Daily Times-Gazette, 8 Nov 1946, p. 5

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--- ' Bt dt it td bh ut bh Bd kd et et pt THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE FIVE 'RIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1946 On the Air Tonight and Saturday "Wor CKEY "CBL 0 ) INTO "CFRB 'WBEN CIBC (CBS-CBC) (NBC) 860 ~ 930 ABC) 010 OSHAWA CKDO 1:40 TORONTO CHUM ~1050 BUFFALO | WKBW (ABC) 1520 8:15--~The Jumpin' Jacks \ 8:30--Alan Young Show WBEN--CKEY-CJBC 30--~Adven, of the Thin Man WGR :30--Norm: Cloutier CEDO 100--Li News CEDO t Up And Listen CJBC b 2 Seats--3.50" CBL :00--~The Ginny Simms Show WGR 100-80 the Si Goes CEKEY :00--People Are ny WBEN :00--Break the Bank WEBW CFRB CKEY CEDO CKEY CBL--~WBEN CJBO WGR WEKBW :00---Ontario Panorama A8--Muslc 15] rd Review :15--Educ. Week :30----Waltz Time :30----Western Tralls :30--Victor Record Album :30--Durante and Moore :30--~The Sheriff 1) | 30_olm Toox's Orch, :85--Champion Roll Call 10:00--Irving Miller Orch. :00--Mystery Theatre WBEN :00--It Log To Be Ignorant WGR :00--~CBC National News CBL RX Hermits Cave i :00--Ohamplonship Figh! Da ~-CJBC--~WEKBW i on ews Roundup CBL Sothern in "Maisie" WGR 0:30--Eventide CBL :30--News B0-Ontanlo Holiday 10:30" er. Sports Page '30:40--Donald 2 Novis . 0:48--Gowt, Take OF 10:45--Rex Frost aS 4s r= inion Network News CJBC $1:90-Prairte Schooner CBL oben aude Th Orchestra 35--Dance Orchestra m. 3 News Bulletin E WBEN--WGR--' EL -News 12:05--~Charlle Spivak Orch. 12:05--8igned Beasley Smith :30--News :30--Three Buns Trio im ad Sims :35--News SATURDAY MORNING 45M! Program 20-88 Fo News utumn Serenade :00--~News :00-Nine O'Clock News urch in the Wildwood :05--All Time Hit Parade :05-Jazz on Parade :45--Mother Goose :45--Buffalo News fr, Washing, :00--~Advent. of Frank Merriwe! :00--Buddy Weed Trio CJBC-- 00--Hlywd Merry-Go-Round J unior :35--Hlywd Merry-Go-Round :45--Music in Marchtime :45--Hank and Bill :00--Teentimers Club © :00--Warren Sweeney, News :00--News al 'Melod r :00--~Concert Masters :00--Teen Age Towl 00--Teen Age Time :00--1240_ Bandstand Let's Pretend Make Believe Ballroom :15--Johnny 1:30--8milin' Ed McConnell 1:30--Piano Playhouse 1:30--Give and Take Program 30--Quaker City Serenade :30--Chuck Wagon Serenade :35--8tork Club of the Alr :45--Red Cross hh dd Bh pk ft ed put - oy :00--News :00--~Theatre of Today :00--Music Shop Hits :00--News--Music :00--0.A.C, Calli :00--~BBC News :00--N. Shore :00--Texas Jim Robertson :15--Readin; :15--Farm 'tween the Lines peaker :15--Symphony of Melody :15--Luncheon Music :30--Home Is What You Make It :30--The American Farmer . Stars Over Hollywood Lorne Greene (News) ews Berle in Music PEE ESEEEES 2 H-Jops in Pops 1:15--U.8. Army vs Notre Dame :15--Better Business Bureau 1:15--World Church News 1:15--Music of The Americas 1:28--Army-Notre Dame Foot. :30--Veterans' Adviser :30--Treasury Salute :30--News 30 Musical Prope ; us rogram :30--Alan h :35--Music With Johnn: 1:45--8yracuse vs Cornell Univ, ball 1:45--"Gardening" 1:45--Musical Pi 2:00--~Downbeat; News L Junction WEKBW----CJBC CHUM KE Thompson WKBW---CJBC WBEN Ws WEKBW ! 12:55--News Summary :00---CBC News CBL :00--Wake Up & Smile WKBW--CJBO #00--~Ch CEDO CKEY WGR WBEN WBEN WEKBW 100--Martin Blocks' Record Shop WOR HU CKE CB! pry or EN | 10:40--Joe Chrysdale (Sports) bt 4 10:45--Ter Z00 11:30 SATURDAY AFTERNOON ng CFRB and Commentary CBL Digest CKDO --WKBW--CJBC WBEN WEBW CKEY | 12 CBL CJBC CFRB WGR CKEY FRB CBL CHUM ' 2 Eats 'em, All 18 WBEN | mail Hindeway, forbidden by the Y | has solved the problem in a prac- KEY WEKBW CFRB ; | naries were he said: | EN CFRB CBL--CJBC CKDO CHUM WGR friends aboard the Marine Carp. = 3,500 Yule Parcels KEY | and clothing for needy South Am- DO | dren are in the warehouse of the CHUM CHUM | tee here awaiting