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Miss Hunsaker, l j. McCulloch Are Married Bridegroom Is Son of Mrs. j f, McCulloch of Elizabethtown _. I7ABETHTOWN. March 9.— EMrs. William Fay Hun Fairmont, West Virginia, , announced ihe marriage of daughter. Avarilla, to Nor tcel g McCulloch, Lieutenant, USNR., which was i'uininized on Friday afternoon at clock m Dillon, S C„ at the Methodist parsonage, the vows be C iakei before the Rev. Pierce f rnok pastor of the Dillon Meth Tim bride. is a member of the iUVES She was educated at Fair ' West Virginia, is a member Beta Sigma Phi sorority and . Business and Professional Semen’s c!ubs of West vir«inia The bridegroom is the son of , Edgar F. McCulloch and the f' ' senator McCulloch of Eliza bethtown. He received his educa oa at Davidson college and the iliiiversi'y of North Carolina. He is , member of the SAE social fra •e-nity. He volunteered for service L the United States Navy in No vember. 1941. and has recently returned from two years with tKe pacific Fleet. Prior to his entrance to the Navy, he was associate editor of The Bladen Journal. After a brief honeymoon, Lt. and JIrSi McCulloch came to Elizabeth town for a visit with the bride groom's family. At the expiration of their leave, Mrs. McCullock will -eturn to the Philadelphia Navy Yard where she is stationed and It McCulloch will return to sea duty. * ♦ * Bridge Party Slated Monday A bridge party will be given on Monday evening by the Business ar.d Professional Women’s club of 'filmington. The party will be held a! the Woodrow Wilson hut, Fourth and Princess street, and will begin at 8 o’clock. Persons desiring to make reser vations may do so by calling Ver na Sheppard, 7788; Ruth Humphrey 7741 or 5536, or Mrs. Louis B. Polvogt 7406. * * * Miss Frances Hayes Honors Bride-Eleci Miss Prances Hayes entertained this week at a lovely party at her home on Chestnut street when she honored Miss Patricia White, bride elect. The home was decorated for the occasion with a profusion of spring flowers. Upon her arrival Miss White was presented with a white corsage and the other guests with miniature nosegays of m i xe d flowers. During the evening games were played and prizes awarded toe winners. At the conclusion of the games each guest presented the honoree with crystal in her chosen pattern. Guests were then invited into the dining room, where at a beautiful ly appointed table, Miss White cut the wedding cake and Mrs. W. J. Hayes presided at the punch bowl. The following w e re present: Miss White, honoree, Mrs. T. D. White, Mrs. Charles Burke, Mrs. W. B. Tayior, Mrs. B. W. White, Mrs. Joe Baker, Mrs. W. J. Hayes, Mrs. M. G. Allison, Mrs. Louis Jenkins. Mrs. C. H. Hayes, Mrs. D. C. Padrick, Miss Mary Lilly Davis, Miss Catherine Davis, Miss Juanita Rankin, Miss Genevieve Steffins, Miss Peggy Barker, Miss Emily Carr, Miss Elizabeth Clarke and Miss Edna Bessent. jj * * * PERSONALS Colonel S. H. Morrow, who has been overseas for the past three years and who recently arrived in joe states from Paris, will arrive in Wilmington this morning to visit bis wife at their home, 115 North 16th street. • • • Mrs. A! G. Dickson is spending jhe ween-end in Rocky Mount with ber mother, Mrs. Edward Weav *r. • • • Mrs. N. a. Culbreth has returned ttUer home, Shore Gables at Caro Actress s Role Brings Advice-Seeking Servicemen’s Wives To Stage Door By ROSELLEN CALLAHjm , _ __ By ROSELLEN CALLAHAN NEW YORK.—When diminutive film star Martha Scott signed a contract to play the title role in the Broadway hit “Soldier’s Wife ’’ she took on, without knowing it at the time, the responsibility of act ing as adviser and morale-builder to all the servicemen’s wives with in a train-ride of New York Sitting in her attractively dec orated dressing room, Martha Scott said that one of the most perplexing problems these girls and their husbands faced was the financial independence the wnfes had gained. “The girls are torn between keeping their jobs after the war to help in those first hard years to set up a home, or giving them up as soon as their men return. The boys worry that their wives’ new - found independence may make a difference in their rela tionship. "Of course they think of me as the wife in the play who was faced with the problem of a career vs. homemaker and the difficulty of adjusting herself to a husband re turned from overseas,’’ she smiled, “but, of course, I can only advise them generally on such things. I don’t attempt to mold or adjust their lives,’’ she added. As she finished, a knock came at the door. It was a pretty dark haired girl who apologetically ex plained that she had