Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 60, Decatur, Adams County, 11 March 1964 — Page 7

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 1964

(Advertisement) New Catalog Order Center at Western Ante The Decatur Western Auto dealer store, owned by John Rawlinson, this week announced the opening of a new catalog order center as an added service for customers in this area. This new service is part of a nation-wide catalog order program being launched by Western Auto at this time through its more than 4,000 home-owned and operated dealer stores. ’This will constitute the largest single group of catalog order centers in the United States. The distribution of millions of colorful catalogs is now being made in all sections of the nation and should be completed soon. The catalog, with 320 pages, lists thousands of items offered by Western Auto. Mr. Rawlinson said he will complete distribution of the catalogs to his customers in the next few days. Anyone who/does not receive a catalog can get one by coming to the store, he said. , Tennessee Ernie Ford, popular radio and television personality, has been signed to feature the new catalog order service on his ABC network television show. He also will present a series of radio commercials describing the new catalog order program. In addition, Western Auto will highlight the new service in its national adr vertising program and more than 200 daily newspapers. Mr. Rawlinson pointed out that the new catalog order service enables him to offer literally thousands of merchandise items which space would not permit him to display in his store. y “We know that many of our customers will welcome the opportunity,” he said, “to sit at home and shop the complete merchandise lines in our new Western Auto catalog. There’s a surprising selection of values from barbecue grills to vitamin pills.” Mr. Rawlinson explained that one of the most important features of the new service is that prices shown in the catalog are the prices the customer will pay, including postage and delivery costs. The customer does not have to figure weights, freight rates, or shipping charges, and then add transportation costs to the price of the merchandise. All charges are included in the listed catalog price. He also emphasized that Western Auto will extend its k>ngstariding policy of satisfaction or tfioney back to4nclude all catalog order merchandise. At the company’s home office in Kansas City, Western Auto President A. C. Swanson said that the company’s entry into the catalog order field “is in keeping with the 55-yeair Western Auto tradition of constantly expanding customer services, while offering the utmost in quality at competitive prices.” Mr. Swanson said the company will use its existing network of large warehouse centers throughout the U. S. to speed mercjandise to customers. Specially designed catalog order desks have been installed in all company • stores'and*“most dealer stores, he said. Eye-catching signs will call attention to the order center. Western Auto is one of the largest merchandising organizations of its type in the nation, with sales last year of more than $326 ■ million. (Advt.)

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Sonny Lisfon Jailed Briefly In Denver DENVER (UPI) — Former world heavyweight boxing champion Charles (Sonny) Liston was jailed briefly in Denver Tuesday night for carrying a concealed weapon and careless and reckless driving. Liston, a Denver resident, was arrested by patrolman James Snider. Snider said he gave chase to a black sedan which passed his radar patrol car at 76 miles per hour in a 30-mile-per-hour zone in a Denver residential section. Snider searched Liston following a short chase, he said, and “found a gun in his coat pocket and told him he was under arrest.” Snider said Liston attempted to get out of the car, but the officer ran around too the passenger’s door and shoved the brawny ex-champ back in the car With his nightstick, applied handcuffs, and resumed the trip to headquarters. Liston posted S3OO bond. Jim Bouton Ready To Sign Contract FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla., (UPI) — Jim Bouton, although admitting he’s “not very happy at the way things turned out,” was ready to sign his contract with the New York Yankees today for an 80 per cent pay hike. The young righthander, who was holding out for $20,000, accepted the club’s final offer of SIB,OOO Tuesday from his home in Ridgewood, N.J., and left Tuesday night for Fort Lauderdale. “I really have no recourse in the matter .-. . I’ll probably sign tomorrow,” Bouton said before taking off for the Yankees’ spring training headquarters. General Manager Ralph Houk had warned Bouton that if he failed to come to terms by midnight tonight he would be fined SIOO for every day he refused to sign.

