Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / May 23, 1942, edition 1 / Page 8
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RADIO WMFD Wilmington 1400 KC SATURDAY, MAY 23 7:00 a. m.—Morning Greetings. 7:30—Family Altar, the Rev. J. A. Sul livan. 7:45—Red, White and Blue Network. 8:00—World News Roundup. 8:15—Pages of Melody. 8:30—Musical Clock. 8:45—A. P. News. 9:00—The Breakfast Club. 9:30—Jungle Jim. 9:45—The Breakfast Club. 10:00—Meditation Period, the Rev. J, A. Sullivan. 10:15—The Cadets. 10:30—Poppy Day, Robert Strange. 10:35—Let's Dance. 13:00—The Band Played On. 11:30—Little Blue Playhouse. 12:00 n.—Four Belles. 12:15 p. m.—Music By Black. 12:30—National Farm and Home Hour. 1:00—Hotel Taft’s Orch. 1:15—Rest Hour. 1:40—WILMINGTON STAR-NEWS ON THE AIR. 1:45—Rest Hour. 2:00—Fantasy in Melody. 2:30—News Summary. 2:45—To Be Announced. 3:00—Roseland Ballroom Orch. 3:30—News Summary. 3:35—Phil Bowers and Orch. 4:00—Club Matinee. 4:55—A. P. News. 5:00—Hotel Pennsylvania Orch. 5:30—Erskine Hawkins and Orch. 6:00—WILMINGTON STAR-NEWS ON THE AIR. 6:05—Arcadia Ballroom Orch. 6:25—A. P. News. 6:30—Let’s Dance. 7:00—Baseball Scores, Ruppert Beer. 7:05—Message of Israel. 7:30—An American University, Cornell In War Time. 8:00—The Green Hornet. 8:30—Provincial Festival of School Music. 9:00—Summer Symphony. 9:45—James G. McDonald, News Analyst. 10:00—Bob Ripley, Believe It Or Not. 10:30—Carlton Hotel Orch. OVER THE NETWORKS SATURDAY, MAY 23 EASTERN WAR TIME P. M. (Alterations in programs as listed due entirely to changet by net works). 2:00—U. S. Marine Band Concert — nbc Fantasy in Melody Orchestra — blue News and Of Men and Books — cbs Dancing Orchestra for 30 mins. — mbs 2:30—Matinee in Rhythm Orch. — nbc The Follies From Brush Creek — cbs News; Elwood Gary and Songs — blue Continuation of Dance Music — mbs 2:45—Here’s to You, Orchestra — blue 3:00—New England to You — nbc-red Canadian Air Force Concert — blue Serenade Program at Buffalo — cbs To Be Announced (30 mins.) — mbs 3:15—Air Youth for Victory — nbc-red 3:30—The Campus Capers: News — nbc News; Clyde Lucas & Orchestra—blue F.O.B. Detroit, a Variety Show — cos No. Carolina Univer. Musicale — mbs 4:00—From Down Mexico Way — nbc Club Matinee in Variety; News — blue Saturday Dance Matinee. News — cbs News; Dance Music Orchestra — mbs 4:15—Broadcast of Horse Race — mbs 4:30—Your Number Please, Var. — nbc Baseball; To Be Announced — mbs 4:35—Horse Race at Belmont — cbs 5:00—Doctors at Work, Drama — nbc Thirty Minutes of Dance Tunes — blue The Library Congress Concert — cbs Glenn Miller Sunset Serenade — mbs 5:30—Ricardo’s Time Orchestra — nbc More Dancing Music Orchestra — blue : 5:45—Alex Dreier in Comment — nbc ; 6:00—Golden Melodies Orchestra — nbc i Dinner Music Concert Orchestra. — blue Frazier Hunt News Spot — cbs-basic Chicago Dance Orchestra — cbs-west ; Prayer and Anchors Aweigh — mbs 6:15—Calling Pan-Amer., Concert — cbs 6:25—News Broadcasting — nbc and blue 6:30—Religion in News Talk — nbc-red Graziella Paraga Song Prog. — blue , Col. Miller on Fighting Tools — mbs 6:45—The Three Suns, Trio — nbc-red Edward Tomlinson’s Comment — blue World of Today via Short Wave — cbs Baseball Roundup; Dance Ore. — mbs 7:00—To Be Announced — nbc and blue The People’s Platform Forum — cbs To Be Announced (30 mins.) — mbs 7:30—Ellery Queen Drama — nbc-basic Message of Israel on the Radio — blue Comic Strip Serial Series, Tillie — cbs Arthur Hale’s News Comment — mbs 7:45—H. V. Kaltenborn News — nbc-w. Jack Stevens Sports Talk — mbs-east 6:00—To Be Announced (30 m.) — nbc Green Hornet, Mystery Drama — blue Guy Lombardo Orchestra — cbs-basic To Be Announced (30 minutes) — mbs 8:30—Truth or Consequences — mbs Swop Night & H. Allen Smith — blue Hobby Lobby, Dave Elman — ebs-bas Melodies Come from California — mbs 8:55—John Daly’s War Comment — cbs 9:00—National Barn Dancing — nbc-red The NBC Summer Symphony — blue Saturday Hit Parade Orchestra — cbs America Loves a Melody Hour — mbs 9:45—Saturday Night’s Serenade — cbs Jas. G. MacDonald. Comment — blue 30:00—Bill Stern and Guest — .nbc-red Bob Ripley Oddities Program — blue Raymond G. Swing Comment — mbs 10:15—Labor For Victory Prog. — nbc Bobby Tucker Voices in Night — cbs Concert for America Preferred — mbs 10:30—The Ted Steele Club — nbc-basic The Grand Old Opry — nbc-red.south Stag Party. Canadian Variety — blue