FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1949 I TH klar' ol E \ DAILY: TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE SEVENTEEN | | RADIO LOG--TIME TABLE as Dy the individual stations, The 13 sibility for FPIDAY EVENING 7:30 P.M. CBL-News Bulletin 1 CFRB-WGR-Club 15 CFRB--Pays to be Ignor- ant rCBL-Band Call CKDO-Cavallero Orch. SIB0sponng, Shop WBEN-University Play: 10:15 P.M. house CBL-News Roundup - Ss 1:45 PM, 10:30 P.M. WGR-Kattenborn FRB- CKEY-News: Sports CFRB-Mra. Altken WGR-Yours Truly CJBC-Foster Hewitt of WBEN-Stern, Sports CKDO-The Other Side CBL-Beat the Champs 8:00 P.M. {GERB-Song Se Cc -Gart Trio CKEY-News; Lester Show WBEN-Bands of America | 10:45 P.M. CBL-Roukd Table Discus-) CKEY-Dance Oreh. rk CFRB-Mr. Ace and Jane! Government CJBC-The Fat Man {CEDO-News:" Spbria 11:00 P.M. Wes |CKDO-Allen Roth Non Ta 8:30 P.M. CKEY--News; Robbins Nest WGR-My Husband WGR-News; Analysis CJBC-Treasure Trail CJBC-WBEN-News WBEN-CBL-Can. Short -Prairle Schooner Stories | CBL CFRB-News; Sport 8:45 P.M. {SEDO-DisemI Ine CKEY-Sports Interview 1s PM, , 9:00 P.M. | WGR-Sports; Bowling | WBEN-J. Wesp; Late Sport CKEY-News; So Story Goes CFRB-WGR-Ford Theatre | CFRB-Dance Oren. Na Today WBEN-Eddle Cantor | CBL-Symphony Concert 8:00 P.M. CEE Z-News; Ballroom CKDO-WGR-News; Sports WBEN-News CBL-Melody Parade CFRB-Herb Shriner CJBC--Ethel and Albert 6:15 P.M. WGR-WBEN-Sports CBL-News; Farm Market CFRB-Melody Caravan CJBC-Quebec Adventure CEDO-Melody Parade (6:20) 6:30 P.M. WGR-Contentment NBEN---Musical Souvenirs CBL-Divertimento CFRB-JIm_ Hunter; cEnigh CJBC-Kesten and Price 6:45 P.M. WGR-Lowell Thomas WBEN-Three-Star News CBL-BBC News CFRB-Did 1 Say That? (6:50) CJBC-What's Your Beef? 7:00 P.M. CKEY-Lorne Greene; Ballroom WGR-Beulah WBEN-Supper Club CBL-Ed McCordy CFRB-Songs of Times CJBC--Safety Clinic CKDO-Plantation Party 7:15 P.M. 11:30 P.M. |WGR-Man About Midnight CJBC-Danforth Folks CKDO-News | WBEN-Club Canadaque 9:30 P.M, |CFRB---Dance Orch. |CJBC-Dream Prelude CKEY-Mystery Playhouse WBEN-Red Skelton |CBL-WBEN-Rhytim Pastels (11:55) {CJBC-Abbott & Costello | 12:00 MIDNIGHT CFRB-WGR-Jack Smith |CKDO-Manhattan Music |CKEY-News; House Party WBEN-World. News | 0: | WGR-News CBL-Mott Sports | 19:00 P.M. WBEN-News; CJBC-Talent Hour | WGR-Morris Playhouse |2JBC--News CKDO-On Parade WBEN-Life of Riley ICFRB-News; Dance Orch. Dance Orch. SATURDAY MORNING 7:00 AM. 8:30 A.M. CFRB-WGR-Red Barber CEEY-News; Musical CBL-March Past WBEN-Archle Andrews 0 CJBC-American Jazz Cloc CFRB-News; Break. Tunes WGR-Warren Kelly CKDO-Music for Saturday WBEN-News CJBC-Toast and Jamboree ol CKDO-News CHUM LU herpes Top o' CHUM-News; Coffee Shop bs $s: Morning 8:45 AM WGR-Mother Goose CJBC-Jamboree . ond WBEN-Mary Lee Taylor CBL<News; Weather; | the WGR-News (8:50) CBL-Doorway in Fairyl'd Breakfast Melodies| CFRB-Gospel Singer CFRB-Chlldren's Music 7:15 AM CKDO-Sacred Heart Prog. |CJBC-Sarah and Peter . sy CHUM-Teleflash (8:59) |CKDO-News; A to Z in WBEN-Clint Buehlman ! CHUM-R.R. 105 7:30 AM. CEEY-News: Musical lock CBL-News; Melodies CFRB-Headlines; CHUM-Chapel Chimes 7:45 AM. Novelty |CHUM-Headlines; Shopper 10:45 AM. WGR-Bob Eberly CFRB-Today & Tomorrow CJBC-Children's Theatre CKDO-Sammy Kaye |CHUM-Stork Club; News | 11:00 A.M. | CKEY-News; Ballroom WGR-News; Let's Fretend | WBEN-Meet the Meeks CBL-Calling all Children .