Daily Times-Gazette, 24 Feb 1950, p. 16

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Ee A a, PAGE SIXTEEN THE DAILY TIMES. GAZETTE a FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1950 RADIO LOG - TIME TABLE Information on radio programs is supplied by the Jadividual stations. The prints p d an does mot assume responsibility for inaccurate a FRIDAY EVENING 6.00 P.M. CKLB-Sports; News WGR-WBEN-News CKEY-News; Ballroom CFRB-Curt Massey CBL~Melody Parade 6.15 P.M, WGR-8ig Smith, Sports WBEN-Ralph Hubbell, Sports OBL-Market Summary CFRR-Ontario On Parade . 6.20 P.M. . SELB Supper Club .30 P.M. cimo-Byug Whittaker, WGR-Canes 1 for Cone tentment WBEN-Musical Sou- venirs CBL-International Com- mentary; British Empire Games 6.45 P.M. CBL-The Enchanted Pine CJBC-Safety Clinio WGR-Lowell Thomas WBEN-News 7.00 P.M, CKLB-Saddle Rockin® Rhythm CJBC-Poole's Paradise CFRB-WGR-Beulah WBEN-High School Round Table CBL-Opera Stars CKEY-News 7.15 P.M. CKLB-News For the Community ; Milt Heath Trio WGR-Jack Smith Show WBEN-News CBL-Ed McCurdy Sings CFRB-Jack Smith Show 7.30 P.M. CKLB-Barry Wood Show CJBC-Doris Day Sings CFRB-WGR-Club 15 WBEN-Bandbox CKEY-Cisco Kid CBL-U.K. Election Forum 7.45 P.M. CKLB-Singin' Sam CJBC-Foster Hewitt WGR-Edward R. Mur- row WBEN-Income Tax Hints CFRB-Kate Aitken ° CBL-Canadian Stories 8.00 P.M. CKLB-News; Starlite Promenade CFRB-The Sports Writers CJBC-The Fat Man WGR-The Show Goes On WBEN-Halls of Ivy CKEY-News; Mickey > Lester CBL-Ray Norris Quintet 8.30 P.M. CKLB-Children's The- atre of the Air CFRB-CJBC-Treasure Trail WGR-My Favorite Hus- band bi WBEN-We, The People CKEY-Mickey Lester Show CBL-~T.S.0. Concert 9.00 P.M. CKLB-Michael Shayne CJBC-Ford Theatre-- "Springtime for Henry" WGR-Leave it To Joan WBEN-Screen Direc- tors' Playhouse CFRB-Arthur Godfrey CKEY-CKLB-News 9.15 P.M, CKEY-Campbell A La Carte 9.30 P.M. CKLB-Philo Vance CJBC-Ford Theatre WGR-Broadway Is My Beat WBEN-The Show Goes On CBL~Beat the Champs CFRB-Mr. Keene CKEY-Bill Brady Show 10.00 P.M. WGR-Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar CBL-News Bulletin \CFRB-The 8ki Show CKEY-News; Parade of Bands WBEN-Life of Riley CJBC-Fights 10.15 P.M. CFRB-Al Bollington At the Organ CKEY-Tommy Haslock Trio CBL-CBC News Round- up ' 10.30 P.M. CKLB-News; Sports CKEY-News; Sports C, -Hospitality Time C McGill String Quartet WBEN-Bill Stern, Sports WGR-Ray Bloch Presents 10.45 P.M. CKLB-Melodic Moments WBEN-Government Talk CKEY-Hit of The Day CFRB-Gordon Sinclair Footloose Among Youth 11.00 P.M. CKLB-News; Robbin's Nest CJBC-News Bulletin WGR-WBEN-News CBL-Eric Wild CKEY-News; Sunday Afternoon Sports (Talk); Bill's Place CFRB-News; Orch. 11.15 P.M. CFRB-Let's Go Bowling; Road Report; Organ Reverie CJBC-U.N. Today WGR-Late Sports WBEN-Joe Wesp 11.30 P.M. CJBC-Prelude To Dreaming WGR-Man About Mid- Trace night WBEN-Rockefeller 'Cen- ter Choristers CBL-Vancouver Theatre CFRB-Dick Lasalle Orchestra 11.45 CFRB-Oscar Dumont Orchestra. 12.00 MIDNIGHT CKLB-News and Sports CJBC-News WGR-News; Man About Midnight WBEN-News; Qrchestra CBL-News CFRB-News; Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra CKEY-News; House Party SATURDAY MORNING 7.00 A.M. CKLB-News; Morning in the Motor City CBL-News; Concert Time * CJIBC-Toast and Jame boree CFRB-News; Top o' The Morning CKEY-News; Musical Clock WGR-Musical Clocks News WBEN-News 7.15 AM. WBEN-Clint Buehlman 30 AM, CBL-News; Concert Time CFRB-News; Top 0" The Morning CKEY-News; Musical Clock 7.556 A.M. CBL-Melody Highlights CFRB-Sports WGR-News 8.00 AM. PKLB-News; Sports CBL-News CJBC-News; Sports CFRB-News; Band- stand CKEY-News; Sports WGR-Musical Clock WBEN-News 8.15 AM. CKLB-Morning in the Motor City CBL-Devotions CJBC Toast and Jam- boree CKEY-Musical Clock WBEN-Clint Buehlman CFRB-News; 8.30 A.M. CBL-March Past CFRB-News; Novelette 8.456 AM. CFRB-Gospel Singer WGR-News (8.50) 