just seen the show, and wondered where she could buy the pair ot bright-strip ed lounging pajamas which the actress wore in the first act when she welcomed her husband home from overseas. The girl’s husband was due back in the country for a 30-day furlough, and she felt that if she could look and act as the girl in the play did, she’d be sure his homecoming would be perfect. Tht wives aren’t the only ones who ask the actress for help. From overseas come letters from many of the girls’ husbands who thank Miss Scott for the courage she has given their wives. "But tell them to write more often, they plead.” The soldier’s wife in the play, it should be explained, wrote such provocative, amusing, revealing letters that her husband’s buddy sent them to his publisher father to be put in a book and it be came a best-seller. "But it’s so hard to write a let ter every day when nothing much Three soldiers’ wives visit Martha ScotU extreme right) backstage lO-read to her the latest letters from their husbands overseas*. nappens, tne wives complain to her. “It won’t be,’> Miss Scott as sures them, “if you’ll keep a few pads around and jot down things as they occur to you. Keep one by the telephone, by your night table and in your purse. There’s plenty that happens every day which will interest your husband. They don’t have to be world-shak ing events. He wants to hear about the baby cutting his first tooth, about the new recipe you concoct ed, about the chair you bought from a junk dealer and reupholstered with a pair of drapes you found at the bottom of the trunk.” Miss Scott, who has been made an honorary member of WIVES— a group of servicemen’s wives who organized to keep each other com pany while their husbands are ov erseas — goes down to their can teen very often on Sundays to help the girls serve supper to men passing through town. Canteens, she believes, are as much a mo rale-builder for the girls as the men. “It keeps them in touch with what' the men are going through and helps them to realize the changes in viewpoint they must ex pect from their husbands when they come home,” she says. This group, which has bought out the entire theater for two per formances of the play, tell Miss Scott they are planning to make their weight felt in maintaining peace after the war. They’re study ing international and national pol itics as closely as their ration book deadlines. “Politicians will find these girls will have a lot to say about the way the affairs of the nation are handled from now on,” Miss Scott is certain. Paris Designers Create New Styles "For Art's Sake" Only By ROSETTE HARGROVE PARIS, March 8, Every effort is being made this season by the Paris haute couture to emphasize the importance of the fashion in dustry in the economic life of France rather than as an expres sion of frivolity. Stylists stress the fact that the evening dresses shown were created only “for art's sake.” In order to avoid the crush wit nessed at last season’s showings, leading couturiers decided to hold special presentations for the press. The latter, nevertheless, ware sc numerous as to fill the salons to capacity, as, for example, at Mag gy Rouff’s collection. Despite al most insuperable material diffi culties, the styles shown by this creator featured the same wealth of details and fine handiwork, al though the fabrics themselves were definitely not comparable to pre-war standards. The general trend shows little change in sil houette, novelty residing in details rather than in new lines. Afternoon costumes show hips still accented, with full skirts gath ered at the waistline. Many are circular cut, with fullness main tained by pleated godets with the accent on back pleats. Much em phasis is placed at the tops, wdth generous fullness in bodices, which are slightly bloused in back in formal dresses, while simpler models show plain tailored fronts. USE BOLD tULUKSi Maggy Rouff features mod ernized elbow-length leg o’ mutton sleeves, often of intricately work ed patterns, tiny pleats and seam ing, both on formal afternoon dresses and coats. Maggy Rouff also launches the three-quarters sleeve with enormous gauntlet cuffs, often in contrasting fabric and color. Ensembles alternate- between full - length flared redingotes over matching or contrasting dresses with matching lining, and straight, unfitted, unbelted box jackets. Shoulders all through the collec tion show a built out, rounded line. Suits have wrist-length, man-tail ored jackets with nipped-in waists and fewer pockets than last sea son. Skirts have slender kick pleats or twin box pleats at back and front. Many pastel and bold - colored plaids