I FRIDAY, JANUARY 21, 194?
THE DEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON
PAGE THREE
Oklahoma Agqiesle7Q' Sporfsmen Make Plans
Garner Top Spot
In National Play
By 'Ilui Orlffln
Itlliitt J PreM SnurtH Writer)
New York, Jari. 21 lli For sot
ting the game of basketball back
15 years, the Oklahoma Aggies
WPre rewarded today with a lead
ing position In the battle for the
national championship.
Sports fans from coast to coast
found the 29 to 21 overtime score
bv which the Aggies upset un
beaten St. Louis last night "in
credible," for nothing like it has
been seen on a court in years. It
was a pinnacle for Coach Hank
Iba who annually produces great
defensive Aggie machines.
The Billikens, leading claim
ants to the national title, went
into the game with an 110 record
and a burning desire to avenge
two losses to the Aggies last
year.
named for tricky, speedy plays
and smooth ball handling, the
Bils were out to prove they could
run wild against the -best defen
sive club in the nation. Instead,
they were stalled completely and
then thrown mio reverse.
St Louis shot off to a six-point
lead during the first half, but had
that margin chopped to 1-112 at
the intermission. The regulation
time ended with a 27-27 tie. Fam
ed "Easy" Kd Mcauley of St.
Louis was high scorer with 13
points while Vernon Yates led the
Aggies with, no loolin'. 7 points.
The victory left the Aggies in
front of the Missouri valley con
ference and with an overall rec
ord of 10 wins and two defeats.
St. Louis will be back in action
tonight against Tulsa and there
was no predicting what kind of a
mood the Billikens would be in
for that tussle. Their upset left
just four teams on the list of ma
jor schools still unbeaten West
ern Kentucky, Hardline, Minneso
ta, and Villanova.-
Western -Kentucky faces Miami
of Florida tonight while Hamline
plays St. John's of Minnesota.
Other leading games are Denver
Valparaiso, Baylor-Texas Ag
gies, Rice Arkansas, Wyoming
Utah, Utah State Brigham
Young, Loyola of Los Angeles
Santa Clara, San Francisco
Stanford and Oregon -Washington
Football Parley
Expected to Show
jWew Money Plan
t Chicaeo. Jan. 21 U'. -The Alk.
America football conference was
expected to reveal today its mas
ter plan for turning the red ink
it has used for the last three years
into blue ink for the 1049 season.
Conference owners apparently
were getting more and more de
termined to operate independent
ly for another season despite the
terrific financial battering they
have taken from booming players'
salaries and gate competition in
their not-so-cold "war" with the
National Football league.
The conference held a late ses
sion last night from which the
announcement of its plans was to
come, but the meeting opened so
late that spokesmen said they
would make no release until later.
That apparently meant today, for
each day the league has said a
statement would be made.
National league owners, whose
winter meeting opened yesterday,
paid no attention to the action
of the AAC, apparently generally
convinced that no peace was pos
sible. They handled league busi
ness speedily, giving Commission
er Bert Bell "and Treasurer Dennis
Shea new 10-year contracts, in
creasing the guarantee to visiting
teams from $15,000 to $20,000. ap
proving rules changes, permitting
each team to establish its own
policy on television, and cutting
the authorized squad size from
35 to 32 players for the entire
season.
Mi Oregon Phone 1154
Excellent Food
Reasonable Prices
Dancing and
Entertainment
OMER ZILLMAN'S
MUSIC
Each Saturday Night
Open 5 p.m. to 2 a.m.
WHY SUFFER?
TRY RELIABLE
DOLCIN
For relief of symptoms
ARTHRITIS
RHEUMATISM
Reliable Effective
City Drug Co.
ror oociai Meeting reb. 4
nans for a gala evenlnc of en
tertaitimcni and refreshments on
February 4 were made last night
by hoard members of the lie
':hute County Sportsmen's as-sociali-.n.
The affair will be held
in the CIO hall on Bond street,
and will leature motion pictures,
-l""- p.mii iiy a uuit.ll Hllli'U.
tvery man and woman interested !
In the future of Oregon's hunting I
ami iiMim is invneu.
The party is being staged In
connection witii the launching of
the association's 1!M9 member
ship campaign, in which the goal
of 1,500 members is hoped to be
reached.