9.00 A.M. CKLB-News; Morning Devotions CBL; News; Music in the Morning CJBC-Mind Your Manners Novatime CKEY-News; Jay and . Ginger WGR-Musical Clock WBEN-News 9.15 AM. CKLB-Port Perry Show CFRB-Homemaker's Club WBEN-Uncle Ben's Cabin 9.30 A.M, CBL-Musical Program 'WGR-St. Joseph's Teachers College Drama ° CJBC-Sarah and Peter WBEN-People are Funny CFRB- orkid Maga- zine of the Air 9.45 AM. CJBC-Little Players CFRB-Walta Time WGR-Garden Gate 10.00 A.M. SKLB-News; Rainbow Ballroom CBL-Music for Madame CJBC-Ontario Roundup CFRB-Make Way For Youth CKEY-News; Ballroom WBEN-Fred Waring WGR-Mother Goose 10.15 A.M. WGR-Knot Hole Quiz 10.30 A.M. CBL-Fairyland CFRB-Joe DiMaggio Show WGR---Joe DiMaggio Show WBEN-Mary Lou Taylor 10.45 A.M. WGR-Joe DiMaggio Show 11.00 AM. CBL-Calling All Child ren CIBC-Opportunity Trials CFRB-Here's Health; Road Report; Melody Whirl CKEY-News; 'Ballroom WGR-Allan Jackson; Let's Pretend WBEN-Lassie Show 11.15 A.M. CFRB-Here's Health WBEN-NBC Stamp Club ciBC-Musical Program 11.30 A.M. CBL-School Quiz CJBC-Pick of the Pops WGR-Junior Miss WBEN-Ed McConnell SATURDAY AFTERNOON 12 NOON PKLB-News; Mid-day Melodies CBL-News; Weather CJBC-Pick of the Pops CFRB-Symphony of Melody CKEY-News; New Style usic WGR-Theatre of Today WBEN-News 12.15 P.M. CBL-Sports College WBEN--Washington Correspondent 12.30 P.M. CKLB-News; Sports CBL-CBC Stamp Club CJBC-Walter Bowles; Musical Program| - CFRB-News CKEY-Lorne Green WGR-Grand Central WBEN-Luncheon with Lopez 12.45 P.M. PELB-The Vocal Spotlite CBL-The Answer Man CJBC-Byways of Beauty CFRB-Presenting Ed, McCurdy CKEY-Singin' Sam 1.00 P.M. SKLB-News; All Time Hit Parade CJBG-Junior Junction CBL-News; Weather CFRB-Shoe Talk; Organ Music CKEY-News; Tops in Pops WGR-Hollywood Stars WBEN-National Farm and Home Hour 1.15 P.M. CBL-This Week CFRB-Bgtter Business ureau 1.30 P.M. LJIBC-Byways of Beauty CBL-World Church News JFRB-Curtain Calls WGR-Give and Take WBEN-Voices Down the Wind 1.45 P.M. CJBC-Songs of Anne Shelton CBL-Concert Favorites 2.00 P.M. CKLB-News; Motor City Matinee 'WBEN-Here's to Veterans CJBC-Met. Opera-- "Madame Butterfly" CBL~Metropolitan Opera '"Khovantchina" By Mussorgsky JFRB-The Show Goes On CKEY-News; Jerry Burke WGR-County Fair 2.30 P.M. CJBC-Voices Down the Wind NGR-Get More Out of Lif: WBEN-Mafinee at a Meadowbrook CFRB-Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar 2.45 P.M. -{VGR-Handy Man 3.00 P.M. WEBR-Meetin' With Keaton CKEY-News; Jerry Burke VBEN-Pioneers of Music; Symphony Orchestra CFRB-Report From Overseas CJBC-John Steele, venturer 3.15 P.M. Ad- CFRB-Adventures in Science CFRB-Young Love 3.30 P.M. CJBC-Musical Program SFRB-Club Crosby 3.45 P.M. CFRB-Dick Haymes Show 4:00 P.M. JKLB-News; Rainbow Ballroom CFRB-Junior' O.H.A. Hockey CJBC-Juke Box Serenade CKEY-News; Club 580 WGR-Football Game WBEN-Living 1950 4.30 P.M. CFRB-Noro Morales Orchestra CJBC-Old, New, Borrowed, Blue WBEN-Honeymoon Hotel 5.00 P.M, )KLB-News for Teens; Rainbow Ballroom WGR-Bob Chester's rch. CJBC-Jazz Unlimited CFRB-Boys' Town Choir CKEY-News; Studio Party CBL-Ballet Club 15 P.M, CBL-Baliet Club 5.30 P.M. CJBC-Jazz Unlimited CFRB-The Dave Stephens' Show CKEY-Make Believe Ballroom NGR-Cisco Kid WBEN-Reading Between the 5.45 P.M. WGR-Music In The Morgan Manner CBL-Ballet Club CFRB-Dean Riley -- Lines Church of England WBEN-Hollywood Sta/s Tower Prisoner Now Sells Honey Dublin --(CP)-- Norman' Baillie- help to sell cycle parts, years' bit skins, dried milk, honey, here include cattle, rab- bi- Diesel engines and sur- gical instruments, In 1933 he was sentenced to tive imprisonment for giving 23 W "What?! ~You're late because you OVERSLEPT?!