Coug
'- ' '-J ' . . " ' -
Early Lead of
WM
JLWfSMPVti:
ms
TTTY
Two
-State!
Bel
fotimtaiin
Mi
Harry Vardon of
Divot Fame Dies
, -
Untntored Play c r -Who
Won 62 Title Only
- Rival,Bob Jones
jriaces-
on
rant
Webfoots Vain
Spectacular Comeback by
Washington " -Staters '
. Makes Game Rout
PULLMAN. Waste.. March 20-
(jpy-Washington state's battling!
Cougars won tneir nrsi norinera
dirision coast conference' basket
ball title here tonight by defeating
Oregon, 42 to 25, before 6,000
frenzied fans, largese crowd, ever
to see a' hoop game in the inland
empire.' - " -
Washington State will be host
to Stanford, southern division wm
' ner, next week In a three-game
series for the Pacific coast -conference
championship. -
From the . opening of the sec
ond half there never was a shred
of doubt as rto the outcome. The
Cougars unleashed a specatcuiar
offensive that bewildered the Ore
gonians, while the defense allow
ed only two Oregon field goals In
the half. '
Although W.S.C. turned the
game into a rout, it was an up
hill battle Oregon started off in
championship form to run up an
11-2 lead while its zone defense
baffled, the 'Cougars. Solving the
defense, W.S.C. spurted up to tie
It at 11-11 and take a half time
lead at 16-15
Ivar Nelson, center, and Capt.
Bill Dahlke were the brilliant stars
for the Cougars in the spectacular
second half ! offensive. Nelson
scored 16 points for high honors.
Dahlke rang in 11 before he went
out of the game on personal fouls
midway In the second half.
: The lineups and summary:
W.S.C. (42) 1 G FT1
S. Carlson, If . . .... 1 1 3
Kosich, If . , . . .3 1 7
A. Hooper, rf ......... 0 0 -.0
Johnson, rf j. ......... 1- 0 2
Kerpa, rf ............. 1 0 2
Nelson, c .....5 6 16
Dahlke, lg . . .5 1 11
C. Carlson, Ig ...0 0 0
F. Hooper, rg ..0 0 0
Dolquist, rg .......... 1 1 3
Bishop, rg . . . ..... : . . .00 0
I Totals ............16 10 42
Oregon (23) O F TP1
Lewis, If 2 1 5
Courtney, If .0 0 0
Silver, rf .0 2 2
Jewell, rf 0 0 0
Wintermute, c ....... 1 1 3
Gale, c .0 3 3
Anet, lg .............1 2 4
" Purdy, lg ..2 0 4
Johansen, rg 2 0 4
Totals ...8 9 25
: Personal fouls: s. Carlson 2,
Kosich 3, A. Hooper; 'Johnson 2,
Nelson 8, Dahlke 4, C. Carlson,
Dolquist; Silver 3, Wintermute 2,
Gale 3, Anet 2,: Purdy 2, Johan
sen. i .
com?1
' Fanny about the etiquette of
different sports. Perhaps it's
more accurate to. say lack of
etiquette in several case,
starting at rock bottom wkh
wrestling. What a fellow,, can
say and do to an opponent in
that gamJ Is limited only by ;;
the fact that ringside seats are
up pretty close to the arena,
and sometimes the crowd ia
quiet. Boxers can. get away
with a little more in the way
of insulting conversation, be
cause there's always a certain
amount of uproar. .
' Baseball players rank a little
kigher. What they can say to
the umpire Is strictly . limited,
and what they .say' to opponents
Is gauged upon various factors
such ar whether the irksome foe
is a pitcher, who has a chance
to bean you. or whether he may
be a base-runner with sharp
spikes, in case you're an lnfield
r. There are little niceties of
that sort Involved in football
conversation too- as well as the
fact that footballers need all
their wind.
Tennis and golf rate at the
top. Players of both are -
: toriously polite exa pt when
among close friends, when they
, will unbend and Indulge hi a
little good natnred goat-get
ting and sarcasm. , . . ;
: Getting" around to basketball,
which until Monday will still be
the principal topic for sport fans
hereabouts, we had always classi
fied it as one of the polite games
until we encountered Lincoln
and Franklin high schools of
Portland. You might list Frank
lin first, but we got a closeup of
Lincoln's chatter a couple of
years ago and unless a new gen
eration has brought a change,
Lincoln Is Just as good, or Just
as bad depending on how you
look at it. The best or worst
thing about It is that the coach
es, who are otherwise admirable
young fellows, encourage It, or
maybe coach it.
