headers mimermn& for State moot lour O O JL o I Vikings Beaten Id Last Period Look Good in Defeat When They Hold Rooks Even in Middle Stanzas . Led by Deadeye Phil Fogle and lanky Bob Riseman, tbe Oregon State Rook basketball team puH d away! from a stubborn Viking 2uint In the last quarter last nignt to chalk up a 40 to 3: win and itB second victory over 5aleru high. Outplayed and outfought by a determined bunch of Vikings through the two middle periods, the Rooks owed their v'ctory to a sudden burst of hot shooting on the part of Fogle who beran lay ing In the long shots In the sec ond half end the efficiency -under the basket of 6 - foot - 6 Bob Riss man. Salem was forced to display it best ball hawking abil'ty from the start and did l, well enough to worry the Rooks. Although Bi'l Wanner, no shorty, was somewhat dwarfed by the Rooks' tall Ri. man. who consistent!? got the tip off avant!e. it mad- little Jif ference to the Vikings through the two middle periods. Wagner am' Luther were taking the hall off the backboards well and while tip Rooks were mtsin it was a good enough procedure. Whn they be gan to connect in the final period loss of tb tinoff was fatal. Tied at Ouarter With Phil Salstrom leading 'he Vikings as they showed a fast passing, accurate shooting brand of ball the Rooks were unable to get ahead until the lasi period The game wa? neck and ppck from the end of the first perled whe Salstrom dropped In two tree throws to knot the count at 9 to 9 to the beginning of the final pe riod. The Rooks opened up In a hur ry and held a six-point lead mid mrav in th first neriod but Was per and Salstrom managed to even it up by ouarter time. Once evan Salem maintained the pace. Wag ner sank a one-handed shot a the second oerlbd opened to glv Salem its first taste of the lead and the Vikings held it until a minute before the end of the hair. Then Fred Sandoz pocketed one to make It 15 to 15 as the teams left the floor. Coming back for the second half Rissman tipped in a field goal af ter Kuvallis had unsuccessfully shot free and the T utors held a slight lead until two minutes be fore the end of the third period when Williams gained a free throw to knot it at 22 to 22. Th" period ended with the Rooks lead ing 26 to 24. Hot. Last Period Fogle potted two long ones wihle Williams was collecting a free throw, giving the Rooks a fire-point lead and the Vlkinss were unable to overtake the sud denly hot Rooks. Fogle accounted for two more goals in the rest of the period while Quesseth and Salstrom gained Salem's lone two Salstrom led scoring with 15 points. Fogle scored 13 for the Rooks, Including five field goals, all in the last half. The Vikings face two tough m trins this week. They will meet McMinnville at McMinnvill Tuesday night and play a secono game with the state champion As toria team Saturday at Astoria. Lineups: 05.C. Rooks (40) (31) Salem Fogle 13 F 2 Skopil Kuvallis 6 F . . . 15 Salstrom Rissman 7 C Wagner A. Sandoz 4 . . G Luther McCarty 7 G 6 Williams Substitutes: For O. S. C. Rooks. Bretz 1. F. Sandoz 2; for Salem. Ouesseth 2. Referee. Harold Hauk. Hubbard Ahead th North Division - HUBBARD, Feb. 15. Huh bard high school won the championship of the northern half of the Ma rion county "B" league last night by defeating the Gervais high team 36 to 9 on the local floor. This makes the fifth straight vic tory for the Hubbard team In this end of the county and with only one more game to play the Vik ings are a cinch to play with eith er Mill City or Gates for the coun ty championship. Gervals garnered only three -points In the last half of the game here last night, although it had control of the tip-oft throughout tbe game. . The Gervais girls handed the Hubbard girls a trouncing as a preliminary. This was the second defeat for the Hubbard girls in this league. Salem B Defeats Calvary Baptist Leading all the way the Salem high B team defeated the Cal vary Baptist quint 40 to 25 last night for its 12th straight win. Included la the B team's victories .are five over high school quints, " two over Corvallis, and McMinn ville, Eugene and Chemawa one each. - The B team led 21 to 10 at half time last night. Medley was high scorer with It points. Lineup: Calvary Baptist 15 40 Salem B Foster 3 . . . . . ..F. . . . 