--Don't tell me' " you sleep at home TOD?" SATURDAY 6.00 P.M. CKLB-News; Sports Tal CBL-Piano Classics CJBC-Cuckoo Clock House 8.00 CFRB-Tune Time; Movie Time" CKEY-News WGR-News; Man About Town WREN-News Hou CBL-~Muslic CJBC-Twen WBEN-Buffalo Round ble CKLB-News; Sports CJBC-The Mysterious Traveller CKLB-News; Old Ranch se From the ilms CFRB-Gene Autry 6.15 P.M, Show EVENING 10.30 P.M. CBL-Organ Melodies CJBC-Kalle Ruusunen, aritone CFRB- my Shields CKEY-Newg; Joe Crysdale\ WBEN-Lincoln Day Dinner 10.45 P.M. CKLB-Presenting Ed. P.M. ty Questions CBL-CBC News CFRB-Singing Canaries WGR-Sig Smith, Sports WBEN-Hubbell, Sports 6.20 P.M. CKLB-Supper Club - 6.30 P.M. CBL-Divertimento CJBC-News; Sports CKEY-Michael Shayne WGR-Gene Autry Show WBEN-Hollywood 8.°0 P.M. CKLB-Parade of Bands CBL-Share The Wealth CJBC-Apartment 113 CFRB-Adventures of Philip Marlowe McCurdy CKEY-Hit of the Day 11.00 P.M. CBL-Prairie Schooner CJBC-News CFRB-News; In Toron- to This' Week; Road Report CKEY-News; Littlest CFRB-News; Saturday WGR-Saturday Date 6:40 P.M. CFRB-Novatime 6.45 P.M. CBL-Divertimento CJBC-The Four Knights CFRB-Wes SeeR night... Sport. WBEN-Religion in the News 7.00 P.M, CKLB-News; Music Hall Melodies CBL-Armdale Chorus CJBC-Juke Box Jury CFRB-Guy Lombardo CKEY-News; Lorne Green WGR-Young Love WBEN-High School Forum 7.15 P.M. CBL-Memo From Lake Success 7.30 P.M. CKLB-0Old Ranch House CBL-Byng Whittaker Tops CBL~News; 9:45 CKEY-Phyll Show re. CFRB-Home on the WGR-Sing nge CJBC-Musical Program CKEY-Musical Mys- teries WGR-Vaughn Munroe 10.15 CKEY-Bulldog Drum- Ski Bulletin mond WGR-The Goldbergs WBEN-Truth or Con- sequences 9.00 P.M. CKLB-News; These Are Broadcast CJBC-What's The Answer CFRB-News; Hockey Broadcast CKEY-News; Hayloft Hoed WGR-The Gangbusters WBEN-Your Hit Parade 9.30 P CJBC-London Dance Orchestra WGR-The Godfrey WBEN-Dennis - Day WBEN-London Dance Orchestra 10.00 P.M Trio CJBC-Ellis McLintock"s Orch WBEN-Judy Canova Angel WGR-News and News Analysis WBEN-Holy Trinity Lutheran Church Service 11.15 P.M. CBL-Prairie Schooner CJBC-Joe Decourcey's Orch. WGR-Late Sports CFRB-Hugo Malan Orch. 11.30 P.M. CJIBC-Leighton Noble's Orch, Hockey own CBL-Current or Choice WGR-Night Club; News WBEN-Distinguished Service Awards CFHRB-Ray Pearl Orchestra 11.45 P.M. CFRB-Harvey Crawford Orchestra 12 MIDNIGHT CKLB-News and Sports; CJBC-Dance Orch. CBL-CBC-News; Sign- off CFRB-News; Joe Reich- man Orch. CKEY-News; House P.M, is Marshall It Again P.M. CKEY-Allan McLeod Part WBEN-Wormwood Trio Y WGR-News; Night Club of the Air It Is Your Problem The farmer who produces milk and cream for sale to the creamery holds the key to the quality of butter manufactured. The consum- er's preference for butter is largely dependent upon quality. True, price may be an inducement, to a limited number of consumers, to purchase substitutes; but this need be only temporary if our Canadian farms can supply the needs of consumers with the finest quality butter, says Prof. F. W. Hamilton, Department of Dairying, O.AC. Butter is one of our best food fats, and is a food which every housewife, dietitian or coek appre- ciates, because it aflds palatability to other foods. It gives that delicious satisfying aroma to cooked foods, and makes bread end butter the staple food of our nation. It is not the very poor second and off grade cream that is the burden to the creamery industry. Second grade cream constitutes only a small portion of our total pro- duction. It is this great volume of cream, of just acceptable quality, and which makes a low quality first grade butter, that is the millstone to the marketing of butter. When you are eating a piece of bread and butter and you remark, "that is real good", your desire is kindled for more butter and not for a substi- tute. Butter which you eat without comment because it is available does not advertise itself. How can the type of cream that will make truly "Finest Canadian Butter" be produced? There is pos- sibly no hard and fast set of rules that can be appl to all farms. First, it is important to know what constitutes finest quality cream. This