, i ' - 4 The OREGON STATESMAN. Salen. Oregon; Sunday Morning! January 7. 19M page eight; PROVES FUTILE r Oregon State Starts Slowly ; Again, Later Gets Lead ; But Can't Keep It , . CORVALLIS. Ore. Jan. 6. 1 Maintaining their; scoring ac curacy throughout i the entire game, the Washington State Cou gars gare the Oregon Ute col lege basketball team .its 'first con ference defeat of , the season, 28 to -14 here tonight. rThls evened their series with one apiece. 1 Washington State's half time lead of Ik to 4 was passed by the Bearers at 19 to 18. but Mc Phee and Johnson t connected in time to reTerse the advantage. . Late in the - final period the Bearers moved ahead when Len ehltsky scored a goal. The Ore . gon State team took a four-point lead when Lenchltsky. dropped In another goal and a foul conver sion. .. . "' . ' : Then the Cougars put on a rally of their own. Johnson, Con gar forward, tipped in the win ning, basket in the last minute of play. v- .-' : -. Not in the memory of the pres ent home, basketball generation has a team guarded the Beavers bo successfully as did the Cou gars the first half. Captain O'C oniell broke through repeatedly' Lfor scores which spirited the Bearer rally.. In the dying minutes of the game Scott let fly from far out on the floor and the score read 24 all. For more than a minute and a half the teams battled before "Johnson won a scramble under the basket by tipping In the win ning goal. Washington domin ated the tipoff throughout ; Another near-capacity crowd of 3,000 witnessed the game. Summary: Wash. State (20) ; G Johnson LP i.2 SfcPhee RF , ,, : -1 Houston C .2 Scott LG .2 Willi RG -3 F 3 1 0 0 TP 7 3 4 4 8 2 Totals ..10 24 Oregon State (24) ,0'Connell LP .5 0 0 1 1 2 10 4 1 1 8 24 3, Hibbard RF Kidder C .2 J) MacDonald LG -Lenehitsky RG .0 .3 Totals .10 ' Personal " fouls: Johnson Houston 2, McPhee 1; Kidder 4. Hibbard, Lenehitsky 2. Free throws missed: .. Johnson S, Hibbard 2, MacDonald. 1. ; Referee, PUuso, M.: A. A." C; ' umpire, Adams, Willamette. New Deal in Golf Slated For Summer By EDWARD J. NEIL NEW TORK, Jan. 6. JP) Golf launched a reconstruction program all its .own today with a thorough overhauling of the " manner ot playing the annua amateur championship, and the announcement- of a thoroughly ; democratic 1934 Walker Cup team, with four of the nine play ers new to the classic internation al competition. , Patterning the amateur cham pionship after the British system, the United States. Golf association announced the elimination of , Qualifying play in the tournament proper and the substitution ot a . full week of match play among a maximum of 180 entries, most drastic change in the 'history of ' the competition. At the same time, Francis Oiu met, Boston reteran who led the "Walk : Cap forces in 1932, was again named captain' of the team that will meet the- British at St. Andrews May 11 and 12. - His team mates . are Johnny : Goodman ot Omaha, present open chaplon; Johnny Fischer, all youngsters new to international play: H. Chandler. Egan, Del Monte, OL, reteran who won the amateur In 1904-05 and eliminat ed Goodman In the first round ol the 1933 amateur but nerer be fore played ! ia- Walker. Cup - matches; Max R, Marston, another former champion who returned to top flight -form last season, and the reteran of the 1932 team, George T. Dunlap, Jr., of New York, -national amateur -cham pion; Gua Mereland of Dallas, and Jack Westland of Chicago. Under the new amateur : plan. 22 sectional -qnalifylng tourna- ' menta throughout " the - country August 21 will produce the field 4 that will start 18-hole match' play - at Brookllne, Mass., September 19. All former - champions "in good standing" automatically are Included among the 180. certified for match play., : 'iVUls. i,; "ATLANTA. Jan. f. (S5) The national football rules committee will hold Its annual meeting her for three days starting February I, H..J Stegeman, a committee