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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 30, 1957)
it TE7 MEDTOHD 'OF.SCOW1 MAIL TF.IBTJTfE Cheney Stu Today; Pres M-dfo.-d f Cheney Studi. ; -Ahj've embarked upon an am-! ' hitiom wmi-pro baseball sched-' ; ' Hi" of six games in r.me dav?. ' w play t:ie second of that string this afternoon when they meet the Dram Elac't Sox In the con-' cluder of a two-game weelc end series. " Ga.-i.e lin e is 2 p m. at the , fairground hire. The Studs go to bat and field again Tuesday night when they meet the talent-laden aggrega tion frim the Arrny'j San Kran-! risco. TJ.u tussle aso is set for the "Mfdford diamond and will he at 3 J m. Both rivals of the Studs are laden with players of pro and collegiate experience with the Presvdio club, however, boasting Oe b?er share of basrballers i)io have played for pay. ! Drojeher May Pitch Drain comes with a number of ; players who have faced Medford ' in former smi-pro years and ; with one player. Moose Blevins. i- an outfielder, who has patrolled the pasture for the S'uds. Med ford and Drain have built up a traditional rivalry over seasons in the Southwestern Oregon and Soul hern Oregon leagues. With the Southern Oregon suspended i this year. Drain is ulaying iide-! pendent ball while Medford is in the Rogue Valley circuit and leading it with a clran slate. Manager Frank Roelandt of the Studs has indicated Jerry Droscher as probable starting pitcher this aftertjoon. Skipper Ray Stratton is expected to call up on either Star Dmochowsky or Jerry Phlug. whichever of the ; two did not throw last night in the series opener. Outfielder Eldon Francis was due to rejoin the Cheney Studs today after being at National Guard camp and may get into the game. .345 Bat Average The Studs carried a 7-1 record nd .345 team batting average into week end play. Jack Cooney is the swat leader with .500 av erage on 11 hits in 22 times up. Bartow in two games has hit three for six for .600 also. Droscher has a .471 mark and Owuigs has hit at .432 and is co leader in runs batted in with 14. Frank Rector has hit at .400 and Roelandt at .375 with 13 RBIs. John Kovenz has a .324 count and 14 RBIs along with QOwings. Larry Perkins also showed a .342 mark. Francis .313 and Ed Reinking .261. Last available record for the i Army team from SF showed them with a season standing of 25 victories against seven de feats. The roster lists 14 players w ith a pitching staff of four. A number of the men have played at least Class A baseball in the minors. Pitchers and their records when the last statistics were compiled are Dick Shinnick (B-li, Roger Collins (7-2), Fred Crissey (5-2) . and Danny Cook 14-2). Shinnick, the Presidio team manager, tias played for Lincoln is the Western league and has pitched in the California and Arizona -New Mexico league. Collins is strikeout artist of the Torco. A veteran of Army base ball, he was leading hurler last year for the Sixth Army champs. He attended Niagara university. Owned By Tigers Crissey attended Detroit uni versity, is owned by the Tigers of the American league and was with Charlotte in the Sally league. Cook is a two year vet for the Presidio He pitched pro ball at Panama City. He has been a starter this season after being a reliever last year. .Inficlders and their last listed batting marks are Ken Carrol first base. .3 1: Emilo Martinez, j second base. .270: Mike Drum miee. shortstop, .265; and John Zeleznock. third and second j ' READY-MIXED PlannStg to build a shed, crib, granary, feeding floor or par haps modernize around tha house? When the forms are In and you're ready for concrt for that WALK, DRIVEWAY, TER RACE, STEPS, FOUNDATION OR WHAT HAVE YOU-call us! We'll deliver promptly th rypa and amount of concrt you need. For tfte be in Beady Mixed Concretav-CONTACT US TODAY! J m inl a?g ' "ySiJ MUr4ock . Mill 0LiHH(ER'S G. 3 lUINlftcl.c. II SERVICE H ds Vie With Drain idio Tuesday Night X V, j3 PRESIDIO SLUGGER At last report John Zeleznock, above, was the heavy hitter for the San Francisco Presidio base bail team which plays the Medford Cheney Studs, here on Tuesday night, July 2. The Army player had