i.T7. ' Tl 0 - CI fa Tit! 'Defeat -B intc siom EMvi ;;-.. .,:. i-'-. PugeifSdund nnrnriiiMPTinrr 1 . - UntbUIUIHIL Lead Changes Five Times in Hectic Game;. Goal and Foul Decide Win SEATTLE. Feb. le.-CffH841' terlng down the stubborn defense or Oregon State, lagt-year Paci fic coast -conferences basketball champions, the University f Washington clinched the northern division conference 1934 title Id night with a bitterly fought 24 to 21 win oyer the Beavers.. A crowd of 8200 saw, the game. - The Of egonians were- In r i b e running alt the Way ftr a splendid attempt to remain in ' t h e title - race; but tie Huskies managed to "-soiueese out their biggest victory of the season in sensational style. '- Fire times the Bearers were in front.. Are "times the" score ; was tied and .five times Washington Vas on top, the lat time for good. - - -. - '-' . , Captain Hal Lee; aplndly gnard. won the game in the dosing mln- ate when he -sank a field goal In spite of being fouled at the same time, and then added the' ex ; tra point onjthe free throw to pnt the Hnskies ahead. 22 to 21. -. Jack Hanover, slippery forward, r added another basket for good measure and the new champions then played the old keep - away same for four minutes, .. holding the excited .Bearers at bay. Bob Galer. eagle-eye Husky for ward and leading point - getter of the league, kept Washington in the battle during the first halt with lour one - handed swishes. Washington led, 12 to 9, at the rest period: . - Summary: . Oregoa State (21) G O'Connell, rt 1 F. 0 1 1 0 e 0 1 1 Tp- 2 Taylor, rf . Hibbard. If -Palmberg, If 2 7 2 1 1 Tolen, e MaeDonald, rg HU1, rg 0 0 Lenchitsky, rg i Totals 9 21 . . Washington (24) Hanorer, rf Galer, If 1 5 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 2 10 Cook. If 0 4 Wagner, e Lee, rg Weber, lg 2 0 Wyman, lg Totals 10 4 24 Personal fouls: Oregon State MacDonald 3, Hibbard 3, Lencblt- sky, O'Connell, Palmberg, Folen and Hill. Washington Galer 4, Lee 9, Hanorer, Wagner and Wy- j nan. Free throws missed: Oregon State Taylor, Hibbard, Palm berg. Washington Hanorer 3. Galer 8, Weber 2, Wagner and Lee. Referee, Al Hopkins, Tacoma; empire, Abe Cohn, Seattle. MONMOUTH. Feb.-16. Ore . gon Normal walloped Eastern Ore gon Normal here tonight in a wide-open basketball game, 57 to 22, with each of 11 players for . the winners breaking Into the coring column. Max Allen, for ward for OJi.S., was high with 13 points. Allen, Arerill and Tstad got go ing In the second canto and boost- . ed the score to provide a Bate margin,' after which Coach Wolfe seat, in his reserves to continue the flood 'Of baskets. Half-time core was 21 to 14 in favor of . the western teachers, the biggest coring spree coming after the : boys were well warmed, The iosra vr. rin. It and had to content thom.oiro. OREGON NORMAL IS HI with long shots, sinking a e e n OD DT holding each other prac tleld goals and eight fouls. The UctJ1 eveni lt one ct them 18 winners made onlv . three ' nolnt. poorer he gets better and the r core. Conklln Of E.O.N. controlled most of the'tlpotfs, but OJI.S made the points. Summary: O.NJ3. Benjamin 7 ;.F. Allen 13-. F. Avmi i n , Ashby 2- G E.O.N. 10 Worthly 1 Halverson 5 Conklln 2 Crawford 4 Patterson TsUd O Mackey 4 Leonard 2 Philips 2 Burrell 4 -Gustafson 2 Webb 2 . -S .8 . Referee, Agnigen, Columbia, Square Dealers i Defeat Chemawa HiHpopsters -square Deal Radio of Salem defeated the Chemawa Hl-T bas ketball team 45-28 at Chemawa hut night, scoring lat will and leading til the -Way. : ' r :"r - . Peterson and WUder for the losers were high with 14 and 12 - points. Parrlsh led the - winners with, 10 eonnters. - Summary: . : .:. Square Deal 43 ": 28 Chemawa Papkof t 8 . i . . ..F, . . . . 2 Hunter . Elliot . .F. ... 