Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily Times-Gazette, 28 May 1947, p. 10

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PAGE TEN : Li, THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE WEDNESDAY, MAY. 28, 1947 On The Air Tonight and Thursday "YI/AFF-A-DAY "CFRB. 'WBEN (CBS-CBC) (NBC) TORONTO CIBC Ee RONTO OSHAWA "CHUM CKDO WKBW 1050 ARORA QOD, a hai aaas 3-ROMA Ethel a Albert Tad ula reek Review :15--Expert LAR :15--Bobby le Show be Allen Rol E Heirs 30--Court of fasting JBC Trail CFRB 30-The Nations Business :30--The et Siidsrsienvs YM. a wey 43 Polls Safety oty Tork 53-80 the Story Goes bliin by for Strings CBL 's Foreign Travel s Toreisn TeayCkeny . . CFRB = Auttion VoREY. BAA) f 1) il ut 10 FE ro WEBW 10:00--Musie of Manhattan CEKDO 10:00--The WGR 10:00--Kay Slose at the Organ CFRB 10 ig Story WBEN 1000-080 Ne National News CBL 15--CBO N up 1:15--Raln 25--Footnote :25--Late Shorts Sosuma :30--Buddy CBL :30--Martin ins Tung Time WGR :30---Invitation to Music CFRB :30--Music_Room Nations Bulletin t With CBL am, CKEY CFRB--WBEN--WGR ° ins Tune Time WGR Orch. CFRB {00--Katie's :00--Parade Adam 's Music Shop Daughter of Bands WBEN | 10:45--The CFRB 1085--Davia 10 :45-Novelette 11:00--News w | 11 00--Arthur Godtr 3 :00--Shady 11:00-- Road of Lit6 :00--Consumer 11:00--Fred Show 11:00--Morning Varieties 11:00--Breakfast in Hollywood 11:05~Make Believe Ballroom 11 :15--To 1 30--Th ry 11:30--Say it With Music . If 30--Aunt Mary 1:30 CuK Wagon Serenade 11 :35--Stork Club of the Alr 11:40--Interlude 11:45--Ted Malone * 11:45--Volce of Memory 11:45--Do 11:45--Laura Li 11:45=Lora 11:45--Rosemary 11:50--News ' 12:00--Easy 108 --Flok The. "Hits KEY [1 TiNow, - oh a d Harum 45---Jane Weston Valley Wi Sister y and Bob Be Announced e Hollywood Sto: You Remember imited Lawton ---- THURSDAY AFTERNOON Star For Today 5--Luncheon Musle Aunt Jenny Lucy Linton a hb a 5 BORERE BO D309 00 BO BI 09 bet put bb pus M4 3:00-1050 Matines 3:00--Life Can Be Beautiful. 3:00--Ladles Be Seated 3:05--Jerry 3:10--~Interlude 3:15--Salon 3: :15--Coff elody Inc. 3:30--Meetin' with Keaton a Young's Famil C --Reading Between the Lines Dr. Frederick A Hodge the Troubador Ladles Greene (News) Valley Program at Noon of Sing nging Malone Varieties Corner Malone of the World of Life Time Hour Concert Children Show e of the Alr te Spivak Orch. Journey Melody Groom Yours my of the Suns 'est, CFRB WGR--CKEY Herbert Concert Hour CJBC Burke Show CHUM | 10: 50_Metody Lane 4:10--Alrlane Trio i ay Recital 4:30--Adventure Parade 4°30--Hint Hunt iu Matinee : News 5:00--T and the Pirates ry 4 CJBO--WKBW 5:00--Time CHUM on My 5:00--Veterans' CBL 00--~When A WREN pe: :00--News :05--Studio Party ' With ii lody Seustanes sigh ows. © Svs fi Parade 5--P0] pales of ghd 30---Jac! Ammairong, .5:30--Spotlight on f 'Treasury Plain Bill :30--New: 30--Make Jetiere Ballroom :45--High Newreel :45--Puttin' on the Dog :45--Cocktalls for Two 5:45--Western Five--Ottawa 5:45--Sweetwood Serenade 5:45--Candlelight and Silver 5:45--Front Fage Farrell 5:45--Barber op Quartet 5:50--Puttin' on the Dog THURSDAY EVENING 8:00--News SEN WGR~WEBW--CEEY 6:00--Victory Parade OBL 6:00--~CBC News CJBO i :00--FPress News CEDO 00--1050 Serenade CHUM y 05--Make Believe Sallroom CKEY 6:10--~Hot Off The Wire WKBW 6:10--Clary Settell CJBC WGR CHUM AANA ng 6:10--Quiz-O-News 6:15--Short Sports 6:15--Jim Wells, 6:15--Hit Tunes FR. 6:15--Tello-Test WEBW 6:15--Tune Train WGR 6:15--News; Farm Market Sum. OBL 6:20--What's Your Beef? CJBC 6:20--Report on Sport CKDO 6:20--1050 Serenade CHUM 6:30--Musical Memories CEKDO 6:30--It Happened Today CHUM 6:30--Jim Hunter--News . CFRB Sports po CFRB { 6.30--~Ralph Hubbell, Sports i 6:30--Serenade 6:30--Sig, Smith Sports 6:30--Supper Club ° 6:30--News Quiz 6:35--1050 Serenade 6:40--Wes. McKnight's 6:45--Robert Trout--News 6:45--Lowell Thomas 6:45--Strike Up the Band 6:45--BBC News 6:50--Labor on the Afr 6:50--Did I Say That 6.55--CBC Commentary 7:00--Headline News 7:00~8upper Club Ts Fishing Calendar 7:00--Lorne Greéne (News) 7:00--1050 Varieties T7:90--Mystery of the Week 7:00--T ony The Troubadour 7.:00--New:. 