Public Affairs & Guest Speaker — cbs 30:45—World & War News Time — cbs Don Bovay Radio Troubadour — mbs 11:00—News & Late Variety — inbe-red Dance & News (2 hrs.) — blue & cbs Dance and News for 3 hours — mbs -v-, Clapper Says: (Continued from Page Four) putting everything into the war funnel and it looks as though we are certain to come through on +he production side if the present high pressure for doing the impossible continues. We have done what was considered the impossible in some production jobs and there will be more of it if the heat is kept on. * * * Administration concern is pass ing now into the matter of using all of this, and using the Ameri can Army, part of which is com pletely trained and equipped and ready for use. The Lend-L ease phase is over—that is, the phase of sending materials for others to use. The emphasis is shifting now to use of those materials on the fronts by our own forces. In other words we are entering into the full combat phase, not overnight, but during the coming weeks and months. It will show most clearly probably in the air, and could lead to domination of the air over Europe by the Allied side this year Once air superiority is establish ed, then the way is cleared for the ground follow-up which would bring the climax of the war. -V U. S. WOOL-CONSUMPTION The United States, it is estimat ed consumes 365,000.000 pounds ol virgin wool, 10,000,000 pounds oi pounds of re-used fabric in the tJptse of a year, i CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO Tommy supposed, since things did seem to be perking up, with Tibby suddenly, unaccountably be ing nice to him, that he ought to be willing to continue to let Steena manage her campaign. If she had a plan, however, he wished she would tell him what it was. “Why not let me in on it?” he suggest ed. Steena was evasive; she said, as she had before, just to leave every thing to her. She assured him that if he did, everything would work out smoothly for each of them. Tommy had to be satisfied with that, although he actually was not. He was like a race horse at the post, eager to be off, keyed to fever pitch. He wanted to race to the finish, which, of course was Tibby. He wanted to clear mat ters up with her. But he supposed that Steena. be ing so clever, knew best. He did not really believe that Tibby was jealous just because he had been sending Steena • flowers and pre tending to give her a rush. He sup posed, rather, that Tibby wonder ed what had come over him, why he was behaving so unnaturally. Still the fact remained that Tib had changed, that she had gone out of her way to be nice to him. He felt he ought to show her, by some small gesture, that he ap preciated that, how much it meant to him. The next time the florist’s boy delivered flowers there were two ooxes, the usual long one with red roses addressed to Steena, and a smaller one addressed to Miss Elizabeth Lane. These last Tom my had paid for himself, because naturally he did not want to charge them to Steena’s account. “Violets!” Tibby exclaimed, lift ing the fragrant, dewy blossoms :rom waxed paper. “Imagine vio lets at this time of year!” They reminded her of the springs she lad gone walking with Tommy in he woods back home in search of ;he first wild flowers. Was that vhy he had sent them? To re mind her of those other springs, :o tell her that they might come igain one day, that everything, ;ven friendship, was not over be rween them? “Wasn’t it nice of Tommy?” Steena said, although she did not ;hink it nice of him at all, not vhen he had promised to leave :verything up to her. “I told him l was sure you liked violets,” she idded. That was only a very white lib; Tibby could draw her own inclusions from it, however. Everything was fair in the game Steena had to play. The stars in Tibby’s dark eyes laded; the brief lift of happiness eft her heart. If Steena had told rommy to send the violets, as she must if she had suggested what lowers to send, they did not have my meaning. “You see,” Steena hurried on, since this seemed an excellent jpening if she were to try to carry >ut the plan she had, “it's all ra ther mixed up, you and Tommy having been such friends, but you know you said, Tibby, that you didn’t mind if I went out with him. 1 hope you won’t mind what I’m going to tell you now.” Steena’s plan was still a bit vague, but j she knew the time had come to do | something drastic, to stir Wayne up and to make Tibby realize it was Tommy she apparently cared for. “I shan’t mind,” Tibby said. She put the violets back in their waxed paper. '"Of course,” Steena said, still speaking so that Tibby could put what construction she wished on the words, “Tommy hasn’t actual ly asked me . . . yet. But I just wanted to be sure you wouldn’t feel badly in case he does.’ Steena dropped her long lashes over her narrowed green eyes, but she could see that there were no stars in Tibby’s dark ones now. “A girl always KNOWS, you know,” she added. Tibby put the lid back on the box. The’ violets would die if they were not put in water, but what did that matter? It was odd, but it seemed as if nothing ever would matter very much again. “I shan’t feel badly,” Tibby said. How could you, when you felt as if you never would feel anything any more? “I hope,” she added, “that you both will be very happy if Tommy does ask you to marry him, Steena.” That was the proper thing to say, wasn’t it? Steena had said that a girl always knew, meaning her own heart, her answer, as well as when a man had lost his heart to her. Steena had had so much experience in affairs of the heart that she ought to know all right. “Thank you for saying t h a t,” Steena said. She meant that, for now she knew Tibby did care for Tommy, even if Tibby did not know it herself. Again she told her self that it was not her fault if Tibby jumped at the wrong conclu sions instead of the right ones. She was not at all sure that Tommy would approve of her method, but he ought to be mighty well pleased with the result. “I promise you you’ll be the first to know when it happens,” she said. aieena nopea mat wayne wouia react as well. If he thought she was considering marrying some one else, he would realize he would have to do something to put a stop to it. He would HAVE to make his gift a diamond solitaire, although Wayne might not be as easily misled as Tibby by a few vague hints. Steena might have to think up some way to convince him thoroughly. Her plan was fairly well formu lated now, as well as started, like a ball that would gather momen tum as it ran down hill. All Steena had to do was to give it a little push. Well, Tibby told herself, that’s that! It had not been any use for her to make one last attempt to be nice to Tommy, to regain the old familiar footing. She knew now it never could be regained, certainly not if Tommy and Steena should become engaged. It had not taken him long, she reflected, to get over the old love and onto the new. Maybe that was why she felt as she did about it, sort of hurt and bewildered and as if it could not possibly come true. Of course it could. It would be a very good thing in many ways if it happened. As she had thought before this, it would be a good thing for Tommy to marry some one with money of her own, with the right connections. Those were valuable assets for a young doctor to consider in choosing a wife. Tommy had not thought of them when he had asked Tibby to marry him—oh, how long ago that seem ed! He would, no doubt, if he ask ed Steena, although maybe those were not what would count with him, either. Maybe this time Tom my, in proposing to a girl, would DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Chimney part 15. Hurl 9. Merit 10. Buckeye state 11. Stamped cloth 12. Pants 14. Dine 15. Spawn of fish 17. Observe 18. Work at steadily 19. Beard of rye DOWN 1. Savage 2. Laymen 3. Vase 4. Boards a train 5. Persuasive 6. Exclama tion 7. Effeminate boy 8. Pith helmet 11. Vim 13. Place 16. Nocturnal birds 21. Webbed footed birds 22. Move 23. Rodent 24. Eskimo tool 25. Short haircut 27. Old measuri 28. Grow old 29. King 31. To befall 33. Ascend 35. Slave 36. Thing, in law > 37. Reserved 38. Talk 10. Rascal 11. Adorn 12. French rivei ~ ~ ~ ~ 'aIdIaIsIei 1 Hi Yesterday’s Answer 47. Malt beverage 49. Goddess of dawn ai. iNeveruie less 21. Covers with gold 23. Flemish painter .26. Listen 30. Plants of lily family 31. Part of ship 32. Vats 33. Directed backward 34. Oust 36. Strike sharply 39. Kind of tree 40. Salt 43. Guido's highest note 44. Body of water 45. Shout 46. Short-billed rails 48. Approaches 50. Wide mouthed jar 51. State of insensibility 52. Touch 53. Catch sight of CRYPTOQUOTE—A cryptogram quotation BP QCC ARCSTRUyyVQ W PC B T V, W T P W X C A„U, S Z Y TCRVMVPZ — TNQOVZ. Yesterday’s Cryptoquote: THE GREATEST OFFENCE AGAINST VIRTUE IS TO SPEAK ILL OF IT—HAZUTT. Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc. * be certain, so that he would not have to withdraw his proposal right away. It would be a good thing for Steena, as well. If she married Tommy, it would be for love, not for the millions that he did not have. Maybe Steena had discov ered that love mattered most, al though that did not seem like Steena. Marg had said that Tom my had “everything,” since he was handsome and honest and clean. Tibby hoped that Steena would ap preciate all that. Love certainly changed things. It changed everything for Tibby, even the idea that Tommy might ask Steena to marry him. She did not realize that she was being femi ninely inconsistent, because Tibby herself was considering becoming engaged to someone else, too. At least she had promised Wayne she would let him know as soon as she could, but that seemed differ ent, somehow. Tommy would not care now if Tibby married a man too old and with too much money. It would not make a dent in him even. Steena would not mind, either, although she had so frankly admitted that she had hoped to land Wayne and his millions for herself. There seemed no reason why Tibby should not give Wayne the answer he wanted. He had said it did not matter whether she was sure she loved him or not'. She was going out with him to night. She supposed she was as sure now as she ever would be. It was silly for her to feel so upset, so sort of weepy, as if what she wanted most was a good old-fash ioned cry. Maybe every girl felt like that when she finally reached an important decision. 4 (To Be Continued) -V United Nations Air Training Conference Concluded At Ottawa OTTAWA, May 22.— (5>) — Rep resentatives of 14 of the United Nations concluded a five-day air training conference here today with announcement that a United States-Canadian-British committee m training in North America would be established in Washing ton and that other important re sults of the discussions must be kept secret. A communique announcing the fommittee plan said a public re port would be made, dealing only with proceedings at the first plen ary session and with general de scription of the conference work, while a secret report on conclu sions of special committees will be issued only to the governments :oncemed. The advisory committee, which will have a United States repre sentative as chairman, will serve as liaison among such nations as ~hina, Poland, Norway and the Netherlands, which have air train ing programs in North America, whenevevr questions of interest to them arise. -V LAND VS. WATER Area of the earth consists of 139,440.000 square miles of ocean an d 57,510,000 squat e miles of land, on which lalter are approx imately 1,000.000 square miles of river and lake surface. BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES Oh! _By EDGAR MARTIN WASH TUBBS The Mask Is Off By Roy Ci SUPERMAN It’s Only The Beginning! By Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster DR. BOBBS Elliott and McArdle BRICK BRADFORD By William Ritt and Clarence Gray ft uAsOHINE ALLEi. Owing To Conditions Beyond Our Control I'LL FEEI SADLi ENGUOH BUT IT lOCtf TO ME 45 IF TM4T5 WH4T WEIL H4VE > TO DO. A OUT OUR WAY By J. B. Williams if oh, wa \Ta;hut are ,\fi was just waitin’ / ALEC-WE \ THEY DOIN'? V TO SEE HIM TAKE / NEED YOUR 1 BRlNOIN’ 'EM \ HIS HANDS OFF THE SKILLED BACK OFF TH’ OL' BOV/ “THINGS HELP BAD SHELF SO / HAVE CHANGED SOME"' / AT A TIME { V CLD THEY / ENOUGH SO HE’LL ' LIKE THIS/ \ ] HAVE TO \ HAVE TO LEARN TH’ I YOU’LL FIND \ \ HOLD 'EM 1 TRADE OVER AGAIN/ \ THINGS HAVE ] \ UP/ yS HE’S FORGOT KAORE’N \ CHANGED ) V__ \ WE EVER KNEW, BUT Y SOME / / 5 YT| \ IT'S BEST FORGOT Y--|Y -V^TENJNOW^ j|| . ^ ^ ^/9fer ; r* i ^ i i | ffi L **/] *•41 • ■ ' I i I- ■ II ^TP-VJIU-'AMG „ * THE SHELF ROBBERS .t*. »«.•***». o* — f - - - ■ ■ . . f-l* OUR BOARDING HOUSE , .. with ... Major Hoople ■IOV, YOU JUST I OUGHT TO~~M 'S HEAD, AND (S STOP THIS TO t^EEP fj ME6 IN. SPEAK IS THE OLD BOY'S I •WAYS 8LOMJ — UPPER PLATE /| HOW BRAME ,^§iF FROM POPPING P E HEARS OUT, BUT X 1 L SEE IF .g^ggg?- CAN'T/-^6u66S’I 301 LED IT'S THE ROVER / - ' g^Y |N ME/ y
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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May 23, 1942, edition 1
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