12 Wilder . Parrlsh 10 .... .C. . Scott H. Singer 2 ..G. Green Houssert......G.. 14 Peterson L.Slngr2....Ji from the foul line, but potted 27 PlBW B1WB aown 10 B" rei,-un-Celd goals to .pile up their big le" inlUal and natural abil- Ties The Will the new uveiV "the PIRATES' BATTIMS NPQWEJR- WILL BE ;i:ift .fgBEHlAjD LUCAS TOlS 'tt fM 1 WAS HAAJDICAPPED By THE r k iKJtli WEAK HlTTTAJG REDS MOW ' k N aVVF-- HE WlU. PITCH FOR THE VSS & waff cQ fi0J I K VI wJm If W pill affect soft ball HURLERS- LIKE RED? THIS little story should be en titled "The Reward of Per ,HiiM a Kav some such highly moralistic heading. Here, my children, we hare the tale of a red-headed lad whose name was Charles Fred Lucas. Oddly onnucrK his oftls nicknamed him "Red,'' so from henceforth in the story, we will call mm Kea L.ucas. Now Mister Red Lucas was a rery talented flinger of horsehides, which being: translated means that he was a good baseball pitcher. He was also an exceedingly swell hitter, which made him quite a problem with various managers who didn't know whether to use him in the infield, where he could employ his batting ability, or as hurler. COT IENTS The last time we took partic ular notice, Bill Tilden and Ellsworth Vines were all even on their lengthy series of ten nis matches. It sounds like a racket. We also noticed that Vines won most of the matches In ' California, which perhaps was natural, ft being his home state. Seriously speaking, lis not sur prising that they break very near ly even on the series. Long ago we found out that any two men playing tennis against each other over a long period of time, wound I . tL J A. f lu were unusuany uivergenu Setting New s J&Pl Boston A..C, an old Brown Unfversfty star and a member of the U. S. Olympic team of ten year ago, shows how he topped the timber to win the 60-yard high hurdle event at Millrose Games in New Xexk and set ft new world's record in doingtit. The bald veteran hong ud the remarkable time of f 10 seconds. skJZ- Up Mries With Red-Head and the Pirate By BURNLEY- Red bad several tryouts with big league teams before he decided that pitching, not infielding, was his forte. Both the Giants and the Braves had tried to make an in fielder out of him, in spite of Red'a protests that he was a pitcher, and as a result he was sent back to the minors. ' When he got his third big league chance, (his time with Cincinnati, he Insisted on being considered as pitcher and nothing: else. And it wasn't very Ion? before he was one of the outstanding moundsmen in the majors. Now we come to the sad part of the story. It seems that poor Red has been pitching his heart out all these years for a lowly second diri- There's something about tennis mostly the question of pace which causes it to turn out that way. The only way to Improve Is to play with better players as oft en as you can induce them to play with yon. However, we : know -of no game which would be easier to recketize ttian tennis. It's such a simple matter to double fault a few unnecessary times, and ft fellow . can appear to be try ing jnst as ' hard wheat he's aiming for a point two Inches outside, than when aiming for two Inches insfde the - lines. Maybe you've seen ft couple of unequal players engaging In ft long deuce on a public court. In order to keep on playing when others are waiting for their set to end. Whether Bill and Elly are in dulging in a little horseplay or not, doesn't really matter. They're demonstrating to the country at large, the best tennis to be found anywhere and that's what the public goes to see, not a victory for either one; and we doubt if there's much money, bet on them. World's Record s r Hill he SOLVE THE PITCHING 'PROBLEM sion team which usually wound op in the cellar. All his marvelous mound work usually went for naught, because his own team didn't give him any support, and abso lutely refused to manufacture any runs for him. Nevertheless he re fused to be discouraged, and con tinued to pitch very excellent ball, and as a result of his perseverence he has now been acquired by the heavy-hitting Pittsburgh Pirates the hardest-hitting team in the Heydler circuit last year. The sound