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RADIO fWMFD Wiimiaftoa 1400 KC V MONDAY, MARCH 19 7:30—"Family Altar.” 7:45—“Musical Clock” 8:00—News with Maitia Agronsky. 8:15—"Musical Clock” 8:30—Correspondents Around toe World 8:45—Rosa Rio 9:00—The Breakfast Club with Don Mc Neill. 10:00—My True Story 10:25—Aunt Jemima Show. 10:30— “Let’s Dance" 10:45—The Listening Poet 11:00—Breakfast in Hollywood — Tom Brenamen 11:30—Gil Martyn. Newe 11:45—Jack Berch and His Boyi 12:00—Glamour Manor 12:30—Farm and Home Makere 1:00—Baukhage Talking—Whites’. 1:15—Musical Interlude. 1:25—News — Wilmington Star-News. 1:30—1The Vagabonds. 1:45—Piano Playhouse. 2:00—John B. Kennedy—News. 2:15—Ethel and Albert. 2:30—Sunny Side of the Street. 2:45—Yours Alone. Ti 3:00—Songs by Morton Downey. __ 3:15—Ladies Be Seated. 3:30—Appointment with Life. 4:00—Time Views the News. 4:15—Church of God. 4:30—Reports from Abroad. 4:45—Hop Harrigan. 5:00—Terry and the Pirates. 5:15-Dick Tracy. 5:30—Lone Ranger—Merita. 6:00—Kieman’s News Comer. 6:15—Musical Interlude. 6:25—News — Wilmington Star-News. 6:30—Ten, Two Four Time. 6:45—Unfinished Business— Red Cross Program. 7:00—Headline Editions. 7:15—Raymond Gram Swing—New*. 7:30—Social Security Program. 7:35—Let's Dance. 8:00—Ted Malone—Top of the Evening. 8:15—Johnson Jubilee Singers. 8:30»-Blind Date. 9:00—The Jerry Wayne Show. 9:30—Victory Parade of Spotlight Bands 9:55—Coronet Story Teller. 10:00—Guy Lombardo and His Royal Canadians. 10:30—Armed Forces Playwriting Contest OVER THE NETWORKS MONDAY, MARCH 19 Eastern War Time. P. M. Changes in programs as listed due to corrections by networks made ,too late to incorporate. 5:45—Front Page Farrell Serial — nbc Wilderness Road, Serial Drama — cbs Capt. Midnight, a Sketch — blu-east Hop Harrlgan in Repeat — other bru Tom Mix Serial Series — mbs-basic 6:00—News Report for 15 Mins. — nbc Quincy Howe and News Time — cbs Walter Kieman and News — blu-east Repeat of the Terry Serial — blu-west Chick Carter. Detective Repeat — mbs 6:]5—America’s Serenade; Sports — nbc Dyn Murray Chorus. Orchestra — cbs Repeat from Dick Tracy — blu-west Serial Superman’s Repeat — mbs-west 6:30—Sally Moore in Songs Show — cbs Repeat of Jack Armstrong — blu-west House of Mystery Repeat — mbs-west 6:45—Lowell Thomas & Newscast—nbc World News and Commentary — cbs Peggy Mann and Songs — blu-basic Capt. Midnight in Repeat — blu-west Repeat of Tom Mix Serial — mbs-west 7:00—Como's Supper Club — nbc-basic Jack Kirkwood’s Radio Show — cbs War Correspondents Broadcast — blu Fulton Lewis, Jr.. Comments — mbs 7:13—War News from the World — nbc Hedda Hopper from Hollywood — cbs Raymond Gram Swing Comment — blu Mutual Musical. Short Concert — mbs 7:30—Carolyn Gilbert and Songs — nbc Bob Hawk * Quiz Show — cbs-basic Dancing Music Half Hour — other cbs Lone Ranger’s Drama of West — blu Bulldog Drummond Adventures — mbs 7:43—Kaltenbom and Comment — nbc g:00—Cavalcade of America Play — nbc Vox Pop by Parks and Warren — cbs Ted Malone’s Overseas Show — blu Cecil Brown’s News Comment — mbs 8:15—Lum and Abner Serial Skit — blu Curt Messey’s Broadcast Time — mbs 8:30—Howard Barlow & Concert — nbc Burns and Allen Comedy Show — cbs Blind Date and Arlene Francis — blu Sherlock Holmes & Dr. Watson — mbs 8:35_Five Minutes News Period — cbs 9:00—Voorhces Concert & Guest — nbc CBS Radio Theater, Hr. Drama — cbs Jerry Wayne and Music Show-blu Gabriel Heatter and Comment — mbs 9:15—Dramas from Real Life — —mbs 9:50—Information Please, a Quiz — nbc Spotlight Bands, Guest Orches. — blu Music of Worship, a Concert — mbs 9:35—Fi\c Minutes Story Teller — blu j0:00—Contented Concert Orches. — nbc Screen Guild Players & Guest — cbs Guy Lombardo and Orchestra — blu Anita Ellis Sings Her Songs — mbs 7015—Raul Schubert in Comment — mbs 10:30— Doc. I. Q. and Quiz Series — nbc The Johnny Morgan Show — ebs-east Bob Hawk Quiz Repeat — other cbs To Be Announced (30 mins.) — blu Half Hour for Dance Music — mbs 11:00—News for 15 Minutes — nbc-basic The Supper Club Repeat — nbc-west News; Variety, Dance 2 h.