SI l ong Membership
Importance of a strong mem
bership in this year of reorgan
ization of the game department
is stressed by John Smith, mem
bership drive chairman, who
points to the accomplishments of
the club in the past two or three
years as gains which could not
have beei made without the sup
port of large numbers of inter
ested MKirismen.
Fending legislation in the pres. ,
ent session which will largely re- .Osborne, pastor or the Culver
vamp the game code and the Christian church, who has just
working of the game department been named secretary of the Cul
systems, Smith points out, from ver chamber of commerce, says
an action originating in the local ! 'lis group is giving consideration
club seeking the apK)intment of ! to promotion of better road fa
the now widely publicized interim I eililies between Culver and the
committee. : forest and recreation region on
Important Work '
Among other important works
Guessing Out
Sanders Said
UCLA Coach
Los Angeles, Jan. 21 Six
weeks of guessing games on
UCLA's new coach were over to
day with the announcement that
Henry H. (Red) Sanders of Van
derbilt has taken the job. '
Athletic director Wilbur Johns
revealed the identity of the new 1
UCLA coach after considering 43 j
men for the job. Some of them 1
had applied for it and others
were asked. Sanders belonged to
the second group, Johns said. !
But Johns wouldn't say for how i
long a term Sanders was signed I
or how much he will receive. The j
guessing was he must have at I
least a three-year contract pay- ;
ing him $12,500 a year or more.
Sanders' selection was announc-
ed last night a few hours after j
Johns went before the UCLA!
board of co'ntrol for final approv- j
al of the new coach.
"The board of control felt San- I
ders was the best and most logi-
cal choice for us," Johns said. "In ;
picking Sanders we feel we have
obTained a' man of outstanding
ability, character and personali
ty." ' Sanders succeeds Bert Labruch-;
erie, UCLA's first graduate coach,
who resigned Dec. 31 along with
his assistants, W. P. (Dutch)
Fehring, Shelby Calhoun, and
Ned Mathews.
Busier Brown Leads in fhe
Return fo Low Prices!
5
Firsf Time at These Prices!
SELBY
Arch Preserver Shces
Formerly priced to $18.95
Save man.v dollars on these famous shoes, known for
comfort and slyle. Choice of puniW or ties in fine leath
ersblack or brown. All si.es, but not all styles every
pair a Buster Brown bargain not sold ut these prices
in any other store:
Now 8.95 fo 12.95
Sizes A AAA to C, I to II 'j
Buster Brown Shoe Store
carried on bv local sportsmen In
recent years has been the destruc
tion of more than 6,0011 magpies,
predators which prey on pheas
ant and quail nests.
"We have been winking and
progressing steadily," Smith says,
"hut much ol the work we do
which Is reallv Important In the
long run Is not spectacular-of
ten not publicized. It Is slgnifl
cant to nute, however, that our
recommendations in recent
months have been practically all
adopted without change by the
Deschutes Kiver council, the Ore
gon Wildlife Federation and the
state game commission."
Committee chairmen for the
February 4 party include Lloyd
Smith, refreshments, Cail Baker,
entertainment aand M. L. Myrick,
pictures and publicity. Several
valuable prizes are to be awarded ;
during the evening.
iCulver Schoolmen
Plan Gymnasium
Culver, Jan. 21 Rev. Wayne
the Metolius river. Currently,
Osborne said, it is necessary for
North unit of the Deschutes set
tlers to drive a 00 mile distance
by way of Sisters to reach the
popular Metolius recreation area,
which lies in Jefferson county.
He says belter roads will accom
modate loggers operating in pine
forests of the area.
At the annual meeting of the
Culver chamber Don Lehman
was chosen president, succeeding
Cecil Allied, and V. L. Anderson
was elected vice president.
COFFEE SHOP
Featuring
Barbecued Sandwiches
Deluxe Hamburgers
Homemade Pastry
Complete Dinners
OPEN ALL NITE
l'rlvatc Banquet Room
For Small Parties
t CALL BEKNICE
Phone 36-J
Altdl PJIESEIIVER
No Hope Expected
For Siamese Twin
Mt. Vernon, HI., Jan. 21 Oh -Dr.
Claire M. Dixon said today
that one of the Siamese girl twins
born here Wednesday was dead,
and that the second "probably
will die at any moment."
Dixmi said be separated the
twins by surgery shortly after
ihey were born prematurely at
Good Samaritan hospital. The
babies, whose combined weight
was four pounds, seven ounces,
were joined at the navel. One of
them died yesterday morning.
