Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily Times-Gazette, 24 Sep 1953, p. 17

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'RADIO LOG WGR 550 © CKEY S80 @ CBL 740 @ CJBC 860 © CHML 900 WBEN 930 © CFRB 1010 © CHUM 1050 © CKOC 1150 CKLB 1240 © WKBW 1520 @ CHVC 1600 information on radio Times G prints ility for THURSDAY EVENING 6.00 P.M. ighlights CBL-CBC News CFRB-Kate Aitken CJBC-Rhythm CFRB-C.N.E. CKEY-Chas. Ante! WBEN-One May is Family 8.00 P. CKLB-Music; Chatting WBEN-F: with the Listeners CBL-Jefferson Heritage CJBCCity of Times Square CFRB-Radip Folks CKEY-News» Mickey CJBC-Music WGR-G.E. Playhouse 'ather Elow s Best | CIJBC-N 9.00 A. CKLB-News; Listening Glass CBL-John and Judy CJBC-Musical Program Joe Crysdale; WBEN-Truth or C CKEY-News; WBEN-Korean Report WGR-Family Skeleton Tames Go 8 AS es Go By Who's That Singing? CFRB-Record Shop WBEN-News CKEY-Bing oral Time CBL-The .Coutmtdorey 45 P.M. CBL-Don't Destroy FRIDAY MORNING 5.45 A.M. WGR-Chore Time; This I CFR Morning Melodies 5.30 AM. WBEN-Farm Reporter CFRB-Morning Melodies 6.00 A.M. CKLB-News; Koffee Korner CFRB-Breakfast on the Farm SKEY-Nowa: Musical WBEN-News; Musical WGR-News; Chore Farm Reporter 6.30 AM. CKLB-News; Koffee CFRB-News -New! WGR-Musical Clock; News 6:45 A.M. C©FRB-Top o'° Morn 7:00 AM, CKLB-News; Koffee Korner Crna News: "Top. o> ews; ° Morning: Livestock Review WGR-Mus. Clock; News wi -News; Musie ar 7:30 AM, News; Kotfes Korner CBL-News- Concert CREY News: Mase CERB News: Top © the Morning 7:45 AM. CBL-Musie CFRB-Lost and Found 8:00 AM. CJBC-News; Sport CKLB-News; Sports FRIDAY AFTERNOON OKLB--Ni ; Community | CKEY ews P.M. ; Sports CBL-Farm Broadcast; Time Signal CJBC-News; Small Types Club CKEY-Lorne Greene CFRB-News; Women's WGR-Gal Sunday 1:00 P.M. CELB-News: Stop the Record CBL-News; Weather CKEY-News; Better Business CJBC-Maitland Manor 1:15 P.M. CFRB-Widder Brown CBL-Happy Gang WGR-Ma Perkins 1:30 P.M. CFRB-Dr. Mal WBEN-Sally Work 6.00 P.M. WGR-News; N. Broken- shi: ; Ballroom go CFRB-Denny Vaughan CKLB-News; Sports WBEN-News 6.15 P.M. CKLB-Supper Club CBL-Music CFRB-Path of Duty, Brownies and Guides WBEN-Sports WGR-Sports: Heaftbeats in Sports 6.30 P.M. CJBC-News; Sports CBL-International Com- mentary; Music CFRB-News; Sports Guest Stars WGR-Skyway Reporter Three Suns WBEN-Hits and Bits 6.45 P.M. CJBC-Byng's Choice WGR-News WBEN-Mike Mearian Show A 7.00 P.M. CKLB-News in a Minute; Follow the Band CBL-News; p CJBC-Toronto Foremen's lub CKEY-News; Ballroom CFRB-Kate Aitken WGR-Family Skeleton WBEN Cisco Kid 7.15 P.M. CKLB*elody from Murphy's; Hig CFRB-Who's That Singing WGR-Johnny Mercer CBL-Trip to the Moon 7.30 P.M. CELB-Great Music CJBC-Safety Clinic CBL-Armdale Chorus WGR-McNuity 9.30 P.M. CKLB-Haunting Hour CJBC-Musie CBL-Holiday Inn CFRB-Broadway's My Beat WBEN-Counter Spy WGR-Time for Love 10.00 P.M. CELB-News: Obsession Cantor CJBC-H CFRB-Outdoors 10.30 P.M. CBL-Eventide c Box CFRB-P. Brooks; Music By Montavant WBEN-News; C. Adams; Orchestra WGR-News; C. Adams; Orchestra CBL-Winnipeg Drama ews CFRB-News CKEY-Les Lye Show WGR-News; Glacey's Basement WBEN-News: Sports; Diane CFRB-Orchestra WGR-Sports 11.30 P.M, CBL-Nocturne CJBC-Prelude to Dreaming CFRB-News: Sports; CFRB-News; Sports; Orchestra WBEN-News: Stars tn 22 CBL-News; Sports WGR-Mus. Clock; News WBEN-News 8:15 AM. CJBC-Toast & Jamboree CKLB-Koffee Korner CFRB-News: Top o' the Morning CBL-Devotions WBEN-Musical Clock 8:30 A.M, CKLB-News: Koffee Korner