—cbs & blu Newfreel; Dance Orches., 2 h — mbs 1113—Variety and News to 1 a.m. — nbc _v Finnish Election Count Complicated By People Displaced During War HELSINKI, March 18—ta>)—Fin land’s first parliamentary election since 1939 ended tonight amid in dications that a clear-cut picture of the political complexion of the new national assembly might not be known for several days. Voting, generally far heavier than in the election six years ago, ended at 8 p.m. and election boards : throughout the country began count ! jr.g ballots, but various factors in dicated the process would be slow. One circumstance—displacement of hundreds of thousands of per sons as the result of German deva station of Lapland and the ceding of eastern border areas to Russia under the armistice — made the counting by unfamiliar election hoards the more difficult. -V 12 Persons Are Killed In Air Raid On England LONDON, March 18— (JP>— A shower of bombs killed 12 and in jured many at a northern English town last night in the first raid on Britain by piloted enemy planes since March 3. Fragmentation bombs splattered into busy streets, leaving dead and injured on the pavement. Victims included servicemen home on leave. Damage was described as only superficial. HER THANKSGIVING DAY RED BUD, 111., March 18.—(U.R)— Army Nurse Lt. Rosa Reaper has written friends in Red Eud, 111., that she will always celebrate her Thanksgiving on Feb. 3, the day she was liberated from the San To mas prison camp on Luzon. Romance Launched With Ship ■ mm——gBBBI A love story as well as a ship was launched when the U. S. S. Harold J. Ellison, 2,200-ton destroyer, slid down the wavs at a Staten Island, N. Y., shipyard. It was then that June Havoc, lovely Broadway star (shown at right) declared her love for Lt. George H. Gray, Jr., (center) sole survivor of the Torpedo Squadron 8 exploit which turned the tide in the Battle of Midway. Ensign Ellison was lost and here Mrs. Raye Ellison, his widow (left), is about to christen the ship. 1. . —. ---— Today and Tomorrow —-By WALTER LIPPMANN Those who are supposed to know about the Bretton Woods proposals are divided. Thus the American Bankers Association and the New York State Bankers Association are leading the opposition. They speak with the authority of bank ers who have a long experience in international finance, and the posi tion they have taken reflects the views of Professor John H. Wil liams, of Harvard University, an expert whose views command great professional respect. But not all bankers, not even all international bankers,' agree with them. And among the recognized experts in this field, it is fair to say that the majority are with varying degrees of enthusiasm and hopefulness for the plan. Now when technicians disagree, the layman must ask himself whether the issue is at bottom technical, and beyond his under standing. There are, it seems to me, strong reasons for thinking that the issue does not lie in the field of technical currency prob lems but in that of the national policy of states, and that it has to be decided not by bankers and expers as such but by men of affairs. * * * If we compare Bretton Woods with the counter-proposal of the two bankers associations we shall find, I believe, that there are two different methods intended to ac complish the same result. Both assume that it is desirable to re store a system of international trading through markets which shall be as free as possible and by means of currencies which shall be as stable as possible in their rates of exchange. Both agree that to do this it will be necessary for the United States, as the great creditor nation, not only to invest abroad continuously over a long period of time but also to make short and intermediate loans to stabilize, or at least steady as against arbitrary alterations, the