y A WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1946 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE NINE. ~ On The Air Tonight and Thursday "Wo 'CKEY CBL (cas) (NBC-CBS' 580 40 ) TORONTO CFRB (CBS-CBC) 860 BUFFALO WBEN (NBC) 930 TORONTO TORONTO OSHAWA CJBC S-ABC) Ba 11) BUFFALO WKBW (ABC) 1520 CHUM CEKDO . Smith . _ WEBW :18--Your Appointment Book CKEDO :18--Jim Wells, Sports WBEN juois Review and : ay :15--Jack Smith :15--The Nylon Show 1308! 45--H, V, Kaltenborn Home Folks Frolic ; HS Midweek Review :00--The Tespajen' Money :18--The Jumpin' Jacks :15--Listen to LaGuardia 30--Ad :30--Pishing & Hunting Club :30---Norman Cloutier :30~-Dr, Christian 30--Dance Tunes fr, London 30 Trail 'The Nation's Business 'The Great Gilldersleeve ny Baker 45" 0 1046" CBL :55--Bill Henry, News WGR Risin of Ann and WEBW :00--London ' by Lamp! 19:00--~Press News DO 00---Duffy's Tavern . 9 by Sinatra $3 tomer A ¥incent Lopes 9 Time 9:30---B'way in your Own Backyard CKEY WEBW CKDO -WBEN WGR CFRB :00--Jimmy Shields Si OFRD n| BR fmm 5 Dr, oa EN 30:00 Jonnny Perrin. TT" Okay E 7) ! 00--0BC National News D:15--CBC News Round! 15--News aod :18--Corinne Jordon 00 ale Sports ! CKEY 1 30 Se ormution Please CFRB--WGR 10 Kay Eayaer Show WBEN :30--Royal Winter Fair CKEY--CJBC :30--Henry Morgan Show WEKBW 0:30] ed Artists Series CBL CKDO UBL -WEKBW WBEN--CEKEY---CFRB Romeo vor ows C382 :10--Rexallites CFRB '15--Russ Carlyle's Orch, 5--Late Sports CBL CBL 1:00--Mart Kenaey's Orch W0--News O° "Wo Barron Orch, Ww 12:00--News B - News Bulletin. ews C. 100] y it With Music 2-ows Summary WEKBW :05--8nooky Lenson Show WBEN :05--Guy Lombardo Orch. CFRB 3-ABC Prog. To 1:00 am, WEBW News A CFRB THURSDAY MORNING 5:50--550 Rangers 8:05--Top o' the Morn. $8:10-Clint Buehlman ing +8 News 8:30--Music on Parade 8:30--Farm BService--Weath: EY | 10:45--The Listening :00--Volces of :10--Livestock Revi :10----Musical Clock :15--Clint Buehlman :15----Wake ed Smile :15--Three Coffees Time Morning Devotions Music on Parade '15--Ear], 15--] Date 2 NCOrpora Melodies Daytime Classics of World Events Listen :00-~My True 8 :00--Joe Powers of :00--News :05--Make Believe Ballroom and Singing n : ldmorn! Melodies :30--Bthelwyn Hobbes 0:30--Road of FL am 10:35--Piano Interlude 10:45--Joyce Jordan, M.D. Post ht tt tk dt dh Bk et Bd ek Bd et : 8 2 5 10:45--Music in Marchtime 10:45--Time To Remember foams, Westen i a) 10'45--Noveletts Bee "11:00--Arthur Godfrey 11:00--Melody Parade 11:00--Road of Life 11:00--Fred Waring Show 11:00--Morning Varieties 11:00--Consumer New: :00--Breakfast in :05--~Make Believe :15--Louise Moore :15--Big :15--Betty and Bob :30--Home Edition 30--Aunt Mary 0--News Jack Berch Show kd ok [eye tia :30--Grand Slam :35--8tor! :40--""Household :45--William Lang :45--Do You Remember 45--David Harum "45--Taura Lim :45--Laura ited :45--Voice of Memory 50--News Fe Id dk dt fk ek kf fe ed 12:00--Pictures in Melody 124 ews--Music 12:00--N. Shore Farm Digest 12:00--Glamour Manor - 12:00---BBC News 12:00--Kate Smith 32:00 -Rows 12:15--This Will :15--Pick The Hits Fa cast Farm nN I 3--Aunt Jenny F=-Lucy Linton aks 5 Freer: Reading Dr, Frederick A. :30--News :30--Lorne Greene (News) :30--~CHUM Valley Folks :30--World at Noon :30---Ontario Farm BEEEREEREEEEEEERE Bante :45--Luncheon Music E usic Box :55--Ceorge Murray Show 00 Song of Love :00--~CBC News : 00--Tne Eafior's' Disty E T's :00--News :00--Music of Manhattan :00--To The Ladies 17 an Roth :30--Modern Kitchen 30--Sally Work 2:00--News 00---Guiding Light :00---Our Gal Sunday :00--Se B :05--Mickey Lester Show :15--~Rom. of Helen Trent :15--Ethel and Albert Mel T ack. The Lone Journey Bride oe yoo Curtain Echoes 45--Sing' Alone Grub :45--Tropicuna Rian: The Range :00--Tello-Test 0+ :00--Ladles Be Seated :00--News 100 :15~~Com :15--Melody, :30--~News t Music a la :30--Norm. Wullen 3:30--Pepper Young's 11 :35- Romance :45--Three 8 45--George