a .419 average through 32 games, according to a press sheet from the Presidio. Zeleznock, property of the St. Louis Cardinals' Houston club of the Texas league, was with Allentown of the Class A Eastern league before entering the Army. He plays at second and third bases and in the outfield. The press notice listed 11 homers for Zeleznock. The game will be at 8 p.m. at the fairgrounds park. Three Rediegs Lopped From National League AH-Star Starter Nine By MILTON RICHMAN United Press Sports Writer New York 1? A new sys tem for picking All-Star players will be introduced next year and all signs point to a limiting of the fans' voting power. The new svstem. in the process 0( being worked out now, will carry the backing of baseball Commissioner Ford C. Frick, who made his dissatisfaction with the present system obvious Friday when he readjusted the base, .419. Carrol has been with Modesto in the California league and Lewiston in the Northwestern circuit .while Drummie per formed for Orange Coast Junior college. Zeleznock is a St. Louis Cardinal farm player who has been with Houston in the Texas league and Allentown in the Eastern circuit. Outfielders are Chuch Gritts. .300; Dave Hennigan. .356, and Bob Jolly, .304. Gritts has played for College of the Pacific and Jolly for Bradley university. Hennigan, a Sixth Army all-star in 1956, is the property of Water loo of the Chicago White Sox system. Raoul Rios, .298. and Paul Bil afer. .298. are catchers, and Bob Clark, .290, pitcher-utility. Rios has been in the Cuban and Puer to Rico leagues and is an accom plished bullfighter. Bilafer at tended Boston college and was an All-Eastern Seaboard hockey player. He is owned by the Bos ton Red Sox. A vet of Army play. Clark attended Sacra mento Junior college. I CONCRETE DEUVWfD When ESTIMATES PHON OttT Biwnc- our Pleire"!! I ITOU WANT ITI Where YOU WANT ITI e Sunday, June 39. 1957 results of the fans' votes for this year's All-Star Game. "Something had to be done." Frick said, when a last-minute deluge of 550,000 ballots from the Cincinnati area created a sit uation whereby eight Redleg players would have started against the American league All Stars in St. Louis, July 9. Three Rediegs Dropped So, after telephone conversa tions with National League Pres ident Warren Giles and Ameri can League President Will Har ridge, Frick ruled that only five Cincinnati palyers the same number of Rediegs who started for the NL last year would be in the opening lineup this year instead of eight. Frick's action, unprecedented in the 24-year history of the AH Star Game, resulted in first base man George Crowe, center field er Gus Bell and right fielder Wally Post of the Rediegs being dropped from the starting lineup and quite possibly from the All Star squad. Designated to start in their places wer first baseman Stan Musial of the Cardinals, center fielder Willie Mays of the Giants and right fielder Haxik Aaron of the Braves, each of whom fin ished runner-up at his position. Frick's move was generally applauded in baseball circles. The commissioner pointed out that the rush of Cincinnati bal lots just before Thursday's mid night deadline had "resulted in a team which would not be typ ical of the National league and which would not meet with the approval of fans the country over." Honesty Unquestioned Frick stressed that his action was "no reflection on the sin cerity or honesty of the Cincin nati poll." but he explained their 550.000 ballots were "great er than the total number of bal lots cast by all other sections of the country for a similar period." Without really meaning to, Frick actually named the Nation al league's All-Star team. The five Cincinnati players who will start are Johnny Tem ple at second base; Roy McMillan at shortstop; Don Hoak at third base; Frank Robinson in left field, and Ed Bailey will catch. Brooklyn manager Walt Alston, who will pilot the NL All-Stars, will choose the pitchers and the reserves. Dick Thorpe RVL Umpire Dick Thorpe. Ashland, has Joined the staff of umpires of the Rogue Valley baseball league, it has been announced. He replaces Jack Clark of Grants Pass, who has taken a leave of absence bfcauaa