Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 80, Decatur, Adams County, 4 April 1963 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Maloney, Rose Star As Reds Defeat Mets By United Press Internationa] Don’t think for a moment that the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Francisco Giants have a monopoly on youth and speed in the National League. The Cincinnati Reds rate high in those departments, too—especially when you consider pitcher Jim Maloney and infielder Peter Rose. Maloney, 9-7 last season after a fast start, looks like he is going to fit in as the Reds’ No. 4 or No. 5 starter this season while Rose may be the team’s second baseman when next Monday’s opening-day lineup is announced. Maloney, 22, yielded only one hit in seven innings while Rose, 21, had two singles, a walk, a steal and scored three runs as the Reds scored a 5-0 victory over the New York Mets Wednesday. Jim Brosnan pitched the last two innings for the Reds and allowed one other hit. Vada Pinson rapped out two singles and a double to share hitting honors with Rose. Philips Continues Skein Bubba Phillips, one of the hottest hitters in the south, raised his spring average to .411 with three singles in the Detroit Tigers’ 5-4 decision over the Minnesota Twins. Rookie Bill Faul was tagged for four runs in the first three innings but rookies Dick Egan and Bob Dustal then shut out the Twins the remainder of the way. The Milwaukee Braves went over the .500-mark for the first

KI YE S GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE .™- Save up to 80% on shoes for the whole family—JUST IN TIME FOR EASTER! The right shoe of each pair, more than 2,000 P airs ’ * 8 on display for your easy self-selection. A salesman will be happy to get the mate for you. The COMPLETE STOCK 1 is on SALE. All New Spring and Summer shoes, most of them just arrived — ordered six months ago, too late to stop shipment ■ .... & I For Men I Men’s ALL Nationally , I Women’s—Famous Black Dress I Ball-Band Advertised Shoes "*"* I RED CROSS SHOES Oxfords or Loafers I $18.95 Insulated FOR WOMEN FOR MEN Wolverine I Just Arrived , Boots Red CrOM Nunn-Bush Work Shoes I?n * P 8 sty Now s£BB I CORP American Girl E dg ® r l on . I bone SABB ** O I 2palrs S 9 BB Lazy Bone S7«B ™ 8 reg. to $9.95 | size. 7 and 12 Su"h Puppies FOR ' p-“ R ” te 15 00 Summerettes CHILDREN Red Ball Jets ?<>"«» I BARGAIN $197 XL AMERICAN 6tRL SHOES I TARIFF Bridge Rush p uppies IN DRESS - SPORT S X.BS IHDLE.O dfa OR STACKED HEELS q|-***» ond B ™$ w ft ft WOMEN’S SHOES - Values In Sl3 95 M ‘ bone - patent leather TOWWIKWO qnuEO - Tames 10 ■ FOOTHRILLS $£.44 ■ BLACK AND WHITE LEATHERS Ref1.t010.99 A ■ CLINICS CHILDREN'S I I «» BALL JETS 4.,.. .=53,39 Only 5 pairs left I HUSH PUPPIE $/" B In RED, -- -- | GOLF SHOES ' | BLUE or WHITE size * l2li to 3 *3-88 Mr. and Mrs. David Kaye of Kaye’s Shoe Store Are Selling Their None And Moving To California I I THESE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE STOREWIDE BARGAINS pi i/AYr<? sH ® E r 1111 IF O STORE I NO EXCHANGES IM North Second Street NO REFUNDS

time this spring when they beat the Baltimore Orioles, 3-2. Denny Lemaster and Tony Cloninger held the Orioles to four hits, Lemaster yielding only three oyer the first seven innings. The largest local crowd of recent springs—3,724—turned out at Ft. Myers, Fla., where the Pittsburgh Pirates closed their spring exhibition schedule with a 6-4 win over the New York Yankees. The Yankees gave Stan Williams a three-run lead but Roberto Clemente hit two triples to lead the Pirate comebackCuban right-hander Diego Segui pitched eight innings and also connected for a single, double and triple to lead the Kansas City Athletics to a 10-5 triumph over the Chicago White Sox. Rookie Pete Ward hit his third homer of the spring for the White Sox. Bosox Upend Dodgers Roman Mejias had a double and triple and had a hand in all three runs as the Boston Red Sox downed the Los Angeles Dodgers, 3-2. Bill Monbouquette and Earl Wilson, the Red Sox’ no-hit pitchersof 1962, each went four innings and allowed one hit. Carl Yastrzemski saved the game for the Red Sox with a fine catch in the eighth. Left-fielder Walt Bond dropped Willie Mays’ ninth-inning fly to let in the run that gave the San Francisco Giants a 4-3 win over the Cleveland Indians. Mays had two doubles and a single to lift his spring batting average to .344. The St. Louis Cardinals broke a four-game losing streak by defeating the Washington Senators, 6-4. Julian Javier, Gene Oliver and Ken Boyer paced the Cardinal attack with triples. Pete Runnels an Rusty Staub hit homers as the Houston Colts beat the Los Angeles Angels, 5-2. Dick Drott, Dick Farrell and Jim Golden combined to limit the Angels to four hits. The homers by Runnels and Staub came off Eli Grba.