Time; | CBL-Music CFRB-News; Top o ; P. Brooks 8:45 AM. CJBC-Music; News CFRB-Top o* the Mo ; Gospel Singer 9:00 AM. CKLB-News; Devotions CJBC-Breakfast Club CBL-News; Music CREY News: Jay and inger CFRB-News; Winning ords WGR-Musical Clock WB the re OR ena F278 | ford. andthe AM, Music in % » CKLB-News; ; Ballroom IC-Roses For You WBEN-Welcome Travelers CFRB-News; Neighborhood Corner WGR-Dr. Malone -Tea Time 1:45 P.M. CBL-Musical Kitchen CFRB-Helen Trent WGR-Guiding Light 2:00 P.M. CKLB-Women"s News 2:15 P.M, CKLB-Kitty Kelly CBL-Trans-Canada Matinee CFRB-Ma Perkins WBEN-Pauline Fredrick WGR-Perry Mason 2:30 P.M. CJBC-Maitland Manor Manor CFRB-Gal Sunday WGR-Nora Drake WBEN-Dave Garroway 2:45 P.M. CKLB-Songs of Our Times CFRB-Brighter Day WGR-Brighter Day WBEN-Doctor's Wife 3:00 P.M. CJBC-Afternoon Concert CKLB-News; Showcase CBL-Life Can Be Beautiful CKEY-News; Show Business WBEN-Life Can Be Beautiful WOR:Hilliop House P.M. CBL-Ma Perkins WGR-House Party WBEN-Road of ae 3:30 P.M. CBL-WBEN-Pepp Young's Family IDAY EVENING CFRB-Record Shop CKEY-Music Box: Ja CKEY-News; House Party WGR-News; Glacey's Basement 10:15 A.M. CKLB-Mystery Man CBL-Kindergarten CJBC-Hope for the Ladies CFRB-Ann Adams 10:30 A.M. CKLB-Hit Parade CBL-Ruth Harding Jane Weston CFRB-Who Am I? CJBC-Just Around orner WBEN-Bob Hope 10:45 A.M. CFRB-What's On Wally's Mind CBL-Food Facts CJBC-Music WBEN-It Pays to be Married 11:00 A.M. CKLB-News; Say It With Music CIBCCotée with Bruce 11:15 A.M. CFRB-Memory Lane CBL-Backstage Wife 11:30 A.M. CKLB-House of Peter McGregor CBL-Kate Aitken CFRB-! CJBC WGR-Make Mind * Glee Up Your CJIBC-June Dennis CKLB-Second Spring ; Club CFRB-News; Records WBEN-Backstage Wife 4:15 P.M. CFRB-Aaunt Lucy WGR-Keaton WBEN stella Dallas :30 P.M. CFRB-Manhattan Music CBL-Play It Safe WBEN-Widder Brown CJBC-Of .All Things 4:45 P.M. CFRB-Hollywood Date WBEN-Woman in My House 5:00 P.M. CKLB-News; Supper Club CKEY;News-Studio Party CBL-Music CFRB-News; Interlude WGR-News; Ke: CFRB-Devitt Drops In WBEN-Front Page Farrell 5:30 P.M. CBL-Sleepy Time Story Teller CKLB-Community News; Supper Club CKEY-Ballroom Times; Barry and Betty CJBC-News; At Ease WBEN-Lorenzo Jones, 5:45 P.M. CFRB-Personalities; News CBL-Messer's Islanders WBEN-Dixieland Special Ford Feature WGR-Curt Massey CJBC-Champions Fights up WBEN-All- American Sports Show 10.15 P.M. d Fre WBEN-One M is Family le Man's CKEY-Rate the Acts 3.00 P.M. CKLB-Music; Chatting With the Listeners CJBC-Fisher, Ameche i Voice of Army CBL-Waltz Time CFRB-Johnny CKEY-News; M. Lester WEEN: Fisher. Ameches 8.30 P.M. CFRB-Treasure Trail CE1LE-Crim e Does Not ay WBEN-Bob Hope CKEY-News; P. Brooks CJBC-Treasure Trail WOR-Badebiall 00 P.M, CBL-Songs of My People CKLB-News; Charlie Chan CJBC-Music from Canada CFRB-On Stage CKEY-News: Back Talk Crysdale WBEN-P. Harris A. Faye 9.15 PM. CKEY-Football 9.30 P.M. CKLB-Club Saludos CBL-Winnipeg Studio CFRB-Pigskin Parade WBEN-Bob and Ray 10.00 P.M. CKLB-News: Kim's orner CBL-News CFRB-Ontario Hydro CKEY-News;: Foetbell / CBL m 10.30 P.M. CKLB-News: Sports CBC-Sports CKEY-News; Joe Cysdale; Music Box CFRB-Music by Manavani WBEN-Freddy Martin 145 P. CFRB-Sports Yarns Song: Passing Years JKLB-Airlane Trio CBL~-CBC Sports 11:00 P.M. CJBC-News CBC-Times-Prairie CBL-Bob McMullin CFRB-News: Sports WGR-News WGR-Sports; Basement WBEN Sports; Diane Round 1:30 P.M. CJBC-Prelude to Dreaming CFRB-News; Sports CBL-Music WGR-Glacy's Basement 12:00 MIDNIGHT CKLB-News; Bob's Place CBL-News