of con fiictinj interests. Thorp, a coach it Ttlent dur ir.g the school year, ill ork his first game torUy fcen ht Cml's balls nd :ntr in the Camp VhiV-Cave Junticn giune at Cave Junction. ! Other league umpire are ! Keith Mobley and Fred Jones, ' Ashland: Leonard Warren. Cen tral Point: Berfc Thomas. Camp White, and Darrel Copeland, lEai'.e Point. Angels Lose Despite Two Homers by Bilko Los Angeles II? The San i Los Angeles pitchers. PYancisco Seals held off a Los San Francisco now holds a Angeles scoring threat in the i 3-2 edge in the current series. ninth inning Saturday to edge the Angels 9-8 as batters for the two teams slammed out seven i home runs in a " Pacific Coast league game at Wngley Field The Angels collected four of the seven circuit clouts, with Steve Bilko slamming out his 22nd and 23rd homers of the year. He has had 11 home runs in the past 13 games and the Angels have collected 36 homers in the past 12 days of play. Bill Abernathie kept his pitch ing record clear, gaining his eighth win against no losses for the season, but he needed help from Leo Kiely in the eighth. The loss went against John Jancke (4-5), the first of five Jim Bryan Wins Monza Auto Race Monza. Italy HP Jimmy Bryan of Phoenix. Ariz., scorch ed to victory Saturday in the Monza ' 500.'' The world's fastest IrarV ,r,H i,lir,o llU.ar heat Worked ot si of his nin- American running mates in Eu rope's first "Indianapolis style" automobile race. Troy Ruttman of Lyndale, Calif., finished second with America's Johnnie Parsons third. But the biggest surprise of the race was the steady performance of the three British Jaguars, only European cars to compete. They hung on without wavering, through the heat, the battering banked turns of the elliptical Monza track and the hot pace, to wind up fourth, fifth and sixth. No Accidents Track temperature was regis tered at a blazing 126 degrees at midafternoon. But despite the stove-top heat of the track, there were no accidents or blowouts in the race, termed by many Eu ropean racers a "race with sui cide." Bryan, driving a Dean Van Lines special, covered the course in an average speed of 160.057 miles an hour. He was clocked three hours, seven minutes and 5.9 second for the 189 laps of 2.64 miles each. Ruttman covered 187 laps in 3:07:05.6 at an average speed of about 158 miles an hour. Par sons, who comes from Van Nuys. Calif., toured only 182 laps and was timed in 3:07:29.0. His aver age speed was approximately 155 m.p.h. Bryan's winning average speed was about 25 miles an hour fast er than the record clocking established this year for the In dianapolis speedway by Sam Kanks of Pacific Palisades, Calif. Hanks' Indianapolis time was 135.6 m.p.h. Jack Dunn Bat Leader Portland HP Jack Dunn of Salem continued to lead North west League hitters with his mark of .384 in games through June 25. according to latest league statistics. Herman Lewis and Vince Mo reci of Yakima and Ellis Burton of Tri-City figured prominently in the other statistics. Lewis had the most hits, 21, the most total bases, 144, and had driven in the most runs. 87. Moreci had scored the most runs, 65. had drawn the most walks, 71, and was the loop's leading strikeout victim with 43. Burton Heads Homers Burton led in homers with 14 rfuu in Moien uases wiin in. Zeke King of Eugene had hit the most triples, 6, and Glenr Lukenbill of Salem led in sacri fice hits with 11. Chuck Davidson of Yakima, with a 7-2 mark, led the hurlers percentagewise with a mark of .778. Ollie Brantley of Eugene was the loop's winningest pitcn er with 12 victories and was tied for the strikeout lead with Andy George of Salem. Both had 81 strikeouts. Brantley had also pitched the most innings, 121, and Chuck Lybeck of Salem had appeared in the most complete games, 12. John Busso Bout Victor Boston HP Unranked John ny Busso looked in the direction of lightweight champion Joe Brown today after dumping con tender Larry Boardman by the wayside. "The first thing we want is to be ranked," said Busso's man ager. Nunzie De Lucia, after the Astoria, N.Y., lad's unanimous decision over Boardman Fri day night in a nationally-televised 10-rounder from Mechan ics building. "But we want Brown and we'll tke him." said De Lucia. Boardman went into the bout ilijht favorite, and was look ing to a title match with the elusive Brown. However, the 23-year-old Busso switched places with the 21-year-old Marl boro, Conn., lad. knocking him down twice and going on to carve out a popular decision in a rough and tumble scrap. San Diego, Calif "? Ed Casque bested Earl Harrist in a tight mound duel Saturday as San Diego defeated Sacramento. 