8 Galfaher B. Taylor 6. .. .F. ... . 12 Medley J. Taylor 3 C... ... 5 Maers Strickland .... .G .... . 2 Hiebert Swelgert 3. . . ..G. . ; . . 4 Holsteln Substitutes: for Salem B, Driggs 2, Erland 4, Meyers 2, Damon 1, Benson 1. Referee, Hauk. 1 - - , - ...... - : Sugai to Meet M eanie Champ Local Boy Will Face Hobo Chambers Tuesday Eve; He Isn't Worried Don Sugai, Salem-growa grap pler, will continue his campaign of showing the local fans how much mat trickery he has learn ed in his travels when he takes on the toughest of them all, the irrepressible Hobo Cambers, as the main event of Herb Owen's Tuesday night mat exhibition at the armory. Sugai. who downed Jean La Belle, wild and wooly Canuck grappler last week, has promised that the madcap. Hobo will be able to get away with nothing fancy while he is in the ring. It will be Sufeai's first encounter with Chambers but he has cap ably handled many similar vil lains on his tours in Mexico and Hawaii. Curtiss Meets Piluso Jack Curtiss, Mississippi mat expert, and Ernie Piluso, Port land Italian, are billed tor the 45-minute semi-windup. Both Pil uso and Curtiss know all the ins and outs of the mat science and can be expected to stage a skill ful exhibition. Piluso and Otis Clingman last week staged one of the best exhibitions of pure wrestling local fans have seen in a long while. Jack Hagen and Paddy Nolan, the comic Irishman, are sched uled to mix in the 30-minute opener. Nolan, whose waxed mus tache is the object of much deri sion, is a thorough-going villain. He Did Really Did Win Feature Race LOS ANGELES, Feb. 15. JP) HeT)id conquered a tfrack field of 3-year-olds today to win the $25, 000 added Santa Anita derby be fore a crowd of 25,000 turt fans. Setting a pace that was never relinquished, Mrs. Silas B. Ma son's colt turned back a stretch challenge by Valliant Fox, but beat out the Norman Church en try by a head. Gold Seeker, a 35-to-l shot, fin ished third in the mile and one sixteenth classic over a muddy track. Gloomy Skies held down the turf treasury with $26,000 in add ed purse money, and paid off 15.20, $3 and $3.20 to his backers through the pari-mutuel ma chines. Oregon Natators Top Golden Bear BERKELEY, Calif., Feb. 15-(iPj-The University of Oregon swimming team defeated the Uni versity of California paddlers 4 8 36, here this afternoon, to chalk up their third consecutive victory on their barnstorming tour. They had previously defeated Stanford and San Jose State. The meet was featured by the stellar performances of Califor nia's Jim Werson and Jim Hurd of Oregon. The former broke the Pacific coast intercollegiate 200 yard breast stroke record when he did the distance is 2:33.3, better ing the former record, held by Foster of Stanford, by more than a minute. C. Reed of Oregon was second. Olympic Hopeful Jennie Caputs, champion gymnast of the National Turners Associa tion, performs a handstand in New ark, N. J, where she is practicing for a place on the U. S. Olympic team. . :.Ji. -. : ih. ! 3 ! A ) ) x 1 !'" VJ They re Out i v. 2Cfrt 4& - 'mi l-- uiV Here's the aggressive, ambitions volleyball team of the Salem Y. M. C. An 1936 edition. Coacb L. E. llarrick believes the outfit has excellent chances to win the northwest tourney and go on to the na tional meet at Davenport, Iowa. Top row: left to right: Schnuelle, Bone, Gregg, Brown, Seblak. Low er row: Kitchen, Hill, Barrick, Lee Hilborn. Leslie Noses Out Baptist Cagemen Score 36-32; First M. E. and Presbyterians Other Winners Leslie Methodist, leaders of the "A" church league, barely nosed out First Baptist 36 to 32 in the feature contest of last night's round of games. First M. E. upset Jason Lee 35 to 33 and Presbyte rian downed Evangelical 36 to 18 In the other tilts. Saturday afternoon's games re sulted as follows: Jason Lee Aces 15, Christian 12; Nazarene 8, Ja son Lee Cubs 5; Jason: Lee Mid gets 18, Evangelical 17; Jason Lee Juniors 7, Calvary Baptist 25; First M. E. 13. Presbyterian 14. Senior league scores: Jason Lee (33) Lowe 9 F. Duncan 15 . . . .F. Lapschie 4 . . . .C. (35) M. E. ,...14 ike Crary ,10 Hibbard . . 