PAGE SIX THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1949 National Guards To Field 28,000 For '49 Training Approximately 28,000 national guard officers and enlisted men will take part In field training encampments at locations throughout the sixth army area this summer, it was announced today at sixth army headquar ters. Units from all eight states of the area will be represented for the first time since the war, as an estimated 10,000 more nation al guardsmen will assemble at summer training centers than at tended last year's encampments. Nevada to Send Men Nevada will send 15 officers and 175 soldiers on their first postwar summer encampment, to train at Camp San Luis Obispo, Calif. California and Arizona na tional guardsmen will conduct their third postwar field train ing, while it will be the second postwar training period for Wash ington, Oregon, Idaho and Man tana guard units. General Mark W. Clark, sixth army commander, expressed him self as pleased with the progress being made by the national guard and considers that this summer's training will contribute material ly to the efficiency of the sixth army area national guard units. Sites Selected Sites selected for each state's encampment have facilities for maximum training in the special ties of the units represented in the state organization. Detach ments of regular army troops will support the national guard units, using regular army equip ment where necessary, providing guardsmen with further famil jarlxation with army techniques and weapons. Teams of specialized Instruc tors will be provided by the arm ored school, Fort Knox, Ky., and the anti-aircraft artillery and guided missile center, Fort Bliss, Tex. The air force of air national guard will provide towed aerial targets. Stress will be laid on weapons training during the first week and on field exercises, ma neuvers and marches during the second week. Phoenix Champion Is Jimmy Demaret Phoenix, Ariz., Feb. 1 Ui Colorful. Jimmy Demaret of Ojai, Calif., is Phoenix open golf cham pion today after taking an 18-hole playoff and the $2,000 winner's purse from Ben i Hogan, who had previously bested him three times in competitive rounds. Demaret shot a four-under par 67 in yesterday's playoff to re venge last week's Long Beach open playoff when Hogan took the honors 67 to 69. The pint-sized Hogan, of Hershey, Pa., turned in a one-under 70 to collect $1,500 second money, splitting the final clay gate with Demaret. CLEVELAND COACH SIGNS Cleveland, Feb. 1 (U"i Reports that Coach Paul Brown of the Cleveland Browns would desert the professional ranks to skipper a college team were wiped out to day when he signed to pilot the Browns for the next seven seas ons through 1955. In the three seasons that the All-America conference has been in business, Brown has guided Cleveland to the league champion ship each time. Bowlers Place in Tourney Take Care of Your Eyes Knjoy (rood t Is Ion and freedom from headache . . , you can not be lure your eytt are perfect unleu you have then examined. Consult ua nml Dr. M. B. McKenney OPTOMETRIST 908 Wall St. I'honc 312-M CASH FOK TAXES Easy to Get Easy to Repay '25.00 to '300.00 ON FURNITURE FARM MACHINERY LIVESTOCK Up to '500.00 ON AUTOMOBILES Terms up to fifteen months. PORTLAND LOAN CO. Norbert D. Goodrich. Mirr. Km. 8, Penney Bldg., 1010 Wall Telephone 173 Bend, Oregon State Licenses 186 MS21 rr rr -v tw I Lew Button, left, won third place in the class C all-events of the Oregon bowling tournament that ended in Eugene this week His tourney score was 1648. Henley Bauglin, right, placed third in the class B all-events with a score of 1750. The Bend keglcrs were hack . in action at the Cascade bowl last night. Hamline Is Tops In College Play New York, Feb. 1 (IP) This is the day to ring out the cheers for the peerless Pipers of Hamline university, the only undefeated major college basketball team in the nation. The mighty machine from the school in Minnesota was left alone on the list of glory when the roof fell in last night on Villa nova, swamped by Duquesne, 05 to 37 after winning 12 straight games. Hamlino's Pipers have won 14 games and' their next contest fig ured to he an easy one on Satur day night against Concordia. They kept rolling through vic tory after victory while other leading teams St. Louis, Ken tucky, Western Kentucky, Okla homa A. and M., and the rest fell by the wayside. Now the Pipers stand alone anil richly deserve the fancy praise they