2 to 0, to take a 4-1 lead in their Pacific Coast league series. The Solons outhit the victors. 9-6, but San Diego sewed it up in the seventh by breaking a scoreless deadlock on Dave Pope's double, a passed ball, an infield out and a bases-empty homer by Preston Ward, his sixth of the year. It was Ed's fifth victory against three defeats and the 12th shutout registered this sea son by a Padre hurler. Harrist suffered his seventh defeat against three triumphs. The Solons stranded nine run ners, three of them in the second after they loaded the bags with none out. Harris did succeed in snap batting streak. The San Diego ping Rudy Regalado's 26-game third sacker. who leads the PCL in hitting, got the collar in four times up. Although the Sacs tagged him t . !...,.. ,u u ,l" stvcil .mi U11UUS11 U1C nisi seven frames, Casque got out of several deep jams, including the third when Sacramento put run ners on second and third with one out. There was a triple play in the second inning, Harry Bright to Artie Wilson to V. Jones. Earl Averill hit into it. I.INF.SCORES: San Francisco.. 000 530 100 9 9 1 Los Angels .... 0.10 100 1308 12 4 Abernathie. Kiely (8i and Tornay; Jancse. Mickens (4p, Georee 5. Las orda i8t. Hughes lJi and Olson. Tappe 9i: Home runs Bilko. LA. 2nd. none on and 4th. none on: Hamric, LA. 2nd. 1 on; Toarmina. SF. 5th. 1 on; Hatton SF. 5th. none on; Keouph. SF. 7lh, none on; Olson, LA, 7th none on. Sacramento 000 000 000 0 9 0 San Diego 000 0 2x 2 6 0 Harrist and Barraean: Casque and Averill Jones 5. Home runs Ward, SDO. 7th, none one. Softbnllers Mix Monday ACKSON" COUNTV SOFTBALL LEAGUE Crater T.nke M.lnr Prt. ' M and w chain Saw 1.000 .6K7 .500 .333 .000 .000 .000 Courtesy Chevrolet Parsons Motors 1 Morse Motors 1 20-30 Cluh 0 Dairy Maids 0 National Cuard 0 VMCA CHURCH LEADERS W. First Methodist 3 First Baptist 2 Xazarene 2 St. Peter's Lutheran 2 Phoenix Presbyterian 1 Temple Baptist t Zion Lutheran 0 Latter Day Saints 0 First Methodist will be out to protect its unbeaten status in the YMCA Church Softball league Monday against one of the second place teams. In the Jackson County Soft ball association M and W Chain Saw and Courtesy battle over undisputed second spot while 20-30 club and the Rogue Val ley Dairy Maids, each trying for a first loop win, meet each other. Church league games on Hcd rick Junior High school field at 6:15 p.m. will be First Methodist against St. Peter's Lutheran and Zion Lutheran against First Baptist. The games on the Mc Loughlin diamond will be Temple Baptist meeting Medford Nazarene and Phoenix Presby terian versus the Latter Day Saints. Jackson County association games are at the Veterans Ad ministration domiciliary s Rick er field. Camp White, with M and W and Courtesy set for 7 p.m. and 20-30 and Maids to col- ide jn the secon(J brush NBA Vetoes Rademacher Grand Rapids, Mich. iip The National Boxing associa tion has vetoed a proposed heavy walght championship bout between, lillo-h o 1 d r Floyd Patterson and Olympic champion Pete Rademacher on the grounds that the lat ter has not had sufficient ex perience to qualify for such a match. Our 31st Anniversary JUNE MUFFLER SPECIAL 1 u 49-57 Passenger Car CRATER LAKE MOTORS Main & Fir Yank Netters Advance at Wimbledon Wimbledon, England (IP Vic Seixas, seeking his second Wimbledon title, and Herb Flam, trying for his first big crown in 10 years of top-flight tennis, advanced to the quarterfinals of the Wimbledon champion ships Saturday in sweltering heat. They were the only Ameri cans in the round-of-eight. which also included the four top ranked Australians defending champion Lew Hoad, second seeded Ashley Cooper, fifth seeded Neale Fraser, who beat 1950 champion