wKbfofeabAT krimm. tot* t m Cleveland May Lose Stengel In Short While By MILTON RICHMAN United Pres* Sports Writer It the Cleveland Indiana continue to play the same kind ot ball, they’ll wind up in the World Series and Oasey Stengel may wind up his association with the Yankees. Stengel, in the first flush of pen nant victories In the past, has said, “If we’d a lost, I’d have been gone” and has indicated since then he will retire only when the Yan kees fail to win the flag. The way the Indians are rolling now, they have a 314 game lead in the American League race and are playing at a feverish .778 pace in their last 27 games that is all but hastening Stengel’s departure. There seems to be no stopping the Indians. Take, for example, their 11-3 victory over the Orioles Tuesday night. They scored 11 runs in the first inning, marking their biggest uprising in a single frame since pouring across 14 runs in one inning during the 1949 season. GLYNN STARTS RALLY Bijly Glynn, who smashed three homers in one game Monday, led off the big frame against Joe Cole man mlth a homer. After two sin gles and a walk loaded the bases. Wally Westlake emptied them with a triple, then came home himself on George Strickland’s single. Five more singles and tow walks com pleted the carnage. As if the game wasn’t one-sided enough. Early Wynn pitched no hit ball until Jim Brideweser tri pled in the eighth. Even though the Orioles got to him for four more hits, Wynn had as much trou ble bagging his 10th victory as he does in polishing off a pair of small lamb chops for dinner. Andy Carey’s seventh inning homer snapped a 1-1 tie and sent the Yankees on their way to a 4- victory over the Red Sox but the world champions failed to gain a single inch of ground against the torrid Tribe. TRUCKS HURLS ONE-HITTER Elsewhere in - the American League. Virgil Trucks of the White Sox, who has pitched two major league no-hitters. Just missed an other by one-hitting the Tigers for a 4-0 jtriumph. Harvey Kuenn’s third inning single —a clean smash to center was the lone Detroit safety. Washington rallied for three runs in the sixth to beat Philadelphia 5- as Johnny Scmita was the winner despite a homer by Lou "trimmer. The Giants, refusing to let up on the second-place Dodgers, beat the for the fourth straight time them for the fourth straight Tues day night, 5-2 while increasing their National League lead to 4t4 games, Home runs by Alvin Dark, Willie Mays and Monte Irvin were the key Giant blows. Sal MagUe aas the victor. Curt Simmons hurled one of his better games of the season as the Phillies beat Pittsburgh, 3-0. Smokey Burgess and Earl Torge son. with four hits apiece, paced the Phillies’ 17-hit attack. Gerry Staley pitched a nine-hit shutout as the Cardinals defeated the Reds, 8-0, in a victory which featured Red Schoendienst extend- NEW DIVIDEND PERIOD CONTINUES UNTIL JULY KITH Let Your A Full Month'* Savings 3 Earnings For Earn Savers. Get the most in earnings lor your savings at Homo Building and Loan by opening your account or add ing to it before the 10th of the month. Money added by that day earns lull dividend credit from July Ist and is compounded semi-annually. HOME BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 11T E. Broad St. Phone *47* E. B. CULBRETH, FEES. R, L. CROMARTIE, Jr., flee. * '" ■ ■. ... . r.v 's.. DIRECTORS ~ . C. W. G. * MACK M. JERNIGAN H. M. TbSST^^ • o WILLIAMS fli'diHl mm**-** GUEST SPEAKER AT GLAD TIDINGS Rev. D. G. Rebison, outstanding young paster from High Point, will be the special speaker tonight at the regular midweek service at 8:M at the Glad Tidings Assembly of God In Dunn according to Pastor Ro bert Palmer. Everyone la invited to be present tonight for this special service. Furniture Mart Opens Monday HIGH POINT (W The an nual Southern furniture and rug market will open here July 12 with heavy emphasis on design to catch consumer Interest forecast for the exhibit booths. Style will be highlighted by finish and color. Industry sources fore cast resurgent interest in tradition al design with functional and con