CKEY-News; House Party CFRB-News; Sports; ay Glacy's TELEVISION PROGRAMS ©BLY -- CHANNEL 9 THURSDAY 4:30---At the U.N. 5:00--Telestory Time 5:15--Children's Films 5:30~Ramar of the Jungle 6:00--Music 6:45--Uncle Chichimus 7:00--~Tabloid 7:30--Sports Club ans FRIDAY 30--At The U.N. 00--Cowboy :00--Music 6:45--Uncle Chichimus 7:00--Tabloid 7:30--Adventure Film 8:00--Foreign Intrigues 8:30--Film 9:30--T.V. Sound Stage 10:00--Regal Theatre 10:30--Film 8:00--Film 9:30--Symphony Concert 10:00--H. in the Kitchen 4: Al 5: WHAM -- ROCHESTER -- CHANNEL § THURSDAY EVENING 6:00--Western Roundup 6:30--News Almanac 6:45--Speaking of Sports 7:00- Community Challenge 7:30--Eddie Arnold 7:45--Camel News Caravan 8:00--You Bet Your Life T-Men In Action that Pay Almanac 11:15--George Jessel : FRIDAY 7:00--Today 8:55--Thought for the Day 9:00---Take It Easy 11:15--Bennett Story 11:30--Strike It Rich 12 Noon--Bride and Groom 12:15--Love of Life 12:30--Search for TIomorrow 12:45--Guiding Light 1:00---Make It And Market 1:15--Mid-day Midway 1:30--Garry Moore Show 2:00--Double or Nothing 2:30--Ladies' Fair 3:30--Kate Smith 4:00--Welcome Travelers 4:30--On Your Account 5:00--Atom Squad 5:15--Gabby Hayes $:30--Howdy-Doody FRIDAY EVENING 6:00--Western Roundup 6:45--Speaking of 7:00--Football Ratings 7:15--Schools on Parade 7:30--Fisher-Ameche Show 7:45--Camel News Carava' 8:00--Mama 8:30--Life of Riley 9:00---Big Story 9:30--Favorite Story 10:00--Boxing 10:45--Great Fights 11:00--News; Almanae 11:15--Feature Film WBEN -- TV, BUFFALO--CHA THURSDAY EVENING :00--Sagebrush Trail - t sco :30--Sports Adventures 7:45--News Caravan (NBC) 11:00--News; Weather: Sports 11:25--Beat The Experts 11:30--Baseball Hall of Fame 11:45--Your Garden FRIDAY 7 a.m.--Today, Dave Garroway 2 irl Talk 9:45--Garry Moore 10:00--Ding Dong School 12:00--News--Virgil 12:15--Love of Life, drama (CBS) 12:30--Search for Tomorrow (CBS) 12:45--~Guiding Light 1:00-Matinee Playhouse 3:00--Big Payoff 3:30--Kate §mith 4:00--Welcome Travelers 4:30--On Your Account 5:00--Fun To Learn 5:15--Children's Theatre 5:30--Howdy Doody FRIDAY EVENING 6:00--Sagebrush Trall 6:30--News 6:45--Sports Spotlight 7:00--Terry and the Pirates 7:30--Family Theatre 7:45--News Caravan (NBC) 8:00--Mama 8:30--Life of Riley 9:00--Wrestling 10:00--Boxing, 10:45--Great Fights 11:00--News; Weather; 11:30--Mr. Peepers Sports 6:30--News Almanac 12:00--Adolph Menjou. Notables Where else in Europe can one find a region favored above others by nature, timt calls to mind as many, illustrious people as the Riviera? asks a French Informa- tion Service writer. Yet its function as a chosen place where sovereigns, statesmen, writers and artists come to seek rest, health and pleasure, dates back: only 200 years. These two centuries have been made to live again by a French historian, Jules Bertaut, in a lively, ¢ '.rful book which shows how the elite of European society formed the habit of meeting in that part of the Mediterranean coast which had become their winter garden. ENGLISH ARISTOCRATS To the English aristocrats is due the credit for discovering the site in the 18th century and establish- ing the first foreign colony there; in the Second half of the century the Duke of York, brother of George III, the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester, the Duke of Bed- : ~Duehess- of Cumber- land and their friends all paid visits to the coast or resided there for some length of time. They were the leaders of a society life so