are used both in dresses and coats, but usually in the form of plaid dresses and solid-colored full-length coats. Daytimers re place black with navy, greys, yel lina Beach after spending the past four weeks in New York and Hart ford, Conn. She was accompanied home by Miss Gay Chamberlin, of Hartford, who will be her guest for two weeks. lows, warm browns, beige and greige. Many prints are used, mainly with light grounds fea turing all - over wallpaper de signs or small motifs. Evening costumes alternate ro mantic hooped skirts and the sinu ous draped line with decorative ef fects massed at the bodice in the form of pailette or else “vest ment” embroidery, intricate tuck ing or down-thread work. Decol letes show an ultra-low sweetheart line, usually stressed with trim ming. of sleeveless black silk jersey of leeveless black silk jerse^ dinner dresses with full - gathered bodices and skirts and draped armholes. Several crepe numbers had skirts entirely embroidered with self-colored soutache or apr pliqued trellis design in self-fab ric repeated on leg o’ mutton sleeves and contrasting with plain bodices. Prices are even higher than last season. Dresses are pric ed at $300 at the present rate of exchange; ensembles are $500 to * * * Victory Menus By CHARLOTTE ADAMS Sunday Dinner In The Oven Roast Chicken Creamed Onion and Peas Roast Potatoes Cornsticks Molasses Pudding with Lemon Sauce (Recipes serve four) Creamed Onion And Peas 12 small onions 2 cups peas, canned or cooked 2 tablespoons butter or sub stitute 2 tablespoons flour 1 cup milk 1-2 cup liquor from peas Salt and pepper. Coop onions in salted water un til tender. Drain. Melt butter in saucepan. Remove from stove. Add flour, making smooth paste. Return to flrme, add milk and liquor from peas and stir con stantly until sauce thickens. Place onions and peas in baking dish Pour sauce over all. Cover with breadcrumbs and bake at 350 de grees 20 minutes. Molasses Pudding 1-4 cup sugar 1-8 teaspoon salt 1-4 cup molasses 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1-4 teaspoon cloves 1-4 teaspoon nutmeg 2 egg yolks 1 teaspoon vanilla 2 cups milk 1 tablespoon butter or substitute 1 cup soft bread crumbs Mix sugar, spices and salt to gether. Add molasses and egg yolks. Add butter to milk and heat. Add to mixture. Add bread crumbs and vanilla and pour into baking dish. Bake at 325 degrees 30 min utes. Serve with lemon sauce. Cake layers can be cut in half for frosting or filling by using a length of thread with a sawing motion. -V New combs are decorated with colored feathers made to look like tropical butterflies. t H GROCERS LEAD CHAMBER DRIVE Wilmington grocers are leading off in the new membership cam paign of the Chamber of Com merce, Walter J. Cartier, execu tive secretary of the Chamber, said yesterday saying the Chamber was planning to make a very defi nite bid for the membership of the 168 grocers in Wilmington and vicinity. Explaining that the Chamber was seeking to improve its ser vice and enlarge its work so it could give more time to indus trial and resort promotion, Mr. Cartier said the group was hoping to double its present membership, estimated at about 300. The membership committee plans to handle a portion of the campaign by mail and will send out letters to present members asking their support, he said, support, he said. The letters will go out early next week, he said, adding that the committee wanted to get ev erything in line before the annual meeting of the Chamber in April. -V A hint of nutmeg or mace in a cream sauce adds zip to snap beans. IT Color Mexicana by Alice Brooks All the color and gaiety of old Mexico are in these easily em broidered motifs. They’ll brighten your home and your spirits in no time. Mexican motifs can be used on all kinds of household linens. Pat tern 7340 has transfer of 8 motifs 2 3-4x4 to 7 1-2x10 inches. Send FIFTEEN CENTS in coins for this pattern to Wilmington Star-News Household Arts Dept. 259 W. 14th St., New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS and PATTERN NUMBER. Our new 32-page Needlework Book is yours for Fifteen Cents more ... 