Budge Patty of Los Angeles and Paris Satur day, and eighth-seeded Mcrvyn close. In the women's division, Dor othy Head Knobe and Betty Ros enquest. Pratt won fourth-round matches Saturday to join three other American girls top- seeded Althea Gibson, four-time champion Louise Brough and Darlene Hard in the quarter finals. Scixas, 1953 champ at Wim bledon and '54 champ at Forest Hills, used his experience to beat Slim Mai Anderson of Aus tralia, 4-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-2. Flam, the 28-year-old from Beverly Hills, Calif., played his usual steady retrieving game to beat British Davis Cupper Billy Knight, 6-3, 6-1. 6-3. Cub League ay Starts PEE V.'EE I.EAGl'E W. I.. Prt. Medford Tigers 2 0 ) 000 Eale Point 1 0 1000 Centra! Point 1 1 .500 Medford Wildcats 0 1 .000 Ashland 0 2 .000 INTERMEDIATES W. I.. Prt. Medford 1 0 1.000 Central Point 0 1 .000 Ashland 0 0 .000 Talent 0 0 .00J Cub loop schedule in the Southern Oregon Junior Base ball league opens Monday and with Pee Wee and Intermediate slates underway, the junior sea son will be in full swing. Ashland meets the Grants Pass Cubs at Grants Pass and the Grants Pass Bears travel to Medford for the opening Cub play. Tiffs are planned for 2 p.m. Tuesday pee wee games are Medford Wildcats at Eagle Point and Central Pomt at Ash land. There will be no pee wee play on Thursday, July 4. Talent has joined the Interme diate league filling the spot va cated when Lone Pine decided not to field a team. In Wednes day action Ashland will play at Medford and Central Point at Talent. While the loop plans call for 2 p.m. scheduling of contests, frays with Talent will be at 6 p.m. In a Pee Wee game played Thursday and not previously re ported. Eagle Point beat Ash land 13 to 0. Baseball Scores FRIDAY'S REStl.TS Pacific Coast Leacue Vancouver 1, Portland ft Los Angeles 5. San Francisco 4 San Diefio fi. Sacramento 1 Seattle 3, Hollywood 0 National T.eaKue Brooklyn at Chirago. ppd.. rain Milwaukee 4. Pittsburgh 2 inifihtj New York 4, St. Louis 1 (nifihtt Cincinnati 7. Philadelphia 1 might) American I.eaeue Chicago 4. Washington 3 night) Baltimore 6. Cleveland 0 might) New York 5. Kansas Citv 4 tmght) Boston 9. Detroit 2 I night) . Northwest League Yakima 5. Wenatchee 2 Lewiston 5, Eugene 4 I first t Lewiston 4. Eugene 3 (second) Salem 14. Tri-City 1 SUNDAY'S GAMES National League Brooklyn at Chicago -Philadelphia at Cincinnati 2) Pittsburgh at Milwaukee 2 New York at St. Louis 12) American League Detroit at Boston Kansas City at New York 1 Cleveland at Baltimore Chicago at Washington FUENTES VICTOR Melbourne, Australia Iff) Ramon Fuentes of Los Angeles, the seventh-ranked welterweight contender, won a 12-round deci sion over Luigi Cohtzzi of Italy at Melbourne Stadium on Fri d a y. Fuentes weighed 160 pounds and Coluzzi tipped the scale at 15614. Phone SP 3-4547 iddlecoff Given nance to Break Thomson St. Andrews. Scotland IP Dr. Cary Middlec'off, rated the only golfer with a chance of de priving Australia's Peter Thom son of a fourth straight British Open championship, practiced 18 holes Saturday muttering "time's a-wasting." British bookmakers have made Middlecoff the second choice at odds of 5 to 1 to win the week long tournament which begins Monday at the "Birthplace ot Golf." Thomson, who has won the title for the past three years, was favored at 5 to 2. The rest of the golfers in the 282-man field were not given Doug Ford Takes Lead In Tourney Detroit OP Doug Ford, the masters champion from Kiamesh Lake. N.Y., fired a four-underpar 67 , at windswept Plum Hollow Saturday to grab a one-stroke lead at the three-quarter mark 'of the 54 Western Open Golf tournament. Ford, golf's top money winner with earnings ui 5.30,046 this year, had five birdies, an eagle and three bogeys in his round for a 207 total after 54 holes. He was one of only fiv,e play ers who managed to break par of 35-3671 at the 6.892-yard Plum Hollow layout which was buffeted by 35 miles an hour winds throughout the day. Billy Maxwell, Odessa, Tex. and Gene Littler, Singing Hills Calif., the co-leaders after two rounds with 136. both had one over-par 72 rounds Saturday and .cre a single