5 Buxton Ben ja men . . . G Keuscher 3 .G. . 6 Smith Leslie (36) W. Bertelson 8 F. Ritchie 14 F. Stockwell 8 . . .C. J. Bertelson 5 . .G. (32) Baptist 8 Clark .4 Robertson ...15 Broer ... 1 South J. Bush 1 G 4 Curry Evangelical (18) (30) Presbjt'u Lanikin 8 F 2 Bailey Arnesmeir 4 . . .F 7 Mason Ballantyne 2 . .C. . . . .10 Upston Childs G 5 Glaisyer B. Rudin 4 . .G 10 Moore Sebern S. 2 McKay Pacific Makes It Two Over Albany FOREST GROVE, Ore., Feb. 15.-)-Pacific university made it two straight over Albany col lege tonight, defeating the visi tors 31 to 19 in a Northwest con ference basketball game. Pacific won from Albany last night to leave the cellar position which the two teams previously shared. The home quintet led 14 to 11 at half-time tonight and further increased its lead in the final frame. Sikstrom, Pacific forward, and Marsh, Albany guard, shared scoring honors with seven points each. Lineups: Albany (10) (31) Pacific 7 Sikstrom Jones 4 Eilertson 6 Tuom Barnes 2 Haviland 2 Fraxee 2 Wright 6 Marsh 7 F F C G G McClarty Substitutions: Albany Brown, Patterson, Arthur; Pacific Cox 2, Mills 6, Cook, Haller. Lipton. Referee, Heniges, Portland. Scio Boys Win Fifth Victory SCIO, Feb. 15 Scio boys took their fifth Linn county class B victory at Tangent February 14, 25 to 7. The game was ragged, and Scio boys -were below their usual standard of play. " v Coach "Bub' Elder's boys have vanquished Sweet Home, Shedd, Harristrurg and Tangent twice in the B league. They have lost to Shedd and Sweet Home. The re maining league game on Scio's schedule is with Harrisburg there February 25.. The battle will be the crucial one of the season to determine the county champion ship. Harrisburg has one victory ahead of Scio, but has been de feated by Scio here earlier In the season. The dope favors Scio in the coming tilt Scio's line-up in the Tangent garner included: Forwards, Wheel er and, Elmer; center, Faltus; guards, MacDonald and Bilyeu. Parker substituted for Elmer. Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning, February for National Volleyball Honors 5V BY rAVl MAUSE-K, People used to think volleyball was a sissy game, one that shriek ing girls, anaemic youngsters and fat e x e c u tives played. Lots of people still do. They're wrong. Volleyball, espe cially as exem plified by the Sa lem Y. M. C. A. team, is any thing but slow moving. It gets p r a c tically cy clonic at times. As to the sissy part take a look at the personnel FaolHaKtei of the Salem Y. team and we dare you to walk up to any one of them and blat "Sis sy." It you do you'd better smile. You'd better run first. Not for anything do volleyballists call their lead-off men "killers." O The Salem Y. M. C. A. team, coached by that genial sports man, Dr. L. E. Barrick, will be one of the seven teams in the Pacific Northwest A.A.U. tour nament at Seattle Saturday. Salem, which has already beaten three of the other six teams, is given' excellent chan ces to cop the championship. Teams entered are the Wash ington Athletic club. University of Washington, Seattle Y., Ta coma Y., Bellingham Y., Port land Y., and Salem. Salem has beaten Washington Athletic club, Seattle and Portland. O That volleyballists call their servers "killers" doesn't mean ne cessarily that they are a blood thirsty tribe but it doesn't pay to be in the way of a volleyball when one of them smashes it across the net. Joe Sedlak, Keith Brown, Lorenz Schnuelle, John Bone and Lloyd Gregg are the killers who will go to Seattle with the Salem team. The set up men aren't by any means "set-ups" either. They are Nile Hilborn "Squee" Kitchen, Elmore Hill and Herb Burch. O Nile Hilborn and Dr. L. E. Barrick bear the titles of fath ers of volleyball