CLASSIFIED
RATES
Under 25 words - 50c each
•id — 5 times - $2.25 — Ov
er 25 words - 2c word—Paid
in Advance — All keyed ads
25c extra.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE: Baby bassinet,
very reasonable, Call 2991,
Mrs. R. E. Jones. TFN
FOR SALE: Boxer Puppies,
eignt weeKs old, registered
wnn American Kennel Club.
Contact Harold Warren, 301
E. D. Street Erwin, Phone
4y44. 819-5ts-C
FOR SALS: Slightly Used
new models, reasonao.ie
price. Westinghouse electric
stove, frigidane refrigerator,
Baby Crio, Cnest drawers,
warurobe, gym set. Con
tact Mrs. Eveiyn McLain at
Louis Bears ouice.
8-16-tfn-C
FOR SALE: Briianmca En
cyclopedia, new and up-to
aate. Less than half the ori
ginal cost. Phone 3878.
8-20-3ts-P
FOR SALE: One used John
Deere corn harvester, will
lit most any tractor. In good
shape. Will sell cheap. Auto
Sales and Service Ford
Tractor Dept. 8-20-2ts-C
FOR SALE: 2-dump trucks,
will sell or trade for car. Can
be seen at Alvin Tart Store
on the Pope Road. 8-18-5ts-P
FOR RENT
FOR RENT: 3-room dup
lex Apartment, bath, wired
lor electric stove. 405 Wash
ington St. $25 month’. Call
V. H. Westbrook Newton
Grove Phone 761. 8-18-2ts-P
FOR RENT: Furnished bed
room, clean and comfortable
in a quite home. Young gen
tleman or lady preferred.
Please call 3890 if interest
ed. 8-15-tfn-C
HELP WANTED
tiELF WANTED: Carrier
bovs needed, boys interested
in a Daily Record route or
sales work afternoons after
scnool, appiy at the Daily
Record oifice between 10:00
a.m. and 12:00 Saturday.
Aplicants must be over
twelve years of age.
3-29-tfn-P
HELP WANTED: Be an
AVON Representative. Cash
in on the big Fall business.
Openings in Dunn, Erwin,
and rural sections of Har
nett county. For interview
write Mrs. Evelyn Parker,
Mt. Olive, N. C., giving di
rections to your home.
8-19-3ts-C
SPECIAL NOTICES
SPECIAL NOTICE: CLEAN
Washed Play Pen Sand $3
per ton delivered in uunn,
in. u. Ready-mixed concrete
Co., Dial 2323 7'24-tfn-C
SPECIAL NOTICE
CALL OTIS GODWIN FOB
expert floor and wall tile in
stallation, free estimates. All
work guaranteed, Call 4768
day or night. 8-5-tfn-C
SPECIAL NOTICE: A visit
to our shop will convince you
that we have the best radia
tor and cooling system serv
ice to be found any where.
Barefoots Radiator Shop at
Dunn Auto Parts. Phone
3228. 6-14-tfn-C
CALL ELLIS GODWIN FOR
General Building — Experi
enced in carpentry, ruason
Stories Not
Obscene
Says Lawyer
HOLLYWOOD (UP)—An
attorney for Confidential
magazine testified today
that stories on Frankie Sin
atra’s love-making techni
que and Robert Mitchum’s
nude romp at a party were
“not even borderline obscen
Daniel J. Ross, New York at
toney for the scandal magazine,
told the court on cross-examina
tion that he believed none of the
stories he approved for Confiden
tial were obscene or libelous.
Confidential and its sister pub
lication, Whisper, are on' trial for
criminal libel and conspiracy to
print obscenity.
He drew a titter from the press
and spectators when he described
as “very humorous” the story on
Sinatra's alleged romancing in his
Palm Springs cottage between
bowls of Wheaties.
Names in stories he listed as
approving of for legality before
publication' included John Carroll,
Alan Dale, Eddie Fisher, Corrine
Calvet and—for the first time
mentioned in the trial—Elvis Pres
ley.
“Some of these stories were not
particularly complimentary to the
individuals,” Ross said, provoking
another peal of laughter in the
courtroom.
Court opening was delayed half
an hour this morning as attornies
wrestled over some undisclosed le
gal point before superior Judge
Herbert V. Walker.
Just before court reconvened,
the prosecution jubilantly claimed
it had “trapped” the Confidential
defense attorneys into picturing
actress Maureen O'Hara in the
arms of a lover when actually she
was 6,000 miles away.
Defense attorney challenged the
prosecution to call Miss O’Hara
and have her testify under oath,
where she was when the magazine
said she was cuddling in the arms
of a “Latin Lover” in a Hollywood
movie theater.
