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PAGE SIX YESTERDAY’S STAR —Ned Gar of the Brownies, who pitched his second consecutive shutout, a two-hitter, as St. Louis topped Cfiicago. 8 to 0, then lost 10 to 2. .;3 WISH TO ANNOUNCE "2L- THAT I WILL BE A CANDIDATE S. From DUKE AND GROVE TOWNSHIPS In The Forthcoming Democratic Primary May 31, 1952 TOUR VOTE AND SUPPORT WILL BE - APPRECIATED. ~ DAVID E. "DICK" - IASATER, JR, •' Going Fishing? We Have the Worms. Large Red Wiggles. • Pint (100) 75c Quart (200) $1.50 UNLIMITED SUPPLY It-. DUNCAN'S WORM FARM 5 1 ’•! miles south on highway 301 SILVER MINNOWS AND GOLD FISH L - an institution of service THE COMMERCIAL BANK Serving The Community Since 1919 lifej MHL 0m e sm wm i *»> MR Bum x hb ohkm !■■■■* PPPB. JKk^PMßßopMNPli^j^i CONDENSED STATEMENT OF CONDITION OF THE COMMERCIAL BANK DUNN, NORTH CAROLINA . AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS MARCH 31, 1952 ; RESOURCES 1 Cash and Due From Banks $ 903,753.13 U. S. Government Securits 682,890.50 , Obligations of Federal Agencies 450,000.00 ; ‘‘ State and County Bonds 607,200.00 ! Loans and Discounts , 1,052,257.82 Accrued Interest 12,006.93 i ; Other Resources 16,090.35 ]' Banking House, Vaults, Furniture and Fixtures 24,304.98 (Less Depreciation) y $3,748,503.71 ‘ LIABILITIES » Capital Stock $ 30,000.00 ; Surplus 150,000.00 » “2 Undivided Profits 50,163.26 Reserve for Contingencies 20,000.00 3 £s—* Unearned Discount 31,078.87 * ~CCI Reserve for Taxes, Etc 6.761.50 S 4 DEPOSITS 3,460.500.0 n - 1 n $3,748,503.71 ■<* i „ " J ; : ESTABLISHED 1919 |t, , Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation • '£• L. A. TART E. W. SMITH J.N. STEPHENSON L. A. GAVIN j President Vice President Cashier Asst. Cashier niDCTTriDC L. A. TART E. B. CULBRETH C. D. HUTAFF E w SMITH EDWARD PURDIE t J-N. STEPHENSON WE ENJQY SERVING YOU AND WE ARE PROUD OF OUR RECORD I OF 32 YEARS OF CONTINUOUS SERVICE. ahwya 111 ■■■■ 1 "'' £ Auto Racer Hurtles Through Crowd At Dayton, Ohio Race Decapitating Woman, Driver -50 Fans Injured As Car Spins, Hits Paint Drum, And Careens Into Crowd DAYTON. O. HP! Witnesses said today that a race car driver apparently misjudged his speed n a turn before he hurtled into a crowded grandstand, killing four persons and injuring 50. Charles E. Sarver. one of. the injured spectators in the accident at Dayton Speedway yesterday, said the red and white racer driven by Gordon Reid. 29. of Burbank, Calif., zoomed over his head like "an artillery shell.” Reid, a father of four, and Mrs. Ruby Ellen Shaffer. 43. a spectator from Springfield. 0.. were decapi- j tated. Police said the other dead were Gene Lawson, 19, and Robert Thatcher. 22. both of Davton. Thatr\,er. a special policeman at the track, desperately tried to push away a woman spectator from a guard rail when he was killed, other policemen said. Reid, favored to win yesterday’s race, was in second place when his “engle-Stanke Special" rounded a turn and went into a spin. Some 10.000 spectators jumped to their feet as the racer struck a arum of gray paint and crashed into the grandstand. LIVED BY MIRACLE The racer came 'to rest on the leg of Herman CottrCS of Dayton, who said “it was a miracle that i I was not killed." | "God must have been sitting ’ right there with me.” Cottrell said. 1 Sheriff’s Sgt. Ray Escurdero said “people were lying everywhere.’ "It was like a bomb had hit.” I Reid, scheduled to drive the I racer, owned by John T. Stanke of j Dayton, in the Indanapolis Memo | rial Day 500-mile tace. was pre • paring for his first try at the j classic. I It was the List time that Reid had raced without his “lucky j charm,” his wife, among the spec | tators. She was unable to accom pany him to Dayton because of the birth of their youngest daughter two weeks ago. Mrs. Reid. 26, said at Burbank i that “racing was his greatest love' and although I've seen other driv- j ers killed, I would never have; asked him to quit.” Rocky Marciano Heavy Choice Tonight PROVIDENCE R. I. «P 1— Rocky Marciano is a heavy favor ite to repeat his 1950 triumph over Gino Bjionvino when he meets the Italian heavyweight in a 10-round er tonight at Rhode Island Audi torium. The Brockton, Mass., heavy weight contender with 39 straight victories, 33 of them knockouts, is in line for a possible September | title shot at