getsito KnJf -Pgar, ftwM, Or.. ImSttr. Jss. ?, MB, 11
feasant Hill, Lowell Remain as I eading Choices for Eastern Division liale
avers Next DuckOpponent
.'first of tour "eivll war"
H court battles .gainst Ore.
. nnmarful Beavers
Lshire University ef Qregon
tSall this weeK. -ne two
P" ...D(c .inh in- the
ty i rorvallis Saturday
fyiu a.
Lh Slats Gill's Orangemen,
ItS only by Long Is and this
l"et1. nhhv Hobson's Web-
are figured as leading con
;,. along with Washington,
'Northern Division Pacific
ConiKreii .
The Beavers meet Wash-
1 ' . II, If It-.,
in SlSte 8t tWVBU rawuua
Tuesday in their first oon-
'h 'Ted Schopfs Oregon
quintet wiw w ww
during the coming week
, i. htTVi sphnnl oDDonents.
IW" tJ w-
playing at Oregon City Friday and
Medford Saturday night.
The J-V quintet, leading the Eu
gene City AAU league, plays the
Eugene Eagles Monday in a triple
bill and will play both the Coos
9ay Pirates and Richfield Oilers
at WcArthur Court Thursday
night.
TENNIS MEETING
NEW YORK The path annual
meeting of the United States
Lawn Tennis Association will
convene at New York's Vander
bilt Hotel, Jan. 18.
Honey Russell, coach of the
Boston Celtics in the Basketball
Association of America, posted a
44-game win streak when he
coached the Seton Hall College
cagers. '
Lotus Aqucllizo
Your Home for
WATERTIGIITNESS
with the SENSATIONAL
WATERPROOF COATING
latelv featured in leading magazines
AQUELLA
Scientifically stops leakage, seepaf e, dampness
inside or outside . , , above or below ground
on porous masonry surfaces such as
C0NCRI7I CINOIR AND MASONRY
BLOCKS 'STUCCO COMMON MICK
ROUGH PLASTIR
Turns Wt Cellar into playroom, workshop, laun
dry! Wtterproofs walls, buildings, retaining walls!
Damp-proofs foundation to keep house damp
free! Reconditions leaky swimming pools, foun
tain, cisternal
ECONOMICAL
Cost is nominal. Ws will gladly furnish tppUcs
tion estimates,
M-H SUPPLY CO.
34 West 6th
Phone 5863-R
JCC Fighters Train
For Fight Card at
Armory Friday Night
Nine members ef iWeufeiie
Junior Chamber boxing elub are
completing Intensive trainins
this week for their second Inter-club
mitt match ef (he win
ter season against the Portland
Pals Club and the Multnomah
A.C. of Portland. The fight card
will be staged at the Armory
arena Friday night and reserved
seat tickets are being placed on
sale at the Club cigar store
early this week.
Slated to compete for the JCC
against the Portlanders are Don
flyers, 180) Dean McCall, 155;
Dick Weldon, 155; Verle Baar
s tad. 185; Denny t)uan, 126;
Dean Loge, 126; Tex Turner,
112; Dick Weldy, lit; Fred
Boraple, 87.
Feature attraction will be be
tween Quinn, - semi-finalist In
the National AAU tenner in
Boston, and Don Stringer of the
Pals, who won the ilej-ponnd
elasa in (ha National AAU out
door show in Portland last sum
Ber. ....
.
NCAA Expected to Mull
Football Rule Changes
MEW YORK, Jan. bW) Foot
ball's rules, both those that de
termine who shall play the college
game and those that say how it
shoitd txf played, are expected to
be overhauled at the annual NCAA
and coaches meetings that stsrt
Sunday.
The NCAA proper opens with
a routine business session, saving
its fireworks for Monday when its
subsidiary, the conference of con
ferences, tangles with the problem
of determining how much if any
financial reward shall be given
college gridiron heroes.
