PAGE SIX Height Not Mark of All-Star Prep Team Astoria Lands Two on 1942 All-State Quint! Three Weigh . SALEM, March 18 P) As toria's Flying Fishermen placed two men on the 1942 all-state high school basketball team . se lected by coaches, officials and newspapermen attending the state tournament, while Corval lis. Baker and North Bend placed one each. - - The team Is the smallest In years, only one member being over six feet tall and three of the five weighing - less - than 140 pounds. ' Out ot 33 possible votes, Baker's Captain Tommy Hol man, a veteran guard who made last year's all-state second team, led the balloting with 31 votes. Stan Williamson, the 121 pound Astoria guard who spark ed his team1- throughout the tournament, was a close second with 30 votes. Ruben Wirkku- 7942 All-State Quintet Oregon 1942 all-state high school basketball team: Stan Williamson, Astoria guard, 5ft. 4 in. tall, weighs 121 pounds, 18 years old, has had one year experience. Ruben Wirkkunen, Astoria forward, 6 ft. 1, 174 lbs., age 17, two years experience. Wayne Fox, North Bend forward 5 ft. 7 in., 130 lbs., oge 17, three years experience. Tommy Holman, Baker. guard, 5 ft. 10 in., 160 lbs., oge 18, three years experience. Jason Widmer, Corvallis forward, 5 ft. 6 in., 138 lbs., age 17, three years experience. Astoria TakesSecond Straight Prep Title SALEM, Ore., March 16 (UP) Astoria Saturday night won the Oregon state class A high school basketball championship, their sixth since 1930, with a 34-22 triumph over Corvallis. i Even In the first half, the SALEM, March 16 JP) Hare's- how Astoria won its sixth '-itat high school bas ketball championship: Defeated Eugene 49-29, Mc MinnrUle 45-25. Baker 45-33, and. Corvallis 34-22. - The first eight teams In the order of finish were: Astoria. Corvallis, Baker, North Bend, McLoughlin of Milton-Freewater, Medford. Mt. Angel and Oregon City. teams swapped the lead seven times before the midway mark, when Astoria led 16-15. Corvallis" zone defense col lapsed with the opening of the second half, and it was two and Gun Club Shoot 16- Yds. Hdc'p H. Baum 22 2345 23 20 43 N. Reed 24 23 47 20 1939 20 D. West : ..22 2143 22 2244 14 J. -F. Adams : 20 24 44 22 19 41 14 P.- Puckett 24 23 47 17 1835 13 Driscoll ......23 21 44 18 20 S. Reed 12 1729 C. Coulsen '. 16 21 36 W. E. Lamm I....24 2145 T. Waiters . 24 2246 22 2143 17 B. Houston . 23 24 47 20 Ledingham ..21 24 45 23 2144 19 C. J. Martin 23 2346 22 1234 18 Fahnlander 15 AMERICA'S SEATTLE BREWING & MALTING CO. Sine 1878 Emil Sick, Pres. March 16, 1942 Less Than 140 nen, Astoria forward, tne oniy six-footer on the all-state quin tet, was the other Astorian chosen. The other two all-staters se lected were Wayne Fox, North Bend forward, and Jason Wid mer, tiny Corvallis forward. The players were chosen with out regard for position, and the results were announced after to night's final tournament game. There were no all-state re peaters from last year, all of last year's team having been grad uated. Selected on the all-state team were: Bud Wigant, North Bend center who also made the second team last year; Leo Grosjacques, Mt Angel forward; Eben Parker, Astoria center; Amos Magruder, Milton-Freewater forward, and Bob Caviness, McMinnville guard. a quarter minutes into the final quarter before Corvallis bucket ed a point in that half of the game. Rube Wirkkunen of Astoria counted 16 points to lead scorers. Bob Knoll of Corvallis had eight. Baker copped third place with a 39-29 win over Medford. Medford led 14-17 at the half, but faded early in the final two frames. "Lanky" Herman of Medford was high point man with 12 points, two better than Tommy Holman, Baker guard. WOODRUFF ACCEPTS PHILADELPHIA Lieut. John Woodruff, Olympic 800-meter champion in 1936, who is now attached to the 369trr Coast Artillery, has accepted an invi tation for his relay team to com pete in the Penn Relays, April 24 and 25. Dbls. TABLE BEER a &r.m SuillU trom. hibhw WHAT OTHERS THINK Notes gleaned from other papers: Medford Mail-Tribune (Art Perry's Smudge Pot): "The bb. team has hied to Salem for the state meet, where they have as good a chance as any, and bet ter than several. Take ruamatn Falls, for instance. They have everything that goes to make a