the winner of a coming championship bout between Jersey Joe Walcott and Challenger Ezzard Charles. ’ A near-sellout throng of 7,000 fans was anticipated for tonight’s bout. The partisan customers will be looking for Rocky to repeat his lOthe round knockout over Buon- THE DAILY RECORD. DUNN, N. C. l BILL HAIR IS FOURTH I | Local race driver Bill Haire took I a third-place in the Consolation Race at Goldsboro yesterday, and I he drove to a fourth-place finish I in the Feature race of the Sunday afternoon's Stock Car Racing pro gram at the Eastern Carolina track. The Dunn racer alternated be tween the Goldsboro and Wilson tracks on Sunday afternoons ds they feature the NASCAR San e ctioned Modified Stock Car Racing. '• The local car will be at Wilson ' next week. I I Coats High Downs Lillington By 11-7 ; The C°ats High baseball team came from behind in the last in- | | ning to down Lillington by an 11.7 j , score on the Coats field Friday I afternoon. The winners made 16 hits in the I 11 seven-inning including two doubles, i three triples, and a home run in taking their second win of the ' season; Tommy Pope and Robert ; Lamm hit doubles; Gail Pope. Mar ven McLean, and Hoover Johnson I hit triples, and Mac Turlington j hit the home run. It was Mac's j second home run in recent games, j Turlington and McLean were the 1 j for the winners, and Fred Holmes I leading batters with 3 for 4 each j and Hoover Johnson had 2 for 3. j i Rudy Brown led the visitors with j | 2 for 3, and Charlie McDonald and i j Jack Long added 2 for 4. Long j hit a triple. Rober Lamm pitched the win for the home team and struck out 12 j Lillington batters. Howington pit ched for Lillington and struck out | three. The game was tied at 6-6 going into the sixth inning. Lillington scored a single talley in the top half of the fifth inning to tie the ! game, but Coats came back in a ! big way in the sixth to score five I runs and clinch the victory. The j visitors added another run in the l inning, but the run was wasted. R H E LILLINGTON 101 010 1— 7 9 2 COATS 202 205 x ll 16 7 vino in the Braves Field, Boston fight n July 1950. - BASEBALL STANDINGS - By UNITED PRESS NATIONAL Yesterday’s Results New York 6 Brooklyn 0 St. Louis 3 Chicago 1 Philadelphia 4-1 Boston 3-2 Cincinnati 12-2 Pittsburgh 6-2 Standings Team W L Pet. Brooklyn 5 1 .833 Cincinnati 4 2 .667 Chicago ... 3 2 .600 St. Louis 3 3 .500 Boston 3 4 .429 New York 2 3 .400 Philadelphia 2 4 .33 Pittsburgh 2 5 .286 AMERICAN Yesterday's Results New York 9 Philadelpia 6 Boston 6 Washington 3 Cleveland 3-7 Detroit 2-2 St. Louis 8-2 Chicago 0-10 second game called end of 7th Standings Team W L Pet. Cleveland 7 0 1.000 Boston 6 1 .857 St. Louis 5 2 .714 Washington 3 3 .500 New York 2 3 .400 Chicago 2 5 .286 Philadelphia 17 .167 Detroit 0 7 .000 Pair Os Ten-Round Bouts Set For Boston Tonight BOSTON IIP) lrish Bob Mur phy tangles with Reuben Jones of Richmond. Va., tonight, sharing the Boston Garden limelight with Coley Wallace of New York, an other rising heavyweight who faces Sandy McPherson of Tulsa, Okla., in a second 10-rounder. Murphy, expecting to weigh about 181, will be extending himself in a bid for popularity with fans in Boston after moving his base of operations here from San Diego, Calif. His opponent, a capable club fighter, will meet Murphy at his sharpest if the one-time West Coast boxer makes the weight. WORLD’S. TRACTOR gives you All the revolutioear) FERGUSON SYSTEM features GENERAL UTILITY COMPANY, INC. Dunn, N.C. Garver, AAaglie Pitch Two-Hit Victories* Kluszewski Gets Two Homers, Two Triples;' Indians Win Two For Seven Straight Wins Wynn & Garver Take 2nd Wins; Goodman, Burgess Hit Vital HR Bv CARL LUNDQUIST (United Press Sports Writer) l NEW YORK OKI.. A four-way pennant 1 irmula which could be | mighty devastating as time goes on was sweeping the Cleveland Indians l along today as the only undefeated • team in the major leagues. The Indians have won seven in ja row, and a quick check after less than a week of play revealed that they have hit more homers (9), gotten more hits (65). turned in ! more complete games (5), and al lowed fewer runs (14) in seven games, or 2 per game, than any other team in the league. Yesterday, the Indians kayoed the Detroit Tigers, who have yet to win a game. 3 to 2. and 7 to 2. getting outstanding pitching