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BOWLING Jack and Jill League W L Pts Lucky Dogs 15 0 20 New Breed 10% 4% 13% Cee Bees 10 5 12 Pin Droppers .9 6 12 Homestead Rebels 8 7 12 Homestead Bulldogs 8 7 12 Gutters 8 7 11 Unknowns 8 7 11 Alley Katz 7% 7% 9% Half & Half .. 6% 8% 9% Grapplers 7 8 9 Mix Ups 6 9 8 IV Seasons 5 10 7 Four Winds... 5% 9% 6% Country Trix 5 10 6 Dubs „- 5 10 5 High series — D. Wolff 539, G. Giessler 551, C. Deßolt 531, C. Bultemeier 525, B. Christen 526, H. Banning 516, D. Macklin 501, C. Hissem 509, R. Smith. Jr., 534, L. Anspaugh 532, R. Colclasure 572, Coritha Pierce 506. High games — Men — P. Bauman 190, D. Wolff 189, 179, G. Giessler 214, 181, C. Deßolt 188, 202, C. Bultemeier 184, H. Krueckeberg 183, B. Christen 196, W. Bedwell 176, H. Banning 191, D. Macklin 201, C. Hissem 199, D. Hirschy 175, R. Smith 199, B. Worthman 178, L. Anspaugh 186, 182, R. Colclasure 205, 189, 178, R. Pierce 198. — Women — M. Wolff 150, M. Giessler 158, A. Carpenter 175, M. Hilyard 154, R. Deßolt 160, 154, E. Hite 166, N. Bedwell 162, 151, M. McColly 155, R. Macklin 151, W. Hirschy 162, N. Smith 162, B. Worthman 182, 163, J. Colclasure 153, 157, C. Pierce 175, 183. High team series — Grapplers 2393, Gutters 2325, Lucky Dogs 2394. Splits converted — W. Bedwell 3-10, B. Christen 4-5, B. McColly 2- G. Grabill 3-10, A. Ross 510, R. Pierce 5-7, Bob Worthman 5-7, M. Anspaugh 2-7, C. Pierce 3- R. Colclasure 6-7-10, L. Anspaugh 3-10. < American Legion League W L Pts. Willshire. .... 17 13 24 Firestone ... 16 14 20 Burke Insurance —ls 15 20 Ashbauchers 14 16 20 Cowens Insurance 15 15 19 Mirror Inn 13 17 17 High games — J. Myers 200, B. Porter 216, A. Murphy 203, H. Engle 215, W. Frauhiger 203.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA

REPORTS Rural League W L Pts Baugh’s '.. 15 9 21 Miller-Jones Shoes 16 8 20 Weber’s Bath .... 15 9 20 Adams Builders — 13 11 19 Schwartz Ford „ 14 10 18 Reidenbach Equip. 14 10 18 “7” Up 12% 11% 16% Mcßride & Son 12 12 16 McConnell’s 11 13 16 Decatur Kocher .. 12% 11% 15% Sheets Furniture 11% 12% 15% Stucky Furniture . 10 14 14 Jaycees ... 10 14 13 Parkway “66” 10% 13% 12% Barkley Const. 9 15 12 Wecatur Industries 6 18 9 High team game — Adams Builders 954 (new league high). High team series — Schwartz Ford 2554. High games — A. Fuellling 230, D. Graber 226, M. Lautzenheiser 215, R. Geimer 212, R. Williamson 209, W. Bultemeier 206, L. Fravel 204, O. Moeschberger 202, D. Kable 201, J. Elzey 200. ' High series — D. Graber 572, R. Williamson 548, M. Weisman 545, W. Bultemeier 535, N. Bultemeier 532, R. Geimer 532, F. Lybarger 528, D. Kable 528, J. Elzey 522, M. Murphy 520, L. Fravel 520, J. Schnepf 520, W. Myers 518, F. Bienz 517, M. Lautzenheiser 512, L. Worden 511. EDDIE’S RECREATION Come Double League W L Pts. Team No. 4 17 10 22 Decatur Cleaners 15 12 31 Ruby’s Stylel2% 14% 16% Team No. 3 9% 17% 12% High series — Jim Butcher 537, Fred Eyanson 522, Ed Feasel 500. High games — Jim Butcher 206184, Maureen Butcher 144-155, Fred Eyanson 178-183, Sharon Grimm 149, Larry Worden 165, Diane Feasel 161, E. Feasel 185, Jerry Hurst 161. Splits converted —Carmon Hurst 4-5, Jim Butcher 3-10, Sharon Grimm 5-6-10 and 3-10, Larry Worden 5-10. VanArsdale Twins Are I. U.'s Most Valuable BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UPI) —For the first time since selection of Indiana University’s “most valuable” basketball player began 19 years ago, a dual selection has been made. Coach Branch McCracken announced at the annual banquet Tuesday night that twins Dick and Torn VanArsdale had beers tapped for the honor. Jon McGlocklin was elected honorary of the Hoosiers for 1964. Pro Basketball Eastern Division W L Pct. Boston ... 56 20 .737 Cincinnati 53 24 .688 Philadelphia 31 41 .431 New York 21 56 .273 Western Division W L Pct. San Francisco 45 30 .600 St. Louis —1 44 31 .587 Eos Angeles ..—— 38 37 , .507 Baltimore 30 45 .400 Detroit 20 54 .270 Tuesday’s Results Detroit 114, Cincinnati 103. St. Louis 124, New York 105. San Francisco 129, Baltimore Hl-

