Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / June 7, 1942, edition 1 / Page 19
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n instruction comptometer niirhs Calculators, and a 1 Bmmercial subjects taught fP^Motte's Secretarial School. 313 church__St_ Tot' _ QUICK ANE °rhP,M on shotguns, cameras, lb plrv and clothing. Cape Fear foan Office. 12 So. Front. '"^$54xTAND UP nn Vour Signature Alone WILMINGTON FINANCE CO. yMURCHISON BLDG. yf\lTY-T 0 L 0 A N / Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry, gLrware, Men’s Clothing, Type s'* ghotguns, Musical Instru tc'and Anything of Value! ^KELSTEIN’S LOAN OFFICE ^ •Crngton's Oldest and Largestl" "'yrtmt and Market Streets Lost and Found . 'FEMALE GORDON SET -pr long bair, jet black. An swer? to -‘Queenie.” Phone 4392. Reward. _. MASONBORO INLET, F mall skiff. 19 ft. long, 3% width, frwner must identify. 813% N 4th St._ ,.,(i Office Equipment -Typewriters & adding ma rhines All makes adjusted and rpnaired. L. C. Smith & Corona Typewriters. Alien-Wales Adding Machines. H. F. Wolfe. Agt., 114 Princess. Phone 5783. 'classified display 2 WEEKS OLD CHICKS Started Chicks—Two weeks old, 12c each. These are very easy to raise. Will make 2-lb. fryers in 6 weeks. Large and heavy, easily raised; no brooding or special care needed. Get your chicks now — 5,000 on hand’ more arriving daily. Healthy bloodtested vigorous stock: all leading breeds—Reds, Rocks, Leg horns. Anconas, Cornish. Wyandottes. eie.. Ducks, T u r k e ys. Feeders Waterers, Brooders, etc. 4 WEEKS OLD CHICKS Special: 2,000 large 4 week old Barred Rocks, ready to go out on the yard. Many weigh over 1-2 lb. 20c each. ROUDABUSH'S SEED STORE 31 South Front Dial 6030 125 Paint-Papering PAINTING DONE BY A13ELECT crew of neat, fast, sober men For estimates dial 2-2951 Wil mington Decorating Company. 130 Professional PASTELS AND PORTRAITS done from photo and one sitting See James Book Store, 113 Mar ket. 135 Personal NOSTRADAMUS FORETOLD OUR entry—into the first World War to the very month and year. He told about Hitler and prophesied the year and manner of his dfalr' iFor FREE copy of some of Nostradamus’ and other fa mous prophesies relating to this war, write to Literature and Sta tionery Service Guild, 243 West Barnard Street, West Chester, Penna. 136 Poultry FOR SALE: LAYING HENS, Rhode Island Reds, Everlay Strain, Reducing breeding flock. Phone 7564 any evening. BLOOD TESTED BABY CHICKS Special: : Positively 2 weeks only; Special asst’d. (our selec tion) $3.-50 per 100. Lge. Wh. Eng. Leghorns (as hatched) $3.95 per 100. Lge. White Eng Leghorn Pullets $9.95 per 100. Reds, Bar or White Rocks $5.95 per 100. Gt. Leghorn Broilers $2.50 per 100. Jumbo Minorca X’s Broilers $3.00 per 100 Quaker Brand Chicks. 37 S. Pearl St., Bridgeton, N. J. BLOOD TESTED BABY CHICKS Feeds and Poultry Supplies T. W WOOD & SONS $$$ IN POULTRY BUY OUR bloodtested baby chicks. Profit able fryers, early layers. Rouda bush’s Seed Store. 139 Radio and Repairs FRENCH RADIO CCL HALT.I. crafters radios. Complete serv- . ice, any make. Public address systems for rent 1304 Market St Dial 9878. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY 139 Radio and Repairs SHACKELFORD’S RADIO REk pair Service. Any make—any model. 123 Grace St. Dial 7817 Commercial Frigidaire Refriger ation. 150 Real Estate LIST YOUR RENTALS & SALES With US — A-l Service Frank G. Harriss 216 Princess St. SALES, RENTALS. INVESTMENT MOORE-FONVIELLE REALTY CO. We are equipped to serve you 155 Seeds-Plants-JBulbs WOOD’S YELLOW SOY BEANS, early spreckled, Osceola, and Bunch Velvet Beans. Cow Peas. Sudan Grass. T. W. Wood and Sons. 317 No. Front St. QUALITY SEEDS Soybeans, Cowpeas, Velvet Beans, Crotolaria, Sudan Grass. Complete Stocks of Seasonable Seed. CROSS SEED CO. 12 Market St. Dial 6868 TOMATO. CABBAGE. ONION, lettuce plants fresh daily. Com plete stocks peas, beans, corn, other seasonable seeds. Carpet grass, lespedeza. Flower seeds, bulbs fertilizers. Roudabusn’s Seed Store, Corner Front and Dock Sts. PROTECT YOUR GARDEN from- insect; by spraying or dust ing regularly. We carry a com plete line of sprayers, dusters and insecticides for the Victory Gardener and Truck Farmer. Let us help you with your spray problems. T. W. Wood and Sons, 317 No, Front St, Dial 462U! RED, PINK AND WHITE VER bena, Dahlia Flowered Zinnias— Pink and Mixed Petunias, Blooming plants. Miss Keyes, 903 Princess. 