week-end ship- Con | Puerto Rico, BO September in a new committee CHUM | been shipped in that month but % | the United States. It still is hoped CKEY of Musical Comedy CBL CJBC Club Ballroom WBEN CJBC CKEY CEDO WBEN WBEN WGR CKEY 5 CFRB Music CBL CKDO Jesters SATURDAY EVENING Musical Program One World"--YWCA 130--Jim Hunter, News :40--Football Roundup :45--Musical 45--Religion In The News B-Wes. McKnight's Hockey :45--Treasury Salute 45--Larry eur--News :00--T, Dorsey Presents 700--Bweeney and March WBEN CFRB CKDO WBEN | ment controls because Parliament DO | dress prepared for the Liverpool WGR DO | the Royal assent without debates CFRB CBL WBEN Inter- CFRB WKBW WGR EN CFRB WGR 1 C | 1 1 1 1 y | 11:00--News and Feature Story WGR CKE' -{ 11:15---Late P| who supported the government of | :00--Amateur Contest Winners CKDO usiness at Eventide how :30--The Old Ranch House i Mistake This Week :30-- In Crime WK. :30--~Mayor of the Town CFRB--WGR :30--Truth .or Consequence WBEN :55--Ned Calmer, News WGR 8 Pisher CFRB WEKBW CJBC CBL CEKDO CFRB WGR CKEY WBEN 4 ng Busters :00--Sat. Night Roundup :00~CBC News ' : Press News 100--News 3 Your Hit Parade Police_Safety Talk, Roy Rogers Show Save The Children Fund ; Talk CKEY :05--N HL. Hockey CBL--CFRB :15--Homes for Vets CKEY :15--Record Review :30--Sherlock Holmes : Ej On Wag Jazz Cf 30--Victor Record Album :30--"Can You Top This?" CKDO WKBW CJBC CKEY CKDO :00--Mart Kenney's Orch, :00--Dance Orch, :00--Judy Canova Show :15--This 1s Hollywood 10:30--Ontario Holiday 10:30--Stan Patton's Orch, 10:30--News 0:30--Organ Music 0:30--Hayloft Hoedown 10:30--Grand Ole O 10:40--Organ Reverie 10:45--Frontier Pageant 10:45--Book Review Arlen 10:55--Headliners 11:00--News WEKBW--CEDO--WBEN--CFRB--CKEY 11:00--Dominion Network News CJBC 11:00--Red River Barn Dance CBL 11:05~Tips "n Tunes X i1:10-D Arges Presents B ports 11:15--Music For Dancing 11:15--George Hicks Presents 11:15--Hit Preview 11:25--Footnote 11:30--Your Favorites 11:3 11:30--8; . 11:30--Art Hallman Orch. 11:30--Dance Orch. 11:45--Saxie Dowell Orch, 12:00--News WEBW---WGR--CFRB--WBEN 12:00--News--sSay It With Music To 7:00 am. EX 12:00--~CBC News Bulletin CBL--CJBC 12:05--News Summary WEKBW 12:05--Log Cabin Farms Orch. 12:05--Gardner Benedict Orch, 12:15--Gardner Benedict Orch, 12:15--Johnny Long Orch, :30--George Olsen Orch, Bobb Ni y Byrnes Orch. :30--Three Suns Trio :45--Lee Sims, Planist 5--Ne' 1:00--News Canaries Vetoed, New York, Nov. 8. -- (AP -- Is- government to take his 18 canaries to Egypt last August, believes he tical way--he says he ate them. The 286-pound Egyptian has sail- ed for his homeland on th Marine Carp. When asked where his ca- "I have eaten them, I must get to Alexandria to see my sick mo- ther." In August Hindeway wept on a Hudson River pler when officials told him he couldn't take his little "I have no wife. I have no fam- ily. I cannot leave my little child- ren. I cannot live without them," Hindeway cried to the sympathetic officials, Ready For Needy Kitchener, Nov, 8. -- (CP)--More than 3,500 Christmas parcels of toys erican, European and Asiatic chil- Mennonite central relief commis- ment to 12 countries -- Ethiop! China, India, The Philippines, Hol- land, Belgium, France, Italy, Ger- many, Denmark, Paraguay and Collected from all over Ontario in project, the parcels were to have were delayed by shipping strikes in to complete distribution of the par- cels in Europe befor Christmas, but ths probably will not be possible in Asia, , Archbishop Flays Gov't. Attitude Liverpool, Nov, 8. -- (CP) -- Dr. Cyril F, Garbett, Archbishop of York, has proposed freeing the Church of England from govern= "no longer consists of churchmen." "With 'the growth of the totali- tarian state," he declared, in an ad- Diocesan Conference, "it ig possible that in