Arnold Palmer Is Favored To Take Masters AUGUSTA (UPD — Arnold Palmer, still unhappy about his wayward driver, was favored nonetheless today as he teed off against 81 other competitors in a bid to become the first golfer ever to win the Masters championship four times. The 33-year-old Palmer, generally rated the finest golfer of the past decade, also will be attempting to become the first man in history ever to win a pair of Masters’ titles back-to-back. Clear, windless weather was predicted for the opening round. The temperature is expected to be in the 80’s and a crowd of at least 25,000 will watch the cream of the nation’s golfers start on the four-day 72-hole testMost of the galleryites will follow Palmer, as they always do here over the delicately manicured 6,980-yard Masters course. He was to tee off along with amateur ace Charlie Coe of Oklahoma .City, Okla., at 12:30 p.m. Nicklaus Second Choice A rush of last-minute support for U.S. Open champion Jack Nicklaus made him second choice in the star studded field, with Gary Player, the 1961 Masters’ titlist, the third choice. Others who are expected to provide ample competition for Palmer are former U.S. Open champions Billy Casper and Gene Littler: young Johnny Pott, who has turned in some fantastic practice rounds: former PGA champion Dow Finsterwald: longball hitting Bill Collins and 51-

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

year-old Sammy Snead, a threetime winner of this event who appears to be back on his game despite a spur on his left foot. The field begins teeing off at 10 a.m. today with all 17 of the Masters’ champions present except Ralph Guldahl and Ben Hogan. The players will go out in twosomes this year instead of threesomes as last year. Fifty United States professionals, 18 foreigners and 14 American amateurs comprise the field which will ‘be cut to the 44 leading players and ties after Friday's second round. Any player within 10 strokes of the leader, however, also will qualify for the final two rounds on Saturday and Sunday. Sums Up Play Palmer played only nine holes Wednesday in his final warmup test, choosing the back nine “because it’s more treacherous than the front nine.” He carded one birdie, on the 16th hole, and eight pars for a one-under 35. “I didn’t play real good and I didn’t play real badly,” he said, after missing a seven-foot downhill putt on the 18th. “My driving was a little better than it has been, but I still hit some bad ones,” he explained. Pressed for some comment about his chances, Arnie seemed perturbed, then answered: “I’m not playing as well as I’d like to, but even if I thought my chances were real good, I wouldn’t say so.” Joseph McNerney Is Pledged At College Joseph McNerney, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Fager of Decatur, has been pledged by Alpha Phi Tau society at Heidelberg College, Tiffin, O.

Gale - Force Winds Cause Heavy Damage

By United Press International Gale-force winds swept away summery temperatures today and caused extensive damage across the Midwest. Showers soaked the Ohio Valley and North Atlantic states. At least one, person died in the violent windstorms. Another was feared dead and several injured. Gusts of up to 75 miles an hour brought freezing temperatures to lowa and dropped the mercury to the 30s over the Central Plains and upper Midwest. A University of Wisconsin freshman drowned and his companion was feared dead when a sudden wind storm gusting at 61 miles per hour capsized their canoe Wednesday. The youths ventured out on Lake Mendota without life preservers and used boards for paddlesWind Bowls Over Man An 83-year-old man was bowled over by strong winds at La Porte City, lowa, and received a fractured hip. Two Milwaukee, Wis., women required hospital treatment. One was blown into a sign post and the other was cut on the arm by a chunk of aluminum siding ripped loose by the wind. High winds buffeted Chicago, caused considerable damage and sent a mother and her two daughters to the hospital for treatment of cuts received when a plate glass window shattered. Three men were injured when the flat roof of a Houston, Tex., department store caved in under the weight of accumulated rain water. The violent winds caused thousands of dollars of damage in

southeastern Wisconsin. Grass Fires Fanned More than 1,000 acres of wood and swampland was destroyed when winds gusting at more than 60 m.p.h. fanned grass fires out of control. A late-season snow storm hit North Dakota and northern Minnesota Wednesday, dumping more than three inches at Fargo, N.D., and Moorhead, Minn. Winds up to 50 m.p.h. lashed the snow into drifts. Three chunks of ice broke loose from a television station antenna at Duluth, Minn., and crashed through the roof of a home, narrowly missing its two occupants. Two fishermen from Menominee, Mich, were rescued from a drifting ice floe on Lake Michigan by a fishing tug Wednesday night. Helicopter rescue was impossible because of high winds and choppy water. Barbershop Harmony Program Saturday The Wren Lions club will present the “Northwesternaires” a program of barbershop harmony, Saturday at Wren high schoolo. The “Northwesternaires” are the Defiance chapter of the Society for the Preservation and Encouragement of Barbershop Quartet Singing in America. The program will begin at 8 p. m. Saturday, and tickets are now on sale for the show, and may be purchased from any member of the Wren Lions club. Tickets are priced at $1 for adults and 50 cents for children.

