Gramophone records
and forecast for farmers and shipping
BBC Revue Orchestra: conductor, Frank Cantell.
Readings from the Bible
and forecast for farmers and shipping
Talk by a Food Advice Organiser
and the Dance Orchestra, with Rita Marlowe. Benny Lee. Sid Buckman. and the Prairie Boys
DELIBES and CHABRIER
Gramophone records of some of their music
News commentary
from page 69 of "New Every Morning" and page 30 of "Each Returning Day". Come, ye faithful, raise the anthem; Psalm 114: St. John 5, vv. 30-47; Jesus lives!
Morrison's Engineering Works Orchestra: conductor. Reynolds Payne
RHYTHM AND MELODY, by Doris Gould. Lecturer in Music, Southlands Training College
11.20 GEOGRAPHY. Italy: Plains and Highlands of Peninsular Italy.' Farm and city in the hill country, west of the Appenines and on the coastal plains
11.40 ENGLISH FOR UNDER-NINES. ' The Snow Queen.' 1— ' The Splinter of Glass ': an adaptation by Silvia Goodall of the original story by Hans Andersen
Reginald King at the piano, with the Quintet and instrumental soloist. This week. Douglas Cameron (cello)
Lunch-time entertainment for factory-workers, from a London factory.
followed by a topical talk
his programme of stars, personalities, songs, and music.
NATURE STUDY. Stories in the Snow.' by Scott Kennedy
2.15 HISTORY of WALES: series for children about 12 years old. 1 — ' Reformation and Counter-Reformation '; the coming of the Reformation to a Welsh parish; Catholic exiles on the continent. By H. T. Evans
2.35 HISTORY II. Industrial change in Britain: 'Robert Moore and the Mill in the Hollow,' from Charlotte Bronte's ' Shirley.' By Sam Langdon
2—' The Informative Double.' (Recording of Monday's broadcast)
at the theatre organ
with George Lacy. Jack Edge , and Betty Huntley-Wright . From the King's Theatre. Edinburgh
Tea-time music from the terrace, played by Albert Sandler and the Winter Garden Orchestra
'The House in a Row': a story for younger ones by Barbara Todd, told by May Jenkin (' Elizabeth ')
5.15 ' The Secret of Linton Abbey': another Norman Bones detective play, written by Anthony C. Wilson and produced by Josephine Plummer
5.45 ' Elephants in Harness': a story by an R.A.F. officer back from S.E.A.C.
and forecast for farmers and shipping
6.10: Topical Talk 6.15: Sport
Series of talks by Professor John Foster of Selly Oak Colleges. Birmingham
A programme about English food by the well-known novelist. John Hampson. Produced by R. D. Smith. What do foreigners really think of English cooking?
* This is My Farm *
Professor H. G. Sanders of Reading University discusses farming problems with a Midland grazier, H. H. Pickering , O.B.E.. Waterloo Farm, Market Harborough. and D. H. Findlay , Executive Officer of the Leicestershire Agricultural Committee
Conductor, Ian Whyte
A serious series of fortnightly, forthrightly, topical talks on National News, by England's patrician philosopher, Mr. Gillie Potter
about ' Money.' A group of young people discuss and compare their attitudes' towards money. In the chair, Douglas Allan
Jack Train , Clarence Wright ,
Fred Yule , Jean Capra ,
Carleton Hobbs , Hugh Morton , Mary £
O'Farrell, Diana Morrison , and Lind Joyce. Augmented BBC Variety Orchestra, conducted by Charles Shadwell. Script by Ted J Kavanagh. Produced by Francis Worsley
Joseph Harsch
The curious adventure of a man lost in a fog at South Kensington. Adapted by Robert G. Newton from a short story by Algernon Blackwood and Wilfred Wilson.
with the BBC Midland Light Orchestra: conductor, Rae Jenkins
Address by the Rev. H. M. Connop '! Price. Chaplin, R.A.F.
A programme of music in tranquil mood. Presented by Joy Rusell-Smith :
by Robert Gittings. With Phillip Leaver as Hans Andersen and Ronald Simpson (now appearing in ' See How They Run as Charles Dickens. Produced by Stephen Potter. (Repeat of the broadcast on January 27. 1942)
Quiet reflective music played by the Chalumeau Ensemble