the future only those would be chosen for ecclesiastical posts the day." Dr. Garbett said "freedom of the Shureh was "precarious," and ad- "The House of Commons has nel- ther the time nor the wish to deal with the worship of the church. Some method must therefore be found to enable changes to receive in Parliament," MUSIC FOR MILLIONS Films on art and music brought to remote districts of Canada by National Film Board field represen. tatives bring enjoyment to many fight, "Win or lose, THE LOSERS By Howard Beckler Up in the r the powerful lights beat onto the white of the canvas with a dizzying effect to the eyes. The announcer was fin- ishing his spiel with a super-bel- low: *, , , , fifteen rounds of box- ing. . . for the welterweight champeenship of the WO! id And the twenty thousand people. in the Stadium roared 1 throated approval of things general, The white heat of the ring lights touched the features of the two women sitting side by side in the -second row ringside, They were obviously strangers, but they had one thing in common, the same look of tired desperation around the mouth and eyes. The sound of the gong cut into the bedlam, . The two hters were circling cautiously the centre of the ring. The elder of the two women sitting second row, ringside, lean- ed forward in her seat. Myra Grady was still young at thirty- three, but some of her beauty had faded with the years from the care of three growing sons, and Mickey Grady, who was up there in the 'ring fighting the young champ. Mickey Grady was thirty five and his legs were gone, but being Mickey Grady he wouldn't believe it. The young champ was startin to work now. He was a g boy, this youngster, Steve Brown. His left jab wag a flick of light, It jarred and cut when it landed. It was jarring and cutting now, in this the first round. But Grady, the bulldog, kept moving in all the time, never taking a backward step. Mickey Grady, who could knock out a heavyweight with either hand, and whose was choked with a wild courage. It was old, old story of the fight game all over again, Can 'an ex-champion sac- rifice the years and come back to regain his crown, Nine years before, ickey Grady had ruled the erweight division with iron fists, Today, he was cannon fodder to a. promoter's dream of a sellout gate, The dream was a good one, It was a sellout, Mickey took four lefts to the mouth as the bell ended the first round. The crowd roared. Myra Grady shivered against the ocean of sound. She remembered Mickey telling her when he signed for the kiddo, I'll be Hiroush for good. It's a promise." But Myra knew the promise would fade away should the impossible happen and Mickey win back the title. She knew that only a 'ter- rible beating would convince him. She could hear him, if he won, 'Well, kiddo, we're back in the chips. In the big time. "The hell with this farming business. Guess the old man can still go in there heyy Ld yra saw the handwriting on the wall if Mickey didn't. Although every punch that young Steve Brown landed hurt Myra as it did Mickey, she sat there, second row, ringside, and prayed for Mickey's defeat, At the end of the fourth Micke: was still moving forward. His left eye was shut. He was bleeding from the nose and mouth. He walk- to hig corner at the bell like an old man, Mickey's legs were gone, but there was still dynamite in his two hands, For the first time Myra noticed the young woman at her side. The girl was beautiful. Her bright golden hair curled up around. a pert little hat. She was young and fresh, but her eyes were filled with tears, She was talking aloud un- consciously, "No! No! Come on, Mickey Grady! Knock him out, Mickey Grady!" Myra sat and marveled and was ashamed. Here " sat a stranger crying for Mickey to win, and his own wife praying for him to lose. In the fifth, Steve