basketball champion, except, ac cording to long tradition and custom, they make the event more social than athletic. They are always predicted to go like a house afire, but the house is never on fire." Salem Capitol-Journal (Eugene game coverage): "The Klamath Falls Pelicans, who always send the tallest and rangiest gang of basketball men to the state tour nament, yet who never seem to get very far in tough competi tion, fell by the wayside Thurs day afternoon as the Eugene Axemen rode to a 45 to 34 de cision" . . . The (Pelicans) did a bit better in the final quarter but it was a case of being 'too few and too late'." SKIPOURRI An Associated Press item re veals the first Oregon-wide high school ski meet will be held on Mount Hood on May 3. Twenty- five teams are expected to enter. What with rubber priorities, it's too late to suggest the formation of a ski group at Klamath Union high school. But it's worth a thought for the future . . . . . . Monday is the deadline, says another AP story, for ac ceptance of entries in the Pa cific Coast college four-way ski tourney slated for Mount Rainier the third week in March. The U. of Washington is the host school and the meet is being sponsored by the Rainier National Park company in a national park. We in Klamath Falls have always been led to believe that tournaments on any large scale were against national park policy. It would appear that national park policy is a flexible thing, designed to meet the exigencies of the moment and place. A mile long permanent. J-bar tow has also been planned for Rainier and dropped for the duration only because of material short ages . . . ... Skiing for the comparative few who were there Sunday was excellent at Crater lake. New snow, which threatened to be come mushy at noon, dried out in the afternoon under a brisk wind and broken clouds. Trails were in fair shape and the ski club's big electric lift operated all day . . . . . . Alf Engen's combined victory in the national slalom and downhill at Yosemite this weekend gave the affable Nor wegian the last of about every major tournament crown in the country. Engen has been famed for years as a jumper ' and cross-country skier and holds the unofficial American record in the yoomp. When downhill and slalom zoomed into popularity and threatened to overshadow the traditional jumping, Engen was virtually the only old-timer to make the switchover. He has copped the national jumping title several times and taken the national four-way more than once. The Yosemite win caps 'cm all. Weekend Sports By The Associated Press MINNEAPOLIS Lowell (Red) Dawson, head coach of football at Tulane university, comes to Minnesota as backficld coach under Dr. George Hauser. now acting head coach in ab sence of Maj. Bernie Bicrman. Sheldon Beise, former Gopher great, goes to Holy Cross as backfield mentor, and Bud Wil kinson, assistant at Syracuse uni versity, returns to his Alma Ma ter as freshman tutor. CHICAGO New York Rang ers defeated Chicago Black Hawks, 5 to 1, and clinch na tional hockey league pennant. WASHINGTON Navy de partment announced that Sam Barry, head coach of football, basketball and baseball at the University of Southern Califor nia, and Football Coach Harvey Harman of Rutgers would be commissioned as officers in navy's physical fitness program. Kansas City-Hamline univer sity of St. Paul won the Nation al Inte.collegiate Basketball tourney by defeating Southeast ern Oklahoma State, 33-31, in tourney's lowest scoring fray. FOR RENT TRUCKS and BICYCLES You Drive Move Yourself Save 54 Long and Short Trips. STILES' BEACON SERVICE Phone 8304 1201 East Main v . n Pacific Coast Champion King o' Klamath Dog Sets Coast Field Mark ' King o' Silver First to Win All-Age Trials for Two Straight Years ELLENSBURG, Wash., March 16 M3) King of Silver, male pointer owned by John Kauffman of Klamath Falls, Ore., is the Pacific coast all-age field trials champion for the second time, first dog in the history of the event to repeat the feat. Competing in an 18-dog field, the nine-year old canine re peated a 1940 triumph when he was crowned here yesterday, judges decided his performance was so excellent they named no runner-up. Cyclone Patsy, a pointer bitch owned by Harold Blake, Camas, won first