member from the University of Georgia, announced today. Tha meeting, generally held in New York, was mored here at Etegeman'a- tnritatlon. ; At ; tha came time tha adrlsory commit tee of coaches, appointed at the recent Chicago eonrention: will viaeet here. Lou Ltttl. Nanie hi feb iy Nose Out . - : - - - 1 , : I , ' i,::. - .i.. . - - . -J--. r . ; : l Inni run iiiiiiiiirn v flACK LOME STAR. Jinny FOXX- the OAJiy ONE OF CONNlEjS EXPENSIVE STARS WHO . REMAIAJS WITH THE TEAM.' GJhat 1934 HOLD FOR MR. A1 T the ripe old age of 71, the silver-haired Cornelius Mc Gillicuddy, better known as Connie Mack, win endeavor to build jap a new baseball team next season to supplant the high-geared machine which he wrecked this winter by selling his high-priced stars. Connie Is facing a tough task, for he is entering upon the coming sea ' son with only one star remaining of his costly galaxy of diamond prima donnas. Jimmy Foxx, heavy slug ging first sacker and the mightiest right-handed hitter in baseball, is still with the Athletics at this writ Kizer, Babe Hollingbery ai " W. A. Alexander are members of this committee. Stegeman said a committee named to 6tudy suggested rule changes would engage in "labora tory work" during the meeting. Spring football training will be under way then at Georgia and Georgia Tech and the committee, composed of Stegeman, Dana Bible. Lou Little, W. S. La n go ford and Walter Okeson, will be able to have squads of players avail able to test out any maneuvers they desire to study. 5 BROOKLYN, N. T., Jan. 6. p Charles Hornbostel of the Uni- rersity ot Indiana, bolder of the unofficial record for the half mile outdoors, tonight won the 800- meter feature of the Knights of Columbus indoor track and field games by ten yards. Zene Venzke, of the University of Pennsylvania was second. Hornbostel's time was 1 minute 57.1 seconds, a far cry from Lloyd Hahn's universal ' standard ot 1:51.4, but a good effort for the unbanked armory track. He was going easily at the finish, looking back for venzke. Phil Cohen, ot the Millrose A.A., a local club runner, sprang a big upset by taking the 100-meter dash to win the sprint series and break the two-year reign of Ed Slegel. who tied for second place with Manny Krosney, New Stretch high school star. Co-op Colony Incorprated at $250 Per Member The Co-op Colony, designed as an attempt at practical commun ism, Saturday filed articles In the state corporation department here. Membership fees were fixed at I2S0. .. l The organisation la authorised to deal la real estate, operate farms, carry en logging and lum bering, construct reservoirs and irrigate land, , develop and sell hydro-electric power, operate tele- pone systems and operate munici pal facilities. i The directors are D. M. Brower, Hi. Cummin gs, Harold Parmele, Gerald Roth, Walter R. Ransom and W;.M.- Roth. ' :vv l - - PRO CHAMPS WEf . ; DALLAS, Jan. C. (m The Chi cago Bears, football champions ot the professional world, rolled np a" tt to II rlctory orer a team composed of former grid stars of Southern ' nieUiodlst university. li I GOAJAJJE HAS WRECKED Iv HS HIGH POWERED MACHINE I EH HD TICK 26 Facing a Dijfault By BURNLEY- MACK ? - 7I - ing, and the venerable Mr. Mitck has insisted that deuble-X JaBtes will not be sold at least not this year. Connie is net downhearted ever the 1934 prospects of the "As, be w erer. Far from it. The Silver Fox of the American Loop insists that his team ia not wrecked, and points out that he has quite a few .very promising youngsters to supplant the already aging reterans who were sold in his sensational winter auction. All the old stars of the old ma chine, which won several pennants for Connie during the last fire The weather man has been smiling on the golfers for the past several days, and a full turnout is expected today on the part of the eight teams competing in the Sa- em Golf club Industrial league, as well as by other divot