tWANT ADS -■i *? * CLASSIFIED RATES UNDER 25 WORDS 50 CENTS PER WORD, PAID IN ADVANCE. OVER 25 WORDS 2 CENTS PER WORD. FOR SALE F -; FOR SALE OR RENT: Two story ' brick store building, 30x90 main S Street in heart of Dunn. Will re s. model. Contact C. M. Butler, P. O. Box 638, Roseboro, N. C. Phone 625-2562. 12-1-TFNC ' FOR SALE: Oak wood. Cut, split and delivered. Call 882-5448. 12-l-5tc FOR SALE Three bedroom home on S. Washington Avenue. Priced low with low down payment. This is a real buy. James Best & Co., 892-6910. (c) FOR SALE: A Practically new large baby crib. If interested can be seen at Anna’s Beauty Shop on High way 95, or call 892-5127 day or night. 12-7-3C FOR RENT FOR RENT: Furnished apartment. Wall to wall carpet, air conditioned and heat. Two bedrooms. Private d’ont and back entrance. Call 892 7413. 12-7-tfnc FOR RENT: Private downstairs apartment, living room, bedroom, kitchen and bath. Completely fur nished. Mrs. Charles Highsmith, 210 N. Wilson Avenue, Dunn. Phone 892-2357. 12-7-3c -S-_ FOR BENT: Seven room bouse at 504 We^t Johnson Street, three blocks from Dunn hospital. Good location. Call 892-3025 before 1 a. m. 11-17-tfnc FOR RENT: New house trailer. Can be seen at 303 County Ave., Dunn. Call Tom Chase, 892-2423. 12-7-5c BIG SALE Now Going on at EARL’S TRADING POST Everything must go at bargain prices before first of year Pony, cart, saddle, two cars - 1953 Plymouth & 1956 Studebaker - 14 ft. boat, 25 horse motor, 8 beehives, 5 rabbit dogs and many other things such as ra dios, TV’s and record players, sewing machines, washing mach ines, clarinets asd drums, heat ers, tables, chairs, tools and tires, silverware, watches and rings, cameras, tape recorders, bicycles, shotguns and rifles. Re gister for FREE prize Jan. 1. Located 508 West “J” St., Erwin, N. C. >.. ■ ■ ""l Call Us Today For Any Type Of HOME IMPROVEMENTS - Carports • Rooms Added - Driveways Paved . Storm Doors . Storm Windows • Baths Remodeled - Aluminum Siding - Roofing Installed . Kitchen Tiled No Job Too Large or Too Small ALL WORK ' ; GUARANTEE!^ ■' - o FREE ESTIMATES No Down Payment, A -1 Building Co. BftTi E. Cumberland St. Dial 892.3103 or 892-3104 SPECIAL NOTICE LOST: Black French poodle on Monday. Contact Miss Hazel Beas ley 607 S. Fayetteville Avenue or call 892-7805 alter 5 p. m. 12-l-5c GIVI a CIFT ALWAYS remember. «d and cherished - American’s first in quality encyclopedia - COMP TON’S PICTURED ENCYCLOPED IA. Representative: Mrs. Eva Hardi son, 892-3607, Dunn. 12-2, 4, 7c ANNOUNCING NEW OWNER SHIP: Lee’s Coffee Shop, formerly Bob’s Coffee Shop, is now open for business. Owned and operated by Lee Tart. Located beside Dunn Bus Station. 12-l-5tc , -- CHRISTMAS SPECIAL — Perm anents one-half price on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday only now ufftir "Christmas'. Pay us a visit. Mae’s Beauty ’Shop, Erwin, phone, 897-5359. (c) SEE US for every kind of radiator and cooling system service. New cores and radiators in stock. Bare foot’s Radiator Shop, i07 South Watauga Avenue, Dunn. Phone 892-3228. 3-17-tfnc FOB VOUR FAVORITE photos and snapshots done professionally in beautiful oils at reasonable! prices, call 892-7288 or see Mrs. Edna C. King, Dunn-Erwin Road. 12-7-5p WANTED SALESMAN r- National Laborat-' ories — Division 6f Lehn and Fink wishes to have salesman to work local area through establish ed distributor. ,No delivery, no collectlrig. Complete •trdlriJTig' pro gram. Contact H. A. Rayford, Jr., 1208 W. Pearsall St., Dunn, N. C. Phone 892-2782 12-7-5C M A I D S — N, Y. To $55 wk. Rush references. Top jobs. Fare Advanced quickly. Hav-A-Maid, 4 Bond St., diiat Neck, N. Y. MAIDS NEEDED New York, N. Jersey & Suburban Areas. Salaries $35455 Weekly. Fare advanced, FREE Room, Bpard, Uniforms, T. V. Write at Once, MISS DIXIE EMPLOY MENT AGENCY 300 W. 40 St. N. Y. C. Dept. 44. WANTED PAPER BOY For West Pope Street Section. Reliable. Must be 12 years old or older. Apply at The Daily Record after 4 p. m. week days or any time Saturday. NEED MONEY? We Lend Money on Anything of Value Watches, Diamonds TV’s Radios, Guns, Guitars, etc. THE PAWN SHOP 219 E. Broad St. DUNN, N. C. Next To Suggs Co. mm ■■iii m Announcing Night Classes Beginning Jan. 7, 1965 At DUNN BEAUTY COLLEGE All Interested Meet At The College on December 10 At • . sgs ^ m j;;i Before The * i Snow Flies Cadillae-Olds-Ramber Service Dealer No. 2128 pt cmum ' ji, % .i... i >UNN etVi nfL> a,.