From the Oval.
(to 13.15)
Further commentaries.
(to 16.15)
[Starring] George O'Brien
In this adventure film the hero discards his uniform and becomes an outlaw in order to bring a gang of criminals to justice.
Further commentaries.
(to 18.30)
The first of four visits.
Filling Stations will soon be at their busiest period of the motoring summer, servicing the August holiday stream of traffic.
Barrie Edgar, at a Service Station on one of the main arteries out of London, talks to motorists as they pull in for petrol.
Time for the Spare
Bill Hartley shows the quickest way to change a tyre, and advises on the preparation of the spare tyre and tools before setting off on holiday.
A 'beat-the-panel' entertainment devised by Mark Goodson and Bill Todman with Dorothy Dickson, Elizabeth Allan, Jerry Desmonde and Ted Kavanagh on the panel and Eamonn Andrews to see fair play.
('What's My Line?' is televised by arrangement with the Columbia Broadcasting System and Maurice Winnick)
Philip Harben continues to provide a modern guide to traditional English food.
Philip Harben's subject this week is bread. He shows how modern machine-made bread has evolved from an infinite variety of regional variations of the home-made loaf.
He encourages the housewife of today to make her own bread and, with John Fothergill, well-known inn-keeper from the Midlands, shows how to make a simple kind of soda loaf.
The National Sporting Club, founded in 1891, starts again a weekly series of professional boxing contests at its new head-quarters in Dover Street, London.
Tonight's programme includes exhibition bouts by champion boxers.
(See facing page and page 38)
(sound only)