130 illustrations of de signs for embroidery home decora tion, toys, knitting, chochet, quilts. Deductions After Death Add To Grief By RUTH MILLETT Perhaps you saw the story of a Massachusetts mother who re ceived her son’s final pay check after he was killed in action in the Normandy invasion — with a $1.58 laundry deduction. She was shocked into declaring that she intended to write a letter to President Roosevelt, telling him the story, in the hope that no other mother would receive the same kind of letter. The laundry deduction was pure ly routine, and of course no hurt was intended. But parents of men killed fight ing for their country shouldn’t be hurt by such callous treatment. The grief and loss are hard enough for them to bear without having the business transactions made by the army hint in any way that their son was just anoth er serial number. GENTLENESS NEEDED If there were ever a place where it was important for business mat ters to be handled with gentleness and consideration for human feel matters bet ween the serv icn— and consideration for human feel ings—it is in the cases of routine matters between the services and the families of men who have died in service . Just such a thing as deducting $1.58 from a dead soldier’s pay for the washing of the clothes he will never wear again is likely to add bitterness to the grief of those who are trying to ease their loss with the knowledge, “He died for his country." Can they help but be bitter at the thought: “For his country which deducted laundry expenses from his last pay check.” If such business - like unfeeling procedure is a matter of money to the army, then shouldn’t spar ing parents’ bitterness, when they can’t be spared grief be added to the total cost of war? _v_ YANKS ENCIRCLE ITALIAN SECTOR ROME, March 9 —(UP)— Fifth Army troops, pressing toward Ver gato from three directions, com pleted a virtual encirclement jf the city with the occupation of Gar viano, one mile to the northeast, it was announced today. With the U. S. Tenth Mountain division firmly established in Car tel d’Adiano several miles to the west, and Brazilian units holding the village of Castelnuovo to the south, it appeared that the Ger man garrison in Vergato, 18 miles southwest of Bologna, might be preparing to abandon its strong hold astride the Pistoia - Bologna highway. Little opposition was en countered in the advance which netted Garviano, but German bat teries continued to shell the roads leading south and southwest from Castel d’Aiano. Heavy concentra tions of enemy artillery and mor tar fire also were directed against Allied positions on Mount Della Spe. On the central sector of the front where the Allies have been pinned throughout the winter months to an area roughly 10 miles south of Cologna, German forces can Army patrols venturing forward drew immediate artillery and mor tar fire. On the right flank a raid ing party reached an objective northeast of Monte Belmonte. An entire enemy platoon, together with mortar pieces, was captured in a futile attempt at infiltrating Allied lines. -V For easier handling place apples or stuffed peppers in muffin tins before baking. RATION ROUNDUP By The Associated Press MEATS, FATS, ETC. — Book four red stamps Q5 through S5 good through March 31. Stamps T5 through X5 good through April 28; Y5 and Z5 and A2 through D2 good through June 2; E2 through J2 good through June 30. | PROCESSED FOODS — Book four blue stamps X5 through Z5 and A2 and B2 good through March 31. Stamps C2 through G2 good through April 28; H2 through M2 good through June 2; N2 through S2 good through June 30. SUGAR—Book four stamp 35 valid for five pounds through June 2. Next stamp scheduled to be validated May 1. . SHOES—Book three airplane stamps 1, 2 and 3 valid indefinitely. OP A says no plans to cancel any. GASOLINE — 14-A coupons good everywhere for four gallons each through March 21. B-5, C-5; B-6 and C-6 coupons good everywhere for five gallons. FUEL OIL—Last year’s period four and five coupons and this year’s period one through five coupons valid everywhere throughout the heating year. "Wins By a Nose Pilot of this Navy Grumman Hellcat beat death by a nose as his plane, just before landing on a carrier, broke in half. Craft had been riddled with Jap ack-ack over Luzon. I " r Today and Tomorrow -By WALTER LIPPMANN n a A a-.mT-' T* 'V »T T . .... JL XV 'MU 4MJL -M. u iV The relation of France with the Yalta powers is much too serious a matter to be dealt with by ges tures in Paris and quips in Wash ington, by rumor, inspired stories and international repartee. There is a problem here which can be resolved only by high statesman ship—that is to say by a deter mination to look beneath and be yond the incident^, which are only the symptoms of the trouble. The problem is how to make the transition from the Big Three to the Big Four. 