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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1957)
TWELVE MEDFORD (OREGON) hillies Praised But Beaten y Cincinnati's Redlegs 4-2 By MILTON RICHMAN United Press Sporti Writer Eirdie T.-bbetts likes to kill 'em wiih kindness, so first he says the Phillies can "zn all the v.ay' and then his Cincinnati Redlees promptly go out and bat Philadelphia to move two games ahead aain in the frantic National league pennant race. That's the way it happened Wednesday night. Prior to the game, Tebbetts, that rr.t?ter psychologist, prais- the Phillies to the skies. p4ifntir out they might even v,-.o it all, speciilly now that tey0 hav smoothie such as Chico Fernanda it shortstop. So What happens. Frnandet oimmit n 11th r nnincs error that helps th Red- leg to a 4 Z victory. Gr Bell atartert the 11th by fceire, safe on f errandez' bobble. . With cne out. pinch hitter Jer iv Lynch lined an apparent sin K to renter field but the ball took a rai hop pat Richie Ash burn for three bases, scoring Bell. Roy McMillan singled hon e the second run of the in ning off loser Dick Farrell and reliever Johnny Klippstein was credit"! ith the triumph. Podgers Advance Ero'Rlvii took over secona piar by beating Chicago. 4-0. at jertcy City: St. Louis deieatea ' Pittsburgh. 5 1. and Milwaukee ; nippei the New York Giants. ', The Chicago White Sox main ! tained their five-game lead in I the American league with a 6-2 decision over the Boston Red ' Sox; the X'W York Yankees cruiied the Cleveland Indians, 13-3: Detroit licked Washington, j J in 11 innings, and Kansas CitT defeated Baltimore. 3-2. Don Drysriale. the Dodgers' jn-year-old sid armer, set the Cubs down on five hits in pitch ing his first major league shut out. Don Kaiser absorbed the loaa. The Cardinals hopped on Pi rate starter Bob Friend for four runs in the first inning. Wally Itloon homered while Lindy Mc Daniel snapped Pittsburgh's tour-game winning streak by giving up only five hits while striking out eight. Nine home runs were hit in the Braves' victory over the Gi r.nts. including a three-run hom er by reliever Ernie Johnson. ho was credited with the vic tory. Joe Adcock and Bobby Thomson also homered for Mil waukee while Red Schoendienst and Hank Saner each hit two homers for the Giants and Wil lie Mays and Whitey Lockman on apiece. Dick Donovan pitched the White Sox to their seventh vic tory in the last eight games by ' holding the Red Sox to eight hits. The White Sox went ahead to stay with two runs in the fifth. Billy Klaus, error allow ing one of the runs to score and Tom Brewer forcing in the oth er run when he walked Jim Lan- dia ith the bases full. Teaks' Berra Hurt Gil McDougald was the big TMI$ IS SPORT? Third rouad action finds head of German velterweight Stef an Kcdl Woody but un bowed during a 10-rounder at St. Nicholas Arena in New York with the Bronx's Frank Ippoiito. Real registered his 15th straight victory on a tpia decision over rppolito. y ifv f i J" I'll -T 2 14 ! r : We're Foolish To ofer a good clean car like th.s 1956 CHEVROLET DE LUXE TUCXDR tor so little money and on such easv terms. VE5, a 56 car with V-S er;e. Doweglioe. radio a-6 bearer .hr,jld be more tai S569 DOWN and S51 89 PES MONTH ... but we like to sell tbe eay ores. see us at . . hi ' i "Zip" Einhouse Courtesy Ninth and Bartlett MAIL TRIBUNE MedfordTribuke HOLDING COVETED TROPHY, Sammy Snead (second from left) stands with other money winners after winning Palm Beach round robin at Wykagyl Country Club, New Rochelle. X- Y. Prom left: Ben Hogan, tied for third; Snead, Doug Ford, second, and Ken Vcnturi. (International) gun in tiie Yankee's triumph over the Indians as he drove in five runs with a pair of homers and a single. Mickey Mantle and Bill Skowron also homered in the Yankees' 16-hit attack on starter Early Wynn and three subsequent relievers. Bobby Shantz went all the way for his sixth victory although nicked for homers by Jim Hegan and Chico Carrasqucl. The victory proved costly for the Yankees when catcher Yogi Berra suf fered an apparent fractured nose during the second inning. AI