is cream that is fresh and free from taints of feed, stable, cel- lar and uhclean or rusty utensils. It is the type of gream you enjoy on your porridge in the morning. Only cream which is produced in keeping with your personal stand- ards of cleanliness in providing food for your own table is fit to sell to thé creamery for the pro- duction of a human food, to be sold on the markets of our towns and cities. If the housewife washes her hands prior to preparing the meal and washes the dishes after use, then it follows that the same stand- ards of decent cleanliness should apply to the milking of the cows and washing of milk and cream utensils, There is no short cut or substitute for cleanliness in the production and handling "of as perishable and fine a food as butter. Quick cooling of cream after sep- aration is essential to the preserv- ing of cream, it simply tends to preserve it in the condition pro- duced. Primarily the market value of cream and butter is government by the supply and quality in relation to competitive products. If we are proud of the butter we produce, let us advertise it, but first let each producer of cream be able to say with confidence that the cream produced on his farm is of finest quality, and the Creamery operator and buttermaker be con- fident that they in turn, have made every effort to process and market the butter in such a manner as to protect the fine quality inherent in the cream which they receive. There is no substitute for good butter and no market for poor butter, PILOT RESCUED Kenora, Ont., Feb. 24--(CP)--Bush pilot Douglas Cameron was maroon- ed in the wilderness for two days, when the skis of his small Aeronica airplane became frozen in the slush of the Lake of the Woods, 30 miles southeast of Kenora. Rescue flyers found him Thursday sitting in the cockpit of his plane, wrapped in a canvas engine cover with the engine heater between his knees. He suf- fered from hunger and minor frost- bite to both feet. Btewart, 41-year-old pre-war "offi- cer in the Tower" and wartime Naz broadcaster from Hamburg and Bremen, has arrived here, to de- velop German-Irish trade. He oid Jeporters ; "I've finished , Once a British and now a German to be. known as business and so- #00ds he will military secrets to a foreign power, and held in the Tower of London for many months. In 1946 he began another five- year term for helping Germany dur- ing the war, He was released last May, MARITIME FIRST The first Canadian boat propelled by a compound steam engine) was used on the St. John River in 1842, Nc THROAT SORE? (« COMMON SORE THROAT) Tunesmith Writes Mellowest Notes When Radio Roars By VAL SEARS . Canadian Press Staff Writer Vancouver --(CP)-- Just like a teen-ager, bandleader Ricky Hyslop likes to do his homework with the radio blaring out noise -- any noise as long as it's loud. But in this case, he's not a teen- ager. He's 31, and his homework consists of writing music that earns his daily bread. Hyslop doesn't know why, but the louder and brassier the radio, the more smooth and mellow are the hundreds of fine arrangements he turns out every year for his two weekly CBC programs and $10,000 annual stipend. "I guess I'm like a lot of school kids," the tunesmi¥i-conductor said in an interview. "I've got to have noise when I work." His two radio shows -- "Harmony House" on Tuesday night and "Cur- rent and Choice" on Saturday night -- keep the radio blaring frequently in the Hyslop household as Ricky scribbles scores for the kind of music that. some 600,000 Canadians from Vancouver to Winnipeg listen to each week. "Harmony House," the first big- time commercial show to originate on the CBC network west of To- ronto, has been keeping his audi- ence and sponsors (Nabob Tea and Coffee Company) happy for eight years. "Sure-Fire" Show "Strictly commercial but sure- fire," is Hyslops description of the