diggers who realize that ideal golfing weather In January is not to be neglected. There are not many regions In the United States where golf is even a possibility at this season. Teams which must get their scores in by tonight in the Industrial league play are: Business Men, Utilities, Pack ers, Printers. Gasoline, Industrial, Medical- Dental, Automotire. ' The City-Y. basketball pro gram will continue this week, the Minor league games at the Y. M. C. A. Tuesday night be ing Kay Mills vs. Teachers at 7 o'clock. Square Deal Radio rs. Oregon Paper at 8, Pay's TakJt ts. Western Paper at 0. Major league games at Parrlsh Thurs day night will be Willamette freshmen rs. Willamette Cardi nals at 7, rade's ts. Kay MIUs at 8, aPrker's vs. Valley Motor V-8. at 9. The American Legion wrestling show Tuesday night is an attrac tive one. 'featuring Art Perkins, newly established -aa a Salem resi dent, against Robin Reed In the main erent. Stan Crawley who made his bow last week meets Tommy Heins, who is expected to demonstrate 67 rartetles of wres tling. The opener brings together Alfred Anderson and Murt cram. ' It's an easy matter to schedule basketball games and for that reason a difficult matter to keep track of schedalea. Fans will just hare to watch this page from day to day to find oat what the basketball attractions xe, Salem high's plana for this week were still a bit Indefinite Saturday except that the team win play Eugene high at Eu gene Saturday night. Willamette ts scheduled to play Oregon Nor mal here Thursday and to meet Columbia Saturday, bat there may be some changes. Doughboys Beat Falls City Five By Wide Margin ' Tha Doughboys, : representing the Cherry City. Baking company of Salem, scored a 45-to-li no tary orer the Falls City town bas ketball team at Falls City Satur- P J rciiiKir-' - 24 Victory mfU Task YSAR. - OLD PILOT OF THE ATHLETICS -CAM HE BUILD ANOTHER. WIMM1MG TEAM? HSj fears, hare been sold -eJl except Simmons, Haas, Dykes, Grove, Cochrane, Walbecg, Earnshaw and Bishop famous names- all of them. And now all hare been aoM down the river by the silver-thatched ring master of the White Elephants. Just as in 1914 Connie wasn't afraid to break up one of the greatest base bail machines in diamond history, so today at 71 this patriarch of the diamond is still ready to start all over again and try to build up an other winning combination. Good luck to you, Connie! O TlaM. 1114. KIM IW tjm tata, Im. day night. Eckman of the Dough boys led In scoring with 17 points, The Doughboys will go to Hebo next Saturday. Doughboys Falls City Yanderhoof 10 F. ..... 12 Foster Allison 7 F W. Howell Eckman 17... .C 4 Rickitts Speck 4 G....1 R. Howell Maw 5 G 2 Speerstra Sachtler 2 S Referee, Zuver. BEATS DALLAS, Jan. 4. Perry dale Farmers basketball team showed the followers ot the game some high class' basketball when they defeated the strong Dallas town team, 1932 state champs, Friday night, 45 to 33. The score was close throughout the first half with Perrydale leading the great er part of the time. The score at the half was 24-20 for Perrydale. In the second halt the visiting Farmers tightened their defense and most of the Dallas baskets were from far out. Pengra starred for the risitars with 13 points, A. Van Otten was a dose second with 11 points and MInich and TJglow ot Dallas .tied Len Gilson of the winners with eight Lineups: Perrydale Dallas A Van Otten 11 F 8 MInich Beyerle 2 F. . . . ..3 Vaughn Lor. Gilson 4 . . .F Syron Pengra 13 C 4 Le Fors D. Van Otten, 5..G...