brilliant as to attract to the coast subsequently an "endless stream of foreign visitors who came to enjoy the beauty of the scenery and almost perpetual sun- shine. But #t was under the Second Empire and after the annexation of the Duchy of Nice that this coast became a mecca for cosmo- politan society, a centre for all Europe p d in distinguished persons and wealthy idlers seeking an easy and magnificent life. PLEASED VICTORIA One of the most devoted admir- ers of this heavenly place was Queen Victoria of England, who visited Nice five years in 3 Enjoy Life On Riviera the life and soul of all the fes- tivities. He had his headquarters at Cannes; English society made his time the heyday of the town as the preceding generation had done for Nice. He was often a guest 'of Empress _ ugenie, who was to live her last days on the Riviera. KING OF BELGIANS Leopold . II, the king of the Belgians, settled at Cap Ferrat in property he had first inspected by climbing over the wall. Every morning he had three or four buckets of sea water thrown over him. He wanted game at all his meals and had the news Cities' Money By BOB JOYCE Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (CP)--The mayors of Canada have decided to walk right back up Parliament Hill and tell the federal government they're no happier about the ban on taxa- tion of federal property than they were a year ago. And for good measure they'll also ask Ottawa once' again to Jet them off paying the 10 per cent federal sales tax on municipal purchases. The representatives of Canadian towns and cities, who also want a federal-municipal conference to tell their money troubles to, Tues- day agreed in principle with a draft report prepared by the ex- ecutive of the Canadian Federa- tion of Mayors. and Municipalities putting the federation's case for these demands. Only one delegate dissented. i Said the mayor of Portage la Prairie, Man., Rev. H. L. Hender- son: "I'll put my reasons in writ- ing." The mayors are attending the first International Municipal Con- gress sponsored jointly by the Ca- nadian federation and the United States Conference of Mayors. At their afternoon conference session the mayors disposed of some 27 resolutions, only eight of which were passed, the rest being dropped or referred bac!" to the national executive. Among resolutions carried was one urging the federal government to make it easier for Canadians to own their own homes by easing mortgage repayments under the National Housing Act. The delegates also decided to strive for more uniformity in high- way codes, and greater standard- Troubles Outlined By Mayors ization of road signs, speed limits, and traffic laws. Meamwhile, nine floors below them, some 350 United States may- ors tackled the U. S. federal hous- ing administrator about slum clear- ance, heard the civil aeronautics administrator from Washington tell them what size airports they should have, and listened to the secretary of the American Associ- ation of State Highways tab Amer- ica's road network as "the cancer of our whole economic system." THEATRE GUIDE Plaza--* The Charge at Feather River", 1.15, 3.21, 5.27, 7.33, 9.39. Last complete show 9.10 p.m. Biltmore -- 'Clipped Wings", 12.30, 2.55, 5.25, 7.50 and 10.20 p.m. "Topeka", 1.45, 4.10, 6.40 and 9.10 p.m. Last complete show at 9.05 p.m. Brock, Whiby. -- "White Witch Doctor."" Evening show, 7-9, Sat. Matinee, 1.30, Sat. evening show starts 6.00 p.m. Regent. -- "The Bad and the Beau- tiful," shown