place in the derby Saturday but was not awarded a championship. Association members rejected a proposal by the Spokane club to hold the 1943 championships there and decided to continue here, meanwhile attempting to build the all-age purse to $500. Engen Wins National Two-way Ski Tourney Sun Valley Star Edges Martin Fopp; Shirley McDonald Cops Women's Title YOSEMITE, Calif., March 16 (P) Alf Engen, the old ski master, is in again this time as national two-way combined champion, downhill and slamon. Coursing the- steep slants of Yosemitc's Badger pass in the colors of the Sun Valley Ski club, Engen compiled an all-around low score of 557 points. He failed to win either event. A tic for second in the downhill was his best showing. Yet his 557 was two points better than the 559 run up by Martin Fopp of Timberlinc Lodge, Ore., who won the down hill; 19 better than the 576 of Sig Engl, Sun Valley, who took the slalom by twice zigzagging through the gates on the 700-foot vertical descent in a total time of 2:22.4. Another among the tourna ment's standout performers was Barney McLean of Denver. Fourth in the downhill and only six-tenths of a second behind Engl in the slalom, he finished with a third-place 575 in the open combined standings. He was a shoo-in for the amateur title, both his downhill and sla lom runs being the best of any in that division. Gordon Wren of Alta, Utah, MacMitchell Dodds In 4:08 to Win Columbus By JACK GUENTHER NEW YORK, March 16 (UP) Leslie MacMitchell, the New York university boy who rose from the city streets to become one of the greatest mile runners of his generation, came from be hind in the stretch as a champ ion should Saturday night to defeat Gilbert Dodds of Boston by three yards in the feature mile race of the 23rd annual running of the Knights of Col umbus track and field meet. Running from three to five yards in the wake of his be spectacled rival for the first 10 and a half laps, MacMitchell came on with a powerful drive in the final 60 yards to win going away in 4:08 flat six tenths of a second shy of the Training Camp Briefs STARS WIN THIRD HOLLYWOOD, March 16 W) Manager Oscar Vltt's hustling Hollywood Stars won their third straight Grapefruit league ball game yesterday, befuddling the Chicago White Sox, 3 to I, be hind the three-hit pitching of Freddie Gay, Charlie Root and Wayne Osborne. Bob Kahlc, third sacker for the Stars, teed off for a 340-foot home run over the left field wall at Gilmore stadium. It was one of his three hits. p SUDS LOSE ONTARIO, Calif., March 18 (P) Los Angeles put over a run in the ninth to beat Seattle yes terday in an exhibition game. Ed Heusser, Red Lynn and Jess Do- RUPTURED? E 1 Art Ui About the LIFEGUARD TRUSS Unlit, Strong, OomfortiMa LEE HENDRICKS DRUGS mt to. am si. j Silver third in slalom and sixth in downhill, brought up the rear of the leaders' ranks with a com bined point total of 579. Shirley McDonald o( Sun Val ley, winner of the downhill, emerged as women's combined two-way champion, although she failed to place among the first three In the slalom. Her 317.2 total points put her comfortably ahead of Clarita Health, also of Sun Valley, with 325.6, and Mrs. Gretchen Fraser of Tacoma with 331.6. Mrs. Fraser, fifth in downhill, won the slalom with twin runs in a total time of 2:43.1. Miss Heath, a third-place downhill runner, was second, and Virginia Guernsey of Salt Lake City third. best time ever recorded on the indoor track of Madison Square garden. A capacity crowd of 16,000 saw MacMitchell avenge his de feat of two weeks ago by match ing Dodds stride for stride dur ing a first quarter in 58 seconds and a half clocked in 1:59.3 then kicking just a bit harder at the end. The triumph was the first scored by the New York U. senior In the Columbian mile and it was perhaps the most popular one he has scored throughout the 1942 indoor sea son. For tho first time in three years, MacMitchell wasn't odds on favorite but the folks who saw him run agreed he should have been. bcrnic scattered the seven hits they gave Seattlo while tho An gels collected eight off Dick Bar rett and Mike Budnick. SOLONS BOW, 108 FULLERTON, Calif., March 16 (P) Sacramento's Solons bowed to the Chicago Cubs' sec ond team yesterday, 10 to 8 Block