in Salem. Hil born is a real veteran, having -played the game for 16 years. He is still rated as one of the best defensive men In the north west. He nsed to be a killer bnt changed over to the set up job after many years in tbe blood thirsty role. Even killing gets boresome after a while, we guess. When Hilborn was a kill- er for Salem the saying nsed to be among other teams, "Stop Salem's number one man and yon stop Salem." The saying doesn't work ranch anymore. You have to stop them all and who wants to, except a volley ball team. O The game of volleyball was in vented in 1S91, four years after Dr. James A. Nalsmith invented basketball at the Springfield, Mass., Y. M. C. A. Like basketball volleyball was also a Massachu setts product, only it came from the Holyoke Y.M.C.A. and a man named William G. Morgan invent ed it. In those days Y.M.C.A. Phy sical directors weren't worth a hoop and a holler if they didn't invent a game or two every year. Mr. Morgan wanted a gymnasium sport that was competitive but not combative. We wonder if he likes to have the servers called killers. It was intended ma a game for middle aged men who had to be coaxed oat of club windows. The old boys still play the game, as do girls, but it's the yonng fellows who pnt the real tornado effect in it. There are" r. Htwa mmc" '' "1 16, 1S36 A. Simon-Pures Will Tangle Thursday Traglio-Fruit Match May Take Place at Last; All Will Be Fast Unless Jack Fruit changes his mind again he will meet Webb Traglio, Salem Y amateur boxer, as the headline event of an ama teur card Thursday night on which Salem Y. M. C. A. fighters will be matched with boxers from the Portland Northeast Y and the Portland Boxing school. Fruit, who holds two technical knockouts over Traglio, was scheduled to meet him on a card several weeks ago but failed to show. He was decisioned by Joe Bonn of Gervais on the National Guard amateur card Wednesday night. Fruit is a Multnomah club boxer. The Traglio-Fruit bout will be for five rounds, as will be two other bouts on the card. In oth ers Peter Seltice of Chemawa will meet Don Waddingham of the Portland Northeast Y. M. C. A. and Bob Quamme of the Salem Y. will fight Billy Burbank, 112 pound P. N. A. champion from the Portland boxing school. Wad dir.gham gained a technical knockout over Seltice in Portland last week while Quamme gained a decision over Burbank here in a previous Y card. Many Short Bouts Three-round bouts scheduled are: Alvin Richardson, Salem, vs. Kid Schmeer, Portland Boxing schopl. Henry Ch'amplain, Salem, vs. Ace Heintz, Portland. Bill Case, Salem, vs. Dan Jar vis, P.B.S. Jim Daugherty, Salem, vs. Joe Market, P.B.S. Clayton Vanderwarker, Salem, vs. Gus Strieker, P.B.S. Melvin Cleveland. Salem, vs. Warren Howe, P.B.S. Volk of P.B.S. will meet Dale Breedlove, Don Harms or anoth er 90-pounder. Med ford Stays in Race Defeating Grants Pass MEDFORD, Ore., Feb. 15.-Jf) -Medford high remained in the hectic race for the southern Ore gon district basketball title by defeating Grants Pass, 30 to 22. Sam Van Dyke, shuffling Med ford forward, looped in 13 count ters in a second - half scoring spree. six players on a team. A net is spread high across the center of the court. After the serve, done with the hand, the players bat the ball back and forth across the net. They can hit it with any part of the body above the hips and the way some can use that area would make Gilda Grey green with envy. Fifteen points make a game. After 15 points a novice is ready to hoi- ' ler "Cncle." SrXCE - ' .. AT Alt ' .. ; ' f LEADING DEALERS PAGE SEVEN Whitman Again Tops Bearcats Score 32-28, Tight Game; Willamette Will Play Two Here This Week NORTHWEST COXKREXCK W. L. Pet. Whitman 6 Lin field 3 0 0 1.000 1.000 .500 .500 .286 .000 Willamette 3 3 C P. S 3 3 Pacific 2 Albany 0 5 6 WALLA WALLA. Feb. IB. -CD -Never behind, but constantly threatened. Whitman made It two straight over Willamette In bas ketball, 32 to 28, here tonight, to remain undefeated in Nortn- west conference play. Whitman led at the half, 