at 2.00, 4.25, 6.50, 9.25. Last complete show, 8.50. Marks. -- "Taxi," 12.45, 3.55, 7.10, 10.30. "Crash Drive," 2.10, 5.25, 8.45. Last complete show, 8.35 p.m. ~ Drive-In. -- Starting at 7.50 p.m. "Bloodhounds of Broadway." Last complete show, 9.30 p.m. Parnassus, one of the sacred mountains of Greece, has a height of 8,000 feet. | EASTERN ONTARIO'S MOST UNUSUAL BALLROOM Jack Denton FOR THAT PERFECT DANCE DATE Presenls . and his Celebrated Orchestra SATURDAY NITE Papers kerchiefs because he hated creases. At Cap Martin, Empress Elisa- beth of Austria sought in calm and forgetfulness some way of taking her mind off her misfortunes. A billiard room had to be turned into a chapel for her. Once she went to Monte Carlo to see what a gaming room was like. She put a silver piece down and won 75 francs. "Well," she said, "I've never earned so much money!" ¢ Louis I of Bavaria died at Nice. He had lived the life of a Bohe- mian king without a thought for etiquette; a contemporary carica- ture shows him strolling in his strapped trousers, with unruly hair and a top hat clumsily held in his hand. LITERARY PEOPLE _At the head of the parade of literary figures comes Chateau- briand, who found at Golf Juan "solitude, waves and sky" on the path of "Napoleon's last step but one" evoking in the southern night the grand moments in history that fired his imaginaion. But the writer who was perhaps most responsible for 'launching' the Riviera was Alphone Karr, the pamphl and humorist. sion. She brought her bed, her lin- en, her crockery and her furniture with her. Neighbors round the park of the hotel where she was staying open- ed gates in their walls so that the queen could enter their gardens. In her luggage there was a real store of small arti 'es, tie pins, watches, rings, bracelets and wal- lets, presents for the good services of officials and employes of the railway by which she had travel ed; she kept an account of these gifts so that the same were not given two years running. Others were: No less popular a f 7ure was He was impressed by the wealth of flowers in the south and turned impromptu horticulturist and flower-seller. he lemi was to read ironed over like hand- |" Tec' HWY. opened a shop in Nice with the sign "Alphonse Karr; Gardener." He sold bunches of flowers and vegetables. No one in literature has spoken with greater love of the perfumes and flowers of the Riviera. This vocation brought quips from his friends but also an epistle in verse by Lamartine. In Cannes grew the mysterious love of Maupassant and Marie Bashkirtseff, ending in a melan- choly meeting at Nice: the young woman was soon to die of an in- her son, the future Edward VII, then Prince of Wales, who was curable complaint and the novelist to fall prey to madness. LONDON (CP)--Britain's globe- girdling Overseas Airways Corpor- ation is planning a fleet of long- range passenger superjets to streak 'lacross the Atlantic in pace with the sun--arriving in New York at the same time by the clock as they leave London. Sir Miles Thomas, BOAC chair- man, explained in his annual re- port today that this will be the "third phase' in Britain's bid for world air supremacy. . To do it, the jet airliner of the future would have to fly the 3,443 miles from London to New York in five hours--the time difference be- tween the two cities--at a near- supersonic speed of 690 miles an hour. Such speeds already have been approached. At present, BOAC piston-engi' liners fly from i..., York