temporary designs taking on more of the softness of traditional feeling. Manager Leo J. Heer said yester day "perhaps it would be more cor rect to say that contemporary de sign is creating its own feeling ot line and symmetry.” Manufacturers will show a full array of home goods for the heav ier-buying last half of the year. Highly competitive conditions have prevailed in the Industry during the first six months of 1964 and this Is expected to be continued. Supplies will continue stable. La. Will Defy Court Ruling BATON ROUGE, La. (B. Louisians today became the first schools with passage by the state Senate of legislation aimed at preserving separate schools. The House-approved legislation, in the f oem of three MBs, would give the stats police poorer te en force separata sJncaltan tar Ne groes and whites. The sososnroa are expected ta he rignsd by Gov. Robert F. Ksuneu tag- his hitting streak to 25 straight games. Harry. Perkowskl yielded ail the Cardinal runs before rdokle Moe Savransky put out the fire. - • Milwaukee massacred - Chicago-, 14-3, With Gene Conley coasting to hts seventh victory. Joe Adcock and Del Crandall homored far the Braves, Ralph Ktaer for the Cubs. Use a quart milk bottle to mash bentos and grapes when making Jellies or jams. The bttlfe M easy to grin and it does not become stained. New Shawfown i Head Is Named ; G. T. Swiason at Belhaven m j Beaufort Count? today was an- J nounced as the new principal of j the Shawtown School In UlUngton. ton. -v-i < Swinson succeeds J. S. Spivey, i who recently resigned to take a new position with the Fayetteville 1 city schools. j County Superintendent G. T. Profflt agid the appointment of Swinson to head the county’s larg est school had been approved by the Harnett Board of Education. Swinson, who has served 18 years j at Belhaven, watched the school there grow from seven to 18 teach- ; era. Prior to going to Belhaven he i taught for five yean in a Greene t County rural scooL . He attended the preparatory j school at A .and T. College, holds • a B. S. Degree from A. and T. at Greensboro and an M. A. Degree from Columbia University. The new principal Is married < and his wife, a primary teaeher, will also be mi the Shawtown fac ulty. They have one 15-months-oid daughter. Botn are natlvea of Greene County. Proffit said the new principal i comes to Harnett highly recom mended by Beaufort County and State school officials. Over 30 ap plicants were considered for the position. Middle West Hit By Storms By UNITED PRESS A savage, freakish storm raked southern Wisconsin with tornadoes and 100-m 11 e-per-hour winds and sent the second giant wave in two weeks crashing against the Chi cago lakeahore. A man drowned and a mother and her three children were in jured in the collapse of their home before the storm's fury abated late last night. The same storm system sent gusts up to 90 miles per hour sweeping onto Mason City, lowa, deluged Milwaukee with two inches of rain and pounded Waukegan, HI., with hailstones as big as half dollars. A second stortn raced across Texas, unroofing five houses at Garfield and killing a rodeo clown at Houston. The clown, Richard D. Snuffy Smith, It, was struck by lightning. The storm struck hardest at the Madison, Wis., area, although the olta' itself did not suffer its full force. Federal Agents (Cvatinoed frsm gage onto the other equipment. Wood was charged with pou-ees ing and operating an unlicensed distillery.' He was ordered held for the October 11 term of Federal Court at. Raleigh under 8600 bond. Making the arrest were Federal ATU Agent C. S. Coats, of Smith field, Deputy Ernie Beasley and Deputy E. R. Hudson, both of- Four Oaks. yHmgtMiNews Attend Camp Ban-Lee Ten young people front the Lit lington Methodist ChuriSh toft Sun day for a week’s stay at a Chris tian Adventure Camp at Camp Dan Lee, Methodist yoath center near Arapahoe. Rev. E. C. Sheaf, pastor of the Llßtagtoa church alao is serving as a camp counsel lor. This week the oamp, which serv es- the N. C. Conference, has at tracted intermediate age bags and girls from many