EGGS-QUISITE—This 12-pound- Easter egg would be a large load for any normal Easter bunny to carry, However, Miss G. Manley does not seem to worry about its ( delivery as she applies the finishing touches in London. _

Avoids Demand On Removal Os Soviet Troops WASHINGTON (UPD — President Kennedy was understood today to be trying to make it as easy as possible for Premier Nikita Khrushchev to withdraw more Russian troops from Cuba without losing face. The President told his news conference Wednesday “we hope” Russia would recall the estimated 12,000 to 13,000 military personnel she still has on the island. But he avoided couching his statement in strong terms which would give it the flavor of a demand. Raids Furnish Excuse Kennedy emphasized that one of the reasons the United States cracked down on refugee hit-and-run raids on Cuba and Soviet vessels was to avoid giving Khrushchev any additional excuse to keep his troops in the area. » - Administration sources said that if Khrushchev, under attack in some Communist quarters for his Cuban retreat, really wanted to pull out more forces, he probably could do so more easily if the United States did not make too great an issue of the matter at this time. Kennedy said at his news conference that “we will continue to observe very closely in the next days, the immediate weeks ahead, whether there are going to be further withdrawals, which, of course, we wish for ” Departures Total 9,000 The President said intelligence estimates were that 4,000 Russian military personnel left Cuba during March. Added to the 5,000 pulled out last November when the missiles and bombers left, this brought total departures to roughly 9,000 since the height of the Cuban crisis. The President said there were thought to be 21,000 to 22,000 there at that time. This would leave 12,000 to 13,000 still on the island. Administration officials said so far as could be determined, those

l. 1961 MERCURY—Monterey 4-Door Sedan, power 7 steering, power brakes, automatic,, low mileage, local one-owner. 1961 MERCURY METEOR "800" - 2-door, hardtop, 7 power steering, power brakes, low mileage, one owner. r 1960 OIDSMOB,LE ® 8 ' 2-door, hardtop, tow mileage, 7 ano owner. 19 CO CHEVROLET 9-Passenger Station Wagon, power 7^7 steering, automatic, V-8, one owner. 1960 RAMBLER AMERICAN, 4-door, easy on the gas. 1961 tXDSMOB,IE ’• CONVERTIBLE, full power, one 7 owner. See Tom Grimm or Leonard Metz jjfc Just A Partial Listing of Our Fine Used Cars! Zintsmaster Motors FIRST AND MONROE ITS. OPEN EVENINGS EXCEPT THURS. AND t&T.

THURSDAY, APRIL 4, IMS

withdrawn during March were technicians and training personnel. This left in Cuba the 5,000 combat troops organized in regular battalions. ... 4 Pearson, Diefenbaker Exchange Charges MONTREAL (UPD — Liberal leader Lester B. Pearson Wednesday night accused Prime Minister John Diefenbaker of supplying fodder for Communist propaganda in his election campaign against arming Canadian defense forces with U.S. nuclear warheads. Diefenbaker said Pearson was trying to “hoax" the Canadian people into believing the warheads were necessary. Pearson, addressing about 4,500 persons in Montreal, Canada's largest city, accused Diefenbaker of “irresponsibility and demagoguery” on the nuclear issue. “Mr. Diefenbaker's words on this subject will be quoted with glowing approval in all the Communist papers of the world,” Pearson said. “Only our friends will regret them.” Pearson has said Canada is committed to accept U.S. nuclear warheads for its North American Air Defense (NORAD) and its NATO forces. He has pledged to do so at once if he is elected April 8. Diefenbaker has said a decision on the NATO forces should be put off until after the NATO meeting in Ottawa next month, and in his campaign speeches appears to have ruled out accepting warheads for forces on Canadian soil. “We have cooperated and we intend to cooperate,” Diefenbaker said during a whistle-stop in Ontario Wednesday. “But is there anything cowardly in not cooperating in those things which are not helpful to the defense of this country?” Substitute Wrench If you’re in need of a wrench for driving in cup hooks, screw eyes, and the like, slip one of the oldtype clothespins over the hook and use the clothespin as a wrench.