PAGE 2 i * Publish#** RECORD PUBLISHING COMPANY At 31i East Canary Street MiL IfilSlONAl, ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE - THOMAS F. CLARK CO., INC. * 256-217 E. 42nd St.. Nev York 17, N. T. Pi-**" -- Branch Offices In Enfj Major City. SUBSCRIPTION RATES ?•' BY CARRIER: 20 cents per week; SBA 6 per year In advance; |i f; •' —for six months, $3 for three months. | IN TOWNS NAT SERVED BY CARRIER AND ON RURAL ROUTES INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: H4t ST Hr _» year; $3.50 for six months; $2 for three month. OUT-OF-STATE: $8.50 per year in advance; $5 for six months, $S for three months. p as second-class matter in the Post Office in Dunn, N. C., under tews of Congress, Act of March 3, 1879. Krery afternoon, Momiay through Friday DoAt Fail To Attend 11' L 1; Yhere are but few—if any—religious events more im pressive-than an Army field mass. ’ Tfr-js an inspiring sight to see thousands of service who will risk their lives on the firing line—as sembltjo ask God’s blessings on them. Tpj£ reason why such a scene makes such an im pression is because the lives of those men anid fu ture arT a little more uncertain than the lives ql citizens who pursue. Most people turn to God when their lives are in Sanger It fS not often that civilians have an opportunity tjo witness such a sight. Ordinarily, they are heftl only on the battle field. Thus, the big Catholic field rriass to bt Dunn ball park Sunday provides citlzehs fAr'a»qc)Dortunitv. No citizen willwant to it PSCner Francis McCarthy, pastor of the Sacred Heart Church, Army officers and c-jber Catholic offi eirts hije arranged for a great assembly. “A number of nationally-known Catholic figures, in cluding Major General William R. Arnold, a Catholic Bishop who formerly served as Chief of Chaplans, will US'ltere*«for the event. The Daily Record joins in extending to these riotables welcome to bur town upon the occasion of their visit for such a splendid purpose. 1 This is not just a Catholic event. An invitation has 6n extended to citizens of every faith to attend. The yers offered will not be just for Catholic soldiers, but all service men. | Afgreat throng is expected here Sunday and you will SC the loser if you fail to attend. tryg» ' i ynick Most Intereesing ie Honorable Capus M. Waynick, who gained fame Irst-class bridge player long before he made his to politics, has come forth with the exciting news ie’ll tell North Carolinians or by September 1 tr or not he will, be a candidate fer Governor, s’s taking time off from%iaF6uties as the new Am or to Columbia to visit Raleigh, Greensboro, High ind other cities of the State to discuss his political is quite possible that some of Mr. Waynick’s sup- > —perhaps including Mr. Kerr Scott—are in great -e interested in whether or not he’ll run for Gov jthjat; most North Carolinians. We haven’t seen or b£ anybody holding his breath anxiously awaiting fiypick’s entry into the race, ankly; we can wait without losing any sleep. Phones ea communications mont. A telephone here and Proctor ree hours after mois lrough holes caused FUNERAL HOME FLOWERS HAVE (pnwiAr ALWAYS BEEN A REMINDER OF DEEPEST AFFECTION PHONE 3306 I LEE'S FLORIST I 211 W. HARNETT ST. I fiairground Rd. Dunn DUNN, N. C. K HERAND SKINNER The latest stock and other ex change quotations may be obtain ed by telephoning the federal post office in large German cities, the charge being double the loeal rate, according to the German Tourist office. THE DAILY RECORD, DUNN, N. C. i nsst uays , tin By £ckcUkij FREDERICK V. FIELD Frederick Vanderbilt Field has come into the news as a million aire Don Quixote, duelling the wmdmilis of the law, in grim, de termined hopelessness. His thin, youthful figure gives him the air more of a Hamlet than a Don Quix ote. fie rejected the disclipines of his family, his country, his God. but g»ps to jail tor accepting the discipline of Joe Stalin. It ah seemed so unnecessary and so . fruitless. Freddie used to be a gentle and lovable person, charm ing tp a fault, gay and big-heart ed. That tight mouth gild first clenched about his pipe, that fighting to be shnet when his yery nature shculd force ,lum to speac out loud, shows wnat the discip lines of communism can do to a man, once he submits to its rigul ities. When I first met Freddie Field, he was not a Communist, fie was a nuld but very confused Norman Thomas (Socialist who had come to the feu east on his honeymoon ana wgs full id ideas on how to save the world. In the 19th century, he would probably have become a clergyman, perhaps a missionary. In the per iod. of Theodore Roosevelt, h e might have fought the trusts or gone in tor conservation. In the era of Franklin p. Roosevelt, ne be came a communist, but with a bit terness, a vindictiveness hardly understandable to those who be lieve that boys and girls of good families could not possibly become Stalin's stooges. It is too often boys and girls of good families who make bad headlines. * Freddie's background was not unusual for a Vanderbilt. He lived in a marble palace on Fifth Ave nue and in the magnificent estate, "Highlawn” in Lee, Massachusetts, near Lenox and Stockbridge. Frederick Vanderbilt Fie 1 d's mother was a gentle woman who I managed the complicated affairs of i such a household with competence and efficiency. I lived for some months of the year An the shlres and can say that file toeMk’ people still remember Mrs. Field favorably. The sanje cannot be said about the father. He was a curiously gross person, reactionary, selfish, over powering. We once argued about revolutions and the communists and the forces at work in the world. I reached the conclusion that had he lived in Germany, he would have been a Nazi. There can be no question but that the really dominant factor in Freddie's conversion to Marxism was a revolt against his father, who did nothing but live on in herited wealth. This revolt turned to distress as his father’s life be came increasingly messy. : His great friendship with Joseph Barnes, at college and at the in stitute of Pacific relations, ended when his first wife left him and married Barnes. To an outsider, Freddie and his first wife seemed to be perfectly mated and very at tached to each other. Often the man with his fist against his own life turns to some rigid discipline ys a rationalization for the causes of his bitterness. The tragedy in Field’s life is that he rebelled against the disciplines of a society he knew and under stood and yet accepted the rigid disciplines of international Com munism, on account of which he is now in jail and likely bit be lor some time. It; is this communist discipline which forces him to Ue .— & V - r f~v ■ v l tES ,Jj a jl y-V tt -v ; ; ■ ■ : I ki* ._ ?. f I Mister Brcflcr I /1 _ 11 II II 1 I s~7/i §ll I fll I li /!■ 1 I|Y v H-1 I I 'ft Al l [L _ll Jf .1 Ivl. J % i- Y Lj ¥»l' 1 g |! | (/ I I B ; • ,\ A ) / I )>y / I SftiSjySJlJSSjjjJlJlli^ZSSiSpSSisj “You khow the regulations agiihst gambling Ivith prisoners!’’ ; ■r KD RULUTAM BEHIND THE SCENES \ i On the afternoon of Mqy 13, 1950, your reporter spent several hours with the then Mayor William V. OTWyer. Oracle Mansion. He confided, in confidence, that he was retiring from, office, , “Now I want to ask your opinion," salt} o’jf)vfycr. .VEJ Hjap is working out a deal With the,White House for me to become Ambassador to Mexico.” .1 suggested that it would be a'ehd for him to rfesign js the mayor of the world’s greatest city, on the grounds of complete exhaustion) and then accent,Sk comparatively unimporfcapt ambassadorial host. “Ft would look a*, though,you were runnlpg away," i-tqld hhp. “I’m glad you sal4.,p>kt,” sai, he’s never had a discipline mark on his record.