pasta of the con ference. The week there ere around 3a campers and 20 instructors in attendance. Campers -are offered inspirational piograma, guidance, and counselling in small groups as weU as a full program of water sports, hikhtg, nature lore: and other recreational activities. In the group are Jhny Barnhill. Allen Walker., Joe and Clarence Hudson. Jap , RoberUh Oomale Kelly ajvd -lummy Milton.., m BpUy KeUf Jean Parker and Ann Renn. . , . Fertaaa . Misses Irene Laslter and Louise McLauchlln spent the weekend at Fontana hi western North Caro lina. They were Joined on the trip by Miss mien Hdffinan or Ashe viße, former LHUhpton resi dent. J.-' - , ■ ■ • ...it .. ■ , IfAtt&AUWj €EDU|£C Repairs Te.AllMakes .And : ' Models vr Cars ' Quick StfyK* TttK DAILY RECORD, DUNN, ft C. Child - (Contused tram rage One) i and knpw nothing of the tragedy Vpich ifad befallen his child until < l|t returned home about 4 a, m. < to find all the lights blazing and ; police stalking about the house. • Roberta viewed the bruised body < ot bis child at a mortuary later in the morning and identified her. Prior to the kidnaping, the de tectives said, the abductor entered Rosenburg’s bedroom and slipped th car keys from his pocket for a get dway. BODY FOUND IN WOODS Mrs. Rosenberg said she woke up about 1 ajn. sensing something wrong, and stepped to the living room to see if Judith wss all right. She roused the family when she found the girl missing and sub sequently they discovered the fam ily car was gone. Then they called police. A cruising police car found the automobile, abandoned near the Coast Guard station on Bay shore Drive which runs along Biscayne Bay. The time was 5:10 am. At 6:15 a-m. an officer found little Ju dith nearby, her body thrown among mangroves 15 feet from a street intersection. 0 OUR THANKS TO YOU Mr. And Mrs. Subscriber!! For Helping Us Attain This Position 01 Leadership And Dominance In This Area Dispatch Ordered J To Cease Claim By UNITED PRESS ’ *-s r~r~. —r ---- -- ■; WASHINGTON (IP) The Post Office Department has » ordered the Dunn (N. C.) Dispatch to remove from Its __ front page the claim that it is “leading the county in paid M „„.si, i circulation and reader interest.” AuVOTtISOrS A Department spokesman said Department and this office insofar this claim doesn't "Jive" with cal- as paid circulation is concerned.” JT'l ~ IS AW .... j J; \ culation figures filed with the De- Postmaster Wade said that a re- B—mg ■ Ah MAg " MwjiAggt partment last October. quest from the Department is the ™ B B ItMVJI - same as an order and that the partment show tohat The Daily Re- Department has full authority to cord at Dunn has more circulation cancel the newspaper’s mailing per- r li fm-jjhg: - A Bib m~hM MW _ than any other newspaper In Har- mi* whenever postal regulations or B_ mPM ML BBBJB.BL - ■ -ba nett County. instructions are not complied with. ■BB The order came from Assistant RECORD LEAD INCREASES _ .. i Postmaster General N. R. Abrams Since its first issue on December $ gkW of the Division of Mail Classifies- 1950, The Daily Record has shown ywva tion. i constant increase in circulation. ' W ■ BwAk Failure to comply with the order. The sworn statements referred to .Jta. - . m Uk/ officials said, sould result in rev- by the Post Office Department was ■ toto r l'ka«) acation of the newspaper’s mail- for the period which ended last JkU JM m" J . Mt , r . , . ing permit. October 1. ■ WK • M . Newspapers are required to file The Dally Record’s Ownership 3 I BCta *1 annual sworn statements with the statement was filed in October, as WBks-tk JB Post Office listing their owner- required by law; statement of The BBHIBaT MS w ship and circulation. Dispatch was not filed until Jan- iff , | ilojiAniil WADE TAKES ACTION the October 1 report The well upper right section ot the front page as to . advertising volume th every - ", of “The Dunn Dispatch.” classification. ; |B| ~ "Leading the county ta paid cir- While The Record’s circulation is U , / culation and reader tateceet.” jhowing a steady increase, cireu / “Inasmuch as this