Barn :55--Western 2 ul '10--~Romance in Rh :15--High Tide yim :15--Melody, Ine. 15--8tella Dallas :18--"School for Parents :25--~News the Stars 00--~CBC News and Interlude (8, Kenney) : WBEN :15--Women's News Commentary CBL CBL | want against the contractor, - ar- WGR CBL B CKEY Ww. CHUM WGR B CBL WEKBW Ci DAD 'Neill Show CPREWOR Meiody Ii ted CHUM ar, Oakville WGR CFRB CJBC CBL CJBC--~WEKBW CEDO WGR CBL 8 Hollywood Ballroom : 's Wife :30--Chuck Wagon Serenade k Club of the Alr Counsellor" THURSDAY AFTERNOON CKDO WEKBW OBL WGR You Laugh Between the Lines JBC CKEY CHUM WEBW CBL WGR I Ine, WEBW :30--~Woman's Page of the Alr WKBW CHUM CJBC ist - WGR v CHUM CJ. oe EEEEEERLaaES . '00--From the Classics ne A igi :03~T' and the Pirates :05--8tu :15--~Family Favorites 15-8 ofits [8 :30--News :30~The Waltz Lives On :30--~Veterans' Varieties Plain Bill Believe Biche tonyt 5:55--Five Minute Mystery +» THURSDAY EVENING :30-Jim Hunter--News CFRB 6.30--Ralph Hubbell, Sports WGR 6:30--Serenade 6:30 Presenting Harry Horlick WKBW 6:30--Jazz Highlights CJBO 6:30--News Quis WBEN 6:30--Musical Memories CEDO :40---Wes. McKnight's Sports CFRB :45--High Newsreel CJBC :45--Robert Trout--News hic of the Week :00----Myste e Troubadour 00--Tony pews i :00--Musical Program 7:05---Make Believe Ballroom 7:05--~Music of Manhattan 1: John Fisher :10---By the Way A --News of the World : ack Smith :15--8ports News :18--Nylon Show :15--Raymond ily 8 30--Mystery of the Week :30--8ingin' Bam : Mr Keen $ :30--F Quis :30--~Melodic Moods :30--Toronto Trio outh De layhouse Popular salon Concert :00--Lum and Abner " p Wanted 1 hristian Sclence Views :15--Neil Chotem Tri 9:00--80 The Story Goes CKEY 9:00--These Modern Composers CJBC 9:00--Press News 9:10--Leaside Mem, Centre (Talk) :15--Vincent IopeE CKDO :15--Munici; CKEY vel Blackie CFRB WBEN Adven, of Jack Haley, Wayne and Shuster Show CBL :30--80 You Want to' Lead a Band CJBC--~WKBW CEDO OBL | Elsa to amuse her, Lod od od dart Tor rf rg oor 100--~CBC News 90--News-Say It With Music :00--CBS Prog. to 1:08 am. WGR :05--Johnny Long Orch, OFRB :05--News Summary TS ABC Prog to 1:00 adn. WEBW '30--New. i TT CURE WBEN fr Fl FT tte] eat (Cool Reception At Oakville Jail Oakville, Nov. 20. --(COP)~--Pris- oners or transients get a cold re- --OBL CHUM | ception at Oakville Jail these days. WGR CFRB 2 A WKBW 45--Right to Happiness WBEN--CBL es Octet OJBC OF | inquest," Chief. John Derry told EN | Town Council. BL | necessitates sending two constables WBEN | cell over night," 'The new heating system for the lock-up is not yet in operation. "If a prisoner died as a result of the cold, we would have a coroner's "It will be necessary to take all prisoners to Malton and this often out of town." Commented Councillor J.-Baillie, chairman of the Public. Buildings Commiittee: * "I suggest the. Chief issue a war- rest him and keep him in a cold Rearing Baby In Glass Box John Gray of Sea Cliff, LL, halts in her knitting to glance at her d joy, seven-weeks-old John, Jr, in the glass box where he spends waking and sleeping hours, The baby's father, an engineer, the box even before little John was born. controlled, humidity-controlled and It is temperature- dirt-free, with a built-in air filter. John romps &bout on a plastic nylon sheet, which only meeds wiping off. The baby needs no bed covering, because temperature is maintained at 84 degrees. An alarm system serves r if the t gets too high or too low. ature 'W + WBEN ' versity. hey being blind as moles, suckers for the poisoned worm treatment. minds farmers phat check moles when trapping is not used, Crystals of strychnine are sprinkled on worms in a jam jar and this bait is dropped into mole tunnels, Today's Short Story A MAN'S WORK By Anna E. Wilson Joe put a last touch of paint to old Mrs. Manning's picket fence, and, if the most Snporiant thing about a man's work is the way he feels about it, then Joe should