156 Situations Wanted YOUNG LADY WANTS GENERAL office work or sales work Ex perienced. Phone 4663. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ATT E A T I O A ! New Job Starting At Camp Davis 20 COMMON LABORERS NEEDED MONDAY MORNING 40c Per Hour Job Will Work 60 Hours Weekly As Soon As It Gets Underway Apply To The Field Oifice: WHEATLEY AND MOBLEY CAMP DAVIS ★ Either A Modern New Five Room Victory Home. ' ★ Or This Accumulation Of Worthless Rent Re ceipts. - - - EITHER WILL COST YOU THE SAME AMOUNT. AND YOU MUST BUY ONE OF THE TWO NOW IS THE BEST TIME TO BPY YOPR OWN HOME SEE THE NEW VICTORY HOMES IN BEAUTIFUL PRINCESS PLACE YOU CAN BUY NOW With As ^ Down Little As IB ■ Payment REPRESENTATIVE AT TIELD OFFICE 2:00 To 9:00 P. M. Daily 309 Lake Drive Dial 2-2404 j FOSTER-HILL REALTY CO. (Exclusive Agents) 160 Transfer and Storage Hauling of all Kinds Heavy Hauling a Specialty Dial 9889—Day or Night _C. D. Parker, Transfer 170Wanted WANTED TO BUY: GOOD USED furniture; beds and springs. Bost Furniture Co., 29 So. Front St. REFINED COUPLE DESIRES furnished or unfurnished house or apt. References exchanged. “A. W.”, care Star-News. WANTED: 2 OR 3 ROOM FUR nished apartment, close in town. Dial 5733 Monday. WANTED BY COUPLE: 2 UN furnished rooms for light house keeping. Dial 22029. WANTED EVERY WEEK: FOUR to eight hundred chicks weighing two to three and one half pounds each. W. M. Todd, 613 Castle Sr.. WANTED: USED FURNITURE. H. Evenson Furniture Exchange. 716 Castle St. Dial 3809. WANTED Desirable listings of property for sale. In convenient loca tions anywhere in the City, Suburbs, Beaches or County. In fact, anywhere in this County and Surroundings. See Us Immediately MOORE-FONVIELLE REALTY COMPANY “Realtors” 201 Princess Street —or— Dial 4438-4430 W. A. Funvielle, Pres. Lloyd W. Moore, Vice-Pres. W. D. Jones, Sec.-Treas. Salesmen: Louis O. Fonviello Lloyd W. Moore Paul A. Bergen John V. Fergus WANTED: TRUCK TO MOVE three rooms of furniture from Portsmouth, Va., by 12th to Wil mington. Must be reasonable. Phone 7147 after 7 p. m. Britt Moore. WANTED: THREE ROOM UN furnished apartment now or by July 1. Dial 3931. WANTED TO BUY: USED SMALL safe. Must be reasonable. Tele phone 6995. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY' SPECIAL! STUDIO COUCHES Assorted $rQ.50 Colors D«/ up TERMS ARRANGED Jones Furniture Co. 18 South Front St, Dial 5751 DAVIDSON BEGINS GRADUATION FETE Dr. Tennis E. Gouwens Will Deliver Baccalaureate Sermon Today DAVIDSON, June 6.— (JP) —The 102nd Davidson college commence ment program opened today with the annual senior-alumni luncheon, class day exercises and a faculty reception. Cameron Morrison of Charlotte, former governor and U. S. Senator and now Democratic nominee for Tenth district representative, spoke at the luncheon. Dr. Tennis E. Gouwens, pastor of the Second Presbyterian church of Louisville, K'y., will deliver the baccalaureate sermon tomorrow. The exercises will close Monday when 29 candidates will receive Bachelor of Arts degrees and 95 degrees of Bachelor of Science. Dr. James A. Jones, pastor of the Myers Park Presbyterian church of Charlotte, was elected president of the Alumni associa tion, succeeding Harlee Branch of Atlanta, Ga. J. J. Barnhardt of Concord was re-elected vice-president. John Payne was re-named Alumni sec retary and Frank L.. Jackson, col lege treasurer, was re-elected as sociation treasurer. The following were introduced as new members of the Alumni council: A. C. Winn, president of the stu dent body; J. M. Owens, president of the Y. M. C. A.; H. M. Darby, editor of the Davidsonian, news paper; J. P. Rudolph, J. C. Cald well, J. L. McCall and W. H Sprunt. STUDY~SHOWS old COLOGNE DESTROYED (Continued from Page One) western Europe to the heart ot the Reich. The air ministry news service said the big railway workshops in Nippes, a suburb of Cologne, also were hard hit. A single area of 660,0?© square yards was reported bomber and burned into ruins in the Ehren fields section, northwest of the city, where thousands of industrial workers lived. 