Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / June 1, 1942, edition 1 / Page 6
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RAD IO WMFD Wilmington 1400 KC MONDAY, JUNE 1 7:00—Morning Greetings. 7:30—Family Altar, the Rev. J. A. Sul livan. 7:45—Red, White and Blue Network program. 8:00—Morgan Beatty—Daily War Jour, nal. 8:15—Pages of Melody. 8:30—Musical Clock. 8:45—A. P. News. 9:00—The Breakfast Club with Don McNeil. 10:00—Clark Dennis. 10:15—Today’s News with Helen Hiett. 10:30—Let’s Dance. 11:00—Second Husband. 11:15—Amanda of Honeymoon Hill. 11:30—John’s Other Wife. 11:45—Just Plain Bill. 12:00—Address by Rear Admiral Free land A. Daublin. 12:15—Refreshment Time with Singing Sam. 12:30—National Farm and Home Hour. 1:00—Baukhage Talking. 1:15—Your Gospel Singer with Edward MacHugh. 1:30—Rest Hour. 1:40—NEW’S — WILMINGTON STAR. NEWS. 1:45—Hotel Taft’s Orchestra. 2:00—Meditation Period, the Rev. J. A. Sullivan. 2:15—Between the Bookends with Ted Malone. 2:30—James McDonald, News Analyst. 2.45—Jack Baker. 3:00—Prescott Presents. 3:30—News — Men of the Sea With George Hicks. 3:45—Fifteen Minutes from Broadway. 4:00—Wilmington Museum of Art. 4:15—Club Matinee. 4:55—A. P. News. 5:00—Thinking Out Loud. 5:15—Music by Bovero. 5:30—Lone Ranger. 6:00—Harmony Isle. 6:15—Lum and Abner. 6:30—Let’s Dance. 6:55—NEWS — WILMINGTON STAR NEW'S. 7:OOP—Baseball Scores. 7:05—Let’s Dance. 7:30—Organ Melodies. 7:45—Treasury Star Parade. 8:00—Piano Ramblings. 8:15—Army Program. 8:30—Front Page Dramas. 8:45—Tod Grant Gets the Story. 9:00—National Radio Forum. 9:30—For America We Sing. 9:55—Ramona and the Tune Twisters. 10:00—Counter Spy. 10:30—St. Stephens Church Choir. 10:45—News Here and Abroad. OVER THE NETWORKS MONDAY. JUNE 1 EASTERN 1VAR TIME P. BI. /Alterations in programs as listed due entirely to changes by net works). 5:45—Three Suns Trio Program — nbe "Secret City,'' Dramatic Serial — blue Scattergood Baines Serial Skit — cbs Captain Midnight's Serial — mbe-east 5.00—Denver String Orchestra — nbc-red Lone Ranger — 5 blue East Stations Ten-Minute News Broadcast — cbs Prayer: Comment on the War — mbs 3:!0-^Ted Husing's Sports — cbs-basic :: 15—String Orchest.: News — nbc-red Hedda Hopper on Movies — cbs-basic Carol Marsh Cone. Piano — cbs-Dixie Baseball: Broadcast on war — mbs l:ZG—Brad Reynolds Tenor Solos — nbc Lum and Abner of Pine Ridge — blue Frank Parker’s Program — cbs-basic The Blue Streak Rhythm — cbs-Dixie Jack Armstrong’s repeat — mbs-west B: 45—Bill Stern Sports Spot — nbc-red Lowell Thomas on News — blue-basic The Three Romeos Song — blue.west War and World News of Today — cbs Captain Midnight’s repeat — mbs-west ■ 7:00—Fred Waring's Time — nbc-east Jimmie Fidler About Hollywood — blue Amos and Andy’s Sketch — cbs-basic ] Fulton Lewis, Jr. & Comment — mbs ■ -7:15—War News from World — nbc-red Louella Paikin Songs & Orch. — blue . El Charro Gil Trio 15 mins. — cbs The Johnson Family. A Serial — mbs 7:30—We Present, Orch. & Song — nbc Lone Ranger Drama in repeat — blue Blondie & Dagwood Show — cbs-basic Columbia Concert Orch. — ebs-west Fighting Cowboy Drama Series — mbs 8:00—America Cavalcade Drama — nbc I Love a Mystery, Dramatical — blue Vox Poppers & Parks Johnson — cbs Cal Tinney War Commentary — mbs 8:15—For Your Information — mbs 8:30—Alfred Wallenstein’s Cone. — nbc True or False and Dr. Hagen — blue The Gay Nineties Revue — cbs-basic Bulldog Drummond Adventures — mbs 8:55—Elmer Davis and Comment — cbs 9:00—Voorhees Concert & Guest — nbc National Radio Forum Speaker — blue Radio Theatre and Guest Stars — cbs Gabriel Heatter Speaking — mbs-basic 9:15—Analyzing the Propaganda — mbs 9:30—Doc. I. Q. & Quiz Queries — nbc Your Blind Date & Variety — blue The Better Half, Quiz Program — mbs 9:55—Ramona & Tune Twisters — blue 10:00—The Contented Concert — nbc-red Counter Spy, Drama Series — blue Freddie Martin & His Orchestra — cbs Raymond G. Swing’s Comment — mbs 1C: 15—Dancing Music Orchestra — mbs 10:30—Hot Copy, Dramatical — nbc-east Morgan Beatty War Comment — blue Latin-American Romance — ebs-east Blondie & Dagwood repeat — ebs-west Music That Endures, Concert — mbs 10:45_War Broadcast Comment — blue Broadcasting World War — ebs-east 11:00—News for 15 mins. — nbc.red-east Fred Waring’s repeat — nbc-red-west News and Dance 2 hrs. — blue and cbs Dance Music Orchestra Variety — mbs 11:15—Late Variety With News — nbc 11:30—Radio Newsreel, London — mbs 