He also demanded to see the
“proof” of her whereabouts—the
passport the Irish-born actress
showed the press yesterday. It
bore customs office stamps putting
her in Europe the period when
the defense says she was petting
in Grauman’s Chinese Theater.
BURIED ALIVE—LIVES
COLUMBIA, Tenn. IIP) — Bob
by Fraser, 25, was being treated
today for a broken leg and minor
injuries after being buried alive
for 30 minutes. Fellow workers
rescued Fraser, a city employe.
Tuesday. He was trapped in ditch
after a cave-in.
ry, cabinets, etc. No job too
small. No job too large. Dial
3755 Day or Nite. 8-9-tfn-C
WANTED
WANTED TO RENT= Furn
ished house or apartment,
two bedrooms, shower. Two
men for tobacco season. Call
4060, Neal Goron. 8-15-5ts-P
Auto Finance
Need A
Personal Loan
We make leans from 91* to
1500 on an toe and furniture.
Security Loan
Corporation
Corner Fayetteville And
Cumberland Streets
DUNN, N. 0.
AUTO LOANS
-r-REWN ANCi NG—
V Reduce Your Pilient
Payments — - ,_i
Money in 10 Miautess •„
MOTOR
CREDIT CO
du^n, n: c.
Fayeitevill'- St. Phone il5f?s
HOT SEAT—It was hot in Hutchinson, Kan., so little Leslie
Bray decided the way to escape the heat was to shed her
clothes and go for a bike ride. However, judging from the
expression on the face of the two-year-old miss, she discovers
her tricycle seat is too hot for a tender, bare bottom.
Former Harnett
Farmer Passes
John 5. Benson, 54, of Salisbury
died Tuesday afternoon at four
o'clock at Rowan Memorial Hos
pital. He had been in declining
health for six months and serious
ly ill for ten days.
He was born July 20, 1903, in
Johnston County, son of the late
Willis A. and Effie Dixon Benson.
He had been associated with the
Cone Mills in Salislibury for about
four years. Prior to that, he was
engaged in farming in Harnett
County.
Benson was a member of St.
Matthews Free Will Baptist Churh
in Harnett County.
He is survived by his wife Vellic
Benson; a son , Thomas W. Benson,
of the home; a daughter, Mrs.
Rudolph Williams of Salisbury;
two brother — Aldridge Benson of
Mebane, N. C., and Almon Benson
of Four Oaks; one half-brother
Gardner Benson of Four Oaks;
two sisters—Mrs. Ennis Phillips
of Benson and Mrs. J. H. Creech
of Dunn; and two grand-children.
Funera lservices wil lbe Thurs
day afternoon at three o’clock at
the Church of God in Erwin. The
body wil lile in state at the church
from two until three o’clock.
Services will be conducted by
^televisionSHMI
nN^^ARK
4U
IN
Person"* plus tu
ENTIRE CAST * me
TV SHOW
PLUS A STAR STUDDED
Plus Chaz Chase
The Florida Trio
RALEIGH
AUD.
WED. >
8 P. M AUl7,
Adm.
ADULT $1.25
28
Rev. R. W. Tetters and Rev. W. L.
Brantley. Burial will be in the
family plot in Spring Branch
Baptist Church cemetery in Samp
son County.
The body will be moved from
Summersett Funeral Home in Sal
isbury to the church for the service.
TO RECEIVE AWARD
WASHINGTON (IP! - Sen. Stuart
Symington (D-Mo.) will receive
the 1957 "Gen. Hap Arnold Award”
from the Veterans of Foreign
Wars. Symington, who was Air
Force secretary under President
Truman, will be presented with
the award at the VFW’s annual
encampment at Miami Beach, Fla.,
next week.
IN PERSON!
JIMMY DICKENS
RED SOVINE
BOBBIE LORD
RONNIE SELF
MIMI ROMAN
BIFF COLLIE, m.c.
by showing at the door a pack of
Philip Morris, Marlboro,
Parliament or Spud Cigarettes
(not required of children)
Hear the show on CBS Radio
FRIDAYS y:30 P. M. WDNC
Radio, TV, and recording stars!
admission FREE
and BUN WILSON.
SHIRLEY CADDELL
and the TUNESMITHS
IN DUNN
Tuesday, August 27
8 P. IVf.
DUNN HIGH SCHOOL
Norris Funeral
Held On Sunday
Mrs. Jeanette Jackson Norris, 66,
died Friday morning at the home
of a daughter in Benson.
She was a native of Sampsott
County and a daughter of the late
Raeford and Jeanette Jackson.
A funeral service was conducted
Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock at
Lee’s Chapel Free Will Baptist
Church with the Rev. A. B. Bryant,
the Rev. C. W. Kirby and the Rev.