#. FOR SALE 1963 Ford police interceptor. Like New Condition. Can be Seen at Wayne Lee's Ser vice Sta. North Ellis Avenue, Dunn. (c) U. S. CIVIL SERVICE TESTS! Men-women, 18-52. Start high as $102.00 a week. Preparatory train ing until appointed. Thousands of jobs open. Experience usually un necessary. FREE information on Jobs, salaries, requirements. Write TODAY giving name, address and phone. Advance Schools. PO Box 2598, Lakeland, Florida. - 12-7-7c Seeing Movie Proves Costly At least one Campbell Col lege student knows that the price of shirking homework can come high. <&0J| Junior English major Gene An derson yielded recently to the temptation to disregard his for a trip to Raleigh to watch Richard Burton playing in 'the movie •Becket.” When he returned to his park ing place, he discovered that his car had been stolen; and several days later Raleigh police notified him that it had been found in a city dump. Anderson itemizes as total cost of the movie two new 'tires, two gasoline credit cards, one broken window, one fur-lined jacket, one pair of glasses, one elephant leather wallet, and $43.89 in cash. “The movie was good,’’ Ander son says, “but I should have stayed on campus and read that book.” Stockholders Give Conditional OK Merger Of Gas_ Companies Near Mrt-ger of two eastern North Carolina natural gas firms has been approved subject to two conditions, President Volney H. Kyle Jr. of North Carolina Natural Gas Corp. said today. The consent of the first mort gage bondholders and approval of the Securities Exchange Commis becomes final. Stockholders of the N. C. gas company, with headquarters in Fayetteville, voted their condition al approval of an earlier proposal by the company’s board of direc tors to merge its operations with sion is required before the merger Tidewater Natural Gas Co. Th e stockholders elected Willard P. Baldwin vice president of the Tidewater division of N. C. Natural Gas. Other officers were re-elected: Kyle, president; William G. Hill, vice president, sales; Donald W. McCoy, secretary; Howard L. Ford, treasurer. Stockholders of the latter util ity firm had given sanction to the same proposal at their annual Electing in Wilmington Monday, Nov. 30. The State Utilities Comission in Raleigh on Monday announced its approval of the impending merger order. Considerations involved in the I transaction included the issuance ; of up to 252,256 shares of NCNG I common stock to be converted from I Tidewater stock, and the assump ' tlon of Tidewater’s $4.5 million ■ long-term indebtedness. The negotiations join together j under the management of North , Carolina Natural Gas Corp., the • surviving member, transmission and distribution systems furnishing na tural gas to 31 urban communities’ in south-central and eastern North Carolina. Five cities in the eastern* part of the state — Fayetteville, Wil mington, Kinston, New Bern and Washington — where Tidewater Natural Gas previously operated — will now comprise the Tidewater Natural Gas Division of N. C. Na tural Gas Corp. NCNG, which transmits the gas via a 600-knile pipeline from a take-off point on Transcontinen tal Gas Pipeline’s main artery near Mooresville, also distributes the fuel in 22 central and eastern Tarheel communities. They include Albemarle, Nor wood, Wadesboro, Rockingham, Hamlet, Aberdeen, Red Springs, Southern Pines, Raeford, Laurin In Slums of Bombay Million Greet Pope BOMBAY, India (UP) — Pope Paul VI took his pilgrimage a? peace and charity through the streets of Bombay today to the deafening cheers of more than a million Indians. In sweltering 80-degree wea'th er, his red shoe splattered with the mud of the city's slums, the pontiff visited in rapid-fire order a church, an orphanage, two schools and a hospital. He was visibly tired from the grueling pace of the heavy sched ule. The Pope has described him burg, St. Pauls, Lumberton, Lilling ton, Dunn, Erwin, Benson, Salem burg, Roseboro, Clinton, Farmville, Goldsboro and Tarboro. Bruce Byrd is manager of the Dunn district, which leads all -the others. The utility concern also furnish es the fuel to four other cities: Monroe, Wilson, Rocky Mount and Greenville, which operate munici pal distribution systems of their own. According to figures of the State Utilities Commission, Tide water showed a net loss of $55, )00, a smaller loss than for pre vious years, and N. C. Natural Gas showed a net income of $59,000 for ;he year ending December 31, 1963. self as “an apostle on the move.” “We come to you as a mes senger of Jesus and His teach ings,” the Pope said in one of Several speeches along the way. “We shall never cease to pray that God almighty and our Lord Jesus may pour down upon the rulers and people of this noble nation an abundance of divine blessings, especially the high gttt sf peace, in Justice and brotherly love.” Nhe pontiff’s prayer was par ticularly significant in this over populated nation where povety, starvation and disease are a way or life for thousands. The Pope saw some of that poverty close jp today. Backache & Nerve Tension SECONDARY TO KIDNEY IRRITATION After 21, common Kidney or Bladder Ir ritations affect twice as many women as men and may make you tense and nervous from too frequent, burning or Itching urination both day and night. Secondarily, you may lose sleep and suffer from Head aches, Backache and feel old, tired, de pressed. In such irritation, CYSTEX usually brings fast, relaxing comfort by curbing irritating germs in strong, acid urine and by analgesic pain relief. Get OYSTEX at druggists. Feel better fast. *52? &T ON ALL SAVINGS DEPOSITS FROM DATE OF DEPOSIT! - rill C' - £«( ,«j DAILY INTEREST COMPOUNDED NOT TWICE BUT FOUR TIMES A YEAR! Move ahedd with the greatest yet in bank-4&fe Savings Move your savings to First-Citizens Bank!