half-hour show. It features crooner Pat Morgan, a quintet of four girls and a boy, a short musical quiz and Rick's arrangements of popular hits. His other program, carried across Canada on the CBC Dominion net- work, gives him "more room to ex- periment." It's an all-string group composed of seven violins, a cello, a base guitar and a piano. Ricky plays no instrument regularly himself al- though his classical violin training sometimes prompts him to '(grab a fide from one of the guys and join His 17-piece "house" band is made up of top-flight symphony and dance-band players who at the end of his Tuesday show often have to dash off to play a Bach fugue with their instruments still hot from the "Johnson Rag." His patient, understanding re- hearsal - technique makes him The Only "Mining" Being Done Childfen of striking miners gather themselves a wheelbarrow load of coal from a refuse pit in the mining area of Yukon, Pa. to help heat their homes during the shutdown. This was the only "digging" going on in the fields, as miners refused to heed the second order from their chieftain, John L. Lewis, to return to work. --Central Press Canadian. thoroughly popular with his band. One of his symphony players said: "I've worked with them all from (Sir John) Barbirolli down and Ricky is really tops." Hyslop wants a band of his own some day but until then he says "I can get along on my $10,000 a year." Will Go Ahead With Hydro Plan Toronto, Feb. 24--(CP) -- Con- struction projects to give Ontario more hydro-electric power will go ahead at full speed, Robert Saun- ders, Ontario hydro-electric chair- man, said Thursday night. The 1950 hydro construction expendi- ture will reach $156,000,000. the $141,7.9,369 spent on new pro- jects represented 99.8 per cent of the Hydro Commission's entire budget. With the rural electrification pro- gram high on hydro's program the 1950 schedule calls for laying 2,000 more miles of lines to accommodate some 27,000 new hydro consumers in rural areas. In addition, the commission plans to spend approximately $24,000,- 000 on frequency standardization-- the change-over from 25 to 60 cycle service. BETTER CATTLE Toronto, Feb. 24---(CP)--Ontario- bred cattle are rapidly replacing Bér- muda's native-bred dairy herds, a shipper said Thursday. Tom Hays of Oakville said some 50 cows are sent ta Bermuda by air each year. The trip--about five hours--is so To Broadcast New Opera' Tomorrow An Opera which most listeners will be hearing for the first time will be broadcast from the Metro- politan Opera House tomorrow afternoon. It is Moussorgsky's "Khovan- tchina" the score and orchestration of which was revised after the com- poser's death by Rimsky-Korsakoff, This opera, like the composer's better known "Boris Godounov" is considered a "musical folk-drama" and relates the story of strife with in the Old Russian Empire towards the end of the 17th century. "Khovintchina" portrays a series of conflicts in which the Prince Khovantsky played a leading paxt. The Prince supposedly is in retire- ment at his country seat, and while he is being diverted by feastings, songs and Persian dancers, he is assassinated on his own threshold. The music of the dance --anc particularly the well known "Dance of the Persians"--in the character of its melodies and rythms and in the choice of instruments, vividly suggests an Oriental atmosphere. Heading a brilliant cast Law- rence Tibbett, baritone, will take the role of Prince Khovansky, Rise Stevens, contralto, that of Marfa and Charles Kullman, tenor, will be today's Prince Golitsin. Emil Cooper conducts. The usual intermission features "Opera News of the Air" and 'the "Opera Quiz" will be under the dir- ection of Boris Goldoysy and Deems Taylor, respectively. $700 BULL Oakville, Feb, 24--(CP)--A year= ling bull, son of Springfarm Sover- eign Supreme, was sold Thursday for $700. He was top