and Olsen of the Cubs hit homo rus. Wicker, Donnelly and Nelson, Sacramento pitch ers, gave up 16 hits, while the four Cub hurlers allowed 14. VAUGHAN TAKES LESSONS MIAMI, Fla. After all these years, Ark Vatighan is taking lessons. Switching from short stop to third base in the Brook lyn lineup, Vaughan is being taught to chnrire the bnll. TIK-TOK'S SPIOIAL FRIED CHICKEN with stwHtrlns Potitott 50c South filth tt. Oregon State Evens Playoff Series: With 42-33 Win Over Stanford; Title Up Tonight AAU Basket Tourney in Second Day By LOUDON KELLY DENVER, Murch 10 11') Tho feeling here at the mitUmiil AAU tournumciit, now In its second day, Is that busketbull will weather tho wur like a $50 tie fenso bond. The fact that 47 trains camo here from 21 stutes (or the second national meet In a wur year Is an encouraging sign. The tournament went right through the first World wur with Illlnol.i Athletic club winning tho 1U1U tournament ut Chlcngo. Ten teams were ellnilniilcd In yesterday's entertaining first duy show and 10 more get their walking papers today. This will go on until two tennis are left to play Snturduy night for the title that Hollywood Twentieth Century is here to dufxiid. Three seeded trains, all In the lower bracket, helped to open the second round today. Shrove port, La., Morris Dickson opens against the Chicugo Y Clippers at 3 p. ni. (Mountain war time); Oakland Golden States draws Denver Royal Arcanum at 4:U0 and the Denver Legion, prime hope of the mountain section, will play Sulesinn Boys club of San Francisco ut 9. By Hugh Fullerton. Jr, NEW YORK. March 16 Double duty dough: sportscast ers hereabouts are asking their listeners to send in contributions from one cent up to two-bits to buy tickets for soldiers to sec the Joe Louis-Abe Simon scrap . . . Having purchased a few minutes entertainment for tho doughboys, the dough then will go, with the rest of the fight profits, into the army emergency relief fund . , . Two of the teams in the New York invitational basketball tournament this week hit more than 100 points each in three games this season. Rhode Island did it twice against New Hampshire and once against American International; West Texas did the trick against East ern New' Mexico, Hurdin-Sim-mons and Buffalo (N.Y.) State Teachers. TODAY'S GUEST STAR John N. Sabo, Detroit Free Press: "Tho dugout in Cleve land's Municipal stadium has been moved closer to the dia mond so that fans no longer can hear tho comment of the pluy ers. After what some of tho In dians are reported to have said to Manager Oscnr Vitt in 1940, anything they say to Lou Bou dreau would sound liko Sunday school chatter. MONDAY MATINEE Maybe Klrby Higbe's Idea about Havana food wasn't too farfetched after all . . . After returning to Florida, Jerry Mit chell of the New York Post wrote: "The Brooklyn club ship ped 400 pounds of special sirloin to Havana. But they forgot to tell their hotel chef there that it was against the rules to cout each steak in creosote and fry It for two days." HALE AMERICA GOLF NEW YORK Thus fur 275 golf clubs throughout the coun try have agreed to participate In tho thro Hnle America lour. namcnts on Memorial day, July 4 and Labor dav. Prneiwla an in Hip Red Cross. RUPTURED? Alt fiindlini iruMM many yiara wi hiv doctdMl tht Little Doctor Truss li tht bft on tli murk ft, nnrt t tli arnwff to all runt ure iifff. et, Nr-fct. llmitlff, efflrknl. tin tr1 to nitt, no el untie, no prrmirn im th dark or hlpi, np i- itrnpB, wrllit 9 oimcM, Ko mntlrr mw Bond your trilM li If Intftrffttnl In th nrW'U fliirl hr till one. Pri (lmnnttrntton. All nrk dotML itiltjt'ft to your ilortiri i firovRl. Drill ml tH frr iirrvk t nj ont ot 2f)0 wfitfrn Agent. Currin's for Drugs Ninth and Main Phoni "Tha Frlandly Drus Itora" Sports JS Brieft fcV'H ill Contest Tossup as Beavers Change Form PALO ALTO, Culif. March 111 lV) - Oregon Sliile and Sinn, ford have It out tonight for the const conference bunkellmll championship, with the outcome swinging on bo niiiny hinge) that tho spurts coiniiuMitutors, in n body, have taken to the wait. undseo bench. Oregon State and Armory T. "Sluts" Gill, Us canny couch, have tho reputation of being iiilck to profit by experience, and It iiiuy bo that tho lesson leurned on Friday