Loyola, Ohio U. Winners In NCAA Tourney By GARY KALE UPI Sports Writer Loyola of Chicago’s race horse type game mastered the Thoroughbreds and re - established a pattern designed to send the Ramblers to their second straight NCAA basketball championship. Loyola, using an ironman offense, defeated the Murray (Ky.) State Thoroughbreds, 10191, Tuesday night in a first round Mideast regional tournament game. The Ramblers also beat an Ohio Valley Conference champion last year (Tennessee Tech) in an opener en-route to the title. Ohio University went into overtime to stop Louisville, 7169, in the other half of a doubleheader at Evanston, 111., * while in a Western twinbill at Eugene, Ore., Seattle upset Oregon State, 61-57 and Utah State edged Arizona State, 9290. Loyola next faces Michigan and Ohio U. takes on Kentucky in second round regional action at Minneapolis, Minn., Friday night. Seattle meets UCLA and Utah State plays San Francisco at Corvallis, Ore. The same 'night. Hit Century Mark Coach George Ireland used his five Loyola starters until less than a minute remained in the Murray State game and each of the players hit in double figures as the Ramblers went over the century mark for the 10th time this season. Jim Coleman had a team high of 27 points and Jim Egan scored 24. With four members of last year’s title team in the lineup, Loyola outscored the Kentuckians, 24-3, in a late first half tear that gave the Ramblers a 54-43 halftime lead. Jim Jennings topped ' f Thoroughbred scorers with 24 points. Jerry Jackson and Paul Story neted free throws with 40 seconds remaining in overtime to advance Ohio U. in tourney competition. Judd Rothman sent Louisville into a 65-all tie |at the end of regulation time, but a basket by Story and Jackson’s two foul shots sent the Bobcats in front by four Ujpihts. Jtouisyille. Again .knotted, the count in the last minute, but committed the fatal fouls in tempts to , gain possession of the ball. Haley Leads Ohio Mike Haley’s 17 points led Ohio U. and John Reuther scored 27 for Louisville. Seattle pulled the first real surprise of the tourney by beating Oregon State and prevented retiring Beaver Coach Slats Gill from gaining his 600th victory. The Chiefs lost twice to Oregon State this season and appeared destined for another setback .as they trailed by 10 points with five minutes remaining. But guard Charlie Williams, who scored all his 12 points in the second half, put Seattle in front at 58-57 with a key three-point play with 2:16 left. Oregon State’s . seven-foot Mel Counts, playing with four fouls in the last 15 minutes scdred 27 points. Utah State avenged last season’s tourney loss to Arizona State as 6-foot-6 Wayne Estes deposited 38 pdints. His final basket with 1:20 to go put the Aggies in front for good. It was a struggle for Utah State all the way. The Aggies trailed, 48-43, at halftime and were behind 70-60 with 7% minutes remaining. But Estes’ stand-out play rallied Utah State. His performance overshadowed the 29 points for Arizona’s Art Becker and the 25 by Joe Caldwell. NAIA Action In concluding first round NAIA games at Kansas City, Mo., Emporia State (Kan.) breezed past Ouachita Baptist (Ark.), 93-68; Pacific Lutheran (Wash.) defeated Buena Vista (Iowa), 109-94; St. Cloud (Minn.) toppled Jersey City (N.J.), 66-47; High Point (N.C.) ousted Ferris State (Mich.), 86-72; Kentucky State beat Redlands (Calif.), 71-65; top-seeded Pan American (Tex.) whipped LaCrosse (Wis.), 94-82, and Central Oklahoma State trampled Cedarville (Ohio), 95-40. The NCAA college division tourney opens at Evansville, Ind., today with eight schools vying for the championship. Hofstra (N.Y.) meets Akron (Ohio) and Adelphi (N.Y.) faces North Carolina A&T in afternodn games and an evening card pits two-time champion Evansville against California Poly and Southeast Missouri vs. State College of lowa. Reiney Selking Name Omitted From List The name of Reiney Selking was unintentionally omitted from the list of men who accompanied the Hotshots Rifle Team to Culver Military Academy last Saturday.