are receiving. But their joy may be short-lived-on Ken. 17 they have a date with the Phillips Oilers, national A.A.U. champions and perhaps the finest team anywhere. Ex-Redmond Man Logging Victim Redmond, Feb. 1 (Special) Mr. and Mrs. George Cork and fam ily, Norman, Kathryn and Clay ton, Mrs. Hubert Bartlett and Mr. and Mrs. Dale Cork went to Mon ument Jan. 23 to attend the fu neral services of Raymond W. Cork, 27, who was killed instantly on January 22 by a log, which broke loose from Ills truck. Mr. Cork had been engaged In the logging business at Ml:. Vernon, Ore., for the past year, having gone there from Redmond. He served In the marine corps during world war II, four years of which were spent in the South Pacific. He was given a military funeral at Monument Monday, January 24. He is survived by his wife, Wan da, and an infant son; two sisters, Mrs. Joe Cox and Mrs. Walter Struck of Prlneville; his mother, Mrs. Bob Levick of Forest Grove, and his father, Thomas Cork, of Redmond. COW STAUVICK JAII.KI) Tacoma, Feb. 1 Ml') George Flannery, G7, Greshnm, was free on $100 bail today after his arrest on a charge of "nun-support" of cattle. The prosecutor's office charged the logger with failure to provide food and shelter for his cows. GENE BEAKDEN C ITED Philadelphia, Feb. 1 (tl'iPitch er Gene Uearden, who overcame the handicap of severe war wounds to propel the Cleveland Indians to the world champion ship, was hailed as the most courageous athlete of 1918 by the Philadelphia Sports Writers asso ciation. The 28-year-old southpaw, a sensation in his first year as a major leaguer, received an award at the association's annual ban quet last night. UO Campus Slates Dad's Weekend University of Oregon, Eugene, Feb. 1 (Special) Sons and daugh ters at the university are prepar ing Dad's gala week end Februa ry 4 0 and preliminary plans in dicate the students' fathers will lx offered a full schedule of en tertainment and activities in their honor. Personalized invitations are ex-ix-cted to draw a record attend ance for the affair. Registration booths will be set up in the Eu gene and Osborn hotels in down town Eugene and In Johnson hall on the campus. Included on the agenda for the visiting fathers are the two Washington-Oregon ba.sketball games Friday and Saturday nights, the annual Dad's day luncheon Satur day noon, the regular business meeting in the afternoon, and conducted tours of the campus. The week end will conclude Sun day with dinner at the campus living organizations following services at the various Eugene churches. Wives of student veterans are competing in a photo contest for the honor of representing the stu dent body as hostess for the af fair. The dad's day hostess will be Introduced to visiting fathers at the Saturday luncheon. Ellsworth Elected To GOP Group Washington, Feb. I dl' House republicans from four western states Monday elected Reps. Jack Z. Anderson of California and Harris Ellsworth of Oregon to represent them on the new house GOP policy committee. Members of the committee are to-be elected at regional meetings of house members. Anderson and Ellsworth were elected at a meet ing of GOP members from Cali fornia. Oregon and Washington. Nevada is also included in the re gion, but there are no republican members from that .state at this session of congress. Former Speaker Scolds Democrats Charleston, S, C Feb. 1 HI' - Former speaker Joseph W. Mar tin, Jr., says the GOP 80th con gress was asked to work miracles in two weeks, but in twice that time a democratic congress has done nothing but raise President Truman's salary. Martin scolded the democrats Friday night in a speech before the Charleston chamber of com merce. "I recall quite clearly that the SOt h congress was summoned into extraordinary session last sum mer to do many things in the space of two weeks," the Massa chusetts republican said. "We were told to ease the hous ing shortage, bring prices down, increase wages and nail dowfl a lasting world peace - all in two weeks. "But now the 81st congress has been in session lour weeks- and all that has happened so far Is a pay increase for the president." Speaking in the home state of Gov. J. Strom Thurmond, presi dential candidate of the states' righters last year, Martin called the states rights movement a "vi tal force" lor sound government. The million votes taken by the party in the 1U48 election was proof, he said, that the south "is not going to be pushed around and held to ancient party loyalty." 