Band of the 1st Battalion the Gloucestershire Regiment
Conductor, Mr. E. E. Snape
and forecast for farmers and shipping
A gramophone miscellany
Bible reading and comment by the Rev. F. D. Coggian D.D. , Principal of the London College of Divinity
and forecast for farmers and shipping
Queen's Hall Light Orchestra
Conductor, Sidney Torch
and his Band
Radio's Own Crazy Gang
The Goons
Tony Lowry and Clive Richardson at two pianos
To Christ, the Prince of Peace (A. and M. 180)
New Every Morning, page 19 Canticle 9 (Broadcast Psalter) St. Matthew 16, w. 21-28
Lord, speak to me (A. and M. 356)
Jack Coles and his Orchestre Moderne
(Leader, Philip Whiteway )
Conductor, Rae Jenkins
Oscar Lampe (violin)
A programme of gramophone records
Presented by Robert Farnon
(Shortened versiion of Monday's recorded broadcast in the Light Programme)
and forecast for farmers and. shipping
Lunchtime scoreboard
at the BBC theatre organ
Shipping and general weather forecasts,
by Colin Wills
The speaker describes a journey through those regions of. the South of France where grapes, olives, and other fruit are grown and where, in the hills overlooking the Mediterranean, enormous bunches of flowers are gathered to make perfume.
Terry-Thomas
Suzette Tarri
Tony Lowry and Clive Richardson
Jack and Eddy Eden
Do You Remember ? with John Watt
This week only:
Lupino Lane
Jack Radcliffe
Mary Naylor
Steve Conway
Felix Mendelssohn and his Hawaiian Serenaders
The Peter Knight Singers
Augmented BBC Revue Orchestra
Conducted by Robert Busby
Produced by Bill . Worsley
by Rachel Grieve
Adapted by Mollie Greenhalgh
Production by Norman Wright
Repeated on Monday at 4.30 (Light) Probably the most embarrassing moment in a stepmother's life is the moment when she first meets her stepchildren—especially if they are old enough to be critical and young enough to show it. So it is no wonder that on the day she arrives home from her honeymoon Dr. David Moore's second wife Caroline is just a little nervous. It is a charming house in a South Coast resort and no one could be kinder than David, a typical general practitioner in his late fifties. As a matter of fact it may not be such an ordeal after all: the doctor's son Charles is married so she may not have to see much of him, and there only remains Nina, his daughter, who more or less keeps house for him. There, of course, a little tact may be necessary, for Nina, an ardent amateur painter, is by way of being temperamental. She shows no signs of getting married. As her father says ' This place isn't good enough for Nina. and neither are the local men.' Well, tact plays its part-for the time being at any rate-but there is one rarher mysterious circumstance. Several people in the town are convinced that they have seen Caroline before and none of them at the moment can recollect where. Or perhaps they have seen her picture in the papers; but none of them can recollect in what capacity.....
Stephen Williams