12:00_Dance Music, News 2 hrs. — mbs Destroyer, Cargo Vessel Launched MOBILE, Ala., May 31— (3?) —A sleek new destroyer slipped sideways into the muddy waters of Chickasa boque today in the Navy’s first side wise launching of a destroyer. The vessel — the USS Capps — was launched at the Gulf Shipbuild ing Corp. Yard as the first combat ant naval unit to hit the water in the East Gulf since the war between the states. Mrs. Charles Gaines Stokes of Meridian, Miss., mother of five naval officers, smashed a bot tle of champagne against the bow and the Capps slipped into the water in a simple 10-second ceremony. A 10,000-ton Liberty cargo ship, the Thomas Heyward, was launched simultaneously at the neighboring shipyard of the Alabama Dry Dcx^k and Shipbuilding Co. -V— Windsors Enroute North On Business MIAMI, Fla., May 31.—CP)—'The Duke and Duchess of Windsor left today on a 10-day business trip to Washington and New York, plan ning to fit the British Bahamas into United States war economy. The Duke emphasized the trip was strictly a business mission. The Duchess hoped to visit her family in Baltimore but the couple had not completed plans for celebrating their fifth wedding anniversary Wednes day. CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE When Tibby protested, the hot color mounting her cheeks, that she could not allow Wayne to write her a check to cover any small purchases she might find neces sary before the week-end visit to met his family, she saw immedi ately that he was displeased. His eyes took on their steel gray, his manner became bruskly impa tient once more. He said, “Why can’t you let me? Aren’t we en gaged? Aren’t you going to be my wife? Please, darling, don’t go middle-west on me.” He might have said middle-class, for she knew from the irony in his tone, his amused expression, what he meant. ■She knew, too, that he meant that it was necessary that she get herself some really decent—expen sive and fashionable—things be fore he presented her to his fam ily. She must not impress them as middle-west and middle-class, but that was what she was. She was not ashamed of being that, either. She did not want to try to pretend to be anything else. She would feel far more ashamed of accepting a check, even from the man she was going to marry, until she had married him. She would be ashamed to appear in clothing that would not suit her any more than the magnificent pearl ring would fit or suit her hand, any more than she would belong in the world in which Wayne lived. She said, flinging back her head in the proud little movement she had used that first time in defying him, “I’m sorry, but I cannot help it that I am from a small, mid west town. I am not sorry, either, or ashamed that I come from plain people. I cannot accept money from you, Wayne, before we are married.” Her tone made that fi nal. “I have enough of my own,” she added, “to buy whatever I shall need to look presentable I did not know that you had a fam ily.” This last caused her more con cern than all that went before. In accepting him, she had not thought about Wayne’s people. You did not always marry just the man or girl, people claimed: you often mar ried the family as well. Her fami ly, which consisted of her father and a few aunts and cousins, would accept Wayne; they would be too far removed to present any problem, although Daddy would be disappointed that she was not mar rying a doctor, Dr. Thomas Dare, to put it specifically. Wayne’s fam ily, in all probability, would be close by. They might not accept Tibby, although he had said— which did not sound too favorable —that they had “taken it” very well. “Of course I have a family.” Wayne’s tone was frankly impa tient. Of course she was taking up his time by such unnecessary de tails. He had gone ahead and planned everything in his custom ary w a y, decisively, quickly, “Quite a multitudious family, a whole army of relatives, all resid ing, off and on anyway, on Man hattan, in Westchester mostly. They will all expect to meet you and look you over,” he explained, his handsome mouth twisting in his wry grin, “though you must not let this worry or annoy you, my sweet.” Was he preparing for her the or. deal that he knew she must under go, the criticism he was well aware she must overlook? Her spirit sank further for, in spite of that innate pride in her own herit age, Tibby knew that Wayne’s family would not spare her. No doubt they would thfnk