stroke behind Ford. Three others Gay Brewer Jr., Cincinnati; Marty Furgol, Lemont. III., and Dow Finster- wald. Tequesta, Fla. also were at 208. Brewer had a 68 in the third round while Furgol and Finsterwald both matched par at 71. Slammin Sammy Snead, two- time Western Open winner, from While Sulphur Springs, W. Va.. had a six-under par for the low est round of the day as he moved to within two strokes of the lead In a determined comeback. Ken Venturi. San Francisco, and Paul Harney, Bolton, Mass., last week's Flint Open winner, were deadlocked with Snead at 209 while the quintet of George Eayer, Los Angeles: Babe Liq hardus. Hillside, N.J.; Joe Con rad, San Antonio. Tex.; Jimmy Demarct. Kiamesha Lake. N.Y.. and Al Eesselink, Grossinfer's N.Y., came in one stroke back at 210. Aside from the sub-par rounds by Ford, Snead and Brewer, the only other golfers who bettered regulation figures in the third round were Besselink with a 69 and Peter Cooper, Lakeland, Fla., with a 70. UPSET AT HOLLYWOOD Inglewood. Calif. OP Annie-Lu-San, a lightly-weighted and lightly-regarded daughter of Khaled, came from well off the pace Saturday to score an upset victory by better than two lengths in the S39.400 vanity handicap for the Distaff cham pionship of the Hollywood Park meeting. Great time for a new Kodak Camera Jabrtfr mi Reflex camera for color slides at a low, low priceT look through the big reflex-type finder to lee your picture in advance. Set the lever to indicate color or blaclc-and-whit. Then just touch the feather-action shutter release. Get gor geous Ektachrome color slides, Kodacolor snapshots, or black-and-white pictures. A really tremendous value! $93 ' CAMERA HUDSON'S BOGUE CAMERA SHOP 613 East Mala Streak much chance of beating etha of these two standout profe. sionals. Both Middlecoff n& Thomson are playing at t h peak of their game. "I reckon I've been averaging 72 or 73 In these practica rounds," Middlecoff said, "but that's not good enough. "I'm happy about everythins here except my golf," h added with a smile. "This is a trmn dous course and it requires tre mendous golf. I've got to be ready by Monday." Middlecoff. who was runner up to Dick Mayer in the United States Open tournament two weeks ago, is the best bet among the 14 Americans scheduled to tee off Monday for the first of two 18-hole qualifying rounds. A few of the Americans who have entered may not compete. Among the other Yanks en tered are: Frank Stranahan, To ledo, Ohio; Clarke Hardwicke, and Fletccher Jones, Los Ang eles; Gene Andrews, Pacific Pal isades, Calif.; Tom Draper, De troit; Johnny Musser, Baltimore, Md.; Lary Carpenter, Spring field, N.J.; Robert Sweeny, New York; Frank Kech, of the U.S. Air Force; and 58-year-old Al Watrous, Birmingham, Mich., who won the World Senior Pro fessional championship at Glas gow Friday. Not since Ben Hogan entered the British Open and won it in 1953 has an American won this tournament. Middlecoff is enter ed for the first time. Thomson has an advantage of greater ex perience on British courses, in cluding St. Andrews. Cycle Riders Hill Climb Billed Today "A very good show for tha spectators." That's what the Rogue Val ley Riders Motorcycle club of Southern Oregon feels it will present today at its third hill climb meet of the season. The climb is set for 1 p.m. on Applegate hill past Ruch on Highway 238. The slope is a 1,000-foot challenge to cyclists. There will be lightweight, middleweight and heavyweight rivalry with trophies in each class. Entrants are expected from northern California as well as southern Oregon points. With the weather improved over the two . previous climb dates, the Riders anticipate the best meet of the three from both fan and competitor stand points. Yakima Regains Northwest Lead By UNITED PRESS Eugene bounced downward In the Northwest league seesaw while Yakima rode the high side. The Bears regained first place after a four-day effort by edging Wenatchee. 5-2, while Lewis ton's resurgent Broncs swept, a double bill from Eugene, 5-4 in the opener and 4-3 in the night cap. Elsewhere, Salem butcher ed Tri-City, 14-1. BROWNIE "SI CAMERA 53 20 FLASHOLDER Phone SP 3-5343 o o o