The names of the parents were
not revealed by the hospital.
Mayor Convinces Town
He's Really an Artist
Montgomery, Pa. '' The way
Oliver J. Mouse! reasons, it's bet
ter late than never, even in oil
painting.
Housel, mayor of Montgomery,
is 72 years old. He didn't start to
paint until recently.
A friendly inirafamily chal
lenge started Housel painting. He
was teasing his art student daugh
ter about her work, one day, re
markiiiH that even he could do as
well if not better. She invited him .
to try.
Housel timidly began to paint
his first picture. From that shaky
beginning, he has advanced well
enough to draw the praise of al -
most the whole -.own of Mont-
Kmery.
Bulletin Classifieds Bring Results
"
If
i
Earn
GOODYEAR
&lgve TIRES
Get non-skid safety now and
enjoy long, worry-free mileage for
miles and months to come with
new Goodyears.
ftfV Mere Non-Skid
"fr JO Mileage Averaged
In Actual Road Tests.
WARNING: 90 of all tire trouble
occurs In the last 10 of tire life.
Sell us that troublesome 10.
"BIG BOY" SCISSOR
JACK
$7.95
A fast, easy action jack with 14 V'a
inch lift; raises 4,000 pounds. Has
a 48" one-piece lock-on handle.
Very sturdy construction.
LIGHTER
LITE
$2.50
A handy eraorgoncy light with
15 CP. bulb, bulb cage with at
tachment hook and 12-Ioot card.
Plutyi In dqai lighter.
stalled.
TERMS AS LOW
BEND
Proposed Bill fo
Icij D-
Washington, .lan. 21 The ad
ministration is drafting a bill that j
would set up a l-.'VA-type projei t :
in the Pacific northwest, govern-
mem officials said today.
These sources believe President j
Truman is ready to back a move i
to take reclamation and Hood'
control development of the vast
Columbia river basin out of the
nanus m uie iinenor uepm ur.cni general counsel for the Bonne
and army engineers, and put It j ville power administration, the
under an independent Columbia i agency which sells government
river authority. ; poWe,. j the Pacific northwest.
! In his state of the union mes-1
sage, Mr. Truman said "the prin -
u-iples of the Tennessee valley
authority should be applied to
other great river basins.
There was some doubt at that
time whether he meant merely
basoi-wide development or actual
selling up of independent regional
l authorities.
Since then, government sources
say, there have been indications
that he meant independent au
thorities and that the idea is
hacked by interior secretary J.
A. Krug. They cite Krug's syin-
patny toward sucli agencies.
attitude which stems from his
I years as power direclur of TV A. I
They also joint out that assistant
I secretary of Interior C. Oirard j
Davidson has long been an advo-1
'eate of river authorities. '
Tn,,y ulso b(,lipve ,hn, KrUK j
i favors the idea of an independ-!
jent authority for the Missouri'
1 liver basin "nd the central val-i
" "
ft
$15.95
ALL-WEATHER
DEFROSTING FAN
$7.95
A streamlined electric car fan that
clears windshields of mist, sleet and
snow In a Jiffy. Has powerful six-volt
motor, rubber fan blades. Switch and
mounting bracket included.
SEALED BEAM
CONVERSION KIT
Includes 2 sealed beam liqhts,
adapter rims, wire and $0 Oft
tnclniMtina Fncill in. v W
TUF-TEX
FLOOR MAT
J3.GQ
Semi-fitted front floor mat for
1941, '42 and '46 Chevrolets.
Fits floor board contours.
Long wearing, tough rubber
with thick felt back.
AS $125 A WEEK
GARAGE CO.
Solllll of I'oslofflee
PIIONK iu:t
Give New
i kl-iL.-j.
ley In California and others.
A bill to set up a TV A In the
Pacific northwest probably won
many willing sponsors in con
gress. Rep. Hugh Mitchell. D.,
Wash., introduced a similar meas
ure in l'JIS when he was a sen
ator. That bill was written with the
1...1.. nf 1 Vit.fl.l.-r.,. ,t.l.,. iti.i.. flw...
Itlip HI A 'tl lllllll (111 II
Advocates of such authorities
cite the accomplishments of the
!TVA and contend that the most
efficient and economical method
of Carrying out river basin de
velopment is by Integrated, inde
pendent authorities.