she was marrying him for his money. They probably would misjudge her in every way. She wished wildly that she could run or fly away, that she need not go through such an ordeal. She supposed that was cowardly. In time she would get used to the idea of Wayne’s having a large and representative family. She had told herself earlier, in trying to adjust herself to the first shock she had received this morning of seeing Tommy’s and Steena’s en gagement notice, that she must ac cept things. Steena could have met this issue; she could have put on an act to play up to Wayne’s fami ly, to convince them he was mar rying her for her beauty and that she was socially equal. They would never understand his having chos en Tibby. She could not understand it herself. She said, for no reason at all, except having just thought about it, “Steena’s engagement was an nounced in the morning paper. She is going to marry Dr, Dare.” She thought she saw a flicker of surprise in Wayne’s gray eyes, but he only said briefly, “Is that so?” Then he added, “Ours must be an. nounced properly soon. That is why I called you in to get all these minor matters straightened out.” His tone implied that she was holding back such straighten ing, but he did not press her fur ther about accepting the check. He closed the large book, pushing it j aside. You mean then, T:obv asked, “that I am to resign right off?” That was what he ha<J said. “Not to go out today on this last flight?” She did not try to conceal her re turning disappointment at this thought. However, she could not try to persuade him otherwise, if this was what he wished, since she had seemingly put up objec tions to the other matters he had wished to put in order. “It seems best,” he repeated, as he had in telling her. “Why don’t you attend to that shopping, and you could go to the jeweler’s to have the ring made the correct size. That was stupid of me, but I was anxious for you to have it.” Was he reminding her again that he was pressed for time, as he had admitted? She got up; he did not stop her now. She said, “All right,” like a dutiful child. Wayne got up, too; he came around the desk. He took both her hands in his big, hard ones, smil ing down on her, his eyes no long er steel, but tender. “That’s a good girl.” His* tone held banter, but she knew he was pleased. He liked hr to respond in that way; he liked to bend her to his own. He would expect it of her after they were married. He was beginning to expect it now that they were engaged. If only she could run away . . . but she must stop such silly, child ish thoughts. She did not really want to run. It was just that things kept on happening so fast without allowing her time to get used to them, but she had known it would be that way with Wayne. That was his way. From the beginning he DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Herd of whales 4. Cut off 7. Bounder 10. Generally 13. Asian country 14. Angry 15. Soapy wate: 16. Pitcher 17. Measure of length 18. Metallic rock 21. Bitter vetch 22. Pierced 25. Diminishes 7. Scratched 8. Change 9. Those who dye 11. Force (Latin) 12. Land measure 18. Goddess of ■ harvests 19. Sun god 20. Guido’s highest note 23. Untidy 24. Ant 25. Network 26. Past 28. Keel-billed cuckoo 29. Golf implement 32. Salt of arsenic acid 35. Sphere 36. Insect 37. Ungulates 38. Sloth 39. Gaping 40. Kind of bird 43. Church parti 44. Garment 46. Weaken 47. Isthmus in Siam 6-1 Saturday’s Answer 49. Recent 50. Hint 52. Toward £ i. ran. oi “to be” 28. Preposition 30. Ova 31. Hair on ani mal’s neck 33. Short for hobo 34. Therefore 36. Eagle’s nest 37. Despots 39. Constellation 41. Morsel 42. Finish 45. Breaches 47. Knot in wood 48. Pertaining to birds 50. Long for 51. Makes everlasting 53. Half ems 54. Sorrow 55. Letter S DOWN 1. Semblence 2. Cancel 3. Mediocre 4. Meadow I 5. Conjunction 6. Greek letter CRYPTOQUOTE—A cryptogram quotation QARBCSQGAT GJ K A A U LAC SER AC GQ GJ KAAU LAC TATB — MNCOB. Saturday’s Cryptoquote: TRAITORS ARE HATED EVEN BY THOSE THEY HAVE BENEFITED—TACITUS. Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc... 