rates of exchange. The argument between the two jankers associations and the sup jorters of Bretton Woods is con lined to the manner in which these ! stabilization loans are to be made, j For it is agreed that long-term loans to be invested in develop ment projects abroad shall be made according to orthodox bank ing principles—that is by compel ling the borrower in each case to prove his credit-worthiness .to bankers. The question at issue is whether the stabilization loans can and should also be made in this fashion, w’hether governments will come one by one to a bank, will let it pass upon the soundness of their taxes, their expenditures, and the national and social poli-! cies which their budgets reflect. * * * The two bankers associations think that such a system, which in fact existed for generations and during the ’20s after the other war, is preferable, and that the other nations can, if Congress so decrees, be compelled to return to it. The delegates at Bretton Woods represented existing governments. They took a different view—that, whether or not the old relation be tween governments and interna tional bankers wal better, the na tions today wdll not return to it, and that they cannot be compelled to return to it because they do not have to. Bretton Woods recognized tnal stabilization loans touch the sensi tive nerve of modern nations— their social policy, their employ ment policy, their wage and price levels which, second only to politi cal independence, are now re garded in all popular governments as the very essence of their sov ereign control of their own affairs, which governments could come— So for stabilization loans they pro posed not a bank but a fund, to not as a borrower to a banker who may judge their affairs but—as members of an association who have the right to draw a fixed amount provided they could show they were observing conditions to which all had agreed in advance. In such an association they were prepared to open their books to one another. The bankers declare that this is contrary “to the usual lending^practice.” And so it is. The question is whether the post war governments will subject their employment and other policies to the kind of scrutiny and judgment which a banker exercises over a borrower in “the usual lending practice.” * * * In the American Bankers Asso ciation report it is said that “if the Congress should decide to cre ate only a single institution, the bank might by minor changes in its charter . . . carry on the desirable functions of the fund.” The author of that sentence is saying that if the Bretfon Woods plan is rejected, the other nations must and will accept the plan of the two American banking associa tions. I think they are very much mis taken in their estimates of what contemporary governments will do, or can be compelled to do. For the other nations the alternative to Bretton Woods is only theoret ically the bankers’ plan. In fact the alternative is to do what a growing proportion of the people in Britain and other highly devel oped countries wish to do anyway —to do their international trad ing under government control and direction, to make bilateral and regional agreements on imports, exports and monetary clearing ar rangements, and thus in world commerce to do away with the system of free enterprise in free markets. * * « The Bretton Woods proposal may seem radical and novel to the American Bankers Association. But in the British Parliament, even with—perhaps even because of—its huge Conservative major ity, in circles where “The London Times” and “The Economist” are read, the Bretton Woods proposal is under heavy criticism for rea sons quite the opposite of those which the bankers use here. The proposals are not regarded as radical but as reactionary by some as a well-meant but dubious effort to restore a desirable interna tional economy, by others as a dan gerous effort to tie the hands of their governments in order to