'In conducting the war the decision in fact lies with the three because, having made a decision, they are able to issue the necessary orders to the great armies, air forces, and navies which they command. In other words Stalin, Churchill and Roosevelt can, and no one else can, make military decisions. But when they come to the pacification and settlement of Europe over a long period of time, the Big Three do not have anything like the same France as a full partner from the beginning and through all stages. * * * The principle of the Big Three for war and a Big Four for the post-war was recognized at Yalta. But the application of this prin ciple has proved to be difficult, and will Undoubtedly continue to be vexatious of worse, until in the four capitals the difficulty is treated as a problem to be clarified rather than as an occasion for diplomatic maneuvering. For that it will be necessary to speak plainly and to say that first in Washington and then in Paris there has been a fundamental mis judgment of the French position in the closing phases of the Euro pean war and the opening phases of the European pacification. Mr. Roosevelt’s misjudgment, to begin with him, was, as has so often been said, not to have seen soon enough that a strong Francs was impossible except under De Gaulle, and that a strong France is indispensable to any settlement with Germany, and therefore to the reconstrutction of Europe. It is however, true that before Yalta, and indeed since last summer, Mr. Roosevelt has agreed intellectu ally, so to speak at the top of his mind, that for the post-war there must be a Big Four. Before Yalta he had come around to the opin ion that France should participate in the political decisions which would follow after the military de cisions of the Big Three. But there is a difference be tween an opinion which has been accepted without personal enthus iasm and a real conviction that for act two of Yalta it was vitally important to have France partici pating. So the matter, it appears, was not pressed when Stalin, who is disposed to count army divisions in international affairs, preferred to confine the conference to the great military powers and not to complicate the .conference by Gen eral de Gaulle’s presence. It was then assumed, much too casually, that the consequences of exclud ing France could be patched up by a little talk on the President’s warship in the harbor of Algiers. * * * It is by no means certain that the matter would have been patched up if they had met in Algiers, or even if Mr. Roosevelt had listened to better advice and had suggested a meeting at some port in southern France. For Mr. Roosevelt’s old error of waiting so long to recognize the France of De Gualle, thus leaving France to brood in isolation, has had a very serious effect on General de Gaulle’s own conception of French foreign policy. He in his turn has, a vtmuic tu uuua, maae a iunaa- t mental misjudgment. He has misjudged the meaning * of his pact with Vie Soviet Union. Believing himself diplomatically isolated by the United States, and also by Great Britain, he very properly went to Moscow and ob tained a mutual assistance pact j against Germany. But he seems to , have interpreted that pact as being j something more than an agree- , ment to enforce the German set- ! tlement, as being in fact an alli ance which made France and the Soviet Union political partners. This is, at least, what his subse quent actions indicate. For when he went to Moscow, the British fully expected that he would at once negotiate also a Franco-Brit ish pact. This he did not do, and in fact made a speech suggesting that he was in no hurry about a British treaty, and that American participation in the German set tlement, and in the world organiza tion, were of no urgent interest, now that France had a treaty with Russia. In his approach to the Dumbarton Oaks plan his mind appears to have been dominated by the same idea: that the Franco Soviet part was for Russia as he supposed it was for France, the foundation of foreign policy. * » * i This, it has now become quite clear, was never Stalin’s idea. For while Russia is strong enough, provided there is a wise and gen erous political solution in Poland, to deal with the Germans from the east, France alone is not strong enough to deal with Germany from the west. France is indispensable in the west. But France is insuf ficient without Britain, without the Low Countries, and without America, Therefore, Stalin has made it very plain to De Gaulle that the Franco-Soviet pact is not a thing in itself, is not an alternative to pacts with Britain and America, and that he will not permit it to be used in that sense. The pact is only one necessary link in a chain of pacts and ageements which must be forged to keep Europe and the world at peace. The con clusion is that De Gaulle cannot find French security by a two power alliance with Russia, and that having