Kaline's double followed by Bill Tuttle's single gave the Ti gers their extra-inning win over the Senators. Charley Maxwell homered in the eighth to give Detroit starter Frank Lary a 2-1 lead but Washington tied the score in the ninth. Paul Foy tack was the winner and Camilo Pascual the loser. Eddie Yost homered for Washington. Home runs by Gus Zernial and Lou Skizas provided the margin for Arnie Portocarrero to beat the Orioles, although Tom Mor gan had to be summoned from the Kansas City bullpen in the eighth. Skizas' homer in the fourth proved the deciding wal lop off loser Ray Moore. Bob Nieman homered for Baltimore. National League Milwankee 403 100 0109 f 1 New York 310 300 0108 13 0 Pizarro. Johnson i2i, Phillips i9i and Crandall. Burnside. Ruiik 1 1 . Davis 1 8 1 , Miller 8 and Thomas. Katt 8i Winnc- Johnson i3-l t. Loser Ririzik Mt-2i. HR Adcock 8th, Ma s 1 0th. Saupr, 2" 8th and 9th i. Johnson ilst.. Thomson t3rd. Lock man tordi. Schoendienst. 2 ,6th and 7th). (At Jersey City) Chicago 000 000 000 0 B 1 Brooklvn . 000 001 03x 4 11 1 Kaiser. Littletield (8. EKton )8.. Lown i8 and Net-man Drysdale (5-2) and Canipanella . Loser Kaiser ( 1-3 j . 11 Innings Cincinnati .100 000 001 02 4 9 0 Phila ... 00! 001 000 00 2 7 3 Jeffcoat. Acker 8 . Klippstein 1 0 and Bailev Simmons. Karrell (lit and Lopata Winner Klippstein 2-4 1. Loser Farrell (3-2 . HR Bouchcc (7th,. St Louis 400 (KM) 010 5 9 1 Pittsburgh ... 0O0 000 H'O 1 5 1 McDaniel '5-2' and H. Smith. Friend. Arrovo 'Bi and Fniles. Rand. LoSer Friend i3-6i. HR Moon illthj. American League Boston 101 000 O'H) 2 8 2 Chicago ... 100 020 12x 6 11 1 Brewer, Chakales i7i and White. Donovan ( 5-1 j and Lollar. Loser Brewer (6-5 1. ill Innings) Washington 100 000 001 00 2 9 0 Kemmerer. Pascual 9 and Court - nt. I arv Fnvtar k iti and Hnnp 1 : Winner Foytack 6-4 Loser Pas- t cual 4-5j. HR Yost (3rd), Maxwell, i6th. Baltimore 100 ooo 100 2 6 0 Kansas City 1 10 100 OOx 3 8 0' Moore i2-4i and Tnandos Porto- carrero. Morgan (8i and Smith Loser j Portocarrero 2-l. HR Zernial Olthi. Skizas 8thi. Nieman i3rdt. New York 000 471 010 13 16 1 Cleveland .. 100 010 100 3 7 1 Shantz (6-1 and Berra. Howard i2. Wynn. Aguirre i3. McLish i5., Pitula '8t and Hegan. Loser Wynn ifi-6. HR McDougald 2i (1st and 2nd.. Man tle il2tht Hegan (1st). Carrasqual 2nd i. Skowron (7tm. About 92.000 motor vehicles cross the San Francisco to Oak land Bay bridge during the course of a normal daw Art Maggenti Chevrolet Phone SP 2-8C37 , ,.IIMI U I LIIU HI ; N -l 1 Thurtday. June t, 1957 STANDINGS PACIFIC COAST LEAG I K W I. prt. GB San Francisco 35 30 H36 Vancouver 33 If .635 a Hollywood ... 30 25 .545 5 Los Angeles .......... 27 24 .529 6 Seattle 27 2U .4S2 8'3 San Diego 2ti 30 .44 Portland 19 29 3f6 I2'3 Sacramento 15 36 294 18 Wednesday' Result Sacramento 5. San Diego 4 (10 in nings i San Francisco 3. Hollywood 2 Vancouver 8. Portland 0 Los Angeles at Seattle, postponed, rain How Series Stand San Francisco 2. Hollywood 0 Sacramento 2, San Diego 0 Seattle 1. Los Angeles 0 Vancouver 1, Portland 0 Thursday's Probable Pitchern Los Angeles. Ralph Maunello. (3-1K at Seattle. Marion Fricano, (5-2 or Bub Podbielan (0-0?. San Francisco. Jack Spring. (2-0). at Hollywood. Don Rowe (2-3. San Diego. Jim Grant. )l-3j, at Sac ramento. Carl Green. (1-2 f. Portland. John Carmiehael. (3-3 f. at Vancouver. Charley Beamon. (4-lj. NATIONAL LEAGUE W I. Prt. GB 22 16 .644 26 17 .605 2 2H 18 .591 2 'j 25 18 .591 3 21 21 .500 fi'i 19 27 .413 10'2 15 29 .341 13U 13 28 .317 14 Cincinnati Brooklyn Philadelphia . Milwaukee ... St. Louis New York ... Pittsburgh Chicago 13 Wednesday's Results Milwaukee 9. New York 8 Brooklyn 4. Chicago 0 night Cincinnati 4, Philadelphia 2 (night. 11 innineM St. Louis 5. Pittsburgh 1 Thursday's Probable Pitchers Chicago at Brooklyn ( night i Dra- bowski 2-5 or Hillman iO-Ij versus Newcombe i 4-5 1 . Cincinnati at Philadelphia (night; Gross (4-1 1 vs. Roberts ij-6). Friday's Games Cincinnati at Brooklyn might). St Louis at New York night i. Chicaeo Rt Philadelphia nieht. Milwaukee at Pittsburgh tnightj. AMERICAN LEAGUE W I. Prt. GB Chicago 30 12 .707 New York 28 18 .51 5 Cleveland 23 20 .5.15 7'2 Boston . 