will be enough to graduate them Into the national collegiate A. A playoffs nl Kan sas City. It's hardly likely Hint. In a weekend's tune. Stanford would have concocted on en l.rely new surprise to spring c n . XAJ'.ll upon the Hc.ivers tonight. On the other hand there Is the strong possibility that Don Durness, thu Stanford captain and forward, will return to the Stanford lineup tonight alter missing the Saturday game be cause of a knee injury. PALO ALTO, Calif., March 10 (UP) Oregon Stale college's northern division basketball champions defeated Stanford university 4i to 33 Saturday night to even thu count at one game each in the three-game Pacific Couct conference cham pionship play-off. The third and deciding game will be played here Monday night. Showing a speedy, vastly-improved offense und a furuilduhle defense, the boys from Corvallis buttled Stanford on even terms in the first half, then completely outplayed and outscured the Cardinals In a furious und thrill ing second half. It was one of the fastest games ever pluycd on the Palo Alto court. The score at half tune was 18-18. Stanford, southern division champions, won the opening game of the playoff Friday night, 41-28. timers of the champion Ship will leave Tuesday for Kan sas City to compete In the NCAA tournament next weekend. Georgo McNutt, OSC guard, and his teammate, Center John Mandic, combined on both de fenso and offensive tonight to put a hex on Stanford. McNutt was the gome's high scorer, getting 14 points, while Mandic accounted for 13. Man die helped the Oregon State cause immeasurably by bottling up fcd Voss, the Stanford cen ter, who ordinarily scores heav ily on pot shots under the basket but who tonight was held to three points. Early in the second half Ore gon State drew ahead of Stan ford and gained a comfortable margin, when Oregon Stute was leading 33-29, Guard Howard Dallmar shot a field goal for Stanfuid to make the score 35 31. That was the closest the Cardinals ever got to tho Heav ers. Oregon State won going away. Hauser Appointed Minnesota Coach MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.. March 16 (UP) Tho University of Minnesota board of regents Sat urday appointed Dr. George Hauser head football couch for the duration of the war. Hauser, 41), is on exponent of power football and has been largely responsible for Minne sota's grent lines. He replaces Bnrnle Bicrman, recently ap pointed athletic director of the new naval reserve air corps training station at Iowa City, la. At the same lime the regents announced that Charles (Dud) Wilkinson, assistant coach at Syracuse university, had been appointed to the Minnesota couching stuff. iatfi Armory M.i x4?u Lcrd iHJUbA if M, i1' , Ml Ll !mtxJ SMA at, til i ' 1 i i Tk.1 PHONE FOR TICKET RESERVATIONS Tha Rlalto Caitlobsrry'i Tha Waldorl IJUIII UUIIV mil Join Navy as Sports Director WASHINGTON. March 18 (UP --Justin M. (Sam) llony, head football coach lit the Unl vcrslty of Southern California, and Harvey Harmon, head foot ball coach ot Rutgers college, soon will ho commissioned In the naval reserve and will Join the physical fitness program of the bureau of aeronautics, the navy announced. Harry will servp ui the nnvy'f director of athletics at St. Mary's college. Calif., and lluf man will hold one of the top positions at the pre flight train log school nt the University? North Carolina, Chapel llill.W Wcbfoot Cagers Name Kirsch Captain EUGENE. March 16 lA'i Don Kirsch, guard from Port land, has been rlectrd cu plain of the University of Oregon linn ketball so,uad for next yenr the first player so chosen since; in;is. Players also named George "Porky'' Andrews. three-ycM guard from Victoria. B. C, hoiv orary captain for the 1012 sea son. I WORKS IN C1VIES ST. PKTEHSIIUHG, Fl Not permitted to don a uniform while bidding out, Joe Gordon, In street clothes, took a catchwj i:love und caught bolls thrJW to the plate by Inflelders In practice. CyCoLQcysezT m SOME NE.LD A LITTLE OlREtTINdCI THFJrtSHLVE.S'jL "I Wise Klamath Fall car owners will always direct you to LOMBARD'S whoro your trado is sought aftor and receives the belt attention. - fji,r - i;M.iv - .iaairiiiifW - amiini'.i Tweselay Phon 8777 Phone 3333 Phono 6811 j DlRECTOD? OSrpf SB! tatMhwi aaVa