| CFRB-Melody Whirl | CIJBC-Juke Box Tunes CKDO-Random Rhythms 9:00 A.M. CKEY-News; Jay and Ginger WGR-Sunny Jim WBEN-News CBL-News;. Morning Melodies CFRB-News; Novelette CJBC-Shoppers' Special CKDO-Rhythm Artistry CBL-Breakfast Melodtes; |CHUM-Teen Tunes Melody Highlights : WGR-News (1:50) 8 3:15 AM, CFRB-Sports (7:55) WBEN-Adventure Story | CHUM-Unity Viewpoint ED Shower Dime 5 8:00 A.M. yr) ; 9:30 AM, CHUM-Morning Varieties WGR-Bob Sherry 70 | WEEN-Biz Top | 11:30 AM. CBL-WBEN-News CBL-Music for Madame | CKEY-Stars Sing CFRB-News; Pappy Smith| CFRB-Calling 'All Girls | WGR-Juniop Miss CHUM-.News: Coffee Shop CHUM-Young Canada | WBEN-Ed onnell 8:15 AM 9:45 AM | CBL-Peter's Program X : M. MM. CEEY-Musical Clock i CJBC-Pick of Pops WGR-Garden Gate | CKDO-Crossroads WBEN-Clint Buehlman | CFRB-Carmen Cavallero Jamboree CBL-Morning Devotions |WBEN-Uncle Ben's Club Lucky LAFF-A-DAY Copt. 1949, Kin Features Syndicate, Inc, World rights reserved. "Who is there to talk about? We're all here." SATURDAY EVENING 6:00 P.M. CBL-Plano Classics CFRB-Herth Trio;. Tune Time CJBC-Cuckoo Clock House CKDO-News: Harmonies 115 P.M. WoR-Rsclg, (6:20); , Weather and Sports CFRB-Hit Tunes 6:30 P.M. WBEN-NBC Symphony WGR-Lynn Murray CBL-Film Music CFRB-Jim Hunter: Quis CJBC-News; Sport CKDO-Bryndwynne Orch. 6:45 P.M, CBL-Just Muslo CFRB-W McKuight Talk 7:00 P.M. CREY-Lome Greene; | allroom WGR-Winner Take All CBL-Meet Gisele CFRB-8pike Jones CJBC-Scattergood Balnes CKDO-Music Hall WBEN-Sports CBL-Why Climb Moun- ta ins 7:30 P.M. WGR-Monrge Orch. | CBL-Armdale Chorus CFRB-Broadway's My Best WBEN-U. of B. Round Table CJBC-The Movie Scene CKDO-0ld Ranch House 7:45 P.M. BL-Lake Success 3JBC-Low Snider 8:00 P.M. CKEY-Music Calvacdde WGR-CFRB-Gene Autry WBEN-Hollywood Theatre CBL-Musical Program >JBCTwenty Questions CKEY-Old Dance Tunes JERB-Philip Marlowe WBEN-Truth or Conse- quences CBL-Share the Wealth CFRB-The Shadow 2JBC-Harmony House CKDO-Music by Morgan :00 P.M CKEY-News; Hoedown WGR-Gangbusters CFRB-CBL-News: N.H.L. CJBC-Music of America 9:30 P.M. WGR~--Tales of Fatima WBEN-Judy Canova 2JBC-Art Hollman 9:45. P.M. CJBC-Polars Orch. CFRB-S8ing It Again 10:00 P.M WGR-Sports Events | 10:15 P.M. 4-21 >JBC-Boyd Valleau Orch. CKEY--Music Box 10:30 P.M. CKEY-News: Sports NGR-Roy Block Presents WBEN-Grand Ole Opry CFRB-Jimmy Shields CJBC-Dance Orch. JKDO-Square Dance 10:45 P.M. CRKEY-McLeod Trio CFRB-Headliners (10:55) CEKDO-News 11:00 P.M. CKEY-Robin's Nest 11:05 WGR-News; Analysis WBEN-CJBC-News CBL--Red River Dance CFRB-News; Organ Music CKDO-News 11:15 PM. WGR-Sports; Interlude WBEN-Flight with Music CFRB-Sing it again CJBC-Dance Orch. 11:30 P.M, WGR-Night Club of Alr WBEN-Club Canadaque CBL-Dance Orch CJBC-Tony Pastor Orch. 12:00 MIDNIGHT CKEY-News; House Party WGR-News: Night Club of Afr WBEN-News; Click Orch. |{CIBC-CBL-News |WGR-Tales of Fatima Ten Awards Given Out For Radio Ten Radio "Oscars" and three special citations, known in the net- work industry as "George Fostor Peabody Radio Awards" were dis- tributed yesterday in New York. For the first time in the nine- year-old history of the awards, a special salute was paid to an "out- standing contribution to the art of television." This