re vive a system which is now dead and gone forever. Yet England, we must remem ber, is the ancient center of free enterprise in free markets with currencies stabilized on gold. If in England there is so much doubt and opposition to Inaking another attempt to restore the free market, what will be the disposiion of the oher European countries, every one of which is now committed to varying degrees of collectivism? * * * It will be, we may be sure, that if America-which alone still be lieves wholeheartedly in free en terprise—prefers not to make the difficult experiment of restoring free enterprise on conditions to which the others have only reluc tantly agreed, then the old inter national economy must be re garded as dead, and all their ener gies be concentrated on organizing a new and radically different one. -.Copyright, 1945, New York Tri-__ bune, Inc. Hitler Held Planning On Marriage, Breeding Of Family To Make War STOCKHOLM, archM 18.—(UP) —Adolf Hitler intends in the near future to marry the sister of his private physician and retire to an Alpine fortress to breed a family to take up Germany’s battle in the next generation, the free German press bureau reported today. The name of the woman was given as Brandt. Her age and oth er details were not given. The free German press bureau gave as authority for its report “obstinate rumors in Berlin.” ---V Two More Jap Admirals Held Killed In Action SAN FRANCISCO. March 18.— iTP)—Two Japanese vice admirals have met “gallant death” in ac tion against the United States Navy, Tokyo radio said Sunday, bringing to 94 the total of Nip ponese officers of admiral’s rank whose deaths have been announc ed in enemy broadcasts since last May. Domei, Japanese news agency, said Adm. Kiichi Endo, 55, was killed in the South Pacific in May, 1944. and Takeo Takagi, 54, died in battle in the Central Pacific last July. The broadcast was monitored by the FCC. -V ENOUGH ON HER MIND TOLEDO, O., March 18.—(U.R)— Jury commissioners Leonard Os born and Charles Strance decided to excuse a woman from jury duty after she told them she wouldn’t have time to serve on the panel. The woman said her husband was recovering from pneumonia, four children had to go to school, she was helping to care for a grand child, a son was on the way home from a German prison camp and four other sons were in the armed forces. ■-V JAPS HONOR SWEDE (SAN FRANCISCO. March 18.— (J!—)Widar Bagge, Swedish min ister to Japan, w’as decorated by Emperor Hirohito Sunday (Japa nese time) ‘‘in recognition of his contribution toward promotion of amicable relations between Swed en and Japan,” the Tokyo radio announced in a broadcast record ed by the Federal Communica tions Commission. -V- . Although the dove is often re garded as a symbol of peace, it is really a very quarrelsome bird. DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS DOWN 15. Coin (Pera.) 1. Distant 1. Cast off 18. Part of a 4. Mineral 2. Sloths whole spring 3. Right 19. Firearm 7. Lit again (abbr.) 22. Levee 9. Domesti- 4. Steps over 23. Pagoda cates a wall 24. Discover 1PM 12. Sacred bull 5. Peel 25. Garments |g|g| (Egypt.) 6. Wine (Hindu) IsImaIrIeM_ 13. High-seas receptacle 26. Sing robber 7. Jewish 27. Sum of 14. Boy's teacher money Saturday’* Answer nifckname 8. Fencing 28. Layer, as of 15. Govern swords rock 34. Sheer 16. Exclamation 10. Anesthetic 29. Variety of 37. Support 17. To charm 11. Shabby willow 38. Blunder 19. Jewel 13. Soft part of 31. Concurrent 40. Buddha 20. Part of fruit 32. Weird (Chin.) asT-’ v/m i‘ m i5 rwm , 23. Sesame 7 6 yy, * 10 11 24. Strike out_^ yy/ _ (Baseball) il '///. u ~“ 25. Begone! _ Yy 27. Organ of 14 '/// is “TT“ motion (fish) yy/. yy/. 