Returning to the subject of
gold etiquette, we guess Glen
Lengren wished proper eti
quette required his opponents
to present him with a cake of
Ice, the bigger the better, when
h approached the fourth bole
yesterday. A ft w weeks ago,
yon may recall. Glen made a
trick carom off the Ice on the
lake there for a perfect ap
:, proach. Yesterday he did it
again, th e times mlau the
ice and each time the ball
went - plunk" in the . water.
He carded a snappy 11 for in
" hole, which, he. said, was
under his record.
Wallace
Gets
Highest Tally
Officials' i Selection Is the
. Same as Fans' Choice
Upon First Team
ALL-STATE TEAM ;
Lee Sitton, Lincoln, forward.
Don Mabee, McMinnville, for
ward. "' ' .
. ,' Richard Ke-ler, ; Bellfountain,
center. : . ;.-;? ; ' - (
Harrison j Wallace, Bellfoun
tain, guard. 1 -
Stanley Fisk, McLoughlin,
guard. , , j
All-State Second T am
- -Bob Oliver; Franklin, and Stan
ley Buckingham, Bellfountain,
forwards; Earl Sandness, Astor
ia, center; Doug. Craven, Eugene
and Manley Miles, Franklin,
guards. ; ! .
Honorable Mention
Forwards:! Igoe, Eugene; Lee,
Ashland; Jones, Athena; Medley,
Salem; Plipo, Astoria; Warren,
Ashlin and Morris, McLoughlin.
Guards: Hill. Salem; Lilly, La
Grande; Graer, Chiloquin; Ol
shen. Franklin: . F. Bueklnsnam,
BellfountalnJ Fowler, Ashland;
Stevenson,; Eugene.
ALI.-STATK II TEAM
Stanley Buckingham, Bellfoun
tain, forward.
Cliff Larkin, Bellfountain, for
ward, i '
Richard Kessler, Bellfountain,
center. ' j
Harrison I Wallace, Bellfoun
tain, guard. !
Bob Grear, Chiloquin, guard.
An all-state team which prob
ably will be the most popular In
years was selected yesterday by
coaches, officials and sport writ
ers at their annual luncheon at
the'bome of, Coach R. S. "Spec"
Keene yesterday noon.
The surprising thing about the
all-state team selected yesterday
was that it coincided exactly with
an all-state team picked by pop
ular vote of tournament fans and
announced at yesterday's lunch
eon following the compilation of
votes for the coaches and sport
writers team.
Harry Wallace, cool Bellfoun
tain guard, was the most" nearly
unanimous choice for a position
on the all-state first team. Wal
lace received 26 Totes for a
guard position on the all-state
first team. Wallace received 26
votes for a guard position, five
more than Lee Sitton, Lincoln
forward, who received the sec
ond highest count.
Richard Kessler of Bellfoun
tain beat out Earl Sandness. As
toria1 center who broke two tour
nament scoring records, for the
all-state center position by five
votes. Kessler received 17 votes
and Sandness 12 for center with
no other centers mentioned.
Sandness was a unanimous choice
for the second string center po
sition with 26 votes.
Fist Other Guard
Stanley Fisk of Mac-Hi who
last year missed an all-state po
sition by one vote, received 1"6
ballots to join Wallace In the
guard positions. Fisk was the
only player on last year's first or
second all-state teams in this
year's tournament.
Don Mabee of McMinnville,
who was on the second string
all-state team two years ago, was
the fifth man on the all-state
team, receiving 17 votes for a
forward position.
Stanley Buckingham of Bell
fountain, who received eight
votes for a first string Job, rated
the second all-state team with
14 votes, same number received
by Bob Oliver of Franklin. Both
are forwards. Sandness was cho
sen unanimously for center and
Doug Caven of Eugene received
a heavy majority, 23 votes, for
a guard position. Manley Miles
of Franklin beat out Tom Hill of
Salem by two votes, 8 to 10, for
the other second string guard
Job.