Garrett Team [ Is Underdog - In Semi-State ; By KURT FREUDENTHAL £ United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPD— Two? of the state’s top teams, Elk- 5 hart and Huntington, may tan-* gle, for semi-state honors in* Fort Wayne’s Northeast district of the Indiana high school bas--ketball tourney Saturday, but it would be dangerous to ignore Kokomo and Garrett, the two other contenders. Huntington, beaten only once during the season and boasting a 13 * game winning streak, clashes with Kokomo in the opener and Elkhart meets tall Garrett in the second afternoon game. Elkhart’s Northern Conference champs came through their own regional district in good shape and have won their last 14 games, six in tourney play. Coach Max Bell’s Blue Blazers have one of the state’s best in Mike Franger, last fall’s Allstate quarterback and seek their first state finals berth since 1956 when they lost to Lafayette in the afternoon round. Elkhart bowed to Kokomo by a single point last December, 62-61, but the others have not met. Garret’s Giants Garrett, with two players measuring 6-10, simply had too much height for its six sectional and regional tourney foes, but in this fast company the Railroaders must be considered the underdogs. Should Elkhart be successful in screening out Ward Smith’s two big boys, Chuck Bavis and Jim Heitz, Garrett may be in a heap of trouble. Kokomo, one of three former state champions left, went all the way in 1961 and the following year bowed to East Chicago Washington in the afternoon round of the state finals. The Wildcats, piloted by Russ Bratton in the absence of Joe Platt, who is recovering from illness, lost six gslmes during the season but compiled the best offensive average of the foursome — 71.8 points in six tourney games. Shumaker Stars •' Bratton has eight lettermen to go with good height and balance _ an indication that the Wildcats coula make it plenty tough for Huntington’s Central Conference co-champions. Not since 1945 has Huntington rolled into the final four and getting there this time won’t be any easier than in the past 19 years. Coach Bob Straight has one of the state’s top little stars, however, in 5-7 Mike Shumaker, a deadeye, to go with 6-4 Mike Weaver and 6-2 Phil Underhill. Shumaker and Weaver are four - year lettermen who sparked the Vikings to their fourth “ consecutive -r-e gd o n a l crown at Marion last Saturday. Only Tipton was able to stop Huntington during the regular season, 75-72, but nobody has been able to come close to the Vikings since the tourney began.

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Jesus Alou Is Star As Giants Win Exhibition By JOE GERGEN ' UPI Sports Writer It won’t take San Francisco’ Giants’ fans long to forget Fe-’ lipe Alou if younger brother! Jesus has any say in the mat-; ter. The Giants traded Felipe, the eldest of three brothers playing in the major leagues and their starting right fielder last season, to the Milwaukee Braves in December with the hope that Jesus (pronounced hay-soose) would uphold the family tradition. And the youngest Alou has done nothing in the intervening period to dispel San Francisco’s fervent hopes for a family succession to the right field throne. Instead, Jesus has flashed much of the form that carried him to numerous minor league awards despite his youthful 20 years. Tuesday, Jesus cracked a triple and a single to lead a 12hit Giant attack in a 5-1 victory over the Boston Red Sox— Frisco’s fourth Cactus League I win in as mtmy games. Another rookie, Jim Ray Hart, collected two safeties as Bob Shaw picked up his second triumph of the spring campaign. Playboy Bo Belinsky was rocked for a three-run home run in the first inning by Cleveland Indians’ retread Wally Post as the Los Angeles Angels were beaten, 9-7. The erratic Belinsky pitched two innings in all, striking out the side in the second frame after walking the first two batters. Bill Robinson, a 26-y ear-old Milwaukee farmhand, clouted a grand slam homer and two doubles as the penver Bears outslugged the Braves, 10-7. Ossie Virgil, Phil Roof and Rico Carty all hit circuits for Milwaukee. Around the camps: Don Drysdale, making his first appearance in a Los Angeles intra-squad game, pitched three scoreless innings, Surrendering two hits and fanning a like number.. .rookie first baseman John Herrnstein unloaded a three-run homer off Chris Short to give his team a'o-4 victory in the* f4iil<eW«& Plies' second intra-squad game of the year. Reserve outfielder Ken Berry lashed an inside-the-park home run to highlight the Chicago White Sox training camp contest. . .Ted Savage collected four hits for the Pittsburgh Pirates and Bob Saverine went

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PAGE SEVEN

8-for-3 in the Baltimore Orioles’ camp. Big Walter Bond, a double and a single in three appearances with the Houston Colts... Ernie Banks suffered a slight fracture of the ring finger on his right hand in the Chicago Cubs’ workouts and will be out for three or four days. . .Bob Skinner smacked a three-run homer and Don Pavletich hit f two doubles in a Cincinnati i scrimmage. k r Ron Kline, the Washington U Senators’ last holdout, came to F terms for what was reportedly < the same salary as in 1963—ap- ; proximately SIB,OOO. Kline successfully fought off a $3,000 cut after compiling a 3-8 record and a 2.79 earned run mark last season. Catcher Choo Choo Coleman of the New York Mets is expected to be out of action for a month as the result of a broken left thumb suffered Monday, while Jim Hickman’s i twisted ankle should be fit ,in ; four days.

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