They say Joint management by
the corps of engineers and the
reclamation bureau tends to ham
per progress and result in con
flicts over jurisdiction, money
matters and plans.
Proponents of the plan claim
TONITE & SAT.!
TRAINS
FORWARD
itmnuim
CLIFT DRU
KXTKA
CAHTOON NKWS
wagon
If 21 W WSP,
d WAITER BRENNAN
One-A-Day
Mdfiple Vitamins
liO diiy supply
$1.96
Bexel
Multiple Vitamins
100 enpsiiles
$7.50
Pcnslar
Neba Multiples
100 capsules
55.49
Squibb's
Vifjraii Cupsules
50 capsules
$1.59
VITAAM
C Kvcn shrewd buyers sometimes
sii' eiimb to Hie "prlre-tni;" temp
tation in the ptirehiise of ronren-tni'i-d
vliiimin products. Hut vl
tnmhis. more f!i:in mosi other
drug s'ore Pi-ins, must tie bought
"on fal'h." It Isn't the pi lee you
pny. bii' wluil you cct that counts.
We fi-ntiire vjiHinin products o'
Kiiarunteeil li'ith vl'iiiiiln potency
mid d-Hniliibillty. So for better
allle, see us.
the Columbia basin Is ripe for
an independent authority. They
hold that it has reached the stage
where basin-wide development Is
essential and that the public in
the erea is favorable to the idea.
The reclamation bureau's own
comprehensive basin-wide devel
opment plan for (he Columbia
basin is still before the bureau
of the budget. It must be ap
proved Iheie before going to con
gress. Opposition to Mitchell's origi
jy.il bill was led by then-secretary
of Interior Harold L. Ickes and
his assistant, Michael Straus. The
latter Is now reclamation commissioner.
DKATII TAKES A HOLIDAY
Chesterfield. Mass. ill1'- Death
is taking a holiday here. No one
has diiHl in this Berkshire county
community of 375 inhabitants
since Oct. 1, 1917. Charles A.
Bisbee, Chesterfield's only under
taker, is concentrating on his
sideline, a lumber business.
HEY KIDS
ANOTHER BIG
PAL CLUB
MATINEE!
THIS WK.KK
A BIG SPECIAL
4 BIG CARTOONS
ALSO
Cliupter 4 of
THE NKW SKK1AI.
"Jack Armstrong
The All American Boy"
and
TWO BIG FKATUUKS!
Teresa Hubert
WKKiHT MITC'HUM
In
"PURSUED"
iiIho
"SMART GIRLS
DON'T TALK"
SHOW STAUTS AT 1 I'. M.
ALARM
blClA CUIDMRMT
$2-25 $2-75
ELECTRIC ALARM
TEtermos Bottle
Fillers
Pints 98c
Quarts ... $1.39
VICTRON
Electric Heaters
.from irlOlLYWOO
$1.50
Max Factor Hollywood
Pan-Cake Make-Up
Like a miracle...
it helps hiile tiny com
plexion faults
make-; the skin look
smooth as velvet
stays lovely for hours
ilhout re-powdering.
Add Federal
1
R - MmJacior
W tv ill ' jr
Raft, Light Seen
In Ocean Lane
Miami, Fla., Jan. 21 nit An air
force B-17 sighted a light and
what appeared to be a life raft
before dawn Thursday in the area
southwest of Bermuda where a
British airliner vanished Monday
with 20 persons aboard, coast
guard headquarters here report
ed. The destroyer Samuel Roberts
oul of the U. S. navy base at
Guantanamo Cuba, and a large
flight of navy, coast guard and
air toree rescue planes from Ca
ribbean bases converged on the
scene 300 miles routhwest of Bermuda.
TONITE and SAT.!
The Mcst Powerful Story
Ever to Come
Out of
the Violent
West!!!
EXTUA
Color Cartoon St News!
CLOCKS
Gilbert ahirm clocks with (filar-
untecil movement. Attractive
us well us dependiible.
.95 '3.50 3-95
CLOCKS by Westclox
HANDY HANNA, JR.
Electric
HAIR DRYERS
9.25
Valentine's Day
Boxed
CHOCOLATES
. . . Select yours from our
refrigerated fresh display of
f'.ne canities l.y
SOCIETE
DAVENPORTS
GOCELIN
WHITMAN
tax ' Cosmetics.
f ( this
npfjy WRIGHT
CO-HIT!