Brown, was still circling to the left, throwing his deadly jab, crossing his right with damaging power, but not enough to put Mickey away for keeps. Steve Brown was a wraith, ,a shadow, that struck and stung and moved away but didn't kill. The Today's Short Story . living. She said, "And I'm glad crowd hummed excitedly on, ever hopeful, that Gi would land, one -- -- that's they asked ust one. The girl was entre: ng Mickey to knock him out. rady n't land in the fifth, ~Illustrated by D. Chalmers When Brown buckled the hook came again, fast and short and terrible, to the chin. sixth, or seventh, Steve Brown hit him with everything in the books, but he still came forward, bloody and beaten, but not knowing enough to quit. Mickey Grady was not a pretty sight at the start of the eleventh with five more rounds to go. And Steve Brown went to work on him, He wanted desperately to put him away. Steve was a clean boy, and he hated to see Grady punished, but he just couldn't knock him out. He hit Grady twenty times without a return early in the eleventh, After that prolonged flurry, he lowered his arms momentarily. The pace was a killing one, That's when it happened! : Out of the welter of blood that was Mickey Grady, a wild left hook exploded on Steve Brown's jaw. It was a numbing, crushin, blow, and Steve Brown sagged bac against the ropes, while twenty thousand people howled like mad- men. Brown came of the ropes in- stinctively, His es were dull, Grady threw a straight right to the mid section, wrist deep, and when Brown buckled, the left hook came again, fast and short and terrible to the chin. Mickey Grady stood in a neutral corner while the referee counted the champion out. Myra looked at the ring once and started for the dressing room. The girl had disappeared some- where in the crowd. Myra hoped that she, at least, was satisfied. Myra kissed Mickey's battered mouth tenderly. "You did a job," she smiled at him. Mickey managed a grin, "Well, kiddo, we're back in 'the chips. Guess the old man's still too young to he a farmer, hey?" He patte her gently on the shoulder. "Come on let's see how the kid is making out. There were only two people "in Steve Brown's dressing room, Steve and his wife. His wife had golden hair that curled up around a pert little hat. "I'm glad you won, Mr, Grady," she said to Mickey. "My Steve promised to quit, if he lost tonight. Well, he is quitting. He's quite an artist you know, now he can use his hands for something worth while." She turned to Myra. "I'm happy for us and I'm happy your Mickey won the title." Myra looked at them both, they were young and eager and: full of you won, my dear. Somebody always has to lose. And Mickey and I have had more experience as losers." Ottawa, Nov. 8--(CP)--Behind a scientifically neat desk in a test- tube clean office in a wartime army building, an austere and deter- mined scientist is quietly laying the foundations of a revolutionary la, experiment in defence technique. He is 37.year-old Dr. O. M. Solandt, head of the embryo Canadian Defence Research Depart- men, being formed as a fourth part- ner of Canada's armed. forces for the purpose of co-ordinating all defence research in peace or war. Since his apointment last Jan. 20, he sits_as an equal member of the Chiefs-of-staff along with Lt.-Gen Charles Foulkes, Rear Admiral H. E. Reid and Air Vice Marshal Rob- ert Leckie. He is gradually organi. zing scientific forces in Canada along the same general principles as the other chiefs are organizing their respective forces--into a com- pact peacetime nucleus capable of rapid expansion in the event of war, It is the first time jn history that science has been placed on an equal footing with . other defence services, and development of the Department is going forward in easy stages. 