Four on B Quintet
Bellfountain, which took three
of the ten all-state positions, al
so scored heavily on the all-state
B team, gaining, four of the five
berths. With the exception of
Grear , of Chiloquin, flashy red
head who was voted a guard po
sition, the first string Bellfoun
tain lineup was preserved intact
on the all-state B team. Stan
Buckingham, Cliff Larkin. Rich
ard Kessler j and Harrison Wal
lace were all named. .
Picked on the fans' second
team were Pilpo of Astoria and
Stan Buckingham. forwards;
Sandness, Astoria, center, and
Caven, Eugene, guard. Parker
of Astoria and Hill of Salem
were tied for the other guard
post. , 1 .
A viva voce rote for the most
popular oflelal produced the an
ticipated results . hearty boos
from all quarters.
Tiger Fox Bests
Bigger Opponent
NEW YORK, March ' 20-&)
Tiger Jack !Fox, Spokane light
heavyweight,' spotted Jack Tram
mell of Youngstown, O., nearly 20
Ml nds tonlxht and whipped him
handily la the 10-round, boot at
Rockland Palace. :
Scaling 176 to his opponent's
192 14. Fox outpuncnea and out
hri-red Trammell from start to fin
fah.- remained on the agrressive
throughout and showed little con
cern when alt by Trammell's hard
rights to the jaw la the middle
rounds. - i , . .
" "' I' 1 n m,
I -1 II
Vikings Seize
Fourth Place
' ' ' 1 '-" i i '
Do Better Than Expected
in Tourney; Favored f
. Axemen Victims i
Salem high, a team the home
fans didn't expect to do much, fin
ished in fourth place when it stood
off a closing Eugene rally for a
25 to 23 win yesterday morning.
, The Vikings, whose loss to Lin
coln was the only black mark on
their tournament record, took a
lead in the opening minutes of the
game and were never headed by
a Eugene team which failed to
solve Salem's tight tone defense.
Like last year, when Salem was
beaten out of fourth place by Ben
son's strong finish, the Eugene
team threatened to turn the tables
in the final minutes with a heavy
bombardment of Salem's basket. A
field goal in the last' minute would
have tied the score and put the
game in an overtime but the des
perate Axemen couldn't quite cut
it and the game ended with Sa
lem In possession of the ball.
Keep Possession
Probably the "fightenest" bunch
of ball-hawkers in the tournament,
Salem was grabbing the leather of
the backboard and kept possession
a good share of the time. Eugene,
checked out of good scoring range,
tried many long shots in the first
half and Salem was getting them
on the rebound. i
The work of Ivan Lowe, start
ing for the first time in the tourn
ament, and the defensive ability
of Al Wickert were big factors in
Salem's win. Lowe, who put Salem
in the lead with two first period
field goals, scored three field goals
and four free throws.
A field goal by Gallaher on a
pass from Tom Hill, Salem's key
man under the basket, gave the
Vikings a 6 to 1 lead at the close
of the first period and they In
creased that by one, 12 to I by
haittlme.
Capitalizing on Its foul shots,
Salem added another point to its
lead in the third period which
closed with the score 20 to 13.
Axemen Threaten
Two free throws by Wickert nut
Salem ahead 22 to 13 before Eu
gene opened Its belated rally on a
field goal by Stevenson. Then af
ter Wickert had dropped in a bas
ket Austin ranged in a, field roal.
only half matched by Lowe's free
throw. Field goals by McNeese.
Stevenson and Austin in the clos
ing minutes brought Eugene up to
the threatening point but Salem
stood off the last desperate try of
the Axemen. Lineups:
Engene(23) (23) galem
AustinS F......10 Lowe
Igoe 4 ...F....6 Gallaher
Hamer 4 ....... C Maeri
Steveneon 5 . . . .O. . s Hill
Caven 4........ Q.... B Wickert
Substitutes: for Eugene. Mc
Neese 2, Kllborn 2.
Officials: Coleman and Plluso.
Denver Saf eways
National Champs
DENVER, March 20-fl3r-The
Denver gateways, the "team that
beat the Jinx," won the national
A. A. U. basketball championship
tonight by defeating the Phillips
Oilers of Bartlesville, Okla., 43-
38, before 500 Joy-crazed fans.
Beaten back at the quarter fi
nals of four previous national
meets, the inspired Denver team
drove to a beautifully-played tri
umph over the star-studded out
fit that was rated as the No. 1
tourney favorite. .