-...6 Griffen Len Gilson S ...G.. g TJglow G 4 Kllever Referee-, Ray Boydston. Lincoln Hoopers Nose Out Frosh PORTLAND. Jan. t. UP) The cobra-like left arm ot Silrer brought the Lincoln high school basketball team an inch-to-the- good rlctory orer the Willamette university freshmen, by a 23-to-22 score, here today. Silrer -led the scoring with It points while Brandon, Bearkitten center, scored eight. " Rook Five Wins Over Corvallis CORVALLI3. Jan. tV The Oregon State college' rooks won their first basketball game of the season, 28 to 18, from CorralUs high school today. . , Tattle and Torgerson - were tha chief scorers for the Rooks. Dai ley, substitute forward far the high school, was tndlriduai. high scorer with eight points. PERDYDALE ULUS If STEliS T Needham Sets N. W. Record Onof ficiatly; Brunke Of Portland Also Two - unofficial ' northwest rec ords were set in the swimming meet between the Salem Y.M.C.A. and a team from Portland North east Y. here Saturday night. Sa lem won the meet, 48 points to 16. , Win Needham of Salem swam the 220-yard free style In 2:24.2 for one of the record' perform ances and: Brunke . of . Portland made the 100-yard breast stroke In 1:14.5 lor the other. Summary: 140 Relay Salem won (C, Wiper, Bill Wirtz, Needham, Boh Brown elL) 100 Breast Stroke Brunke, Portland; Elliott, Salem; Sexton, Salem; 1:14.5. l 100 Back Stroke Luse, Port land; T. Wiper, Salem; Causey, Salem; 1:14. 40 Free Style Brownell, Sa lem; Wirtz, Salem; Johnsrud, Portland; :19.4. 220 Free Style Needham. Sa lem; Levy, Portland; C. Wiper, Salem; 2:24.2. Diving Arm priest, Salem. us. z points; Hauge, Salem: Weber, Portland. 100 Free Style Brownell. Sa lem; Needham, Salem; FIsch, roruana: :B7.s. 120 Medley Salem won (Cau sey back . stroke, Elliott breast stroke, Wirta free style.) DALLAS. Jan. 4. Dallas hlah'a basketball team will settle down to some tough play in r for the next few weeks with a 14 game sched ule facing them, starting with TJni- rersity nigh at Eugene tonight. Dallas has played four high school games to date, winning twice from wmamina, and once each from Chemawa and Falls City. The regular schedule will wind up on February 18 with a county league game at Monmouth, and will be followed by the county and district tournaments. The county league opens for Dallas January 19 when it plays Independence there. Dallas, Monmouth and In dependence make np the A league in Polk county, and the two high teams in their series will meet from the B league in the county tournament. The tourney will be played on the floor of the A league team not entering. Dallas schedule for the balance of the season is: Jan. 8, Corrallis there. Jan. 11, Willamette frosh here. Jan 14. Eugene here. Jan. 19, Independence there, an. 23, McMlnnville there. Jan. 26, Monmouth here. Jan. 27, Falls City there. Jan. 30, McMlnnville here. Feb. 1, Engene there. Feb. 6, University high here. Feb. 9. Independence here. Feb. 13, Corvallls here. Feb. 16, Monmouth there. Keel is Moulded For Defender of Yachting Trophy BRISTOL, R. I., Jan. 6. UPi A keel was made here today upon which will turn the hopes ot the country's yachtsmen to retain the most prized of all blue water tro phies the America's cup. Nearly 90 tons of molten lead were poured into a sand-banked wooden form to fashion the keel of the yacht which Harold S. Van derbllt and his associates are building to meet the challenge of T. O. M. Sopwith. . British sports man, and his new J -class sloop endearor. Pilots Phillies Jimmy Wilson, star catcher for the St. Louis Cardinals in their last world, aeries . appearastce and np to the close of the 193$ - eeasoEL has been acqolred tj the Philadelphia Natlosal . leagwo clnb and will manage the team next BO HOOP 5 EASON OPENS FOR DALLAS Meets Reed Tuesday Night : I v . ' i '"' V ' , ' ' t i X f - ' I - v' y - - v M -4 '- ' - N r " 0!, 3 : y.:.- . ,. A I .:':,:. :':: i . 