23 23 .500 9 Detroit . 23 23 .300 9 i Kansas City 20 25 .444 1 1 '3 Baltimore 18 2fi .409 ;3 i Washington 16 32 .333 17 Wednesday's Results Boston 2 Chicago 6, Detroit 3. Washington 2 Ml innings) New York 13. Cleveland 3 (nightt Kansas City 3. Baltimore 2 might) Thursday's Probable Pitchers Baltimore at Kansas City might) jonnson to-oi vs. oarver (4-3). Friday's Games Baltimore at Chicago might) Boston at Kansas City might) New York at Detroit fnightt Washington at Cleveland (night) NORTHWEST LEAGUE I- 13 17 21 20 21 22 . Yakima ! Eugene 1 Jnatchee .473 Tn-City Lewiston .461 .371 Yesterday's Results Yakima at Salem pp rain. Wenatchee at Lewiston pp ram. Eugene 11, Tri-City 4 Eugene Subdues Tri-City 11-4 By UNITED PRESS Wednesday nignt s spring storm cancelled out two North west league games, but Eugene shrugged off a slight drizzle to submerge Tri-City 11-4 in Ken newick. Double-headers tonight will see Wenatchee at Lewiston and Yakima at Salem. Eugene and Tri-City will play off Tuesday night's 13-13 deadlock before their game tonight. The Emeralds spread eight runs evenly Wednesday night with three unearned markers to pive good support to hurler Norm Tanner, who struck out nine and walked six. FORTE HONORED New York TP Chet Forte. All -America basketball star from Columbia and the United Press Player of the Year." has been voted the seventh annual "Lines on Lions'' Award by the school's monthly publication of the Varsity "C" club. Forte also won the award for the 1954-55 season, becoming the first play er in the school's history to win it as a sophomore. RVCC Crew Selected for Alderwood Harry Millette, Leland Clark. Dom Provost Jr. and Ed Hall have qualified as the four man team which will represent Rogue Valley Country club this Satur day and Sunday in the Aider wood Invitational Golf tourna ment at Columbia - Edgewater links at Portland. Alternates are Phil Getchell, Clayton Lewis and Del Berg. Millette was medalist in the Rogue Valley qualifying play with 72-71143. Getchell fol lowed with 74-70 144 but was listed as alternate because of a work conflict. Clark recorded a 152, Provost a 155 and Hall a 157. Lewis and Berg each shot 163. RVCC pro Al Williams has announced that qualifying play for the men's club championship tourney will run from Saturday, June 8, through Sunday, June 23. Neither the defending cham pion, Justin Smith Jr., nor the 1956 runner-up, Bob Rector, will be in contention this year. Smith is in the Air Force in Alaska and Rector is now in Los An geles. The low 32 gross qualifiers will be in the championship flight with other flights of 16. There will be medals for gross and net medalists in qualifying. Local linksmen have through Saturday, June 8, to enter Na tional Golf day competition. Sat urday is Golf day and Cary Mid dlecoff and Kathy Cornelius, na tional open champs, will play rounds on Saturday. Golfers throughout the country will try to beat the champs' grosses nets with their own nets to gain "I beat" medals. Entry fee is SI per round played. 25 cents for caddies. The funds collected go to golf charities. Williams said that more men are needed for competition against Klamath Falls golfers this Sunday in a team match here. Twenty-three men already are listed. Williams reported that the Royal Oak invitational tourney list is filling up rapidly and advised RVCC members wanting to participate in the Vancouver. Wash., event to send in their entries immediately. The meet is June 14. 