'Worst' Acting Awards Presented Cambridge, Mass., Feb. 1 Hl'i Film stars Shirley Temple, Lana Turner and Burt Lancaster won the Harvard Lampoon's annual awards for the worst movie per formances of the year Monday. The,undergraduate humor mag azine tagged Miss Temple with three other "worst" awards. She was honored as having "the most nauseating screen voice" and as being "the worst all-time hoyden and the actress most likely to drag down her husband's dubious reputation as an actor." Paramount films topped the producers' "hate" lust with three of the 10 "worst" movies of the year. They were "The Emperor Waltz," "Beyond Glory," and "Sorry, Wrong Number." Jeannelte MacDonald was nam ed the "worst reincarnation" for her comeback in "Three Daring Daughters" and Joan Fontaine won the "worst deception" award for her role as a Kiyear-old girl In "Letter From An Unknown Woman." Other stars on the Lampoon's blacklist were Eleanor Parker, Lisbeth Scott, Deanna Durbin, Barbara Stanwyck, Ida Lupino, Gregory Peck, Denis Morgan and Jack Carson. Unit Leaders Will Attend Work Shop Twelve local unit leaders are slated to attend the first of four "best dress" work shop classes, i sponsored by the home demon stration agency, Thursday at 10:.')fl a.m. at the Pino Forest grange. I he project will Include four instruction classes which ate scheduled for February 3, !), 15 and 23. In charge of the classes will be Miss Myrtle Carter of Corvallis, who is a home furnishing special ist. After the completion of the classes, heads of units who have attended the work shop will in struct members of their respec tive units on the project. Those scheduled to attend the meet are: Mrs. V. Stevenson, Boyd Acres; Mrs. Howard Pinneo and Mrs. G. A. Edwards, both of Red mond; Mrs. Marion Smith, Alfal fa; Mrs. F. II. Cottrell, Deschutes Pleasant Ridge; Mrs. Leslie Kribs, Mrs. Ben Chancy and Mrs. Ray Williams, all of Glen Vista; Mrs. Joe Howard and Mrs. Robert Mon ical, both of Lower Bridge; Mrs. R. Hammer, Terrebonne; and Mrs. John Rippen and Mrs. J. W. Mar tin, both of Tumalo. High Speed Ships Being Produced Cleveland, Feb. 1 m Four X-l-A rocket planes capable of fly ing an estimated 1350 miles an hour are being produced by the Hell Aircraft Corp., at Buffalo. N.Y., Lawrence Bell, the firm's president, said Monday. The new research planes will be 70 per cent faster than the origin al X-l and carry 50 per cent more fuel, he said. The XI was the first plane to fly faster than the speed of sound. Its approximate speed, a closely guarded air force secret for more than a year, was confirmed as 100 miles an hour greater than the speed of sound by Air secretary W. Stuart Symington last Sep tember. The speed of sound is 700 miles an hour at sea level. Bell said the new rocket planes will be used by the air force for research on ballast ics and arma ment problems. Thev will cost $700,000 each to build," he added. Bandits Rob Bank, Get 70 Thousand Miami Beach, Fla., Feb. 1 dl'i Bandits held up tile Mercantile ! bank on fashionable Lincoln road Monday and escaped with $70,000. Miami Beach police said two thieves were waiting in the night depository room Inside the bank when two clerks entered to re move the deyosits to the bank vaults. They seized all deposits placed in the depository over the week end and fled In an automobile waiting outside the office building where the bank is located. S. W. Curry, bank cashier, esti mated the theft at from S60.000 to $70,000 on the basis of deposits placed in the night box during the previous week end. Police said the bandits appar ently gained entry into the deposit chamber Friday night by posing as workmen employed on a re pair job in a theater which is in the bank building. L They entered a broom and mop locker off the theater lobby, broke a hole through the wall leading to a recess under the building's es calator which was part of the night deposit chamber. When clerks E. J. Jeter and J. W. Dameron entered the chamber at 8:15 a.m., the bandits held them up and forced them to turn over the deposits. The bandits then gagged the two clerks and secured them with handcuffs. They were dumped into the recess under the escalator and the bandits made their escape through the hole they had made Friday night. Group BelF 'Buyers Scared' Washington, Feb. 1 HP A sec tion of the Hoover commission be lieves the government's supply buyers are scared to get out of their "routine rut" and adopt bus