PAGE SIX 443rd Quartermaster which has es labßShed headquarters at the local armory is spearheading the local order to lay plans for the event the local Unit of the North Carolina Catholic Laymen’s Asso / Ration met at the Sacred Heart Sectory on Monday evening o fthis week. On Thursday evening, July Jfl at the Sacred Heart Rectory there will be a meeting of military Jnen in the area who will help spon sor the religious event. ' CATHEDRAL CHOIR TO SING Plans have been formulated through the cooperation of Father J. Paul Byron of the Cathedral Staff in Raleigh to have the famed Cathedral Choir of Raleigh to sing Goinq Places? * let US YOUI Whittenton Transfer Phone 2090 DUNN, N. C. fuScil OR LONG DISTANCE ) MOW IS THE TIME TO GET YOUR PEACHES FOR ALL PURPOSES Delicious Peaches & Concord Grapes HILEY BELLE PEACHES For freezing and canning GEORGIA BELLE & ELBERTA For delicious eating Attractive Prices to Truckers Golden Belt Orchards & Farms 5 Miles North of Fayetteville On U. S. Highway 15-A .. R. H. BARBOUR, Owner-Proprietor' Mr. Farmer GET MARKET PRICES FOR YOUR OATS, WHEAT, BARLEY WHITI, YELLOW AND MIXED CORN 1 SOYBEANS AND OTHER FARM PRODUCE at the FARMERS WAREHOUSE ON THE FAYETTEVILLE HIGHWAY Open To Serve You OPEN MONDAYS THROUGH FRIDAYS EVERY WEEK 8 A. M. TO 5:30 P. M. DUNN FCX SERVICE ! R. H. GODWIN, Manager North Clinton Ave. DUNN, N. C. Phone 3380 TOBACCO FARMERS... Get Your Safe, long Lasting SILENT FLAME NOW! . All over the flue cured tobacco belt more and more tobacco farmers are / wUmI- Bp 'rijienging to the safe SILENT FLAME oil burning tobacco curer. These feopers have tested SILENT FLAME. They know that they do not have to iM worry about losing their tobacco from oil fumes and smoke. They have .1 {found the SILENT FLAME long lasting and economical to operate, too. Bf ;■ Another feature they like is its simple operation. § Ask SILENT FLAME owners and see the SILENT FLAME at your dealer* M We believe that you will like the SILENT FLAME better than any tobacco _ * ewer that you have ever used. SEE ONE OF THESE DEALERS TODAY £* > GENERAL UTILITY COMPANY » Dunn, N. C 11 " II ft I] r.iijL' srsjrtr? ■ j. B. Barnes ,* John C. Warren A Son \ s_ rmm u*w<.n.c. ►*•«*<>» <>»», n. c. at the Mass. Through the cooperation of the Catholic Chaplains Corps of Fort Bragg and especially through the efforts of Father Henry Durand. Division Chaplain for the 82nd Air borne, the noted 82nd Division Band will play before and after the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. Non-Catholics of this area are cordially invited to attend this event. Father McCarthy stated. Further details will be announced. Chaplain (Lt. Col.) Pressey, chief of chaplains at the 301st Log Com mand and Chaplain (Lt. Col.) Zund, in charge of the placing of chaplains for “Operation South ern Pines” are likewise supporting the event. Hours Are Set prize awarded Mrs. W. H. Byrd, Mrs. J. W. Spears, Mrs. J. C. Hobbs, Mrs. Hal Bradley, Mrs. T. D.. O'Quinn and Mrs. John VVomble assisted with the ar rangements. • Joel Layton, Jr„ chairman of the board of directors, said that ping pong tables will be installed this week in the center. Phones, reading material and stationery already have been donated to the center. Two Hold I • The prosecuting witness testified that her mother switched her to | make her agree to Fowler’s pro position. She said her mother and Arthur Wood and her little sis ter and brother, ages five and three, 6asuaUy walked the railroad tracks nearby while the attacks took place. On the witness stand, the girl retraced an account of a sordid two-week period in which she was in her mother’s company. Previons ; ly, since her parents had been sep arated, she had lived for two months with her father in Angier. She had been with her mother for only two weeks when the attack took place. - She toid how her mother, in company with the two defendants, had dragged her over the country side, sleeping in the woods, on the | floor of Negro houses, and one trip • to White Lake. SAW MOTHER GET MONEY The girl said that once she saw a soldier give her" mother two dol lars. apparently for her services. Attorneys J. R. Young and Archie Taylor, defense attorneys, cross-ex amined the girl on the stand. ; Miss Frances Worrell, child wel | fare officer, who swore ou the war rant, corroborated most of the girl’s testimony. The attack took place on a Thursday and on Saturday the girl said she was forced to ac company the boys to White Lake. She said she didn't know how to contact the law. She said that after the attack took place, she told her mother she was going to get the law to her. Tile defense offered no testi mony. Defense Attorneys tried to show that the girl’s father 'cooked up" , the story against her mother. The ; girl said this was not true. Paving US 421 at Hartley Place west of Lillington, known as McDougall Road, to connect with paving tow ard Swan Station, 13.5; From US 421 at Cameron Farm to McDoug all Road by Stewart Store, 2.6; , From White Oak Church from NC 1210 near Flat Branch Church by I Mason’s Store, 4.9. | More than one-half of the state ■ wide paving goal under the seeon- I dary bond issue program has been completed to date. "My FARM BUREAU AUTO INSURANCE savings paid for our vacation gas!’* Join over o million city and I country drivers moking real sav ings in insurance costs through f Farm Bureau. Standard, nones- Isessoble, ocross-the-board pro tection. Prompt nation-wide claims service, automatic renew al. Compare our rotes with onr. C °“ _ JOHN SNIPES Jk phone *2s* «M” System Store_^ THE DAILY RECORD, DUNN, N. C. Marshbanks He had almost been levied upon i and sold to settle the debts of Mars I Hill College, of which Anderson | was one of the founders. TAUGHT ARITHMETIC Marsh bank's first teaching expe rience was destined to be the coaching in arithmetic; of the son of that same ex-slave. Marshbanks had come to Mars Hill because his father ,a small farmer in very poor health, had moved there at great financial sac rifice, to give his son and five daughters the opportunity for edu cation. Even so, the boy’s school ing was limited to about five months a year. Nevertheless he was graduated from Mars Hill in 1903. In spite of the fact that he was a sickly boy and was particu larly ill the summer of his gradu ation, he decided to go on to sen ior college. He received his A. B. from Wake Forest College in 1908, His M. A. and Li. B. the following year. Dur ing his last two years of college he was an assistant in physics. He also managed a boarding house for 100 guests at Wake Forest, byway oi paying for pert of his tuiuon. Then came the offer from Buie's Creek Academy. Acceptance of the job led not only to quick found ing of his lifes worn, but also to his companion in this work. For it was Mrs. J. A. Campbell, wife of the founder and president of the Academy (later to become Campbell College) who introduced the young man to Miss Lottie Mae Link. The introduction took place at the Little River Association meet ing at Antioch Baptist Church in October, 1609. Miss Link, then a student at Meredith College, was head of the women’s missionary work at the meeting. The couple were married in June 1912. They have four children. May Marshbanks, a teacher in Cha pel Hill; Mildred ; fan is sold tiy Sears-Roebuck