15 and 16. The pro also stated that a lim ited number of spots in the Ore gon Golf association junior tour nament have been reserved for RVCC players. Those interested in the tussle June 17-21 at Riv erside club in Portland should let Williams know. Ed Furgol Defending Akron. Ohio OP Defending champion Ed Furgol led a field or HO professionals and ama teurs today into the first round of the S22.000 Rubber City Open golf tournament here. Thirty of the top 50 money winners of the PGA circuit are entered in the event which is the final warmup for the Na tional Open in Toledo, Ohio, next week. The field will be pared to the low 90 shooters after the second round Friday and to the low 60 pros and low 10 aniateurs for Sunday's final round. Governor Not Opposed To Husky Stadium Use For Heavyweight Fight Olympia HP) Gov. Albert D. Rosellini said Wednesday he would not object if the Univer sity of Washington board of re gents decided to lease Husky stadium for a heavyweight cham pionship fight. He said "real consideration" should be given to a proposal by Jack Hurley, Seattle boxing pro moter, to secure the 55,000-seat arena for a September defense of Floyd Patterson's title. "The matter is for the regents to determine." Rosellini said. "If they saw fit to lease the stadium, I certainly would have no ob jection. "I think we should have a fa cility in the state to take care of major sporting events. While I don't think it's the best type of practice, we should give real consideration to making the sta dium available until we have a regular facility for this sort of thing." Berra May Have Fractured Beak Cleveland IP The New York Yankees today faced the prospect of being without the services of catcher Yogi Berra for an indefinite period because of an apparent nose fracture he suffered against the Cleveland Indians Wednesday night. X-rays pictures will be taken today of Berra 's nose, club train er Gus Mauch said. "His nose is badly swollen." Mauch said, "but we are not sure exactly how serious the in jury is." Berra suffered the injury dur ing the second inning of Wed nesday night's game, which the Yankees won, 13-3. A foul tip from the bat of Larry Raines of the Indians struck the bar on Berra's mask and the impact from the ball drove the bar of the mask aginst the Yankee catcher's nose. j f 8 J o a g ! 3L v. .- ---- - fv' v V 1 f ' I rrsF Aslhl-ji-'f it f m & i flS DRAG RACERS TO VIE AGAIN The group of drag racers, above, collected trophies ai Southern Oregon Timing associa tion's opening competition of the season. A good number of them are expected back when the SOTA conducts its second drags this Sunday at the Camp White strip. In the front row, left to right, are Monte Wray, Jack Hillberry, Jim Clark, Tom Alley. Dale McCay, Bob Ferns and Charles Beck. In the back row, from left, are Lou Wolffe, Howard Roberts, Larry Ryden, Bob Rudig, Bernie Miller, Arden Hildebrand. Charles Peer, Doug Pruitt and Homer Howell. The Rudig-Miller dragster with Miller at the wheel was top eliminator with a record time of Sacramento Starts Making Noise in PCL By DON THACKREY United Press Sports Writer The Sacramento Solons. al most voiceless in the Pacific Coast league pennant race so far, were starting to make a little noise and it was the San Diego Padres that suffered the ear ache. The Solons won their second game in a row from the Padres Wednesday night, taking a 10- Rogue Trout Fishing Good This Week Portlan TP1 The report of week end fishing conditions by regions as prepared for United Press by the Oregon State Game commission: Southwest: Salmon fishing is poor in most of the Umpqua riv er system, fair in the Idleyld Rock creek section. Trout fish ing slow. Salmon angling is good in Winchester bay. Tenmile lakes are good with evening fly. Salmon angling on Coos Bay bar is good to excellent. Trout angling on east and west forks of Millicoma river and south fork of Coos river has been poor to fair. Trout angling on all forks of Coquille river is fair to good. Trout angling in Squaw and Bradley lakes is good. Trout fishing good in nehrly all sections of the Rogue river. Fish lake in Jackson county and Willow creek reservoir are a bit slower. Salmon fishing improv ing between Bybee and McLeod. Central: Lost lake and Kingsley reservoir are fair. Hood River county high lakes are producing Rood catches. Frog lake is good. Clear lake is good and the eat fork of the Hood river is spotty. Deschutes in the Maupin area is fair. Fishing is excellent at Crescent lake for kokanee 11 inches long. Odell lake has produced Macki naw up to 21 pounds and kokanee up to 16 inches. Big Lava lake and Crane Prairie reservoir report good catches. Wickiup is good. East and Paulina lakes are good but slower than