170 Wanted WANTED TO RENT OR BUY Wheel chair. Call E. M. Mal lard, 4885, St. Francis Hotel. WANTED: SMALL HOUSE OK apartment, furnished or unfur nished. Dial 2-2191. SMALL WOOD ICE BOX. MUST be cheap for cash. Phone 7701-W. Inquire Lockamy’s Station, Sea gate. WANTED: OCCUPANT FOR country store, careful references required. “B. E.”, care Star News. ■i mu i in mi mm— D OGS leap at the chance to switch to Kasco. They i don’t know about Kasco's 18 ingredients that assure complete nutrition—that fill them with vigor and vitality—but they do know that Kasco tastes good. You’ll like Kasco because it saves you money. You’ll find that a 5 lb. bag of Kasco will go as far as 15 usual size cans of canned dog food. Kasco, being a dry food, goes three times as far. fcivMMMJWiiaii COMPLETE BUY KASCO ^mmion ITAT ! 1 H T. W. WOOD & SOWS -SEEDSMEN SINCE 1879 317 No. Front St. Dial 4620 FOR SALE - D. 1. GORE RESIDENCE Wrightsville Sound This (Beautiful Home At Greatly Reduced Price! Overlook ing Inland Waterway and Runs to Low Water Mark Pier to Channel. Lot Size 100x300. All Modern Conveniences. Two Baths. Eight Large Bedrooms FOR APPOINTMENTS CALL WILLETTS REALTY COMPANY Dial 5233 HOOPER JOHNSON, Sales Mgr. 124 Princess St. Fire Insurance Industry Will Help War Damage Corporation The fire insurance industry will act as fiduciary agents for the War Damage corporation in writ ing policies of protection against enemy attack to supplant the blan ket protection now in force which, by law, expires June 30, accord ing to an announcement by Sec retary of Commerce Jesse Jones made public here yesterday Dy Rep. J. Bayard Clark of Fayette ville. Persons desiring such protection may make application through lo cal fire insurance agents and brok ers, Jones said. The necessary manual of rates, rules and regulations and applica tion blanks will be distributed on or about June 20. Policies will be issued for a 12 month period to cover physical loss of real and personal property which may result from enemy at tack or action of our own forces in resisting enemy attack, he said. Blackout, sabotage, capture, seiz ure, pillage, looting, use and oc cupancy, rent, rental value, or oth er indirect loss or consequential damage will not be covered. Effort has been made to provide reasonable protection at as low a cost to the insured as possible. Losses occasioned by the war are a national problem, he said, and Congress therefore specified in leg islation that rates should be ge ographically uniform. No protection will be given for accounts, bills, currency, deeds, evidences of debt, securities, mon ey and bullion. Jewelry, furs, pre cious and semi-precious stones, statuary, paintings, pictures, etch ings, antiques, stamp and coin col lections, and manuscripts will be protected for individual owners up to $10,000, with a $5,000 limit for any one article, and for museums and dealers up to $100,000, with a $5,000 limit for any one article. Jewelry and furs up to $1,000 may be included as residential contents under a 10-cent rate. Growing crops will be protected up to $100,000 per single owner; pleasure watercraft and aircraft up to $10,000, while not in use. The insurance companies coop erating in the program will as sume 10 per cent of all losses in excess of net premiums collected after expense, with a maximum aggregate loss to them of $20,000, 000, with a corresponding percent age and amount of net profits, if any. The fiduciary agents will be paid 3% per cent of premiums collect ed to cover their costs and over head, with a minimum of 50 cents per policy and a maximum of $700. The producers—insurance agents and brokers—will be paid a com mission of 5 per cent of premiums collected with a minimum of $1 per policy and a maximum of $1, 000 per policy. For the present insurance will be written in the continental U. S., Alaska, Hawaii, Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, and the Canal Zone. U. S. SINKS, DAMAGES 13 T0 *5 JAP SHIPS (Continued from Paffe One) “Pearl Harbor has now been partially avenged. Vengeance will not be complete until Japanese sea power has been reduced to im-_ potsnce. We have made substan-’ tial progress in that direction. Perhaps we will be forgiven if we claim we are about midway to our objective. “The battle is not over. “All returns have not yet been received. It is with full confi dence, however., that for this phase of the action the following enemy losses are claimed: “Two or three carriers and all their aircraft destroyed, in addi tion to one or two carriers bad ly damaged and most of their aircraft lost; “Th~ee battleships damaged and