have been a happy man. You could tell ig by the way he did things, and the expression on his weather- beaten face and in his clean, blue eyes, that Joe liked his job. He liked old Mrs, Manhing, too, erd, the fence finished, he looked across the lawn to where she was sitting in her wheel chair, a stout, comfortable lady who liked to be doing something even though she was crippled with arthritis, and was now placidly darning Joe's gocks. She nodded approval at the fence, and. called out in her cheer- ful, gossiny voice: : "I do think, Joe, that the Profes- sor must be late 10day." Joe looked across the street in surprise. Mrs, Manning must be mistaken. The Professor was never late, Every day at exactly ten minutes to four the door of the house opposite opened and the Pro- fessor came out, walked briskly down the drive with his soft felt hat at the exact angle on his grey- ing head to shade his amber-tinted len his neat malacca cane sin BR carelessly from left to right and a large k underneath arm, Joe disliked the Professor. To tell the truth, Joe's conscience troubled him. He had a secret and the Professor with his neat glasses and big books constantly reminded him of it. "There he is now," Mrs. Man- ning's voice was filled with deep satisfaction as the Professor ap- peared and walked towards his car, "It's Dale Carnegie, today," she added a bit wistfully, noticing the book under the Professor's arm. "Elsa says that the Professor's man Saunders, told her that the Professor lectures on philosophy and writes books about it, too. He's probably lecturing on it some- where right now." The postman whistled and he went down to the gate to pick up the newspaper, He opened it up and placed it eatery on Mrs. Manning's knees, but she just sat Staring at the print, and Joe thought she must still be think- ing about the Professor. oe tried to concentrate on his work but the paper slid off Mrs, Manning's knee and she just sat there with her hands folded on her darning. It was hard for her, Joe reasoned, with just him and rs. Manning was soclable, she liked to talk to folks, Maybe it was because she was lonely that she took such an interest in the Professor. He straightened up at the sound of her voice. "Why there he is back again," and Joe looked to see tha Profes- sor and Saunders walking up the drive and it seemed to Joe's trou- bled soul - that the Professor walked straighter, and that his lasses glinted more learnedly an ever. "He never came back so early before," Mrs, Manning's voice was eager, +4) thought it was strange, too, that the Professor had come back so early and when Elsa wheeled old Mrs. Manning into the house, he kept watching for Saunders to come out and.go to the garage as he usually did, and when Saunders didn't appear Joe began to worry. It was only because of Mrs. Man- ning's interest in the man, Joe told himself, that he crossed the lawn and went up the drive to the house te, e door was n and Saunders was - just a of the study at the back. He sighed with relief when he saw Joe. "He's lying down, Joe" he said tiredly, "to tell the truth he took it pretty hard when they laid him otf that lecture course at the Uni- He put up a good front but t! were bound to find out some day. Maybe you could sit with him while I drugstore. Inside the study, the Professor had begun to talk steadily. Joe glanced at Saunders, alarmed. "He's dictating to a dictagraph, Joe. That's the way he writes all his books. Just give him one of those pink pills on the table if he asks for it." Joe 'crossed over to the bed and sat down on a chair, The rooin was getting dark and the Profes- sor went on dictating steadily, Why the Professor might have He put the last touch of paint on the picket fence, been Joe. He was jzlking about how a man feit when he was sixty-five, about his job, about his family, about the pleasure he got out of little things. It wag just, Joe thought, like the