went to the American Broad- casting Company's "Actor studio" as "the first to recognize that dra- ma on television is neither a stage play nor a movie, but a separate and distinct new art form." For the second time, Edward R. Murrow, CBS commentator, receiv- ed the award for "outstanding re- porting and interpretation of the news." He won a Peabody plaudit in 1943. . Other awards for outstanding achievement included: Entertain- ment in drama--NBC University Theatre. Entertainment in Comedy --Groucho Marx, Entertainment in music--NBC for its over-all con- tributing to the broadcasting of good music. Music Tonight This Friday marks the final broadcast in the current series of "Pop" Concerts with - Paul * Scher- man conducting. Robert Merrill, one of the most popular of today's bari- tone singers, will be guest. The Metropolitan Opera Auditions of the Air was the springboard to Robert Merrill's success as a singer, and resulted in radio appearances which quickly developed into a fea- tured part in one of the most important American commercial broadcasts. . Besides his opera and concert work, he is one of the most popular recording artists of the day. In fact, two years ago he won the Recorded Music Annual Award for this re- cording of the aria, "Ah, Dite Alla | Biovine" from "La Traviata", On the broadcast Merrill will sing Cavatina from Gounod's "Faust", Deh vieni all finestra from Mozart's "Don Giovanni" and Di Provenza il mar, from "La Traviata". Orches- tral selections will include Pas de Six, from Rossini"s "William Tell", Overture to "Der Freischutz" by Weber, Gypsy Airs by Sarasate (with Hyman Goodman playing the violin solo), Jamaican Rhum- ba by Benjamin, The Dream of Ol wen, by Williams, Voices of Spring, by Strauss, and Enesco's "Rouman- ian Rhapsody No. 1." The "Pop" Concert is carried, from Massey Hall in Toronto, on the Trans-Canada network of the CBC, and can be heard locally over station CBL at 9 p.m. Variety Orchestra in zestful per- formance. of light concert music every Friday evening at 7.30. The program is Band Call and it comes to Canada through the BBC Tran- scription Service. It is heard on Ontario and Quebec stations of the CBC Trans-Canada network. > Dr..ma Bette Davis plays the role creat- ed on the Broadway stage by Ger- trude Lawrence when she stars in a full hour adaption in the comedy "Skylark" on "Ford Theatre" at 9 pan. Ronald Colman stars as a Brit- ish artist whose death is inscribed on a tombstone on a hot August day by a mysterious stone cutter, in "August Heat" on "Philip Mor- ris Playhouse" at 10 p.m. A car containing wealthy Barton Drake goes over a bridge and dis- appears, and a probate court is about to declare him legally dead when Johnny Dollar is called, in "The Case of the Drake Investiga- tion," on "Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar" at 10.30 p.m. Saturday Morning Radio "Hop 0° My Thumb," whimsical story of a minute but magically strong boy, in "Let's Pretend" at 11.05. The entre Graves family--Harry, Grace, Lois and Judy--is hit by an acute case of spring fever on "Junior Miss" show at 11.30. Rusty Lane, now in his second year in the Broadway smash hit, "Mister Roberts," heads the cast of Broadway players in "No Time For Poetry" on "Grand Central Station" at 12.30. Peggy