bull in a sale of one of the better Holstein herds in Peel County. The yearling's sire was undefeated at Canadian shows and was sold last fall to a Bogota, Colombia, purchaser for $20,000. NERVOUS STOMACH? If worries, nervous tension and hurried meals cause over-acidity--take a Digestif Rennie Tablet after eating. Pleasant. tasting RENNIES dissolve in the mouth-- act quickly to relieve heartburn, flatus lence and acid indigestion. Carry a few in« Reviewing last year's tion work, Mr. Saunders said that construc- dividually-wrapped RENNIES with you. é REACH FOR A RENNIE fast that the animals don't miss a milking en route. Rg == G: x od reverse. Nan, play ALL records so simply ~ so easily! They're here! They're new! They're the super- lative product of 50 years of world leadership in home entertainment...they're RCA Victor's new and different 3-speed radio phonographs! Here's exciting new converfience and ease of operation! Here's thrilling "Golden Throat" reproduction for all speeds of records! Record changing is fully automatic at all speeds. Switching from one speed to another is simplic- ity itself. See and hear these outstanding mus ical instruments at your RCA Victor dealer's. No other instruments IW bcusive. A A that plays all records perfectly THE FINEST! An Independent automatic chan ger plays the new spectacularly brilliant "45 rpm records. Player and records designed for ] each other combine to give you the finest music reproduction in the world. A PLUS! Another separate automatic changer plays conventional type "78" records and long- playing 33% rpm records. JUST TURN A SWITCH -- And you automatic- ally turn off the "45" and turn on the "78" § "33%" player. Turn the opposite way AWAY WITH LOOSE GADGETS! No discs to insert. No loose take-out, put-in, lay-aside spindles. Nothing to go wrong or get lost. RCA VICTOR 9-W-95 Finest of the new 1950 radio;phonographs, this beautiful piece of furniture in Chinese Chippen- Yale design features RCA Victor's exclusive simpli- fied 3-speed system. Radio is high-powered 9-tube superheterodyne with Standard and Shortwave bands. Large 12" dynamic speaker. All operating controls concealed behind doors of this beautiful cabinet finished in matched walnut or mahogany veneers = - - - $395% ASK YOUR DEALER FOR A SIDE-BY-SIDE DEMONSTRATION WITH ANY OTHER MAKE OF 3-SPEED "RADIO-PHONOGRAPH See -- Hear the difference! Distinctive classic furni- ture of Sheraton influence. Within you find a highly selective 6-tube Standard and Shortwave radio and RCA Victor's new simpli- fied 8-speed system of rec- ord playing. Top drawer opens to reveal the RCA Victor automatic "45" Changer. Lower drawer contains a second auto- matic changer for 78 and 831% rpm records. "Golden Throat" tone system. In band-rubbed walnut or RCA VICTOR 9-W-653 $2699 mahogany veneers. Enjoy the : fullest advantages of "45" quality and convenience "45" music is distortion-free-- exquisite in clarity, depth and colour -- with virtually no surface noise. "45" is easiest of all to operate. Non-break- able "45" records last up to 10 times longer, are all one convenient bookshelf size 1674") but play as long as an ordinary 12-inch "78" record. You enjoy all the unique advantages of this greatest achievement in the history of recorded music -- in a new RCA Victor radio-phonograph with simplified 3-speed system of record playing. Now onty $1998 for this aviomatic "45" changer! This compact RCA Victor "45" automatic Player at- taches with ease to any radio or phonograph in the home. Plays up to 8 records -- up to 40 minutes of music. Has world's fastest, most depend. able changer. RCA Victor * @@ RCAVICTOR HALIFAX © MONTREAL eo TORONTO © WINNIPEG eo CALGARY eo VANCOUVER World Leader in Radio... First in Recorded Music. ..First In Television 79 SIMCOE STREET NORTH PHONE 2388

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy