to the Imperial and Allied Forces in Great Britain , followed by 'REVEILLE!'
Cheerful gramophone records
Records of America's Crooner Number One
three years ago
Popular records of April 1939
Gramophone records
Directed by Jack Hardy
(New series. No. 2). Presented by David Miller and Basil Adams. ' The White Hope of Radio', supported by Jerry Colonna , Ben Gage , Four Hits and a Miss, and Skinnay Ennis with his Orchestra. (Special recording of last Sunday's broadcast)
with the Bachelor Girls, Peter Akister , and George Elliott. Presented by James Moody. (Recording of last Sunday's broadcast)
Damau difyr at y bore sef pennill ac englyn a chan, gydag ambell stori ddigrif. Y rhaglen dan ofal John Griffiths. (Welsh light programme)
Harold Collins and his Orchestra
at the theatre organ
and his Band
Led by Albert Sandier , with Eugenie Safonova
Lunch-time entertainment for factory-workers, from a factory somewhere in Britain
9 — The double bass : presented with gramophone records by Eugene Cruft of the BBC Symphony Orchestra
Sports talk by Harold Hobson
and the scene it might suggest, pictured by Jane Grahame. (No. 13)
Conductor, Fred Mortimer (Soloist, Alec Mortimer> )
and his Orchestra
Rhythmic records
A tango, a rumba, a sentimental melody. London Tango Orchestra, directed by Reg Leopold , in music of the sunny South. Presented by Fred Hartley
Pipe band music by the Pipes and Drums of the Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment) of Canada : Pipe-Major Sutherland. Programme written by Hugh Macphee , and presented by Gerry Wilmot
played by the Scottish Variety Orchestra, conductor, Ronnie Munro
Doris Arnold brings you some more gramophone records of ' classic ' songs and melodies that you know and love
Questions on current affairs from men and women in the Forces answered at the microphone by Edward Montgomery
National and Regional announcements
Requests designed to unite members of the Forces with their relatives and friends at home
Jack McGuire presents the week's news from home for New Zealanders in this country
Weekly summary of Australian news, specially presented for Australians in this country, and read by George Ivan Smith
Royal Navy magazine programme. Produced by Peter Creswell and Peter Watts. General editor, David Yates Mason. Music editors, Signalman Geoffrey Wright , R.N.V.R., and Harry Bidgood. Esmond Knight with a yam to spin. Musical supplement : the week's new number. ' Leave it to the Navy'-Episode 6. The Briny Trust in ' What's the buzz ? ' Nancy Leigh , the girl with a tune to take away. Harry Bidgood 's Band. The Make and Mend Chorus
with Roy Rich
Favourite pieces from the repertoire of the BBC Orchestra, conducted by Clarence Raybould
Village concert, presided over by Farmer Will Watchet. Famous visitors have promised to appear. Charles Shadwell and the BBC Variety Orchestra. Produced by Harry S. Pepper
Play by Harry Alan Towers. Produced by Fred O'Donovan
Wherever the ticker-tapes run from the machines in great newspaper offices the phrase ' now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of the party ' is known-it is each day's trial message on the tape.
The theme of this broadcast is time, and the time involved is twenty minutes before a newspaper goes to press. The hero of the story, Bill Duncan , has just this period in which to get his story. There is some sticky business, too, and the programme is very much in the present tense.
to the Imperial and Allied Forces in Great Britain , followed by HENRY HALL and his Orchestra