Ann Garner, who at 17 has made 14 pictures, stars in a radio adaptation of Whitfield Cook's "This Is Violet" on "Stars over Hollywood" at 1.00-1.30 p.m. NEW DESERONTO INDUSTRY Deseronto, Ont. -- (CP) -- A new industry to manufacture radios, electronic and television equipment is being established here. Negotia- | tions have been under way since |January and Mayor R. K. Jackson | travelled 2,000 miles in making ar- {rangements. TTNAID i] STV TECHNICOLOR hi Birmingham Link In Britain's Big Television Setup By NORMAN CRIBBENS Canadian Press Staff Writer Birmingham, England-- (CP) -- Before long a massive new tower of steel will be stabbing skywards to a height of 300 feet over Birmingham, heralding the approach of televis- ion for thousands now outside the viewing range. . With the help of priorities work- men are fast making progress with the first television station to be built outside London. ; Already engineers are layihg| cables between London and Birm- | ingham which will link the present ! station at Alexandra Palace, North | London, with the new station, and | af four separate points between the | two "repeater" stations are to be | erected. | These repeaters are minor sub- | stations designed to give "booster" | signals so that Birmingham can re- | ceive London not only by land cab- | le but by radio link. | The Birmingham station will op- | en next autumn. Northern Enge land is next on the list, with Man chester as the probable site for a station. Bristol, too, is high on the priority list. "In the next year or so a sub stantial area of Britain will be cov= ered by television," a BBC official told The Canadian Press, ' At present television reception in Britain is guaranteed for only about. 40 miles from the transmit- ting station--but in actual fact televised programs are often receive ed more than twice this distance away. The Isle of Wight, though | at least 90 miles from London, is thickly dotted with viewers. Opening of provincial stations will inevitably widen the scope of outside relays. At present outside relays are restricted to the trans- mitting area ringing London. When Birmingham opens, events taking place in the midlands will be sent by mobile transmitters to the Birmingham station, then re- layed to Alexandra Palace for re- ception by viewers both in London and Birmingham areas. British viewers pay an extra one pound ($4) in addition to one pound for a radio receiving licence to cover expenses of television pro- grams. - a TICKETS AVAILABLE FROM ANY POLICE OFFICER i OR AT DOOR. Jubilee Pavilion -- Friday, April 22 Dancing 9:00 till 1:00 a.m., with Van Walker and His Orchestra * $2.00 per Couple Saturday! A STARDUSTERS r= Vocalists: BONNIE CLARKE -- JACK YOUNG A he eh ci SS PE ES TENE WERE AT eee -------- %a New Color Cartoon "Half Pint Pygmy" * NEWSZ Es nols Dens CHUM-News; Kid Corner CFRB-Breakinat Tunes ~Tee Beh NL ) CEEY A petition had a familiar ring to|awarded a $500 scholarship, was| CJBC-Jamboree {CHUM-Jr. Red Cross SATURDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 NOON 1:30 P.M. CHUM-News; Good Old CKEY-News; sic Box | WGR-Give & Take y8 Er aiows; Mu Today WBEN-RFD America 4:00 P.M. WBEN-News CBL-Concert Favorites CKEY-News; Club 580 CBL-BBC-News; Commegt CFRB-Music Hall WBEN-Stephen Orch, CFRB-Pick