE PARKINC
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. 52, No. 103, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 1, 1955, newspaper, May 1, 1955; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth558938/m1/9/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.