iness like methods because of the vast power wielded by the comp troller general's office, it was learned Friday. The commission, deaded by for mer President Herbert Hoover, is completing an extensive study of reorganization of the executive branch of the federal government. Its committee on the federal supply .system filed a report with the commission saying the comp troller general's office is exerting a "stagnating influence" on gov ernment purchasing. The committee said that prac tically all purchasing oilicers in the executive branch of govern ment "play safe" by seeking ad vance rulings on any proposed purchases that vary from routine procedure. The general accounting office, headed by Comptroller general Lindsay C. Warren, is an arm of congress. It is known as the "watchdog of the treasury" be cause of its statutory duties of ap proving every dollar spent by the government. TENNIS QUEEN TO MARRY Los Angeles, Feb. 1 '' Paul ine Betz, 24, longtime world tennis queen, announced Monday she will be married Saturday to Wash ington sports columnist Bob Ad-die. The shapely, red-haired prob. siwnal tennis star and Addle n 14 months ago when she wag 2 a radio program, she said Use classified ads in The Bmi tin for quick results. w f PHONE 803 . Dr. H.C.Gtaples Othmiitht M- ff J. iSIOMSftCMUST .7& Poultrymen sometimes treat eggs by washing the shells with hot water and detergents; this forces out bacteria lodged in the shell wall. No Longer Constipated "Since I made ai.l-bran my break fast cereal I've stopped taking laxa tives!" Mrs. V. Uylionis, Philadel phia, Pa. If your diet lucks bulk for normal elimination, tnis delicious cereal will suppy it. Kat an ounce every day in milk and drink plenty of water. If not sat isfied after 10 days, send the empty carton to the KelloKe Co.. Battle Creek, Mich., and gel yoliui.B VOUK MONEY HACK. Order KECLOGU'S all-uuan today. Use classified ads in The Bulle-1 tin for quick results. ! Deputy Sheriff Booked by Police Portland, Feb. 1 ili'i Police Monday booked Deputy sheriff Lyle Cocking, 20, on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon aft er he was subdued forcibly by city patrolmen at his home. Police officers Lee Stockdale and Lawrence J. Rees went to the Cocking home in response to a telephone call trom a woman who reported a family argument. Cocking met them at the door way, the oflicers said, and asked them if they had a search war rant. When they said thev did not. Cocking attempted to force them out, they reported. Cocking then ran upstairs and returned with a gun, which he pointed at Stockdale, according to .police. Stockdale struck Cocking, knocking him to the floor. While on the floor. Cocking again point ed the gun at Stockdale. police said. Rees and Stockdale over powered Cocking, handcuffed his wrists and bound his ankles, and took him to police headquarters. Wood Steel Aluminum FREE ESTIMATES Bend Venetian Blind Mfg. Co. 538 E. Glcmvood (Off of E. 5th Street) Phone 1434-J February SALE 1948 Models Regular $309.95 model.... SALE $249.00 Fully automatic Magic Chef model with 3 Surface burners and deep well cooker a real buy at this price! Regular $259.50 model SALE $195.50 A very slightly used DeLuxe model Zenith with 4 surface units, automatic timing, "beat units. See this one! 1949 Standard ZENITH $209.95 Latest model Zenith standard range without automatic timing, new monotube 7-speed heat units. Benena Hardware Co. YOUR MASHALL-WEUS STORE Corner E. 3rd and Greenwood Phone 775 . ...MS. WW" ...i-t OF rw V'- f0 uiihaw" , Any organization that grows to more than 100,000 voluntary members in a few years must have merit. That is what has happened with Oregon Physicians' Service. Prepaid Medical and Hospital protection at modest cost has been avail able from O.P.S. since 1941. Members have a wide choice of physicians, surgeons, consulting ' specialists and hospitals . . . The O.P.S. plans that have proved so satisfactory to more than 1 00,000 Oregonians may be of interest fo you. rrrpiw"J- 5 city JJa.i i 05 mi irrt 1- - ii 1214 S.W. 6lh. POBUAND 4 455 FERRY ST., SAlfM MEDFOSIO 81DQ., MEDFOSO SPONSORED AND APPROVED Y OREGON STATE MEDICAL SOCIETY 0 saw l t- if l(HylL j An evening at home ... firelight .. . I ' I I friends ... a glass of light Olympia. I . I 3 These are among the good l -'ml j II j I 'lungs of life. 1 -. fljL 1 1 ! 47i the Water"' LBtn, lit Ltfl Ktmhmnt Btnrap eMiliem Vmftratt PnfU 1 OUMIU lltWIKO COMPANY, OlYHHA. WASHIMOTOM, ... I