way he feit trimming the wisteria vine, and then the Professor said how old people wanted to feel that they were of use in the world and Joe knew that that was just the wa Old Mrs, Manning, who was a ric lady and had no need to work, felt, when she darned his socks. The important thing about a job, the Professor sald, wag not how big and important it was but how a man felt about it himself. Sud- denly Joe burst out. "That's great, Professor," and sank back alarmed at the sound of his.own voice, The Professor turned his amber lenses' directly on Joe and Joe : gasped. "You like: my philosophy," he chuckled and reaching for a book $n the bedside table handed it to oe, "That's my last book, Joe, Per- haps you'd like to read it." Joe's miserable secret right 'out of him. "It's no use, Professor, You see I can't--read." "How fortunate you are, Joe. The professor's voice was incred- ibly cheerful, "You see, I can't-- see. Oh, no," he went on hastily, feeling Joe's surprise, "It's not as bad as that. Just have to rest my eyes for a few months, and now that I'm laid off lecturing till they get Well, I'll have time to finish a ok "Could I keep the book' any- way, Professor. Mrs. Manning Is sort of an educated woman and maybe she'd like to read it." Joe could hear the Professor still chuckling as he went out, and he smiled himself as he «crossed the lawn and went in to Mss, Manning with the book in his and. It was only natural, Joe thought a week later, for the Professor to drop over to see how Mrs. Man- ning liked his book. He could hear them now talking briskly as they drank tea on the lawn. "Take Joe now," sald the Pro- fessor, putting his cup down so go down to the | ' | pays to things around him, the | good | on the radio and carefully that he didn't spill a drop, "with the close attention he radio programs he listens to the fine re- sponsible attitude he takes to those who employ him, you wouldn't be | far wrong to speak of Joe as an | | educated man." burst' Op Life Topeka, Kas.,--8. D, Flora, Kan~ sas meteorologist, confessed that he always has an umbrella in his of- fice, He told a Topeka clvic club that the safeguard was "just in case my predictions for fair weather goes ." The forecaster sald he re- celved the idea on a visit to the chief of the Weather Bureau in Washington, "He also keeps an um- brella on hand," Flora added, L 38 BN J Phoenix, Ariz, -- The defend ant pleaded guilty to disturb- ing the peace and mistreating his wife, Justice Harry E. West- fall upbraided him for the fre- quency with which he got into trouble, "How long have you been coming in here?" The Magistrate asked, Quickly the defendant replied: "Ever since 'you married me." The Judge imposed a small fine, * & & ? Milford, Mass..--Some sort of a record might be claimed by two oc- togenarian barbers who have work- ed side by side for 58 years without a cross word--or a vacation, Frank H, Thomas, 86, proprietor, and Joseph B. McClure, 84, assist ant, have been together since 1888. * bh San Gabriel, Calif.--~Kneeling beside the cémetery grave of a wartime buddy, Harold Douglas Smith, 24, of Forest Hills, Pa., ended his life with a revolver, police report, The death of his friend, Theodore Rew, at néar- by Lake Arrowhead last Aug. 6 was recorded officially as sui- cide, Police said Smith had brooded over Rew's death, » » New Toronto--"My wife is prac- tically a back seat driver and she didn't ge the light as we were go-| ing through the village," explained repentant motorist Leonard Tucker of nearby Port Credit, "There is a population of 10,000 and they don't aprreciate being called a village," replied Magistrate W. E, McIveen, fining Tucker $3 and costs for care- less driving, "I'll tell my wife to keep better watch after this," prom- ised Tucker, * oP Lowville, N, Y.