't Art Perkins, of Salem, Ore., will tussle with Robin Reed of Reedsport on the armory: mat Tuesday night. Perkins has decided: to make Salem his home and has already brought his family here. Bis young daughter has entered school. Perkins who drew the praise ot fans aa he defeated "Bulldog Jackson a week ago, met Reed hero in one of the lireliest matches Salem has seen, a couple of years ago. They will attempt to repeat Tuesday night. Tommy Armour Leads Field At Miami at With Four Under Par Card MIAMI, Fla., Jan. 4. UP) Tommy Armour, of Chicago, bias ed a sensational trail of pars and birdies today to post a 34-hole score ot 136, tour under regula tion figures, and lead the field at the halt way mark in the 22,- 000 Miami Open golf tourna ment. The slender pro from the Me- dinah Country Club, who during his, colorful career has worn moBt of the major crowns In golf, post ed a brilliant 47 today, three un der par which with a 49 yester day, pulled him oat of third place to top the field of approximate ly 140 of the best shot makers of the country. Nerer bowing to par on to day's 18 hole round, Armour rounded the turn with a 34, one under perfect golf, and came home with a snappy 33. His card of 69 yesterday was a 34 and a 35. Hitting out long drives, Armour also was on top of his short game UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene, Jan. 6. (Special) The University of Oregon Webfoots will open their 1934 conference hoop schedule Monday and Tues day nights against the strong Washington State college Quin tet. Both games . will be played here on McArthur court, start ing at 7:30 o'clock. Three sophomores will be in cluded In Bill Relnhart's opening combination Monday night. Wil lard Jones, six foot four Inch cen ter prospect, seems to hare a monopoly on the pivot post. Budd Jones, former Ashland Normal star, is entrenched at one guard berth, and Ron Gemmel, speedy transfer from Eastern Oregon NormaH has shown great promise as a forward. Captain Gilbert Ollnger, guard, and Jack Robertson, forward and leading scorer in the pre-season contests with 71 points In seven games, are the two reterans on the squad. Bill Berg, husky one year letterman, has been alternat ing with Gemmel as a forward and will see action. 01 DITTM LEADS ES LOS ANGELES, Jan. . (JP) Olin Dutra, whose forebears sail ed the Spanish main, exploded a sparkling 47 orer the difficult championship course of-the Los Angeles County club today to lead a brilliant field in the Los Angeles open and then went home to practice. 1 Although he clipped three strokes from par,: the big fellow from Santa Monica waa not satis fied with his tee shots and. hur ried away to the -practice tee of the Brentwood dab, where he la pro, to try td straighten out his driving before the start ot the second round tomorrow. ' Two smart pros of the young sehool, Johnny Berolta of Mil waukee, Wis.; and Paul Runyan ot White Plains, N. Y followed Dutra two strokes In arrears with sub-par rounds of ,49. - i k George Ton Elm, Los Angeles, former, ; amateur I champion hut who no longer plays for the fun of It, and Ky Laffoon, Denver pro, .equalled tha reriaed par of 70. WEBFODT QUINTET TO MEET OPEN ' : T7Tf tjtiI - IfctfrhfrhriTi r JUL: U WVWijj,. fu .uy ; i. " jf v. z Halfway Post and sank putts with deadly ac curacy; He shot the first nine in eight pars and one- birdie four, collect ed on the 500 yard fifth and picked up two more birdies on the way back to go with the seven other holes he played in perfect figures. A stroke farther back of the 1932 winner of the Miami Open with 137 came Phil Perkins of Willoughby, Ohio, who was one of the leading British amateurs be fore he turned pro. Perkins, who tied with Armour with a 49, in third place yesterday, mored into second division today with a 68. Although he finished farther back In the field with a par 140 for the two rounds, John Kin der of Asbury Park, N. J., car ried off the low scoring honors for a single round today when he carded a smart 31 on the first nine. He took a 37 on the return side for a 68 to pair with a 72 scored yesterday. . WOODBURN. Jan. Wood burn high school basketball team lost its first game of the season Friday night in the Woodburn high school gym, when they were outplayed by the Silrerton Silver Foxes by a score of 45 to 26 High man for the Foxes was Scott who made 14 points, follow ed oy Pettyjohn with 12 points. The Woodburn second team defeated Silverton's second team, 22 to 4, the teams being more evenly matched than the score In dicates. Summary of main game: woodburn Silrerton Bonney 2 LF 10 Schwab Simran 7 F 14 Scott Jackson 6 , Cl 2 Pettyjohn uoersc z -. , , jj Halter 7 G Gustafson 2 S Referee, Bashor. 