of Pops CJBC-Ozark Folks CBL- Highway of Song CEKDO-Luncheon Music CHUM-News; Hit CJBC-Jr. O.H.A. Hockey CHUM-News; Music 2:00 P.M. CHUM-Safety Quiz " CKEY-News; Jerry Burke 4:15 P.M, 12:15 PM, oy | CFRB-Jamaica Races WGR-Handy Man WBEN-Washington News | WBEN-Boston Symphony |CFRB-WBEN-Racing CBL-8ports College CBL-Fest. of Choirs CKDO-Hign Tide 12:30 P.M. CRB Escape 4:30 P.M. CKEY-Lorne Greene WGR-Meetin' with CEDO-Al Goodman Orch, CHUM-David Rose Roaron WGR-Grand Central WBEN-U.N. Review CFRB-At theChase x 2:30 P.M. CBL-Junior Melodies CHUM-News; B'dway WGR-Children's Quiz -News WBEN-Constant Invader Echoes CFRB-Just for Fun CJBC-Juke Box Tunes CJBC-Walter CKDO-News; 5:00 P.M. CKEY-News; Studio Party CJBC-Jazz Un. CEDO-Les Brown Orch. WGR-Dick Haynes WBEN-Lassle Show CHUM-News; Salute CBL-Ballet Club Municipalities CFRB-Rythm Parade 2:45 P.M. WBEN-Report on Europe CJBC-Musical CHUM-Ten Year Hits CHUM-Téleflash (2:59) 5:15 P.M. 3:00 P.M. WBEN-Red Cross Proog. them. Turning up the records we | Lois Marshall, young Toronto so- find that all of them know a good | prano who was a contestant in pre- deal about the old adage, "if at|vious years. first you don't succeed . .." Winner of the second award for Louise Roy, St. Boniface, Man. | men two years in succession was soprano, who won this year's $1,000 | Ernest Adams, Vancouver baritone, scholarship, tied for the second |who won a $250 scholarship in 1948, award to women in 1947 and was a |and a $500 scholarship in 1949. semi-finalist in 1948. Morley Margolis, Winnipeg bari- tone and 1949 winner of first place for men and) $750, was a semi- finalist in the 1948 contest. The position of semi-finalist is honor- ary and carries no award. This year's second girl winner, and Maggie in Court -- 1.25 BY POPULAR DEMAND 4.10, 650, 9.15. Lass complete || OSHAWA CROWDS ACCLAIM show, 9.00 p.m. 1 IT THE MOST HILARIOUS Regent -- Hills of Home" -- 1.30; COMEDY OF THE SEASON 325, 525, 17.25, 9.30. Last NEGENT "QR Fownene PRovors TheaThs | Join 00 Ballroom "PAYOFF IN PAIN" { Spring Opening D-A-N-C-E SATURDAY, APRIL 30th Parade LIN NIN TINAY: "PERFECT MARRIAGE" Loretta Young @ David Niven Added x Cedar Beach Park (Musselman's Lake) THEATRES TODAY Marks -- "The Far Frontier" -- 2.35, 5.20, 8.00, 10.25. "Jiggs Bowles CKEY-Singin' Sam -- Music by -- WBEN-World Events CFRB-Garden Talk CJBC-Byways of Beauty "CANINE PATROL" "POPULAR SCIENCE" CKEY-News; Jerry Burke WGR-Veteran Show WBEN-Orchs, © 1:00 P.M. CBL-Sat. Ma CKEY-News; Tops in Pops| CFRB-Overseas Report WGR-Hollywood Stars CJBC-O.H.A. WBEN-Farm, Home Hour CBL-News CFRB-Labour Talk CJBC-Jazz Unlimited CHUM-Sweet and Hot 1:15 P.M. CBL-World Church News | CFRB-Better Business |CFRB-You A 3:15 3:30 CKDO-Southern Musie CHUM-Studio (1:05) CFRB-Science CKDO-Boyd Valleau Show 5:45 P.M. WGR-Treasure Guest of Nation {CKDO-Scooter gazine | :30 P.M, | CKEY-Ballroom | WGR-Dick Haynes Show ror CFRB-Broadway's My Beat CKDO-Sat. Supper Club P.M. lea Adventures | CHUM-Flve Star Final Hockey | WGR-Outdoor Mike CBL-This Week CJBC-Fact or Fantasy (5:55) P.M. re There | Farm Family On Broadcast For 10 Years By JEAN THOMPSON Canadian Press Staff Writer There's an unusual anniversary coming up the first Monday in May. The Craigs of Briarwood Farm will begin their 11th year as