of Pittsburgh's busy bats colliding with the hvely pill will be sweet music to Master Lucas's ears next season, after that long exile with Cincy's "hitless wonders." Otjrlfbl 114. Klof rntara SradictU. be E CINCINNATI, Feb. 16 - (TP) - Eppa Rixey laid aside his pitch er's glove today to quit baseball forever after 21 years In the major leagues. Rixey is 43. That, and recent illness, made the going "tougher and tougher." Doubting that he could stand the pace of another season, be elected to drop out instead. .With 21 years of service in the major leagues, Rixey , had come to be regarded as the dean of big league pitchers, and he was as effective, as most of them to the last, Alone of the Reds' pitching crew last year, he turned in more games won than lost. In all his career, he hung np 266 games won as against 251 lost, pitching In 629 in all, fanning. 1350 men and allowing 4633 hits. He jumped from the University of Virginia baseball team directly into the major leagues, and nerer played with a minor league out fit. Starting with the Phillies, he played there nine years, switched to the Reds In 1921, and has been with them ever since. NEW YORK, Feb. U-fJf) Three young college runners, Glehn Cunningham of " Kansas, Bill Bonthron of Princeton and Gone Yenske of Pennsylvania, will gallop a mile on the 11-lap Madison Square Garden track tomorrow night that is confident ly, expected to add a spectacular chapter to American foot-racing history. ; The event that brings this great trio together for the first time Is the Baxter mile; feature of the New York Athletic club's annual Indoor games. It fulfills an objective eagerly anticipated since last summer, lias the track following world completely agog and is likely - to develop, record smashing thrills -for a capacity crowd of 16,000. The race has proved the biggest. Indoor attrac tion -since Paavo Nurml made his debut here la 1925 and the Harden haa been sold out for days, V - - PP1 MM QUITS Ml U CUM HERS TO COMPETE TONIGHT Willamette ginning 4Q to LOGGERS'!!! SHOTS PREVAIL Bearcats Exhibit Speed at Start, Then Lose Sight of Elusive Hoop The argument as. to the-relative merits of long and short shots was not settled in the Willamette-Col- ege of Paget Sound basketball series here, Puget Sound winning the second rapid-fire game Friday night, 40 to 35, after Willamette bad won the first 34 to 30. Fans who saw both games decided that the' shots that go through the- hoop win the. argument, whether tossed from close in or from "a distance. ."-. The Bearcats scored 13 points I iaster than anr Willamette team eve : had maae mat many in & game supposed to be -eveniy matched; five minutes flai; and they led at the end-of that time 13 to 6. Thereafter they piayea just as hard, putting np the best fight they have exhibited tbis sea son, but the shots wouldn't go in; they bounced off the rim and spun out after dropping halfway through, and they Wouldn't even rebound in the right direction; - Meanwhile the Loggers after ft slow start, warmed np to the tem perature at which they - just couldn't miss, from any angle; they quickly overcame that eight- noint lead, and gained one of sev en points for themselves. 26 to 19, at half time. They Increased that to 13 points, 36 to 23, t before Lemmon and- Hartley started a rally that cut It down tty three points near the end. Alter that the Loggers got one more field goal and stalled out the remain der of the game. Hartley led both teams in scor ing with 12 points, Lemmon fol lowing with 11; but three Log gers, Stoffel, Smith and Bates, scored just 10 apiece.. Willamette tonight at 7:30 o'clock will play Pacific college of Newberg, which has an unusually strong team this season. There will be no preliminary. Summary: Pnget Sound (10) O F TP Stoffel, LF 6 0 10 Smith, RF 4 2 10 Bates, C .....4 2 10 Lindqulst, LG .... 1 1 Pollock, RG 3 1 Totals 17 40 Willamette (35) Lemmon, LF . . . Burdett, RF .. . . Kloostra, C . . . . Hartley, LG . . . , Frantx, RG . . . . Manning, LF .. . , 4 , 1 , 1 . 