1 05--Make inten Ballroom 1 13--Jack Smith 7:45--The Waltz Lives On 7:15--Accent on - Music 7:30--~Mystery of the Week 7:30--Mr Keen 7:30---News 7:30--The "Studs Terkel Show 7:30--Ethel and Albert 7:30--1Int House Party 7:30--Slim Bryant 7:35--~World of Sport 7:45--Home Folks Frolic 7:45--"Points of View' 7:45--Request Performance 8:00--~The Aldrich Family 8 '00--Harmonles 8 00--Salon Concert 8:00~~Lum ang Abner 8:00--On Stag; 8:15--Expert BD! inion 8:15=Christian Po once Views wenn 8:30--Money Makers CFRB 8:30--Invitation from Dominion CJBC 8:30--Buins and Allen Show WhEN 3 nd Judy CBL :30--~F.BI In poace and War WGR 8:30--Ailen Roth 8:30--Town Meeting of the Alr 8:55--Bill Henry, News WG! 9:00--Dick Haymes Show NR TE 9:00--Music Hall CBL--WBEN 9:00--Count of Monte Cristo JBC 9:00--So The Story Goes CKEY 3 00--Press News CKDO 9:15--Gospel Hall Speaker CEKDO 9:15--~Talk--St. John Ambulance Association 9:30--Home on the Range CFRB 9:30--Jack Haley WBEN 9 30-ayne and Shuster Show CBL 3: 3u-Tne os ; Things in Life. WEBW 8 3-orman ada's Forelgn Travel an. Hoh vel Service CKEY 3; 30--Crime Ph WGR WBEN :00--~CBC National CBL a = Mus, o Rem: 10:15--CBO $n ws Roundty :30--Along the Sports Lan CFRB :30--Norm. Harris and his Orch, CJBC 10: Eadie Cantor Show EN 10:30--Eventide 10:30--Man Called X 10:30--Baseball 10:3 ngs for You CFRB WGR * CBL CBL CKEY CKDO CEEY CFRB 10:55--Headliners CFRB W | 11:00--~News WEBW--WBEN--CEEY---CFRB 11:00--Dominion Network News CJBC 11: A Yancouves Theatre OBL :15--Joe Hasel Sports CHUM | 11: 18 Rainbow" 'Rendesvous 11:1. WGR WRBW* CFRB | Cope. 1947, King Features Syndicate, Inc, World rights reserved 5028 tbow "When are you gonna make mud pies, Mummie? Daddy said you were getting ready to dish up the dirt! 11:30-Story of Music GBL--WBEN 11:30--Martin Tobin's Tune Time WGR 11:30--Claude Thornhill Orch, CFRB 11 a Soom WEBW I :00--CBC Ni CBL 12.00--News Say It With Muslo EY 12 ta" WBEN--CFRB--WGR 12:05--Musicana WhEN 12:05--Nocturne 12:15--Tommy Tucker Orch, CFRB 12:15--Martin Tobin's Tune Ime WGR 12:30--News CFRB 12:55--News WEBW--WBEN 1:00~News WGR Ile de France Being Refitted Saint Nazaire, France, May 28.-- (Reuters)--The French 44,000-ton liner Ile de France is being com- pletely refitted here to take her place again sometime next year in the service to New York. She served as an Allied troopship for seven yedrs and carried many Ca- nadian troops, The Ile de France, built in 1928 at a cost of 240,000,000 francs, was then the biggest liner in the world. Requisioned by French military authorities at the outbreak of war, she was at Singapore when France signed the armistice with Ger- many. The French officers - and military crew. on board decided to continue the fight alongside Bri- tain. In 1946 she was returned > the French authorities but until last month continued to serve as trams- port for French troops and official parties. The reconstruction work involy- ed is so considerable that her own- ers entertain little hope of putting the liner into transatlantic service before next year, trekking {to towns in search of work and Ruins Rich By DENNIS RYAN Press Correspondent Johannesburg (CP). --Rauin and | first their families have abandoned their formerly prosperous and rich farm- lands in despair and, driving what is left of their stock, and sustenance. 'This tragic migration is the result of two years of the worst drought within living mmory, which turned about 30,000 square miles of fertile country into scrub land. This is how one farmer describes the situation! "Where once there was a happy family life, the laugh- ter of children and the sounds of animaly and 'birds, there now is only "the- noise of the wind. The inhabitants have moved away and everything else is dead--murdered by climatic conditions. . "Careless farming methods must take some share of the blame for the tragedy, but the time is past for post-mortems. Something must be done to restore the soil and the affected districts to their former prosperity." J. C. de Klerk, of the Glen Agri- culture College, near Bloemfontein, in a report on pastures published recently said: "Nature is warning us that what has already taken place in. the Southern Free State may also happen on our good grassland areas in other parts of the country." De Klerk believes, however, that with judicious veld control the lost pastures of the Southern Free State can be restored and their stock-carrying capacity increased. Some 400 miles to the north, an- other part of the country--Northern Transvaal--is in the grip of the severest drought in that