statement does iation of the town's Other newiqm not conform with copies of the last per has dropped sharply during ttoo * jB sworn statement on file with the past three yean. We Are Justly Proud And Deeply Grateful To You lit Your Loyal And ValuaMf Support Which Has Enabled Us In Less Tnan Four Ye&s to ietome The Nfe. ! Newspaper In This Section. We Pledge To You That We Will Strive $tW Harder .f« Olw* Vo. A Still Newspopar W, Are . , ;ot«! To Setvtig VW. | j Judith’s mother said she thought at first that a political enemy of her' fiudtatalb alight have been re sponsible, but discarded that option after police arrived Oh the eceae. tan. Roberta said the family came down, as was their annual custom in the summer, following her husband’s defeat in the June 28 Maryland primary. Roberts was a candidate for the House of Dele gates. GAGGED AND BOUND When her body was found-, she still was clad ta her nightie. But her body bore multiple bruises and scratches and the ugly marks left by fingers at her throat were ap parent. Death, police said, was from strangulation. SEXUALLY MOLESTED Officers said the child had been molested sexually. Then her body was dumped beside the parked 1552 Oldsmobile the kidnaper ap pkrently used. The child’s body was partly ob scured in a clump of bushes grow ing at the edge of the sidewalk at an intersection. In her mouth was a tightly drawn gag, fashioned from a hand kerchief. Judith’s father is a member of a prominent Baltimore law firm. He graduated from the University of Baltimore in 1950 and specializes ta the generkl firaottce of taw. The Roberta have two other child ren, James, 16, and Betty, 8. Mother To (Goa tin nod From Face One) ey to pay ius room rent. THE WOMEN WEEP Crironer Walter McCarron asked Mrs. Thorne why her son stayed av'ay from home and on Christmas Eve 1953 registered under an as sumed name in a Clark Street Ho tel. , “My baby couldn’t come home,” she sadl. "Someone was blackmail ing him.” She broke out crying and looked down at Mrs. Ragen and her daugh ter. "How would they like to have me i I take their daughter into my home | and then put her up on North Clark Street or Skid Row?” she demand ed. Mrs. Ragen and Maureen began to cry. Mrs. Ragen sobbed loudly. ' Mrs. Thorne, waving her arms and sometimes fingering a large ■ cross around her neck, looked at • the Ragens and said: “I’ll fight every one of you until I’m broke.” i DENIES POLICE TESTIMONY When Mrs. Thome began her tes ’ timony she denounced police Sgt Michael Murphy who testified yes tarday that Thome had told biin Mrs. Thome had spread a rumor the youth had syphlilfc. “I have taken all I intend to take Mrs. Thome said. “When an Of ficer of the law makes a filthy, rot ten statement such as that officer made, a mother has to reply.” Murphy had testified yesterday that Thome was taken into custody at his mother’s request after a parking ticket issued to him was found in the automobile of a doctor from which a bag of narcotics had been stolen. Thorne, Murphy said, told him he “didn’t like nis mother.” "When Thorne was 16, he was going steady with a girl,” Murphy said. "He said his mother called the girl’s mother and told her Thorne had syphillis and that the | i shouldn’t go out with him.” Snoring Traced 'Back To Lovers GLASGOW, Scotland IIPI A London doctor told the British Medical Assn, meeting yesterday that male snoring may be a throw back to caveman days when it was a sign of protective love of mate and family ’ Dr. A. H. Douthwaite said that [t. if it is any consolation for long suffering wives, cavemen used to PAGE FIVE make snoring Mtota to MdBB night maraaders from tIMVpBB ones. ! ; ' 3-1 W Kerr Is Leading | | But Vote Close OKLAHOMA CITY, OktalfllH Sen. Robert S. Kerr piles taS’l commanding lead ta the OktahoMf primary today, but it was njp MB tuck whether he would be focni into a runoff with his stronMfl opponent. 1 With 2,056 of tbe state's 3M precincts counted, Kerr ltad MM 806 votes to 119.480 for hlg Ufa challenger for the Democratic sam atorial nomination, former (tod Roy J. Turner. j 7 ‘ O /} * » *v