Answers to 100 questionnaires
mailed a-month ago by rules com
mittee chairman Lou Little of
Columbia, will guide the coaches
in their discussions on the playing
code. The coaches committee can
not revamp any rule, it can only
, recommend changes which the
NCAA group either will adopt or
reject..
Foremast among the proposed
changes are those that would move
the ball in 20 yards from the side.
lines, instead of the present IS
yards; liberalization of the suh
stituting rule; increasing the nunv
ber of time outs; permitting the
advancement of a recovered Ium
ble and declaring the ball dead
when an attempted conversion' Is
.
Oregon J-V's to Play
Three City Loop Tilts
The league-leading and- un
beaten Oregon J-V's play three
City AAU basketball league
games this week as the circuit
closes its first-half league sched
ule.' The J-Vs play the opening
game of a tnpieneader raonaay
night, meeting the Eugene Eagles
at 7 pjn. Richfield Oil end Coos
Bay Pirates play the second game
and the Oregon Firs am Outdoor
Store quints clash at B p.m
Thursday night the J-V's play a
doubleheader, starting at 8 p.m.
against the Pirates and closing
against the Oilers.
Billies Lambast ;
Oakridge, 66-14
EASTCBN division
SUndinH W I. 'Pel.
Pleasant. Hill . , 4 0 LOOP
Lowell - T 3 1 .750
Creswell ... ,- S Z .SO
Mohawk 1 2 ' .ra
McKenife ...LI 3 ' .33S
Oakrldse ... . 4 MB
GAMES THIS WEEK
Western Division Swslaw at Crow.
Coburg at Lorane, Triangle Lake at
Mapleton. Eastern Division McKenzie
at Oakrldge, CreHwel at Pleasant Hil).
Lowell at Mohawk. . -
Pleasant Hill continued right
where they Jell off for the holir
days in Friday night Eastern Di
vision play. With reserves playing
most of the game the Pillies plast
ered Oskrldge, 66-14. John Dowdy
hit for 26 points in the Billie wip.
The Pleasant Hill B team won 27
14, and the pakridge girls defeat,
ed Pleasant Hill in volleyball,
32-J3,
Lowell stayed near the- top in
the Eastern Pivislon trouncing
McKenzie by a 45-18 scores. Evi
dently several members pf the Fed
Devil team found a pregame
plunge into the frigid Willamette
helpful to their caue as they had
little trouble with the McKenzie
team. Ralph Parkton paced the
Lowell attack, pouring 19 points
through the net.
The Lowell B Squad handed
McKen?ie a 27-11 beating. Lowell
will play St, Marys Tuesday night,
uresweii enmoea nearer me top
as they eked out a last quarter
62-53 win over Mohawk. Paced, by
Nubbins Joiner and Ray Bush,
Creswell poured in 14 points In
the last .minute of play.
The Mohawk B squad defeated
Creswell 2B-1S and the Creswell
girls defeated Mohawk in volley.
ball.
Lorane increased their Western
Division position by dropping
Crow 41-29. flex Keep collected
17 points for Lorane to lead the
scorers.
Lorane made It a clean sweep
by winning the B squad game,
17-1, and the girls won in volley
ball, 33.11,
Nearly Two Million Shelled
Out to See New Years' Tilts
BY CARL LUNDQUIST " i
' NEW YORK, Jan. oWtOJO.--'
Footbai) fans paid approximately!
one and three quarter million dol
lars to see New Year s Pay bowl
games and the competing teams in
17 different contests drew better
than $800,000 as their share of the
proceeds, a United Press survey
revealed Saturday,
More than 430,000 persons at
tended the games, with the larg
est crowd and the biggest "take"
at Pasadena, Cel., where 93,000
persons paid more than $400,000
to see the Ross Bowl game be
tween Illinois and U.C.L.A- Each
school was expected to get be
tween $80,ooo and $100,000 but
the winning Illinois eleven gets
only two of U equally divided
shares which go to the conference
commissioner's office end eight
other schools.
Expenses of the Illinois team
are deducted before the shares are
divided.