before. Davis lake has been fair with some good catches reported. Diamond lake still slow. Williamson river excellent with flies and bait. Lake of the Woods also excellent. Fourmile lake excel lent for kokanee. Northeast: Fishing good in Rowe creek reservoir in Wheeler county. Thirtymile creek in Gilliam county, and Wlliow and Rhea creeks in Mor row county. Jambeau creek in Union county is good for rainhow. Looking glass creek has been fair. Wallowa lake is producing limit catches of ko kanee on troll and from the bank. Some Mackinaw and rainbow also taken. Limit catches of small fish being taken in east Pine creek in Baker county. All creeks in Pine valley are high but angling is im proving. Unity. Murray, and Higgins reservoirs are good on troll and fair on bait from the bank. Strawberry and Magone lakes are poor. Southeast: Malheur county Owyhee reservoir is excellent for crappies but poor for bass. Beulah reservoir is fair to good for trolling and bait fishing. Malheur reservoir should be good. Rose or Wlliow creeks near Ironside are producing limit catches of small rainbow. C St fish angling in the Snake fair in late evening. Harney county Moon reservoir is fair to good for large rainbow. Lake county Angling generally fair in all larger streams. Most lakes still are inaccessible. Norwest: Nehalem river and Lost Lake are fair; Columbia river sand bar fishing has fcen good. Upstream trout angling in the Tlliamook area is generally fair to poor with the Salmon river best. Spring lake near Barview has been-producing well and Lake Lytle and South Lake should be good this weok end . Tidewater trailers in the Nestucca have had good luck on cutthroats but spring chinook aneling in Tillamook bay has slowed. Off sore chinook angling at Pacific City is good and fair just inside the Nestucca. Shad angling in the Sandy is still slow but should improve. Marion lake has been slow. Pamelia lake is good for small cutthroat. De troit reservoir has been good for small rainbow. Prospects are good for na tive cutthroat in headwaters of west side Willamette streams. Streams in the upper end of the Willamette valley are fair to good. Clear lake is good; Linton is slow. Hidden lake is good for cutthrdats. Erma Bell lakes axe fair and so is Triangle lake. LET'S GO OCEAN On tht Blue Boar Salmon Trolling Bottom Fishing TWO TRIPS DAILY 7:30 A.M. and 1:30 P.M. or ALL DAY CHARTER TOMMY'S SPORT FISHING Entrance to Citizen's Dock Rt. 1. Box 372 Crescent City Phone 4561 inning 5-4 decision that kept the pennant-picked Pads mired deep in the second division. The two top clubs continued i to win. San Francisco squeezing by Hollywood 3-2, and Vancouv-; i er blanking Portland 8-0. The game was postponed by falling moisture. Sacramento's Al Heist singled with the bases full in the bot tom of the tenth inning to drive in the winning run his sec ond RBI single of the night. Reliefers Figure The win went to reliever Milo Candini who took over in the ninth from Roger Osenbaugh. The loss wras also pinned on a fireman - Dolan Nichols, who took over the chores from Gene Lary in the ninth inn:ng also. The Pads came from behind with a ninth inning run to send the game into extra innings. Jack Phillips and Ken Aspro mente did the batting to put the San Francisco Seals through their ninth win In 10 games. Phillips had three hits, including a single that brought home the winning run in the sixth inning. Aspromonte homered in the second inning and singled in the second Seal run in the third. Still Unbeaten The win went to Bill Aberna thie, Seal relief artist, who now sports a 4-0 record. The Stars managed only five hits off Ab ernathie and his predecessor John McCall. Kurt Raydon took the loss. Ed Erautt pitched a four-hit shutout to keep the Vancouver Mounties a half game and only one percentage point behind the Seals. Vancouver cracked out 10 hits, including a three-run home run by Jim Marshall in the third in ning. Bob Alexander first of three Portland pitchers, was the losing hurler as Erautt chalked up his second win. allowing only one Beaver as far as third - base and that on an error. LINESCORES: I