J. D Capps officiating. Interment
was in Banner Chapel Church
Cemetery.
Mrs. Norris was married to Joel
Core and late Frank Morris, both
of whof preceded her in death.
Surviving are one son. Earl Core
of Routt 2. Benson; four daugh
ters, Mrls. ,Cora Norris of Benson,
Mrs. Doha Norris of Route 5. Dunn,
Mrs. Aleisha Hambleton of An
chorage, Alaska, and Mrs. Fearle
Tompkirjs of Fayetteville; two sis
ters, Mrs. Anna Jackson and Mrs.
Lura Branch, both of Route l,
Dunn: three stepsons, Jack Noris
of Elizabethtown, John F. Norris
of R 5, Dunn, and Howard
Norri ;;T>f^Wilmington; three step
daugl tfers, Mrs. Pearle Johnson of
Smitl field, Mrs. Thelma Jackson
on Route 1, Dunn, and Mrs. Betty
Barbour of Four Oaks; 21 grand
children and two great-grand-chil
ADOPT SHORT PANTS
HEIDELBERG. Germany <W —
The U. S. Army announced the
adoption today of a short-pants
summer uniform for its troops in
Europe. The new ruling applies
only to duty dress, and does not
affect the ban on German leder
hosen — leather shorts — imposed
two years ago as part of a gen
eral campaign to make off-duty
soldiers dress more neatly and
conservatively.
SMART SQUIRREL
CHICAGO (W — Homer Sher
retz, who gets up early each clay,
has made an early-riser out of a
squirrel called Mickey Mickey
arrives at the Sherretz back porch
each morning before 6:15 a m.,
tnkjes his breakfast of peanuts
and buries the nuts in th? yard.
He digs them up and eats them
at a later hour.
COALS TO NEWCASTLE
LONDON lift — Nathaniel Nuuo,
13, a Boy Scout from Ghana,
went to the London Zoo Tuesday
to look at the lions. “I had my leg
pulled so much about ever having
seen a lion that I had to go to
the zoo before returning to Africa,”
he explained.
dren.
GOODBY TO MOSCOW—A Moscow girl bids farewell to
Robert Cohen of Los Angeles as he leaves aboard the Peiping
Express for an eight-day ride across Asia to the capital of Red
China. Forty-one young Americans took the trip despite the
warnings of their government and appeals of many of their
parents. The train left from Yaroslavski Station in Moscow.
^-BRIEFLY. 'THATsf
THE STORY, MRS.
SETTON. WE
THINK SOU CAN
HELP US CLEAR
UP THE CL IPSO
MURDERS, WE'D LIKE
TO TALK TO SOU
HEADQUARTERS.
A SHCTOUN’*"'
orcourse
I DON T OWK
A 5WCTTGIW/
I RESENTTWfc*
8QUT
»CE
sou
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$0 TWO
POSITIVELY IPENTIFIEP
HIM AS MARKHAM ? .
OK WV Lift
YE&. POLICE HAVE
ENOUGH EVIDENCE NOW
TO HOLD HIM FOR REVO
STANO'S MURPER...AND
POR THE ATTEMPT
I KNOW HOW YOU T I HAVE NO SENTIMENT ’
MUST FEEL, MARIE... \ FOR HtlsA. TED! HE'P HAVE
KNOWING WOW THAT LET WOM PIE IF HE HAP
HE IS W FATHER! j DECIPEP IT WAS WORTH
THE MONEY TO GET WE
OUT OF THE WAY...^
r HATE him for
TRYING TO HARM
YOU.-TO PROTECT
. AT leas: I T
i brought l;s
tooethet' Amp
HE GAVE ME A
WHALE OF A
NEWS STORY
HI5
SECRET
U.5. Pat. Of*
MIGHTY PERT LITTLE
LADY... PROBABLY
\ NOT THE ONE {
\ YOU'RE LOOKING
\ FOR,THOUGH. J
NO, NOT LIKE-LY
OURS WAS BLACK -
HAIRED, AVERAGE
HEIGHT... ANSWERED
TO THE NAME
WE JUST BOUGHT
THIS WAGON OFF'N
A COUPLE FELLERS
THEY HAD A GIRL
. WITH 'EM,
But only in some very old
geographies is there any refer
ence to LOWER SLOBBOVIA —
What hap
pened
to lower „
■Slobbovia ?
Where are
the
Lower _
Slobbovlans f
S££
JoMORkOW
NANCY-Sy ERNIE BUSHM
WOW
HOT
TODAY
V
WHAT I
NEED IS AN
ICE-COLD
SODA
THAT COLD
SODA WILL
SURE
TASTE
GOOD
A HOT CHOCOLATE,
PLEASE
4 U« »»