in both j ends of the doubleheader from Bob j Lemon and Steve Gromek. A1 Rosen: hit two homers, and i Pete Reiser and Ray Boone got | I one each. ANOTHER FAST PACE But the Indians are just a shade I ahead of the Boston Red Sox at 6-1, who breezed to a 6 to 3 victory over Washington on the margin of Billy Goouinan’s three-run pinch homer. Goodman’s big Mast, coming di rectly after the injured Ted Wil- j liams had delivered a pinch single.! enabled Mel Parnell to score his j 16th straight victory over Wash ington which has not beaten him [ since May 28, 1948. The Yankees rared up out of a j hitting slump and made 14 hits as old man John Mize led the way I by batting in four runs with a I double, two singles and a long fly. [ to top the ‘A’s by 9-6. Garver, who pitched a six-hitter I on opening day. came through with/ a two-hitter over the Chisox in] the opener a 1 - rookies Jim Rivera and Tom Wright hit homers. Marty Marion and Gordie Golds berry each got three hits as did Rivera in the 8-0 shutout. In the second game, lefty Billy Pierce held the Browns to two hits while Nellie Fox collected four hits, and Eddie Stewart hit a home for Chicago. Maglie shut Brooklyn out in its I own park for the first time in 177 1 ■’*' f Visit our showroom. 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I yOUr *’ I For complete information about any International Truck, see— '■ AAcLamb Machinery Company "NATION'S LARGEST FARMALL DEALER" , games or since the 1949 season | ' | with a two-hit, 6-0 victory, i Surprising Cincinnati moved into second place behind the Dodgers : with their two victories in Pitts i burgh in which Ted Kluszewski •drove in nine runs with two hom , ers and two triples. Kluszewski hit j a grand slam homer in the night ' rap. The Reds took 8-6 ( and 12-2 .; wins. I The Phillies put over two r in the nintli on a homer by Smokey i Burgess, then won the opener for <; Robin Roberts in the 10th on a single by Willie Jones and a triple | by Del Ennis to win by 4-3. i But Ennis was the goat in the 2-1 loss when tt.e Phillies led 1 to 0 in the eighth behind the tight ■ pitching of Karl Drews, but Sam Jethro singled home one run, and . the other scored on a wild throw . by the Philly left fielder. Steve Bilki. the big rookie first baseman for St. Louis, hit a two | run fifth inning homer to give pitcher Gerry Staley all the mar gin he needed for his second vic- I tory. a tight six-hit, 2-1 win. ( j Batting Champ Ferris Fain c Has oor2l In 6 Games; [ Dr-rK From .344 to .000 NEW YORK (IP) Ferris Fain, the batting champion of the Amer- ’ ican League, would like to know j what it takes to get a hit in this . j new 1952 season. The agile first baseman for the j Philadelphia Athletics, who hit .344 | last season, has gone through six games this year without a hit in i 21 tries. j He is batting .000 at the moment, but he thinks things will get a little I better today. Yesterday, he doesn’t j think he had half a chance. And ■ I actually he didn’t. New York Yank- I ee pitchers walked him three times. TODAY’S PROBABLE PITCHERS AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia, Shantz (1-0) at New York. Rachi (1-0). Washington, Moreno (0-1) at Bos ton, Atkins (0-0). .... Only Games Scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE New York, Hearn (0-0) at Phila delphia, Fox (0-0) , night. Chicago, Minner (0-0), at Pitts | burgh, Kline (0-0), night. Only Games Scheduled MONDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 21, 1952 ' # -'4 YB HP ♦. Sal Maglie GWYN ENDORSED ' ~ REIDSVILLE Tl ; e Reidsville City Council today added its offi cial endorsement to the candidacy of Judge Allen H. Gwyn for Asso ciate Justice of the North Caro lina Supreme Court. Ambulance Service Phone 2077 CROMARTIE FUNERAL HOME » DUNN, N. C. MR. FISHERMAJMjErSGO FISHING COME IN chart S s7ys lN ° drop IN TO And See Our * SEE US BE complete rn. - Wed. fore you LINE OF BEST DAYS for GO AFTER TACKLE. FISHING THIS week THAT BIG BETWEEN OVF 10 a.m. • 2 p.m. uwli - CROMARTIE HARDWARE CO., INC. E. BROAD ST. DUNN, N. C. Automotive Shop And *£ Machine Service. 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The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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April 21, 1952, edition 1
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