19 to 13. Whitman drew first blood when Reser, high scoring forward, pot ted a long shot. Versteeg tied it from a rebound, Reser sunk an other long one, Beard retaliated and then Clark, with a free throw. gave Whitman a lead it never re linquished. The Missionaries forged on to a 13 to 6 advantage, the Bear cats twice cut tbe margin to a basket, but Just before halftime Clark came in with two goals to make the halfway score 19 to 13. Clark, Captain Miller and Re ser waxed hot as the second half opened, running the score to Whitman 29, Willamette 15. A parade of Bearcat substitutions ensued and they had all the best of the scoring thereafter, Whit man missing seemingly sure shots regularly. Beard, Gastineau and Versteeg played fine ball for the losers with GeiBt, Whitman center, dom inating over to two Bearcat Jump ers. Reser's shooting and the floor work of Miller and Clark stood out for Whitman. Whitman won Friday night, 44 to 37. Lineups: Whitman (32) (28) Willamette Reser 12 F 4 Beard Miller 6 F... 7 Gastineau Geist 2 C......2 Anton Bierwagen 1 ..G 1 Weaver Clark 9 G S Versteeg Whitman subs: Porter 2; Wil lamette subs: Nunnenkamp Brandon 1. Referee, Coleman, O.S.C. The Bearcats will wind up their Northwest conference season and possibly play for the year when they meet Pacific in a home and home series this weekend. Wil lamette will play the Badgers at Forest Grove Friday and on the Willamette court Saturday night. Coach Anse Cornell's team, sec ond place holders last year, are only a step above Albany in the conference standings. The Bad gers have won twice from Albany. The Bearcats will meet the strong Mt. Angel college team here Wednesday night. Huskies Continue Victorious Stride SEATTLE, Feb. 15. -.-TV Wash ington's unbeaten Huskies ran their list of basketball victories to 10 straight games here to night by romping over the hap less Idaho Vandals 40 to 29 in the northern division of the Pa cific Coast conference. At half-time the score was Washington 22, Idaho 11. The Vandals, holding bottom spot in the northern division standings, looked hopelessly out classed in the first period,' but rallied in the second half to make the Huskies extend them selves. Coach Hec Edmundson of Washington took no Chances on the Idaho team springing an up set and he kept hsi five "iron" men on. the floor until the gun ended the game. It was Washington's second win over the Vandals, who were beat en 50 to 30 last night. Tri-County Sportsmen's Association Is Planned The Salem Hunters & Anglers association will meet in tbe cham ber of commerce reading room at 8 o'clock Monday night to com plete plans for a meeting here within the next two weeks at which formation of a Marion-Polk-Yamhill sportsmen's association will be proposed. This association, according to N. J. Billings, mem ber or the Salem group, would co ordinate efforts toward building np fishing and hunting resources in the three counties. 1878 BeWountain Gains Plaudits Wins 15 Straight; Salem Showing Is Indication Western Oregon Will Be Strong; Ashland Is Upset By JAMES HATS OFF to little Bellfountain high, whose undefeated basketball team won 15 straight games and the Ben ton county B championship. This little school at cross roads in a farming district has only 23 boys, but they live and eat basketball. They defeated Monroe 42 to 28 to clinch the county title. O The team, coached by Ken Denies Charge Dr. Clarence Spears Charges made by William Fallon, veteran trainer at University of Wisconsin, that varsity athletes had been given whisky before big games and that injured players on several occasions had been forced to don uniforms under orders of Dr. Clarence Spears, head coach, were denied when Spears took the stand at a meet ing of university regents, above. Meanwell, Spears Get Ouster Order MADISON, Wis., Feb. 15.