gone to Moscow, he will have to go also to London, and to Brussels and the Hague, and to San Francisco and Washington. * * » The problem of bringing France into equal partnership is soluble because it arises from errors of judgment, that can be corrected, and not from a conflict of in terest that is irreconcilable. The problem will be resolved when in Washington, and also in Moscow, it is as fully understood—as it already is in London — that the partnership of France is a neces sity, not merely an ordnament, in a European settlement; and when in Paris the real alignment of power and of national interests are seen without illusions. -V CHRISTENING CHARLESTON, S. C., March 9. —(U.R)—A military guard of honor composed of former University of Alabama students attended the christening of the destroyer-trans port, U. S. John Q. Roberts, at the Charleston navy yard yesterday. -V BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPS GEM STUDIO Photography Portrait and Commercial 119 Grace St. — Phone 6223 SWISS TRADE PACT BANS NAZI GOODS LONDON, March 9.— (UP)—The I new Allied-Swiss trade agreement signed yesterday in Bern entirely prohibits the transit traffic in iron and coal across Switzerland be tween Germany and northern Italy a British Foreign Office spokesman said today. This was one of the chief goals of the American and British delega tions, headed respectively by Lauchlin Currie and Dingle Foot. The agreement also reduces Swiss exports to Germany to 5 per cent of their 1942 figure, and this amount must be paid for with Ger man goods and not in gold, the spokesman said. He added that the agreement prohibits the supply of Swiss electric current to Germany and makes this current available to France. German funds in Switzerland are blocked under the agreement. The Allies agreed to* incresae supply shipments to Switzerland, the spokesman said. —-V •OUR FROM AREA ARE CASUALTIES The War Department has an lounced the names of three more ;oldiers from eastern North Caro ina, who have been wounded In tction in the European theater of var. The Navy Department an nounced the name of one Wil mington casualty. In each case the next of kin has neen notified, and will be kept in 'ormed by the War and Navy Departments as to the service man’s condition. Wilmington—James Alexander Cing, seaman first class, USNR. Mrs. Allean Powell King, 210 South Seventh street, wife. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Merman King, 307 North sixteenth street, parents. Kinston—Cpl. Charles H. Brown; Mrs. R. Brown, mother. Mt. Olive—Pfc. Albert Johnson; Mrs. Lillie S. Johnson, wife. Goldsboro T-5 Marshall B. Pen lington; Mrs. Docie B. Penning ;on, mother. -V 205TH CRAFT SET FOR CHRISTENING The S. S. American Banker, 305 th vessel to near completion at the yard of the North Carolina Ship building company, will be launched at 9 a.m. today under the sponsor ship of Mrs. George Seidler, of Wilmington. Mrs. Seidler is the wife of a leading assistant foreman in the Steam Engineers department of the shipyard. Her attendants will be Mrs. M. J. O’Donnell and Mrs. G. J. Howell, both of Wilmington. A C—2 type ship, the S. S. American Banker is being built for the United States Lines. •-V Police Seek Man To Tell Him of Sister’s Demise City police yesterday received a telegram from Mullins, S. C., asking them to locate a Casel Platt or Casel Jackson. The telegram read as follows: “Please try to locate Casel Platt or Casel Jackson. His sister is dead, and I want him to come at once.” Signed “Wilson Jackson”. Police said that the name is not in the City directory, or listed at the Draft Board. jl«tre« nV rv,e lei from snlffly, sneezy when vn?.f he?d colds starts to come each (?ut a Va-tro-nol up «£» Ms,° he!Ps prevent many VICKS VATRO NOL DR. MIKE J. PALMER OPTOMETRIST PHONE 4004 EYES EXAMINED — GLASSES FITTED 120 Princess St. UPSTAIRS OVER H. & W. CAFETERIA GLASSES REPAIRED LENSES REPLACED cJke (Qptical <Skop In the Jewel Box 109 N. FRONT ST. I Today, Quick, get mildly medicated ■ Cuticura. You’ll probably be amazed K how it helps relieve externally ■ caused pimples, rash, blemishes and ■ helps ease out blackheads 1 Preferred ■ by many nurses and some hospital*. ■ Buy today l All druggist*. ■ LET’S DANCE CAPE FEAR ARMORY 814 Market St. Tonight - 8:30 -• March 10th -- 8:30 TOMMY HEAD » ORCHESTRA Featuring BETTY GALLAGHER OUR WALTZ CONTEST IS GAINING POPULARITY EACH WEEK Admission $1.50 Per Person (Tax Included) __
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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March 10, 1945, edition 1
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