the farm family on CBC's noon-hour farm broadcast for Ontario and Quebec. That a serial should be going | after 10 years is not so remarkable. | But that the original actors and the original script-writer have put on some 2400 programs--five days about the program is the way its urban rating has stood up over the decade. Dean Hughes likes to think it is contributing something toward better understanding between coun- try and city folk. Other broadcasting regions in Canada have their farm families too. In the Maritimes they are the Gillans, on the Prairies the Jack- sons and on the West Coast the Carsons. While following the gen- eral idea, of the Craig family, the lives of the other radio families are Jypical of the regions in which they ive. Names of the 1949 winners in the "Singing Stars of Tomorrow" com- complete show, 9.00 p.m. vf Drive-In -- "Treasure of Sierra Madre"-- (first show at dusk). Biltmore -- "The Babe Ruth Story -- 1.25, 4.20, 7.15, 10.03. "Vigilantes of Boomtown" 3.10, 6.05, 9.00. Last complete show, 9.00 p.m. Plaza--"Mexican Hayride" 1.00, 2.50, 4.40, 6.13, 8.03, 9.53. Last ccmplete show 9.24. FOR YOUR NEXT PARTY Rememver The Blue Swallow 22 rooms for your next private party at your disposal. Right on the New 2 Lane Highway -- Only 2 Miles West of. Oshawa. Phone 363-J-1 a week, 50 weeks a years, at the same tim --there's a record w r for 10 every day noting. OLDE TYME and with ¥* Fact and fiction have been subtly interwoven as the 10-year history of the Craigs has unfolded. Craigs' Briarwood Farm is located at some indefinite spot in Central Ontario. But when script-writer Dean Hughes bought a farm near Union- ville, Ont., he called it. Briarwood. The daily life of the Craigs, while carefully related to farm routine, is fictional. But when Grace Web- ster, who plays Martha Craig, broke her leg two years ago, Martha did the same thing in the script, and | the studio w#s moved to the act-| ress' bedside until she could re- appear in the studio again. Frank Peddie, a Toronto lawyer, is Thomas Craig, George Murray, radio singer and actor is his son Bill Craig, while daughter Janice Craig is petite Alice Hill, stage and radio actress. The idea of a radio farm family was originated in 1939 by Orville Shugg, former supervisor of farm broadcasts for CBC. Its object is to | promote better farming practice, | and to entertain at the same time. | One of the astonishing things | MODERN DANCING - at - CEDAR VALLEY COUNTRY CLUB (North Oshawa) TONIGHT (930 1 a.m.) | - with = HAROLD GODFREY and His Olde Tymers FUN GALORE FOR BOTH YOUNG AND OLD! "Just a Half-Mile West of Albert's Corners" VIRGINIA GREY o> LUBA MALINA JOHN HUBBARD 3 | od - PLUS CARTOON & MUSICAL PLAZA y V, LLL SMOKING IN THE LOGES EXTRA! -- EXTRA! In Addition to ABBOT & COSTELLO WE PRESENT 'Beyond the Pecos' with ROD CAMERON SAT. MATINEE ONLY BILTMORE &s) oI Van one of Canada's | An ideal place for Walker AND HIS MUSIC (A POPULAR 12-PIECE ORCHESTRA) You and your family will enjoy.your picnic at ittle beauty spots! your: group picnic! WRITE FOR RESERVATIONS! ROV ROGERS TR .~. JOE YULE - RENIE RIANO CHAPTER NO. 11 CONGO BILL (Every Matinee This Week) with FOY WILLIKG Ano THE RIDERS OF Doors Open 11:30 a.m. Sat: ANDY DEVINE THE PURPLE, SAGE » GEORGE McMANUS ALSO COLOR CARTOON