-iP)- Dr. Walter E. Meanwell, athieti? director, and D. Clarence W. Spears, head football coach, storm centers of the University of Wis consin's noisy athletic departni;nt war, were ordered dismissed to day, effective July 1, by the board of regents. Ouster of the two doctors de creed to purge the department of discord, ai the same time, appar ently created a new problem. The action was taken in defi ance of a recommendation by the University athletic board, and a battle between the latter group and the regents, appeared in the making. The athletic board had reported in recommending retention of Meanwell and dismissal of Spears, that It would consider any other action "an invasion of its author ity and tantamount to a denial of faculty control" of athletics. Dismissal of Dr. Meanwell pre ciptated the resignations of the four faculty members of the ath letic board. The student member 6aid he also would resign. Walton Leaguers Will Hear Wire and Dimick The Salem chapter of the Iiaak Walton league is to meet Thurs day night at the chamber of com mere here to hear two men of state reputation on subjects deal ing with game. F. B. Wire, state game supervisor, will speak, as will Dr. K. Dimick, whose subject will be "Game Propagation in Oregon." Don A. Young, president of the league, called the meeting. y . if - V " I j V x w " fflZ' S ) - I sO SiV T. 1 ' ' fv- v ' I : WE&B'STMLIIN a I JACK HAGEN SO Salem Armory, Lower Floor 50c, Balcony 40e, Reserved Seats 75c (Xo Tai) ' Students 23c. Ladies S5e Tickets, Cliff Parker's and Lytle's - Ansptce America Legtoa Herb Owen, Matchmaker in B Rank S. NUTTER Litchfield, must win the county tournament and district tourna ment to gain entrance to the state meet at Willamette university next month. Oakridge of Lane county, the team that knocked Bellfountain out in last year's district meet, looms as the strong est district rival. Western Oregon puffed out its basketball chest after Salem de feated Hood River 42 to 28 in the first mid-season game between eastern and western Oregon teams. Only once has the state basketball championship gone to an eastern Oregon outfit Pen dleton's 1931 giants. The Salem Hood River game was as indica tive as any one game could be, for each quint ranks about tops in its section. Salem also toppled Eugene 36 to 27 the past week. Corvallis Leader Tillamook high labeled Itself dynamite by defeating Astoria high 36 to 29, and then came the Corvallis team and downed the CheesemakeTS 33 to 26. Cor vallis kept well out in front in the district 7 league with a 40-to-16 win over University high. Grants Pass pulled one ot the biggest upsets of the week by handing Coach Don Faber's Ash land high team its first league defeat of the setson, 24 to 16. It hurts, too, for the southern Oregon league winner Is state tournament entrant without the uncertainty of a district tourna ment. Roseburg continued its whining streak with a 28-to-23 nod over Myrtle Point. Another big upset was North Powder's 2 5-to-16 win over Baker high. The Dalles looked Impres sive with a 42-to-33 victory over Pendleton, but only eked out a 26-to-25 win over an improved La Grande team. Milton-Freewa-ter's team also is one of the stronger eastern Oregon outfits. Klamath Favorite The Bend high team showed improved form with a win over Redmond, 37 to 17, but Klamath Falls remained the favorite to represent the district in the state tournament. Other scores of the week, In cluding Friday's games: McMinnville 25, Linfield Frosh 23. West Linn 21, Oregon City 20. North Bend 23, Reedsport 21. Gardinier 37, North Btnd 24. West Linn 33, Woodburn 20. Venzke Defeats World Champion MADISON SQUARE GARDEN. New York. Feb. 15.-i!P)-Amid a veritable bedlam of excited ac claim. Gene Venzke, Pennsylvan ia's picture runner, scored a smashing victory tonight over his arch-rival. Glenn Cunningham, in the Baxter mile, feature event of the annual New York A. C. track meet. Venzke outran the world record holder decisively and broke the tape three yards in front in 4 min utes 10.2 seconds. j mm 286 K. Com'l St. Alleys Open 10 A. M. Until Midnight Bowl-Mor Co. 3 Big Matches ! DON SUGAI HOBO CHAMBERS r 1 Hour JACK CURTISS ERNIE PILUSO 45 Minutes - 1 v.. PADDY NOtAN Minate TUESDAY FEB. 18 8:30