at last one badly; to claim a major Japanese dis aster. His statement tonight that “substantial progress” had been made in the direction of reduc ing Japanese sea power to “im potence indicated that the re pulse of the powerful enemy task force was fast resolving itself into a disaster for the enemy. The assault on Midway, regard ed here as Japan’s first major move to occupy the Hawaiian Is lands, crumpled with greater dam age and casualties to the troop convoy and battlefldet than the Japanese' inflicted in their peace talk cloaked attack on Pearl Har bor. The Japanese invasion force, far from surprising the defenders of Midway, was engaged in battle be fore its advance raiding force could soften the defenses of the tiny westernmost bastion in the Hawaiian group, and before its troopships could come close enougfi even to attempt a landing. Just as in the battle of the Coral Sea, this invasion force was hit more than 1,000 miles from its probable ultimate objective—Oahu Island. On the face of official reports CLASSIFIED PrrDLAY Get Extra Profits on Finishing Steers with Quaker Sugared Schu macher, a feed that builds real flesh and finish! CUGARED Schumacher enjoys ^ wide reputation with profit wise feeders because its remark able blend of carbohydrates, .j minerals and conditioning in gredients makes it ideal for get ting beef and swine to market size and finish at an early age. In cubes or meal. QUAKER SUGARED SCHUMACHER FEED ORDER NOW FROM J. J. ALLEN & SON Corner Water and Dock Sts. DIAL 5762 on the first three days of battle, the conflict appears so far to have been a spectacularly and fiercely fought series of engagements with Japanese airmen fighting like sav ages and machine-gunning Ameri can airmen as they floated down ward in parachutes or bobbed on the surface of the sea in rubber boats. Admiral Nimitz gave no indi cation how the battle was pro gressing tonight. (That the smashing blows dealt by United States forces was re garded in Washington as a com plete victory for America was in dicated in a message sent to Ad miral Nimitz by Admiral Ernest J. King, commander in chief of the United States fleet. The mess age read: (“The navy, marine corps and coast guard join in admiration for the American naval, marine and army forces, who have so gal lantly and effectively repelled the enemy advance on Midway, and are confident that their comrades in arms will continue to make the enemy realize that war is hell.”) Pilots Carry Attack Army, navy and marine corps pilots bore the brunt of that at tack and carried the fight to the invading fleet itself, the greatest enemy armada yet to venture into waters of the eastern Pacific. The American counter-attack was so ef fective that the only further re ported attack on the heavily-forti fied little island itself, was from the guns of a Japanese submarine Thursday night. The size of the invading fleet, or the American forces opposing it, were not revealed while the battle continued. Admiral Nimitz mentioned only activity of American air forces, which “added another shining page to their record” and submarines. One submarine blasted three tor pedoes into an enemy aircraft car rier which had already been dam aged by United States bombers. “While to early to claim a major Japanese disaster,” a com munique from the admiral said “it may be conservatively stated that the United States control remains firm in the Midway area. “The enemy appears to be with drawing but we are continuing the battle.’’ He was high in his praise of American officers and men who participated in this engagement, the greatest battle to be fought in American waters since the Jap anese sneak attack on Pearl Har bor Dec. 7. His communique told of more Japanese treachery in machine gunning aviators who bailed out from crippled planes and shot others drifting in rub ber life boats. Combined American naval and land fo~ces have been preparing for just such an attack since the handful of marines garrisoning the island were first attacked on De cember 7. The miniature island is the last in the chain of the Hawaiian Is lands, extending from Honolulu like a finger pointing toward Tok yo, it lies near the international dateline about 1.200 miles f-om Pearl Harbor, and almost as close to the Japanese bases in the Mar shall Islands, southwest of Mid way. MANOR To°NnA¥ Deanna Durbin, Chas. Laughton —in— 'IT STARTED WITH EVE" Feature at: 2:05 3:54 5:43 7:4? 