5 Orren 4 Specht BLUEGE TO MINORS - ST. PAUL, Jan. 6. (Presi dent Robert Connery of the St. Paul American association base ball team tonight announced he had concluded negotiations for the purchase of Otto Bloege from the Philadelphia National league club. Sllii DEFEATS wooDBUifluuirn ART " . , ' STAN -.' Pgi?EiHe3c 5t?6wHej7 vs. rj-' '.".vs.- ROBIN - TOMMY ElEESED i HIgQeis CRUM vs. ANDERSON . ... . ,-'-' piucks; ; v; ; LOWER FLOOR .: .S5C . ; Tickets at CUff Parker'av ' TlAT,fXWrV - Anspteea American LegSoa ' LADIES .40C " 1TJE31BOWEN.- - STUDENTS ' - 40 il-SuiUtoSkmW.. - CHURCH TEAMS 3 III ITCHED Temple ;BaptisV: Jason ; Lee! And Lutherans Win In : . Saturday Games Two dose' games featured the senior Sunday school league baa ketball at the Y. M. C, A. Satur day night Temple -Baptist nosed out 'the ex-champion " Presbyter ians 25 to 22 and the Jason Led senior quintet won oyer the Tro Jans from the same church, 1 to 10. , v ; ; Featured. by a 23-point scoring spree, by Ritchie, tha third game was not so close, the Lutheranf defeating South Salem ' Friends. 48 to 23. . Lutheran (48) (23) Friends Matthews 1 2 ..F- 6 Pemberton Ritchie 23 UF 4 Laughlitt Bahlburg 7 C 13 P Cammack B.- Bush 2 ,G F. Cammack StockweU 4 .-.G Sebum Lee Trojans (10) (13) Jason Led Block 4 -i-.F 4 Miller Lapse hi ea 1 F. 7 Hesemant Smith ; -,, f? - Baumgartner, Duncan 4 ..... O - Watsott Dourla 1 ; Q... Garnet Presbyterians (22) (25) Temple Robertson 2 .F -11 Tucker, Williams 8 H. Mohr 5 . Barnett Moore 7 F6 Robertson; C 2 Chapel JQ .2 Gulnn JQ WinsloW, FALLS CITY DIVIDE INDEPENDENCE, J. 4. Falls City and Independence high schools' basketball teams split rietories oh tao Independence floor Thursday night. The second team of Indepen dence defeated Falls City's sec ond team by a score of 27 to 12, Ray Dunckel was high point .man. Score at the half .was 17 to 10. Lineups were: Independence - Falls City R. Dunckel . ,.F...... Russell O. Newton ....F Baaier. Hanson C.... Ferguson Syterson O...... Murphy Beach .G. . . . . . Brown Falls City's first team won from the Independence first team by a score of 28 to 16. Coach Silke's combination was working swiftly while i the Independence boys couldn't seem to keep up. Before .the game was orer the whole Independence second string had replaced the first. Lineups were: Independence Falls City Dunckel F Baker Barclay F Zlerer Lenhard ......C. ........ Teal C.Carey .G.... McCuston Newton 6.... Gutbridge Referee, Elmer Beach. Husky Takes League Lead; Beats Idaho SEATTLE, Jan. 6. (ff) The University of Washington Huskies made it two in a row orer the University of Idaho Vandals here tonight, trouncing the inraders, 31 to 25, In a high speed, hard fought northern dirision Paclf ic coast conference game. They led at the half, 14 to 11. Picking up where he left oft last night in 1 which he scored eight points during Washington's first win of the series, 35 to 29, Bob Galer, a , guard, shifted to a - forward position tonight and played sensational basketball. He looped in six field goals and Ato free throws to account for 17 points, more than Jhalf his team's total. The Huskies took the lead at the start, 4 to e, but Idaho short ly tied it up and then went ahead, 4 to 4. Galer then sent the Hus kies into the lead with a tree throw and a field goal, after sev eral minutes In which no scores were made. The Huskies led the rest of .the Way. .f 4- B.O.N. 8. DEFEATED LA GRANDE, Ore., Jan. 4. () A sure-shooting band , of Boise Junior- college ; basketball players defeated the; 'inexperienced La Grande Normal 'school team, 40 to zi, here last night. inDK m