'f had made her feel as shd did now,1 light-headed, confused, hurried. That was why she had been at tracted to him, why she had fall en in love with him—if she had. “I’m afraid I’ll have to ask you to run along now.” His eyes gave hers that deep look that always made her heart quicken. “I couldn’t let you, except that I must. I shall see you again to night.” His hands tightened on hers. For an instant she thought he was going to draw her into his arms. He must have felt that im pulse; then his face got stern, he released her hands, stepped back. “I’ll call for you at eight,” he said. “Until then, my sweet . . .” “All right.” Tibby still was the dutiful child, the pupil responding to her instructor—almost the em ploye replying to the employer. Wayne could see her tonight without asking, taking it for grant ed. He would see her each night, she supposed, taking that, and a good deal more, for granted too. She would go shopping; she would have the ring fitted; she would wear it. She would go to West chester the following week-end to be presented to his family. She had enough to keep her busy, so that it was just as well she had to resign her position as hostess right away. She would be so busy she would not have time to get rsed to all this; she would simply tave to accept everything. Yet, when everything apparently s settled, often it has a way of :urning out differently, especially n a world where wars are rum oling, where ships fly high in the sky, where people, unknown to themselves, do their bit to con tribute to an ever-changing pat tern. 2 (To Be Continued) -V Yugoslav Guerrillas Ignore Nazi Demands MOSCOW, May 31.— (JP) —The Russian news agency, Tass, quoted Yugoslav reports today that Yugo slav guerrilla leaders had refused 5 German ultimatum or have their wives and children, who had been taken hostage, “mercilessly ex terminated.” The Axis press was said to have published a list of persons “ad vised” to surrender. “The brutal threats of the Hitler ites and their appointees against defenseless women and children only served to fan the hatred of the Yugoslav people for the Hitler ite invaders and enslavers,” Tass said. -V Blasts Damage U. S. Ship At Tampico TAMPICO. Mexico, May 31.—(JP) —Three mysterious explosives gravely damaged a United States merchant ship taking cargo at the oil refinery dock early today kill ing at least four U. S. sailors and injuring 12 others, ten of them Americans. The ship listed to starboard but was afloat. The first explosion apparently was in the boiler room. The others were near the bridge and further aft. BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES Ouch! By EDGAR MARtiv' OOOH SOY l , 1 COGY.OWT , IOE <5000.Tfc A SWELL ovo 1 t)PEAWl SLEEP A ww! GUST LESSOH EOR OS SOT OWLAES.'J TO TH\W\C - A HAO A COR A--RE ALLY i OE 'ow' f foPE\6W 69V LOWS COURSE,WE MUSTN'T - OR A6EWT-' TAW EESOSAOOOS OV R\6HT HERE VONTH I EOERYOWE -EOT \W OOR THE I GOST EHE SAP\E. -POUCE WE CAWT EE TOO CAREEOL WASH TUBBS . At Long Last By Roy cr3t|( SUPERMAN Ruse! By Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster SL REMA!N~HERE-\ 1 Learning i and let me do J THAT THE MEEK MANNESED OWNEE OF THE CANSY STEEL MILLS IS FLEEING TOWN ABOARD SAVES HIM FROM THIEVING TEAM PS, THEN SEEKS TO EETEIEVE THe STOLEN PUNOS... mr> l -252 DR. BOBBS Elliott and McArdle CLOSE BY THE SLEEPY LITTLE TOWN OF BAulSBuRG IS HUGE CAMP PAULS- THREE HUNDRED WILES FROM CAMP PAULSBURG iS A SANITARIUM ..BETWEEN I BURG, ARMY REPLACEMENT CENTER WITH A POPULATION OF OVER 30.000 CAMP PAULSBURG AND THE SANATORIUM THERE IS A SINGLE LINK- A MEN. Lying BETWEEN CAMP AND TOWN IS SHAFTOE RESERVOIR SUPPLY MYSTERIOUS PATIENT, ENTERED ON THE RECORDS AS PAUL PiENST. Sj; ING WATER TC> BOTH TOWN AND CAMP.. -. FERING FROM "MULTIPLE FRACTURES AND ABRASIONS OF THE S^ULL* | BRICK BRADFORD By William Ritt and Clarence Gray LEAVING BRICK AND ■ ARATO RECOVER : FROM i THOR i RECENT i NARROW ESCAPE FROM DEATH IN THEJUN6LE, WE RETURN TOKARKAR. CAPITAL OF TITANIA, TO FIND GrASOLINE ALLEY Anyway, It’s Good News I OUT OUR WAY By J. B. Williams ' OUR BOARDING HOUSE . . . with . . . Major Hoople UNCLE BUL6Y, I 60T TOME, YOU ARE A BRIGHT^ AA AN IDEA FROM TKB <Ygl LADj LEANDERjTO PROF" U AA\ SHOWER that Big OTTO \A>r BY YOUR DRENCHING /Y %} GAME ME; HOW ABOUT lAA BUT YOUR PLAN FOR SO AW" | USING THE ROBOT AS A |NG THE RICH MIGHT HA\F . \ 7 4y?7 HIGH-PRESSURE SALES— '&> LEGAL DRAWBACKS^ A/" Wdv\ MAN FOR WAR STAMPS JA SUPPOSE you TRY IT on w / / AA AN' BONDS WHEN A THE TADPOLES H§L ANYBODY WOULDN'T < AROUND THE |§P\ BUY, WE'D LET OTTO NEIGHBORHOOD,' , , ^ •> - /
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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June 1, 1942, edition 1
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