4 The Department will have a com- paratively small basic force, like the other defence branches. Its "reserves"--to be 'called on from time-to-time and used for co-or- dinated war work should the need arise--will be the university labor- atories and industrial research cen. tres with whom the Defence De- partment's wartime connections still are close. "Canada is essentially not a coun- try which plans to make war," Dr. Solandt said in an interview. "In the event of war--which would de- finitely be a total war--she cannot depend on a large professional force. Every: scientific resource in the country would have to help." The new department will take over at least three of the wantime establishments set up to handle the huge share of Allied scientific work given the Dominion, These will include . the 1,000 square-mile Suffield Static . 30 people who lack other cultural fa- Canada Quietly Readies For Scientific Defence miles northwest of Medicina. Hat, |! Sask., the Valcartier Explosives La- boratories at Quebec and the chemi- cal warfare Jaboratories which actu- ally are a part of the National Re- search Division, In England when war broke out, he engaged in blood transfusion work, later became director in Eng- land of the Medical Research Coun- cil Laboratories experimental sta- tion at Lulworth, During research work on tanks, he discovered that the problem of unconscious tank drivers was an engineering one which could be solved by improved ventilation and Subsequently dia- gnosed the problem of inaccuracy among tank gunners as another equipment failure, Were his collar reversed, his quiet manner might mislead acqu- aintances into thinking he had fol- lowed the profession of his father, Rev. D. M. Solandt, a Toronto min- ister. But scientists with whom he comes in contcat will find him en. tirely a scientist -- interested as much in their problems as those of research itself. 'Ace' Tops Lord Louis' Contraption London, Nov. 8.-- (Reuters) --Vis- count Mountbatten's memory ma- chine had better move over and make room for "Ace," a wizard radio brain which tackles simul- taneous equations with 50 to 100 unknowns, : The British Department of Scien- tific and Industrial Research prom- ises that Asspultmatis Suny: engine--will "hear" and 're- I ae orders better than Eniac ~--electronic numerical iutegrator and computer, Eniac was referred to by Lord Mountbatten in a recent speech be- fore the British Society of Elec- trical Engineers. Two or three years will be re quired to build Ace and the cost with punched instructions (on En- the Research Department said in giving these details of its propos- ed operation: * Ace will be "told" a problem by passing through it a pack of cards with punched instructions (onEn- fac a problem must be prepared through a laborious two-hour pro- cess of plugging and switching.) Prefabricated units stored in a li- brary will "pop" the question and ace will flip out the answer in the decimal system, in numbers repre- sented by a series of ones and Zeros. (Ace can multiply two 10-figure numbers in 2/1,00ths of a second). Ace probably will be unique. Fur- ther scientific advances are expect ed to outdate Ace before he really gets going. Western Province Spends Millions On Water Project By LORNE BRUCE Canadian Press Staff Writer LETHBRIDGE, Alta. -- (CP) --A wave of néw wealth is expected to flow into southern Alberta in the wake of the St. Mary-Milk rivers frrigation project, calculated to bring stable water supply condi- tions to 345,000 acres of semi-arid prairie and rolling hills and make land produce up to 18 times as much as it does now. Key to the vast project which will cost $15,000,000 is the St. Mary River dam near Spring Coulee, about 30 miles southwest of Leth- bridge. It is estimated irrigation waters from this reservoir will be flowing into crop