28. Thus n ra ““ 77^ i* ~~ “ 30. Exclamation yy^^ of pleasure Jq“ yY IT- 77? iZ -- 31. Banquets yy, yy ;:s in=iii“ii bearing yyy % certificate — — yyp ---““ 35 Silkworm 36. Set into the ^-777p -rrr; ^ surface Yy/ '/Y 38. One of the ^--777^* Great Lakes yy. S:SST 35 tyMr WwrWxm^ CRYPTOQUOTE—A cryptogram quotation HNDYPWF RNW aQNGRO, OU W PQAAQYLWROGU DF DAAQN’GR O—j G R P D G E F. Saturday’s Cryptoquote—NO ONE IS SO OLD THAT HEi DOES NOT THINK HE HAS A YEAR TO LIVE—CICERO. Distributed by Kin* gestures Syndicate. Inc. I BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES— THAT’S DIFFERENT .CORF* . I . Y , IGfc IS A J ^ Wt'-b VAV i H C006\K!>. AK© j v.ooAKXb '!—'-’ '-■' i X.wx\.t 1 ! foOV! ow. m«=> Vb QGWL i_ cozvl MKV \ ■■ CftVL B| MS' ^ I —7 ? « i •? CSSKfWttVV' \ v\x" VOO^ S\Kiy VCAAYXOiJ^ V«V ^>eb\'b'\ ^K^:. WASH TUBBS— JUST A KNOCKDOWN BY LESI.Tk I rANY BONES BROKEN, MYOOCD MAN?SHALL 1 \ ' ;-/---'xX TAKE YOU TO A HOSPITAL? / I PO NOT FefcL V~ BADLY HURT. 1AM p NOT BROKEN EEN L THE BONES. TAKE ME A TO MV SEESTER^v gHARE-THE-RIDERS PIIEOUTOF MeKEE'i CAR TO MAKE ROOM FOR THE “VICTIM" IN THE FAKED ACCIDENT f ILL PICK K5U FELLOWS \ ( UP AFTER I'VE TAKEN j \J~HIS MAN HOME^ "7 RAMON! V CALM,,*AY PEAS l WHAT EES -<1£E“ ME-' V HAPPEN? V ^ GASOLINE ALLEY- _CALL FORMR?\UU[TI WALT, THERE'S NO^C RATTLE TRAP 7 THIS ■ USE OF TOUR TRYING 'TO WAS SKEEWS 1 MAKE ANVTHIWG OUT OF OLP BABY CARRIAGE. I ■THAT OLP RATTLETRAP. ■ MAYBE 'YOU CAN MAKE I IT RUN, BUI I WOULDN'T I WHEEL A GRANDCHILD OF MINE AROUND IN IT: . 1V4LT, 7HEPES A ]. I'M Busy's'll POLICEMAN hepe 1 , • E 70 see you. y ■ DR. BOBBS— By ELLIOTT and McARDLE I H1ZZ0NER MISS MINNIFER? J;! "7/~~ijG0 RIGHT wawoowi-, IN,JUDGE tin plunk.. HOWDY, JUDGE/, s. MORN IN,' AS SURE AS f WHATG' MAYOR “ THE SEASONS^ IT FOR ANY...ER JUDGE- p THIS ^NEWS'Tjj HERE IT IS.J Jf= TIME? 7rn> rmk -1 11 Sn~" TWENTY-FIVE THOUSAND^ FROM CACTUS JACK, FCR A 1 j MEDICAL CLINIC FOR-AHEM ••••"THE UN-FORTUNATE WHO I CANNOT AFFORD TO PAY FCR H MEDICAL TREATMENT.®® 1r- a i'" —m—:,r x-rrsfSffil [U ll H A If '! l l\ l\ A'/RSC-- |eorr. nit. Kr.-vc eeatvkks synl-icate. in. uqr" j _9INflHKIIEi^955B LaN ^ i 'v.'.' | . THE GUMPS— COMPLICATING IT WITH FLOWERS —-- ^ ^-£*■ ~ WHAT A BREAK .' ^ . A <JOOP JOB WITH 1 ANDY' I JUST HEARD A SWELL!THAT'S ENOUGH DOU6H TO FROM FROM HELEN ' I PROOF ENOUGH START PAYING OFF A LOOK'A FIFTY-POLL AR ] FOR ME SHE'S MY LITTLE DEBT. AND \ MONEY ORDER.' ^ <SOINO STRAIGHT' NO COMPLICATIONS- ’ JCTwI wuQUOfiTr-1r—»■ mmni • n—r-stervlf H /—^ \ PIP I SAV \ /VO COMPLICATIONS? J LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE “ BURNING QUESTION I TOWN THAT THERE WAS A PIECE OF A WOMAN’S COAT CLUTCHED IN THE JUDGE’S WAND, WWEN THEY FOUND HIS BODY-— MV COAT/ Birr HO ONE EVAH WILL BE ABLE TO PROVE THAT.' HUMPH/ FIRE%T6w7 I’LL OPEN THE DRAFT" EH? THE 'PWONJE/1 '' ' NO TELLING l WHO THAT IS ! | OUT OUR WAY— By J. R. WILLIAMS IF'tHIS RADIO IS GET- ''Hill/ I'M NOT COMPLAINING/ THIS IS "THE' f TING AWFUL RATTY-- 'I FIRST TIME 1 CAN REMEMBER NOTHING SOUNDS ANY ’ THAT WE WEREN'T MAKING PAY- < GOOD/ ILL BE GLAD MENTS ON A NEW CAR. OR RADIO WHEN THE WAR'S OVER OR SOMETHING, JUST BECAUSE , AND WE CAN GET A / YOU AND YOUR FATHER THINK / !\ MEW ONE--AND A r / YOU'RE OUT OF DATE IF YOU V A NEW CAR,TOO/ J / DON'T GET A NEW MODEL 'w' —EVERY YEAR/ THE ONLY IN- J 3g;-:"y VC l STALLMENTS WE'RE PAYING Y ^ |!» V mow ,s OM war Bonds, and J ' I Y N-, IT'S A GOOD FEEL-_-Y gfes': ^-v INJ<3/ w_ ■innnnirb- Afc ,-^ \ % DWy [ ^ WHV MOTHERS GET GRAV ,'t OUR BOARDING HOUSE ... with ... MAJOR HOOI’LE 60 YOU'RE THE OLApH BOR ? WHAT DOES ^ WANT PATRICK CHUNG X'M <§nV«S OLD LAUNDRY BN3/ A SUPPOSED To BOR ! —A MEAN, TAKE ? — \ — _ TT^p ' WELL, IP YOU'RE AN Jf X'M NOT A BORER, / ^ r'T-e< j INDIAN, X'LL HAND W( X'M A VORESTLEE- ^ ; °f0 YOU A BUNCH OP COULD BEND/ CIGARS AND KNOCK \ THIS BUM INTO /> 0^= YOU BACK IN FRONT j > THE SHAPE OF j . F'';,. OLo OP THE CIGAR. \ A BEETS STOR.E: / /—- \ COIL / r nn V'-Tr~^ i TfvAEV 7 SEl'TT C5kv4e TVAE i VJROKiS \ P\SU
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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March 19, 1945, edition 1
6
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