San Francisco . Oil 001 000 3 11 3 Hoi lv wood 000 110 000 2 5 2 McCall. Abernathle (4) and Thor nay, Sadowski (9i; Raydbn. Wade (9 and Naton. Hall 5). (in innings) San Diego 001 002 001 0 4 ft 1 Sacramento 000 003 010 1 5 10 2 Lary, Nichols 9) and Jones; Osen baugh, Candidi 9 and Mangan. Portland 000 000 000 0 4 1 Vancouver 013 002 20x 8 10 1 Alexander. Bauer 3i. Fiedler (6) and Calderone; Erautt and White. Glenn Cox Spurs Bisons By UNITED PRESS ' Glenn (Jingles) Cox, a beefy, eight-year International league pitching veteran who flubbed three major league trials, is par laying home runs and complete games to make sure he's granted a fourth. The 6-foot, 1-Inch, 203-pound Buffalo Bisons right hander staged another one-man exhibi tion Wednesday night as he pitched and slugged the Bisons to a 2-1 victory over the Miami Marlins which nudged Buffalo within Hlgame of third place Toronto. The big game of the night be tween league-leading Richmond and runner-up Toronto was rain ed out. A seventh-inning homer by Gary Geiger gave Rochester a 4-3 triumph over Havana and the Montreal Royals tripped Co lumbus, 8-7. to snap a three game Jet win skein in the other games played. FISHING UNDINE" 121.62 miles per hour two weeks ago and the two Grants P3M men have their sights on 130 mph. Time irials this Sunday will open at 10 a.m. and the first race is set for 12:45 p.m. There will be a small price for admission. Entries are anticipated i& as many as 18 classifications. Trophies see to be given to to eliminator, for fast time and to class winners. That the hot rod, drags are popular here is indicated by the 83 entries and esti mated crowd of 3.000 spectators on hand for the opening raqC. The strip is in west Camp White and signs will mark the way out Crater Lake highway from the Y at the north edge of Medford. Tripleheader Will Decide High School Diamond Toga Gil Turner Earns Nod Miami Beach W Gil Turn er's unrelenting fists won him an upset split decision over Bi- mini's Yama Bahama in a 10- round fight Wednesday nipht. I but his' manager ordered him to a hospital with a painful head injury which doctors said was not serious. Turner, 26-year-old Philadel phian, suffered a torn vein un der the skin of his forehead and a possible concussion while bat tering through the defensive ma neuvers of the warthy Bahaman before 2.068 fans at the Miami Eeach Auditorium. The bout was nationally televised. Turner was taken to Mt. Sinai hospital to spend the night un der observation at the request of his manager, George Katz. The hospital said at midnight most of the swelling in Turner's forehead had gone down and he was "feeling fine." Turner, whose victory Wed nesday was sweet revenge for a loss to Bahama in Madison Square Garden last June, said he thought he received the head injury during the final three rounds "from butting." GOOD SO GOOD IT'S REMARKABLE Early Times is so good that... of all the whis kies made in Kentucky and these are the world's best Kentuckians themselves overwhelmingly choose Early Times over all other straight whiskies. Try it yourself. You'll have better times with Early Times. KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKY 86PROOP EARLY TIMES DISTILLERY COMPANY LOUISVILLE 1, KY. Portland HP Oregon's high school baseball champions will be releaved here Saturday and heavy block ticket orders have been reported at Gaston, Tigard, Glide and Seaside. The tripleheader champion ships begin at 5 p.m. in Multno mah stadium when Gaston meets Adrian for the small school Class B crown. At 7 p.m. Seaside and Glide battle for the A-2 honors and Tigard and Franklin of Port land meet at 9 p.m. in the main event for the Class A title. The game between Seaside and Glide is expected to provide the main pitchers' duel of the eve- ning when Southpaw Garry Holmes takes the mound for Se- side and Dick Smith for Glide. Facts and figures on all aspects of big league baseball can be obtained at the Medford Public library. METAL WOCVCS NEW LOCATION . 2287 WEST MAIS at Lozier laae Commercial Indftgrj! Residential Sheer Metal W,k PHONE SP 2-444 J o o - IS' I ted md hg a at m id w f l-