~Lowville child- ren are on a buyers' strike, in protest against the six-cent candy bar, Fifty of them signed a letter to the Watertown Daily Times that termed the price an "out- rage" and pledged "that we will not buy a single candy bar at any store that charges six cents. Baltimore, * Enotes Henn, Jr, and his British wife have a prob- lem--{finding a new home for a family expecting quadruplets, '"We havent had a chance to figure out what we'll do," said Henn, 28, after his wife told him of her doctor's forecast of quads, expected in February. X-rays have shown the foursome to be on its way. London bs Axel about the "unproductive work" of the "drones" in his departnfént, Britain's National Insurance Minister, James Griffiths, told Sir Waldron Smithers, Conser- vative, in the House of Com- mons: "I don't think this work is unproductive--I hope it will produce a retiring pension for the Honorable gentleman short- y." Sydney, ASutY A young American soldier--unable to remem-~ ber: what happened to him during the last two years which he appar- ently spent in the New Guinea jun- 5 gle--was found on the bank of a|$ creek near Lae, capital of northeast New Guinea, The Lae correspondent of the Sydney Morning Herald identified ¢ the soldier as Cpl, J B. Stubblefield, and sald he carried a Bible which listed the name of his next of kin as Mrs. J, B, Stubblefield of Hills- boro, Tenn, He was near collapse and suffering from malaria, * bb Columbus, O., -- Mrs, Janice Pollock hag decided that Mrs. America's place is in the home. Setting the familiar glimmer of the kitchen rance above the tinseled glamor of the "Mrs, America of 1946," title bestow- ed upon her last week, the pret ty 24-year-old housewife and motha: of four definitely gave up the honor, "PAGE FOR FURTHER ANNOUNCEMENT Poison Treatment Gets Rid Of Moles London--(CP)--British moles still are The agricultural ministry re- poison may vo 556566600 LAST TIMES TODAY! aus 4D } 3 Eng U. | LLER A Dt d Ly --STARTS TOMORROW--- £ddie Albert Gail Patrick "RENDEZVOUS WITH ANNIE" Also a Thrilling' Action Drama of the R.C.M.P, "NEATH CANADIAN SKIES" with Russell Hayden Nazi-Hanger Resents Slights New York, Nov, 20, -- (AP)----Sgt. John C. Woods, the little 35-year~ old official army hangman who dis- patched the 10 Nazi leaders at Nuernberg, is home today from Europe and denied these reports: one, that he would quit his job as hangman, and two, that his pro- fessional technique had not been good. i Woods told shipboard interview- ers; a I resent the criticisms I have heard about my hanging the Nazis. All of their necks were broken ime mediately but some of thelr hearts kept beating, "I deny that I had to rehang any of them. 'If there is anybody who can take a rope and hang 10 men in a little over an hour's time, he must have done a good job," FHIATKES TODAY Biltmore -- "Incendiary Blonde" =1.16 = 4,18 ~ 7,06 - 0.50, "Find the Blackmailer"--3.08 = 6.11 . 9.04. Last complete show, 0.04, Regent -- "Easy To Wed" «= 1.00 = 3.00 . 500 - 7.00 - 9.00, Last complete show, 8.50. Marks -- "The Killers" -- 125 = 3.30 - 5.35 - 7.40 ~ 10.00, Last complete show at 9.30, 'The seregant, who stands 8 'feel 3% inches tall, smiled and added: "Hanging is awful hard work, Ith hard on your nerves and it wea you out, It's time -for me to quif but I won't," Woods has been overseas three years, He says he has hanged about 200 persons during his career, including 134 in the European theatre of operations, b ) / DON'T WHISPER ' About It . SEE IT! NOTHING LIKE IT BEFORE! (TL gasned a w peader m ¢ vo BO 4 a ' = with « lu OF RALPH MORGAN KANE RICHMOND es nidren ob oor vo! or wes query suptiaren BO noite ROY ROGERS V. of ARIZONA "GABBY" HAYES -- DALE EVANS @ #7. Betty Hutton in "INCENDIARY BLONDE" FIND THE BLACKMAILER; Faye Emerson aon Nov. in whi Paris ner Shen we United ooy J. snd option, "oday OY Roms? : nuendeRly Bociety* rT on TRIGGER * Playing TRHNICOUOR --~---- JoHNSQ Y KEENAN WYNN CECIL KELLAWAY RAMIREZ « BLUE ETHEL SMITH #% ORGAN pea ON TRAY" (In Color) I PY