area since 1933; Farmers are trying to move thousands of head of cattle to other parts of the province in an effort to find grazing, but they are too ema- ciated for long journeys, and they often fall dead by the wayside. An- other handicap is the authorities' refusal to allow cattle into certain areas for fear these might me overstocked: With winter already here, existing grazing must be made to last to next summer. Most of the Northern Transvaal is a native reserve, and it is the native who is being hit hardest. His | dying South African Drought Farmland wealth is measured by the number of of ttle he possesses, and in "ge three months of this . more than 10,000 Md : cattle have died. The drought is so bad that evén hardy baboons are of starvation, and many burg. "Eieta of the drought are sireedy being felt in the Union, but they will be even worse in a few month's . It is safe to predict that there be a great shortage of meats kinds soon. Farmers are to the towns for employ- which means that there will structure of the Union. JFreedom of the press was estab- lished in England in 1695. U.S. Ignorance Of Canada Said Appalling Ottawa, May 28 -- (OP)--I. B. Pearson, Under-Secretary of State for External Affairs, told the Com- mons External Affairs today the "ignorance" Cana~ ada in the United States was "ap- palling." Mr, Pearson, who formerly was Canadian ambassador to Washing- ton, said the situation was not help ed much when the Canadian Infore mation Service had only four men in the United States--two In New . York and two in Washington-- as compared with the large poring tion services of other countries. Giving the committee information 'about CIS. items in the mental estimates, Mr. Pearson said no educational institution or other community in the United States was as "well posted about Canada as we are about the United States." This was to an extent understand- able in view of the size of the two countries. -- said Mr. Pearson, Canada could expect "a little more." East. to West O0GDEN'S Rolls Best -- | SAID OGDEN'S, "41s way UP IN SMOKING PLEASURE / EASY TO ROLL--DELIONTFUL TO SMOKE' "PIPE SMOKERS! ASK FOR OGDEN'S CUT PLUG." ARE CRYSTAL SET RADIO [AWS GOOD ENOUGH FOR CANADIANS? a long way. kept pace. & Ei = Ny Canada's radio laws date back to the early days when radio "pioneers" . would tremble with, excitement when the "cat's whisker" picked up some squeaks on their crystal sets. Today Canadian listeners can hear a quiet voice speaking from the other side of the world." Radio has come But Canada's radio laws have not Canadian radio today is handicapped by a jumble of hand-me-down legislation--an accumulation of laws, regulations, amendments and addenda. As a result of this tangle, the'full benefit and enjoyment which a Canadian radio listener has a right to expect, is being curtailed. made from time to time like a patchwork quilt, Many of these laws were passed without any idea of what radio would grow into. The Independent Commercial Radio Stations of Canada believe the Canadian radio listener will take a lively interest in the suggestion that Canada's radio laws should be overhauled. Radio broad- casting in Canada is something which affects every 'home. It is important to you and to your children that Canadian radio should be free from the restric- tions of "Crystal Set" radio laws, @ One of a series of -public discussions of the futuge of radio in Canada. Published by an affiliation of 89 Independent Commercial Radio Stations throughout Canada. Member Station in the Oshawa Area: CKDO Ee No 4 25--Li pind umn ur O° ews ate Club 580 11:25--Footno por oon To take one example--there is no legal right to freedom of speech on the air in Canada. As matters stand, any "'government-of-the-day" could prevent expression by radio of any opinion other than its own. Obviously, no one of the governments responsible for various Acts or regulations had this intention in mind. The situation has arisen simply because the laws were GENERAL MOTORS "DELCO-HEAT AUTOMATIC HEATING EQUIPMENT OIL BURNERS -- COAL STOKERS i CANADIAN ASSOCIATION OF BROADCASTERS FINE QUALITY COAL - COKE - FUEL OIL a VICTORY BUILDING, TORONTO, ONTARIO THE ROBERT DIXON COMPANY LIMITED 313 ALBERT ST. TELEPHONE 262 a dut of I G.MA.C, May be fi by the C : Plan - CFRB WGR ania a ---- |

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