to Lon- don in just under 13 hours, aver- aging 270 miles an hour. Sir Miles said the first phase in the battle was over when the Comet--the world's first jet air- liner--was put into service on Com- monwealth flights. The second phase is approaching with Comets GOOD SAMARITAN AUCKLAND, N.Z. (CP)--David Potter, 20, put coins in expiring parking meters with a note ex- plaining that a fine had been avoi and inviting donations to the Congregatonsl hurch. Potter gave up after spending 200 coins WOR News: laa' -News; LJ Basement and getting less than half back in donations Britain Seeks Jet Supremacy and turbo-prop Britannias provid- ing express jet and tourist services. During this winter. British Com- ets will begin exploratory high-alti- tude flights above the North At- lantic. "A reasonable amdint of inter- change of information with the United States military services about high-altitude North Atlantic conditions exists, but no one has Wir2i GAYNOR - scorv OSHAWA ES DRIVE-IN 2A BRADY Screen Play by 3-4972 done very much yet' Thomas said. BARNEY BEAR in "LITTLE WISE QUAKER" COLOR CARTOON LATEST WORLD NEWS SMOKING IN THE LOGES headed for the "30 BEST" list of 19531 Feature As: 2:00, 4:25, 6:55, 9:25 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Thursday, September 24, 1953 4Y¥ The U. S. mayors then briskly passed nine resolutions and elected Mayor Thomas A. Burke of Cleve- land to succeed Mayor Martin Ken- nelly of Chicago as president of their organization. The Canadian federation's exec- utive director, George S. Moone of Montreal, explained that the fed- eral government last year changed the law concerning exemption of crown property from city taxes after the federation had pressed it to lift the exemption. Bu all the government did was to modify it, so that a town or ciy got grants equal to the rates that would have been due on any federal property in excess of four per cent. If the value of federal property in a community does not add up to more than four per cent, the town doesn't collect any money. Mr. Mooney said federation offi- cers saw the government a second time when the law was proposed, but were asked to give it a test. They agretd but a year later they still wereh't~ geting the revenue they thought was their due. Speaking during the discussion, Mayor Charlotte Whitton of Ot- tawa said she thought what was good enough for the subject should be enough for the crown. Mayor Henderson, dissenting, termed it "the weakest document' the federation had ever produced. NERVY BEARS DRYDEN, Ont. (CP) --A big black bear terrified four younge sters at nearby Dinorwic by walk« ing around the edge of the roof om their home while the parents were Y lou. They returned to scare off the visitor. Shortage of blueberries has made the bears bold in north- western Ontario this fall. What was needed was a Dominion provincial-municipal conference %o "rewrite the charter of municipal government in Canada." Register for Lessons in the WILSON AND LEE BUILDING + 87 Simcoe St. North DIAL 5-6122 IRENIE HARVEY ACCM, RMT & CDTA Member FIRST OSHAWA SHOWINGS! CONTINUOUS FROM IP M.+ SAT 12 NOON LLY TODA Q og S Y i ~ A miracle as wondrous as New York itself... as magic as the day the statue of Saint Anthony rode in the back seat of a Big-Town taxi. the Lift Of Your Life... ITT THRILLS ABOVE...BELOW AND ACROSS THE ATLANTIC! \ \ Ye Anne BAXTER - Dina ANDREWS James GLEASON - Dame May WHITTY al nd

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