9:41 MONDAY—TUESDAY Mickey Rooney in ‘Andy Hardy’s Private Secretary’ WEDNESDAY—THURSDAY Jack Benny in “Buck Benny Rides Again” With Rochester, Andy Devine FRIDAY—SATURDAY DOUBLE FEATURE! Gena Autry in "MOUNTAIN RHYTHM" With Smiley Burnette - ALSO - The East Side Kids in "FLYING WILD" BRITISH BOMBERS RAID FRENCH COAST] (Contlnurd from Pate One) ported over the English south coast today. Bombs were dropped but damage and number of cas ualties were declared small. Bomb-carrying Hurricanes es corted by Spitfires scored hits on airdrome buildings and the peri meter of the track at Maupertus, on the Cherbourg peninsula, the news service added. Hundreds of Britain’s fighter craft appeared to rule the air over the enemy-occupied coast tonight as British quarters estimated that more than 3,000 bombers in the past week had dropped their de structive cargoes on cities of the reich. beginning with Cologne. There on last Saturday night, the air ministry said, photographs showed eight square miles of the most vital factory districts and thickly populated regions of that Rhineland city's 100-square-mile area had been razed in a single holocaust caused by 1,130 bomb ers. This area was eight times that which the Nazis claimed to have burned out .1 London in their great fire 1 id of Dec. 29, 1940 Fires in th. R’ hr, lighted by the RAF’s third s. ang attack of the week last night, still fed tonight on the factories upon which Hitler had counted to equip his armies for mighty offensives. This attack was not so great as that of Monday night when 1,036 bombers took for their targets the crowded retorts and blast furnaces of the Essen area in the Ruhr, but observers believed it was equal or almost equal to that of the follow ing night when about 300 heavy planes participated. Returning fliers said it would have been “big stuff before this week’s bomber surge.” -V GREATER ATTACKS ON GERMANY SEEN (Continued from Page One) week from conferences in London to arrange for American air power to join the aerial offensive on a major scale.. “At least 3,000 planes must be in these flights to assure an aver age of 1,000 a night, since there will be some nights when weather will prevent flying, and the British are said to be planning on 30,000 planes a month," the periodical said. “More than 120 ’dromes would beuneeded, and Britons say this will be possible. But that is for British planes. When the United States gets into the fight, it will need probably 150 more air dromes. “Since the United States is to assume charge wherever possible, this will mean a force of at least 400.000 Americans for duty in the British Isles. It must be remem bered that 20 ground men are nec essary for every one in the air. “During the summer time when darkness lasts fewer hours than in winter, the sending away of 3.000 bombers would be a colossal task for airdromes. “Yet the British have said they can handle this many, so why need there be any doubt that Americans can take care of at least that many? Turn any one of hundreds of American Knudsens on the job and see how they will work.’’ 2 nGawuv Starts Today 2 P. M.^H \ Mighty Thrills! ' Rudyard Kipling's “JUNGLE BOOK” In Technicolor! Starring Sabu STARTING WED. Riotous Comedy! Gary Cooper, Barbara Stanwyck — In “BALL OF FIRE” With Oscar Homolka, Dana Andrews, Gene HELD OVER! Spencer Tracy, 1 Katherine Hepburn, j in — “WOMAN OF THE YEAR” TUES. & WED.—*1 Big Days — ON THE STAGE 'MODELS and MELODIES Plus Full Screen Program* THURS. - FRI. - SAT. Humphrey Bogart, Conrad Veidt — In ‘ALL THROUGH THE NIGHT” J jdfH lii&mcT TODAY & MONDAY! f/fCpM)Nfcvn Fun Sensation! [([■McM ' "BUTCH MINDS \ Virginia Bruce, Brod | \ ■ Crawford, Dick Foran \M TUES.-WED. — Gable and Turner in “Honky Tonk” * \ S THURS—John Boles — In j ■ “ROAD TO HAPPINESS’’ tM FRIDAY - SATURDAY k Buck Jones, Tim McCoy, Ray Hatton — In TODAY & MONDAY! ~ Priscilla Lane, Betty Field, Richard Whorf “Blues In The Night" TUES.—Ann Sothern — In “GOLD RUSH MAJSK" WED. — Tim Holt — In “THUNDERING HOOFS" THURS.—Lake it McCrea in “Sullivan's Travels” j FRIDAY - SATURDAY The Range Busters — In “ROCK RIVER j RENEGADES" i
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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June 7, 1942, edition 1
19
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