The battle of two combinations
of master cage artists gave bas
ketball's blue ribbon event its
most spectacular climax since the
Wichita Henrys completed their
string of three straight titles with
a one-point victory over Mary
vllle. Mo., Teachers In 1132.
The Kansas City Trails i won
third place in the tourney by de
feating the Hollywood Stars 47
to 42 tonight.
Oregon Swimmers
Win. Set ; Records
SEATTLE, March 20-P)-Led
by Jim Hard, who broke Jack
Medica's three-year-old' freestyle
record, the University of Oregon's
swimmers won the northwest dual
meet swimming title today by de
feating Washington, 39-36. : ,
Hurd stroked the distance in
54. seconds, shattering the Olym
pic champion Medica's time of 55
seconds flat. .
Hard also figured in another
record-smashing as a member of
the 400-yard relay team with
Smith. Scrorrins and Sexton.
Their time was 3:49-2. The old
mark, set by Washington earlier
in the year, was 3:64.2. ;
Moves to Culver Farm
RICKEY, March 20 A. Mass
has moved onto the Stella Culver
farm. Maas is Interested in milch
goats. He and Mrs. Culver, both
have large herds and' at present
are milking quite a number.'
r " ' -
br: '1 . j
- i. , i . , P
The Lincoln Railsplltters of Portland who reached the finals in the state tournament bat couldn't get
past little Bellfountain. Back row from left, Urquhart, Hansen, Neill, Bubalo, Masters. Front row,
McMahon, Howell, Lebanon, Sitton, Reynolds, Olshen.
Riggi and O'Grady Are Headliners
On Friday Night Fight Card, First
In Months; Norris to Meet Bailey
FRANK Riggi, Brooks heavyweight, and Gene O'Grady,
Ashland fighter, will meet In the ten-round main event
of the first fight card here since before the legislature,
next Friday night at the armory.
Riggi has beaten O'Grady in two previous fights, here
but the Ashland boy has been in heavy training ever since
his battle with Wes Hayes, Port -
land negro.
When Riggi defeated O'Grady
here the first time they met the
fight was stopped by the referee
after Riggi had repeatedly driven
O'Grady to the ropes with his
powerful punching attacks.
O'Grady, who claimed he had
only begun to fight, resented the
implication that he was beaten
and has filed a request with the
Salem boxing commission that
there be no interference with the
coming fight unless one or the
other boxer is counted out.
Eddie Norris, popular Salem
lightweight who is listed as a
coming northwest champion, wUl
meet Ernie Bailey. 136-pound
scrapper from Centralia, in - an
eight-round semi-final. Bailey,
who fought Buzz Brown tp a draw
in Klamath Falls recently, Is rat
ed as an outstanding lightweight.
Ambrose in Comeback
In a special six-round event
Buddy Ambrose, a veteran of lo
cal fistic wars, will meet Ikle
Bostwick of Portland. Ambrose
and Bostwick fought In Eugene
about a month ago.
Butch Llebold, ISO. Ealem, and
Charlie McCoy, 134, Independ
eace, will meet In a four-round
preliminary as will Rocky Per
kins, 165, Salem, : and Swede
Spina, 149, Portland. Spina Is a
brother of : Al Spina. Portland
featherweight battler.
Carl Lodell Quits
Oregon State Job
Resignation Effective in
July; Insurance. Work
Reason, Declares
CORVALLIS, Ore., March 20-(iip)-Carl
Lodell, In charge of In
tercollegiate athletics at Oregon
State college for IS years, sud
denly resigned today.
Lodell, recently chosen track
coach in addition to other duties,
said he expected to leave the col
lege not later than July 1 to enter
the insurance business in Port
land. He disclosed that he had ten
dered a letter of resignation to
the Intercollegiate athletic board
on February 25 but it had been
refused. He said the board would
accept a resignation submitted
today.
Lodell signed as athletic man
ager last July for a year nnder a
new arrangement made" by the
state board of higher education by
which athletics were separated
from other extra-curricular activ
ities. , . I
Lodell said he did not wish to
remain in athletics longer and
wanted to take an opportunity to
Join an insurance firm.
He was the oldest athletic di
rector in point of service on the
Pacific coast and had served oe
many coast conference commit
tees. He began his' career here
July 1, 1922, succeeding Clyde
W. Hubbard.
A Good, Clean, Healthful
Sport 1
Alleys Open 10 A. M.