6 . 2 . 0 .14 3 0 2 0 1 1 11 12 Totals .. .-. 14 7 35 Personal fouls: Lemmon 3 Burdett, Kloostra, Hartley 2. Mc- Kerrow, Stoffel, Bates 2, Llnd qulst 4, Piper. Free throws missed: Manning Burdett, Bates 2. Referee, Ralph Coleman, Cor vallis. E First Methodist Junior Church league basketeers meet the league-leading Maccabees at olock this afternoon In the first game of the playoff series at the city T. Jason Lee Aces and the Presbyterians mix at 2 o'clock while the championship will be de cided when the two winning teams compete at 4 o'clock. Losers in the first two games will play for the consolation title at 3. Pennants for first and second place will be awarded at the Jun lor Church league dinner sched uled for next Friday night at the Y. The First Methodist team earned its place in today's tourney last night when It defeated the strong Calvary Baptist team, 26 to 5. . Lineups: First M. E. C. Baptist Reeves 2 F B. Taylor Keldatz 20 F 4 Foster DeCater 4 C......... Roen Whitehead ....O J. Taylor Crary ........ G. 1 Wagner Referee, Moore. CHICAGO, Feb. 16.-ff)-Vince Dundee of Baltimore, generally recognised as-middleweight cham pion, outsped Ben .Teby of . New York, former titleholder to win the decision in their ten. round bout at the Chicago stadium to night. . The two Judges voted In favor of : Dundee, while Referee Davie Miller cast his. ballot for a draw. No title was Involved as Jeby middleweight limit of 160 pounds. He scaled 162. with Dundee tip ping the beam. at 162.. - Neither appeared willing to ex tend himself Dundee drew a warning Jrom Referee Miller In the fifth round to become more warlike. It failed to stir nim to any great effort with the possible exception, of the sixth round which he won by a wide margin. For the most part each round was a repetition of the last with Dundee Just managing to outscore kls opponent. ..There, were a o knockdowns and neither boxer was" seriously damaged. PLAYOFF OH TODAY IN III IIP WNCE DUNDEE WINS OVER EX-CHAMPION Polk County Hoop Tourney; At Independence to Wednesday; Dallas DALLAS, Feb. 16 Dallas high won the championship of the A division! of the-Polk, county basketball league Thursday night when she defeated Monmouth 33 to 16. As a result of this victory Dallas will enter the county tour nament next , week f as the first team from the A division and Monmouth will enter as the sec ond team.' The, tourney, will be held at ndependence . on Wednesday. Thursday, and Friday of next week, with Saturday, included as tourney.. dale, in ease an extra game is necessary to . settle . tne championship. There Will be two" games.; , Wednesday night, two Thursday, afternoon, one. TMirs- -day .night. And one Friday night ror the championship, xne tour nament will be played on a dou ble elimination basis and in case a team wins .Friday, night which has previously been defeated) the championship game will be play ed Saturday night. Dallas " and Monmouth are scheduled to meet in the opening game, with Falls City, and Airlie clashing to complete the double header. The ' Dallas - Monmouth game should be a thriller despite the fact - that Dallas holds two vic tories over Monmouth; by scores of 34 to 12 and 33 to 16. Falls City and Airlie are tied for first place in the B division and will be fighting it out in the second game to decide which Is the bet ter team. Dallas will enter the tourney as the favorite as she holds two wins over . both Monmouth and Fallls City, but she has not met Airlie this season. In addition to the county games Dallas holds victories over Corvallis, Univer sity high of Eugene, and Chema wa. Coach Shreeve will have his regular eight players in uniform for the county meet, picking his starting teams from the follow lng: Hunter, Jones, Webb, KHe ver, Fischer, Pleasant, Petre, and SILVERTOIil BEATS Mill EASILY SILVERTON, Feb. 16. Silver ton high school trimmed Wood- burn tonight, 49-17, in