Georgia and North Carolina, the
foes in the Sugar Bowl game at
New Orleans, will get .about $76,
000. The net receipts at the Sugar
Bowl were $215,000. '
n
NU I Mlbl.LT-
i
n,. M m THE J
f Hawkmson
a-I V
r x
a&wal ijaelTl f
SCI yt I TUAD1W
(sfi
rr'
7 a
p f
mill
t ONLY Hawkmson Treads cured
to ftte short circl uAWng ndktu
This cannot M
comolislMMwftfHXJt
imiiiallliallaiailniri ; i
4'liiT'"'"","""."" 'I
mmhffkfni Short
M iittthACMIM tfrno.
-
i. Mi locality . . . NI SteeSy nalsla IMS
yet 4 ISethW at Tire Trani
, , HOIVIDD nEDIOED TH1E SnOP
md Madison Streets trlsh-Swartg Sbopplng Center Phone 24$
Pennsylvania, New Jertey, New Members of the VlDsatev bas-
York and Itlinois. I Xetbau teem nan pom lour states
(18) MeKeniie
4, Powers
. a. Thomson
SUBnuasen
.-- 1, LUka
, Hunnlcutt
1, Wilson
Lowell (4S
caw. 7
statnews.
Hathaway, .-C
younnr. 4 Q
Wbeejer, . -...O
v. Wilson, is Tr d.
Erlekson, a 8
. Wilson . , S
rckstrom S
Willlemi, S ,-..s
oificiaw:
King.
CreawaU '(S)
N. Joiner, 20 I..
Buih, 13 ... r-F-
D. Webb r C-.
Orvin Ruede. IS - G -KirkBatrick,
11 G
Owen Ruede, S . S -.
Rnvm Bl
otoclslai Tommy Cn and fete Tay
lor. - s ,
Bob Shlsler end Kenny
(M) Kobawk
1, Aldoua
7. E. fiwaf lord
14, I Swallord
, 14, AUDI,!
13, Jaques
4, Landeiv
(11) OskrHie
3, Tennet
Dunn
CConnel
r. 1, McGulre
3, Malcom
s, aley
(feasant BUI ()
Nichols, 7 , F
KlmlMl, J
Cole, s ,
Butler. 3 -.. ..,0
Dowdy, 24 O
Undley. S . -S .
Lantz, 3 S
lasey, ii . b
Graham. 5 S
0:flclals: Ed Slegmund and Virgil Far-ker.
s) Cree
F.v 4, Morehead
Leran (41)
Keep, IT
Perrr. a
Warren. 1
Briggs. S .
4, Mower
2. oimi
8. Ford
, Warren
Gibbons, 8 G
pespain, 3
Otllclals: UHt andCauen.
Basketball
Michlfan S. Northwestern 31.
Brlgham Young 57. Temple 53.
Utah 64, Wayne 38.
Ohio State 43, Minnesota 41. .
WIM (V, WU1 . " J .V"
KansU State S3, Nebraska 84.
Seton Hall College 9. Toledo u. so.
West Virginia U. 88. Salem College 41,
CoUeK ol Charleston 49, Woflord 39.
Wisconsin S3, Iowa 63. .
New York U. 78. Southern Methodist 83.
Michigan State 83, Ceotgla Tech 53.
Ind. State Teachers 81. Western Mich. 18,
Syracuse University 57, Princeton 48.
Rochester 7, Yaie w.
Crelehton 84. Kalamazoo Colleg 44.
Florida 81. Miami (Flat 38.
Albright 88, Loyola 84.
Buffalo 45, Carnegie Tech 31.
Texas A & M 50, Ft Sam Houston 48.
Akron University 58, Geneva 33.
Pittsburgh 43, Perm State 31.
Centenary 47, Louisiana College 38.
LaFayette Col. 70, Penn State Teachers 47.
nilnola 84, University ef Mexico 38.
Montana State 59. North Dakota AtglU 44.
Butler 77, Western Reserve 80. .
Muhtenburg 58, La Sell 44.