Until Midnight'
uBowI-Mor Co.
2S Si. Coml 7 TeL' 4821
Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning-, March
Bow to Belltouniain's Genius
- - "
fit
i
: i
O
BY rAWL HAUSE-g;
McLou.gb.lin high, that pep
pory little banch from Milton
Freewater, didn't bare their old
drive last night against Frank
lln. They lost something and
there was small wonder for Mc
Ixraghlin was the Tictim of one
of the worst breaks of aay
tournament we can remember.
They were a team that, through
the failure of a mechanic 1
coring device, thought ti.
were in the finals and the a
learned dishearteningl that
they had played a tie game with
Lincoln and must play an over
time. It was too much and their
pep was gone. j
Going into the last two min
utes of the game Sitton's field
goal tied the score. Stanley Fisk,
the brilliant little pilot of the
Pioneers, glanced at the mechan
ical scoreboard. It read: Mc
Loughlin 21, Lincoln 22. Fisk,
able general that he Is, signalled
to hold that lead, to stall until
the final gun gave the Pioneers
a place in the finals. So McLough
lin stalled until It was too late
to get that winning basket. Of
course, they might not have got
it but the way they had ' been
driving the odds were that they
would. .
After watching the high '
school, lads play basketball all
week the Willamette basket
ball team took a few pointers
as it staged Its long deferred
grudge battle between the regu
lars and the second string.
Charley Versteeg won the game
with a very peculiar sort of shot
in the fourth overtime period.
It made the score 35 to 83, auto
matically giving the regulars
the game. There were rumors
about that Pan! Btargea, keep
ing time, had fudged a little on
the clock. We hope the second
team doesn't hear about that.
We didn't see Harold Hauk last
night, but we'U bet bis face was
burning when Tom Hill, receiving
the Salem fourth place trophy,
went Into an oration praising the
merits of Brother Hank as a
coach. ... Bill Lemmon, who did
all. right in his first year as a
coach, was the envy of all the
coaches and the. most handshook
guy In the building . . . They'll
probably have to build an addi
tion" on the Bellfountain school
house to house' all the trophies.
. . , That boy. Grear from Chilo-
CHARLES KEEN vs. NOEL F1IANKLIN
. 45 Minutes
OTTO LUGER vs. JOHN TH03IAS
SO Minutes
Salem Armonf,
Floor COc BaJeoay 40e,
- Students 85c. Ladles Z5e -Tickets,
CUff Parker's and Lytle's . Auspices American Legion
f Herb Owen. Matchmaker " "
21,-1937
in Finals
1.-.
Astoria Winds Up
In Fifth Position
Gets Consolation in Feat
in Breaking Pair of
Tourney Records
The best Astoria, . many times
champion, could do this year was
to take fifth place by beating La
Grande 63 to 33, but gained con
solation from the fact that it suc
ceeded in breaking a couple of
tournament records. ' -
Sandness, Astoria center, scored
18 points in Astoria's overwhelm
ing up-from-behlnd victory to set
a new tournament scoring record
of 68 points for four games. His
mark beat the record set last year
by Ted Sarpola, also of Astoria,
of 69 points in four games as weU
as the aU-tlme record set by Ed
Lewis of Washington in 1929 of
65 points in five games.
Astoria also - bettered by one
point the record for total scoring
during the tournament of 179 set
by Washington in 1929 in five
games. '
Behind at Half time
With Sandness, Piippo and
Parker suddenly hitting the hoop
in nearly every shot Astoria had
little trouble in overcoming a 25-to-18
half time handicap and going
on to a score that hit a new ton.
for scoring in this year's tourney.
LaGrande, which had been led
by Smith to a first-half lead, suf
fered the fate of Tillamook, which
Astoria came from behind to beat
unmercifully In last year's fourth
place battle. Lineups:
Astoria (53) (S3) LaGrande
Piippo. IS F. 14. Smith
Anet. 8 F 3, Stitt
Sandness. 18 C . 7, McClay
Parker, 10 G l, Hogenson
McAllister. 2 G , LUlJ
Substitutes: for Astoria. Fulton
2; for LaGrande, Tuttle 4.
Officials: Coleman and Lead
ing. quin must have .felt like a for-
elraer anion thnsn fAn . . A
O - V V
clothed Bellfountain boys on the
au state a team.