a very rough and fast basketball game, leading all the way. Traditional enemies, the two teams fought it out all over the floor, two Wood burn players, Oberst and Krauss, going out on fouls. Scott, forward for the winners, scored as many points, 17, as the losers did, to take high-point hon ors. Jackson, Woodburn center, was nigh for his team with nine. Pettyjohn, Silverton center, not only controlled the tipoff to good advantage, but also scored 14 counters to help matters along. Silverton's passing game was good but not consistent. Silverton will play Chemawa next Friday night and Tillamook Saturday. Tonight's game was the ninth league victory for the Silver Foxes. Summary: Silverton. Scott 17 Crowder 6 . Pettyjohn 14- Woodburn ..F .F C ,..4 Krause Sinran 9 Jackson Orren 8.. G 2 Oberst .2 Halter Specht 1 G .... S Schwab 3 Referee, Frank Bashor. SUITED FOB AMITY AMITY, Feb. 16. The largest boxing and wrestling card here this year will be given here in the high school gym at 8 p. m. February 21, sponsored by the Future Farmer boys of the high school. There will be 25 rounds of boxing and one and half hours of wrestling. The four round bouts are: Bill Graves, Bethel, ts. Pete White, McMinnviUe; Harlan d Chrlsten- son, McCoy, vs. George Genteman, McMinnviUe; and Arnold Fletch er, Amity, vs. Loren Clevinger, McMinnviUe. The three round bouts will be staged by Homer Davis, Amity, vs. Ed Borgan, Mc MinnviUe; Willard Mitchell, Per rydale. vs. "Doc" Smith, Amity; and Johnny Wood, Amity, vs. Ar thur Earhart, McMinnviUe. In the two round bouts Danny McCarty and Pete Slowik will fight, also Eddie Orllley and Elwood Massey, all of Amity. Linden Jones of Whiteson and George Sargent of . McMinnviUe, both well known , wrestlers, - will be pnt on -the' headline.' Wayne Massey and Franklin. McCarty of Amity, wiU. also wrestle, followed by two tltleholders from Corval lis. Sam Kama of McMinnviUe and Mahlon Williams of Amity will referee . Zobel . Winner in Handball Tourney Bernle Zobel took the handball doubles tournament finished re cently on the Y; M. C. 'A. courts, winning by three points oyer Don Speer, who took second. Fred An nnsen was "third. The tourney started December 13. Twenty men participated. BOXING m Strong Hamilton. Most of these players were entered in both, the county and district . tournaments last year and Webb carried, off high scoring honors in both meets. ': Dallas .has-played 19 games this . season, , winning 1 1 tor a percentage .'.of - . 579. " The locals have scored 556 "points to their oppents 434. The complete seas son record is as follows: . Dallas 40, Willamina 10. -Dallas 4V Willamina 26. -Dallas 2 6 j Fails City 1 7. Dallas .38, Chemawa. 24. DSllaa Sl. W. IT. Frosh 32. Dallas Unirerslty high. 1. Dallas 15, Corvallis SO. Dallas: 29, W. U.. Frosh 85. Dallas 17 Eugene: 19; Dallas r40. Independence 14. v Dallas-22, McMinnvlIle 24v Dallas 3 4,. Monmouth 12. Dallas' 25, Falls City 17. Dallas. 28, McMinnviUe 37. Dallas 12, Eugene 33. Dallas 32,-University high 23 Dallas. 40, Independence 14. Dallas 32, Corvallis 27. Dallas S3, Monmouth 16. Sanford Aids Webf riot Win Over Cougar PULLMAN, Wash., Feb. ie-flpl -The University of Oregon edged out Washington State college 25 to 20 In a basketball game here tonight that see-sawed back and forth until the final. minutes. Seven times in the first half the lead changed, with the Con gars pulling In front 12 to 11 at the half time. Oregon forged ahead as the second period opened, on two goals by Jack Robertson, and Washington State tied the count at 15 and went in the lead on two free throws and a goal by Jack Holstine, substitute forward. Ron Gemmell, Oregon snb for ward, connected for three bas kets to put the visitors In front again. 21 to 20. Bud Jottef made two free throws good, And San ford, cub forward raced In un hindered to give Oregon a 26 to zo margin. Summary: ' Oregon (25) O P 0 0 e o o i 2 TP 10 2 e c o 3 4 Robertson LF ......5 Sanford LF ..l Berg RF ....... '...0 Gemmell RF ....... 