lands by August, 1049, and that the entire program can be cmopleted in seven years if no delays are encountered. Settle Water Supplies The St. Mary-Milk rivers project, now under way, will bring total irrigated land in southern Alberta to about 700,000 acres. Settled wa- ter supplies will prevail on a rolling plain extending about 160 miles eastward to the Saskatchewan boundary, an area which seldom re- ceives enough rainfall to assure pected to 'cost nearly 3.000.000 handicap until recent years, will be eliminated to a large extent under the St. Mary-Milk rivers plan. Pre- viously all construction and opera- tion costs were passed to the land owner, ! The federal government has recognized the work as a post-war project' and will pay cost of con- struction of dams, reservoirs, main canals and other structures, esti- mated at slightly more than $7,000,~ 000, as an outright contribution. The Alberta government will fin- ance construction of water distribu- tion systems and colonization, ex- TODAY Marks -- "Caravan Trail" af 1.30-4.00-6.30-9.10, "Wite of Monte Cristo" . at 3.30-5.08- 7.40-10.15, Last Complete Show at 9.00, i Biltmore--"Sw Pire" =. : - 337 . aol © 813 . Jom, "That Gang of ? -- - 446 ~- 7.10 - 0.26. Last com- plete Show 9.26. t -- "Without A Reserv! Most of this will be recovered' by tions" 1.30.3.20-5.10-7.06-9.05. the. province through annual Last Complete Show, 8.85. charges against the lands, DON'T MISS THE © ROYAL HORSE SHOW AT THE ROYAL WINTER FAIR November 12th to 20th, 1946 IN THE COLISEUM -- TORONTO REDUCED RAILROAD FARES A Few of the Grand Features 15,000 Head Livestock and Birds--1,200 Head of Dairy Cattle Alone -- Breath-taking Display of 6,000 Roses in Bloom at Flower Court -- Outstanding Poultry Exhibits -- Fruit -- Seeds -- Grains [7B illrmzoreld First Oshawa Showing! BATTLE = TARZANS Knives fash and fists clash . . . as the screen's top equatic stors meet in savage water combet for the yntomed queen of the Cajun country! I Paramount presents Doors Open Saturday at 12 Noon heavy yields and which often has suffered complete crop failures. Employment provided by the pro- ject, estimated as high as 460 men in seasonal work for from seven to 14 years, is a minor consideration. Main benefit will come from in- creased crop values. The dry land to be irrigated now supports three or. four persons a square mile. Irri- gation will support about 80 per- sons a square mile, Value of production from an acre of irrigated land sown to special- {2d cr is several times that from dry land, Instead of grossing $20-odd an acre from a dry land: wheat crop, farmers on irrigated land will raise beet crops worth $125 to $225 an acre and vegetable canning crops worth $120 to $360 an acre, To date the area has been used principally for livestock pro- duction, wheat and a bit of rye. Obstacle Overcome Heavy irrigation charges, greatest "SLIM" and his : HAPPY VALLEY TROUBADORS Offer Old Tyme and Modern Dances EVERY SATURDAY UKRAINIAN HALL 68 BLOOR ST. EAST Bring Him To Our Tomorrow Night! Hotel Genosha CLAUDETTE COLBERT JOHN WAYNE "in MERVYN LeROY' Lowithowt NOTE! Midnight Show." "at 11.30 p.m, Joy Reservationd fi Special Tickets Now on Sale for our next Ticket Holders will be Admitted It's the hilarious history of , @ wayward impulse! "S production of v TODAY: TOMORRO FIRST -RUN FLAMING ACTIO FEATURES! fi Breath-taking Adventure! Flaming Action! Daring Swordplay! Tense Thrills The Screen's Newest Western Star! ALEXUNDH The Wife of MONTE CRISTO IOHN LODER LENORE HUBER OF AMERICA OUTDOOR ILL ci oC SOLUTE "HEY KIDS!" VELL BE AT THE MARKS SATURDAY MORNING AT 11.30 AM. ONLY! DOORS OPEN AT 1115 AM. «s+ And You'll See the REGULAR PROGRAM At No Extra Charge! gl / 3 \ EVER MADE - IN ~ ONE GREAT SHOW, = Es EE da =

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