Stanley -JlggV Fisk, who
was right along with Kessler '
and Wallace as the individual
player most fancied by the fans,
made the best speech when he
said, "We're sure sorry that
we're all seniors and cant work
and fight to come back to this
swell place. ....
It was a big night for Willam
ette's fame as a place turning out
basketball coaches of ability.
While the Bellfountain team, the
product of the coaching genius of
two Willamette men, . Kenny
Litchfield and Bill Lemmoh. was
winning the Oregon state basket
ball championship, the . Walla
Walla team, coached by Harold
Dlmlck, a Willamette grad of the
Bob Mathews era, won another
Washington state championship.
When Loren Basler was coaching
at Boise, Idaho, he also won sev
eral championships.
Team Match
FRITZ LUDWIG and
JACK LIPSCOMB
BEN SHERMAN and .
HARRY ELLIOTT
- 1 Hour .,
8:30
TUESDAY
March 23
Reserved Seats 75o (So Tax)
1 ' "' 1
PAGE SEVEN
gain
FbrMatShow
iott and Sherman Will
i . : !
Team Against Meanies
- Ludwig, Lipscomb
ti Harry Elliott and Ben Sherman.
a; pair who tried, ex-offlcio and ex
ringside to subdue Jack Lipscomb
and Frits Ludwig in a whirlwind
finale to last week steam wrestl
iag match will try to do the same
ia legitimate ! style In the main
go of Tuesday night's grappling
show at the armory.
Lipscomb and Ludwig, a win
ning team so far In this new form
'of practical suicide called team
wrestling, won over Herb Parks
and Jack Hagen last week despite
the efforts of Referee Elliott and
Spectator Ben Sherman. Having
resolved that their efforts shall
riot be I in vain Elliott and Sher
man will try to finish up Tuesday
whet they started last Tuesday.
i Irked . at Sherman
f That Lipscomb and Ludwig will
tie kindly to having Sherman in
tie ring with them Is sure for
tley are both itching to get their
hinds on the guy who tormented
tftem from outside the ring last
week. Sherman also managed to
do his i bit on the Inside of the
ring, despite the handicaps of ci
vQian attire. '
INoel Franklin, Hill Military
academy wrestling Instructor, and
Coarles Keenj a newcomer, will
meet in the 45-minute semi-wind-
j
fOttOf Lugerj the boy with the
siiake In the j satchel, will meet
John Thomas, another first timer,
inj the opening 3 0-minute event.
Lhger chased : both his opponent
and the referee out of the ring
lafet week with the aid of his eight
foot snake of a harmless variety.
n mi a
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QUALITY? U(XR ISERVICE;
IQfl WALTER
MANAGER
LONDON. March -(PHHarry
Vardon. who never took a golf
lesson In his life yet ranks joint
ly with Bobby Jones as one of
the two greatest masters the game
ever produced, died at his homo
In Whetstone, Middlesex, today,
at the age of 6.
Death resulted from a chill
Vardon contracted Wednesday
evening while walking around
the South Herts golf course which
only six years sgo he shot in 7
strokes.. 4
His passing removed the only
player whom English and Scot
tish adherents of the game 'ever
were willing to mention in the
same breath with Jones. They
still are nndecidei which was the
greater. -
-Vardon started playing when
he was 15 at Grouville, Jersey
where he was born. Vardon first
played with a rubber ball, and a
"club cut from a hedge.
He won his first open at Muir
fi eld in 1836 with the old gutta
ball and repeated In 159S, 1899,
1903, 1911 and 1914.
In all he won- 2 first class
championships. -
Walla Walla Five
Wins, Washington
SEATTLE, March 2'-0?)-In a
dazzling display of last-minute
power, .Walla Walla high school
won its fourth Washington state
high school basketball champion
ship .here tonight by defeating the
Everett White Ea!e. 49 to 32.
The Blue Devflj led, 19 to 17,
at halftime.
The top basketball teams cf
the state's 250 quintets in both
A and B divisions, as ranked by
outcome of the 14th annual state
tournament are, in order:
Walla Walla, Everett, Dayton,
Bellingham, Aberdeen, W e n a t
cbee, Anacortes- Yakima,
A six-foot, sil-state forward,
Clayton Shaw, led the Blue Devils
to their championship. He amass
ed a total of 18 points.
C1S3-
galesa. Ore.
O: ZOSEL
91SG
Phon