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Gallery

This exhibition looks at how radio became an indispensable link between Canadians and the nation at home.
Black and white text-based advertisement with a subscription box at the bottom of the page.
Front side of a signed radio licence bearing the coat of Canada and a list of frequency numbers with the French word temporaire typed in red ink. The text is in French.
Dense text in French on a licence to operate a radio station.
Photo-montage of two black and white shots showing one man in suit on left reaching for control buttons on a panel, another man on the right in a vest likely signalling to start broadcasting.
Cropped image of a blue and white printed advertisement showing a radio in a slight diagonal view. The radio has a handle on top, a speaker on the left inlayed with a V-shaped decoration, and dials on the right.
Photograph of a reception area.
The white one-storey structure with blue accents on a sunny day displays its decorated facade and its simple side.
Yellow waves carry the title, while red waves adorn the top and bottom of the page. The wooden cabinet radio with curved edges occupies the centre of the page.
This page shows four images: at the top a black and white paper clipping shows a production line for radios. Two colour photographs on the left-hand side show the exterior of a M-45; on the right-hand side another colour photograph shows the cabinet’s inside.
This black and white print has a grey background. A white clip of a telegram in the centre advertises the radio which is seen in the bottom right corner.
The landscape oriented black and white advertisement displays two radio models on either side of a large V-shaped white text block on a grey background.
Two short columns were enough to summarize the daily radio program of all available stations in Montreal.
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