Khoa Island State 54, St. Johns SOL
Mornlngskla 48, North Dakota 43.
N.D. Agrleulturel 44, Mont. State Sf.
&nlslus 50. Cornell 48.
Michigan Normal 48. Central Michigan 47.
-V.tn.r la U..mr.,t. At '
Manhattan College 51. Seranton U. 42.
Brooklyn callage vt. sievens innuuie e.
St. Josephs S3, Utah State 48.
Louisiana State 89, Itlce 38.
Oklahoma Si. Bradley Tech 84.
Oarten Si, XsWer 34.
Belolt 18, tayola (South) 48.
Oklahoma Si, Bradley 48.
Clerk University 82. Mass. State 85.
Santa Clara 56, Montana 48.
Xantucky 46, Ohio University 38.
California 4. Dartmouth 38,
Univ. of Idaho, S. Branch 53, Western
State (Colo.) coUese 40.
otsa J. C. 54 AlMon (Ida.) Norman 4.
V. Orag. Ool. ef Ed. 47, Col. el Idaho 43.
wssmngron ea. Mano ei.
Washington atate 53, Oregon 4.
Hardin-Simmons Beat
Denver in Alamo Bowl
SAN ANTONIO, Tex., Jan. 5.
W) Rudolph "Wttle Doc" Mobley,
national ground-gaining king,
dashed 34 yards tor one touchdown
and snipped 17 lor another Sat'
urday as the Hsrdin-Simmons
Cowboys finished the football
campaign undefeated and untied
with a 20-0 victory over Denver
University in the first annual
Alamo Bowl.
A crowd of 3730 huddled In
windswept Alamo Stadium in 28-
degree temperatures to watch the
mighty Cowboys snap back. from
a scoreless first period, when they
were held deep in their wn ten
rltory, to ramble for touchdowns
in the second, third and fourth
quarters.
With the wind to their hacks,
the Pioneers outplayed the eow.
boys in the first 15 minutes, but
from then on there was no doubt
about the' result, although the
Rocky Mountain visitors threat
ened on several occasions.
The game was a postponed af
fair. It was to have been run off
Wednesday but was carried over
because of an ice storm.
Bowling Tourneys Set
At Eugene Recreation
Eugene's men and women bowl
ers will compete at Eugene Rec
reation alleys Sunday, Jan. 12,
in the "Second Annual -Bowlers
Polio Fund" tournament and ' at
least 150 local keglers are expect
ed to compete, according to Chair
man Virgil Jones.
More than 20 have already post
ed their $1.50 entrance fees. Al
though the fee is divided three
ways 45 cents to the alley, 60
cents to the players' pot end 85
cents to the Polio Fund, Recrea
tion Is .providing bowling at half
price and many of the bowlers
are expected to donate their win
nings, if any, to the fund. All of
the top-flight keglers are expected
to compete.
The Polio Fund Is expected to
net around $100 from the event.
Three other events have been
scheduled at Eugene Recreation
today mixed doubles, women's
doubles, and men's singles. All
three will be handicap affairs,
based on lf)0 and 190 scratch for
women and men, respectively.
The keglers will be allowed two
thirds of the handicap difference
from their averages and scratch.
. ,
Polio Fund
WATCH IT GROW
Mail-a-Buck ..........$216.00
Wilson J.H.S. . . 50.00
Springfield Musicians . , 44.00
B-Leagues ............... 33.21
The next highest return went
to the Cotton Bowl teams, Ar
kansas and Louisiana State, their
schools drawing $63,000 apiece.
The attendance at the Pallas, Tex.,
New Year's game was only about
30,000 but more than 45,000 per
sons had purchased tickets, the
Others staying home because of
cold, wet weather. The gross re
ceipts in the Cotton Bowl were
approximately $178,000.
The biggest sole beneficiary of
any New Year's Day game was
the Shrine Hospital fund for criP'
pled children, which was fattened
by more than $100,000 through the !
non-profit East-West sll-etar col
lege game at San Francisco. All!
money above bare expenses goes I
to me hospital funds,- , . i
Sponsors of the non-profit
Orange Bowl game at Miami, Fla.,
revealed that Rice Institute of
Houston, Tex., and the .University
of - Tennessee each would- get
checks of approximately $35,000.
The on Bowl game at Houston,
which was played in miserable
weather, produced the biggest pay
off in the history of the event
despite the fact that only 23,000
fans were on hand, Georgia Tech
and St, Mary's of California got
$37,500 each.
In the 'Gator Bowl game, at
Jacksonville, Fla., gross receipts
were estimated at about $80,000.
Oklahoma received $30,000 for its
share while North Carolina State
got $25,000.
At El Paso, Tex., where Cin
cinnati and Virginia Polytechnic
Institute played in the Sun Bowl,
each team received an $8500 guar
antee and may get more money
wiien me official audit is com
pleted. ;
Tne Harry-Anna crippled chil
dren's home at Umatilla, Fla., re
ceived, about $800 as lt share of
tne gate at the Tangerine Bowl
game in Orlando, Fla, which had
estimated gross receipts of $11,000.
The Benevolent and Protective
Order ef Elks, which sponsored
the game, turned ever $3500 each
to Catawba and Maryville. Term..
college, .tne opposing teams.
Delaware received a total of
about $10,000 for appearing In the
Cigar Bowl game at Tampa, Fla.
Uilieiais of tne Harbor Bowl
game at San Diego admit that they
"lost their shirts" in promoting
the tie game between New Mexico
and Montana State. Each team was
guaranteed $10,000 and gate re'
ceipts totaled only $15,000.
The Raisin Bowl at Fresno, Cel.,
grossed $24,000 with San Jose
State taking $5000 and Utah State
$10,000 on flat guarantees. .
4 :
Curtains cleaned In Sanltene,
Electric Cleaners, 1210 Willamette
St.
n4ta !r
1. Portable plug into any wall recepticle
2. Heat rays dispensed through glass plates
3. Operates without glow or fumes
4. If touched it will not cause burns
5. If upset it will not burn carpet or floor
6. Will not scorch paper or fabrics that may
come against it
7. Wet bodies can brush it without getting
a shock
Radiates. heat in both directions
Can be dropped or turned over without
damage.
10. Approved by Underwriters Laboratories
8.
9.
C
ELECTRIC
1070 WUlamtltt
Phons 23
Tots! ,
$343.21
SCHEDULED EVENTS
Jan. 11, McArthur Court In
dependent, High School Basketball
Jamboree.
Jan. 12, Eugene Recreation 2nd
Annual Bowlers Polio Fund Tour
nament. v
FOR
VENETIAN BLINDS
QUALITY
VENETIAN BLINDS
In Steel, Wood
or Aluminum
WE DELIVER IN 10 DAYS OR LESS!
OUR OlO CHUNG OF
SOe PER SQUARE FOOT
II STIU THE PRICE-NO
OTHER CHARGE.
FREE ESTIMATES
FREE INSTALLATION
FULLY GUARANTEED
FOB ESTIMATES PHONE 4014-J
SUNBLEND VENETIAN BLIND COMPANY
PHONE 4014-J , , HIVES ROAD AT SANTA CLARA
fiiworaotiG
The
msuRflnce
SERV CE
LOCATED AT
111 East Broadway
0 A Complete Insurance Service Including The
Following Coverages:
INLAND MARINE. INSURANCE
P.U.C. FILINGS FOR TRUCKS
TRUCK INSURANCE
FIRE INSURANCE
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
CARGO INSURANCE
BURGLARY, THEFT AND ROBBERY
INSURANCE
PERSONAL PROPERTY. . all risk coverarj
BONDS . . e Fidelity and Surety
WORKMAN'S COMPENSATION AND
EMPLOYERS' LIABILITY
I
LLOYD'S COVERAGES
.: I
.Fir B
I,-
II.
til
1v.
m
I I!
i
ft
Mi ?
m
!,' )
m
1
m