3 W. Jones C ....... .0 dinger LG B. Jones RG Totals ...11 3 25 Wash. State (20) Johnson LF l 0 2 McPhee RF .0 1 1 Holstine RG 1 4 6 Houston C 2 1 5 Scottt LG 1 0 2 McNeil RG 0 0 0 Wills RG ....2 0 4 Totals 7 6 20 u; Half-time score: Oregon, wasmngton state 12. Personal fouls: W. Jones, 4; Gemmell, 3; Berg, B. Jones, 2; Robertson, 1: Johnson, McPhee, McNeil, 2; Scott, Wills, 1. Referee, Mitchell, Gonzaga; umpire, Folgate, Whitman. Doughboys Play Fast Hobo Five, Parrish Tonight The Doughboys of Cherry City Baking company are bringing to Salem tonight one of the strong est independent basketbaU teams In Oregon: The Hobo town team. composed or ex-high school play ers from Tillamook and other beach communities, and CCC workers. Hobo has been defeated this season only by Linfield eoUege, numbering among Its victims both Pade's and Parker's of Salem. The Doughboys and Hobo will clash on the Parrish floor at 8 o clock tonight. Various sizes, white and colored '. . . . handy for telephone pads, memos, etc 215 S. Commercial 35 Here PflRRIRFftTS I JUIIIIUIl ?UUH.V SLPlLIIfJI Brown's "Giant Killers7' uo Ahead at Start; Remain , ri atfop pf League-. 4 . Parrlsh lunlor Wgb. school's bas- . ItetbaUJteam prored a bMck J ?giarit illers 14' beating- St. Paul a hlga school last night on tad Par- riato. floor, 25 to zi taa uwreuj remains undefeated. In . the north-; ern dtrision ot the county B ;. league. It 'was the 16th straigns victory for Parrlsh. , 1 ' . ' - Pete "Hoffert, Parrisn gnara. . opened hostilities with n field goal to give his team : leaet utac .was never -forfeited,-Davldsoa wf -St. Panl waf bish. with t 15 points and Skdpfl, spvedy fwward.fo Parrlsh, led bin team with lU Tne St. . Paul -players were nearly; all ' bigger than the parrlsh boys, but ; succumbed to the fast-breaking at- tack of the smooth-playing victors. Half time scora'was 14 to 10. ' The Parrlsh Trojans", won. over Liberty grade school in the pre liminary. 37 to 11. . Summaries: Parrlsh (25) (21) St. Paul Skopil 11 .F.J'.'4'Grlbbles Freeman T 15 Davidson Chiles 4 ; .. . - 1 McKay Hoffert 1 ;G.: . 1 f Jette Henderson t -G. -JL. Mutter ' Referee, Strltmater. '"' Trojans (37) (11) liberty LeBouef 11 FJ. 5 Williams Sweigext , F.. .. Snmmars UTalter 14 - ;.C ....... 1 Coleman Ltndstrom 2 ..G Cogswell Drlggs 4 : G Esheman Stubblefield C .S Referee, Nelson. Kay Woolen Mills basketball quintets took two games front the Stay ton Athletic club at the Y. M. C.Jl. last night, the first team winning 64-43, and the second team taking a close one 26-25. Moge and Page, forwards on the Kay first team, made 18 and 16 points respectively to lead the parade' in the feature game, while Reedln of the second team made 11 to help nose out a win.. Summaries: Kay (54) (43) Stayton Page 16 F 16 Thoma Moge 18 F . 14 Ware Wilson 10 .. ,. C Shelton Keiser f g Darby Colgan : G 6 Smith S 2 Siegmund (25) Stayton -F 6 Pendleton -F 4 Shelton - C 4 Sarkey G 7 Thoma G 4 Darby S Kay (26) Antrican 5... Batchelor 4. Reedln 11 Cars Shaffer Page 6 DALLAS TAKES TOP MONMOUTH, Feb. 16. In the final county A league conference game here, the Monmouth high school's basketball squad was de feated by the DaUas high team last" nighty acore 33 to lev 'The game way hard fought, and much less onesided than the score Wnid indicate, Monmouth lads being off their usual stride In basket shoot ing, whUe the Prune Pickers had an exceptionally lucky streak. Lineups: 1 Dallas . Monmouth Hunter 8 F. 6 A. Snyder Jones 4 F Wilson Webb 17 C. McKern Kliever3- G.. 4 R. Snyder Fisher 8 G Winegar Referee, Max Allen, O.N.S. la a preliminary tilt between Monmouth and DaUas high school reserves a close hot battle was , waged with Monmouth , leading heavily with the icore ending at half, Mohmouth 18, Dallas 4; and: at the final whistle. - Monmouth 23. Dallas 17. y per lb. KAY MILLS SQUADS WIN OVER SW1I IN COUNTY LEAGUE Pais . - ' : . "... . . t 4 -4 A :