Commentary during the last hour and a half of the third day's play
Commentators: Alan McGilvray Bernard Kerr. Charles Fortune
A. G. Moyes , and Arthur Gilligan From the Adelaide Cricket Ground
(A relay of the Australian Broadcasting Commission's transmission)
8.30 Close of play summary by John Arlott of the Evening News, from Adelaide
Introduced by Jack Melford
A story, a hymn, and a prayer
at the organ of the Trocadero,
Elephant and Castle, London
Marcel Gardner and his Serenade Orchestra
From Wales
' The New Love ' by Gordon Lloyd
Read by John Darran
Music from the sound-track of the Walt Disney 'True-Life Adventure' film
Introduced by Michael Brooke
Victor Silvester and his Ballroom Orchestra
at the BBC theatre organ
(Leader, J. Mouland Begbie ) Conducted by Gerald Gentry
Today's story: ' Bath Night.' by Joan E. Cass , told by Daphne Oxenford
Lorna Pegram introduces the programmes this week
including
Living Alone in the House: Mildred Perrin, a widow, talks about the way she has solved her problem.
Wearing and Caring for Dentures: Dr. W. G. Senior, Principal Dental Officer to the Ministry of Health, gives some advice
Having Grandchildren to Stay: Gertrude Pearce describes her own experience
Doing Your Hair: some suggestions from Albert Speyer
Afternoon Argument: Barbara Bliss and Florence White take opposite views on the retirement age of women.
Serial: The Naked Risk ' by Phyllis Gordon Demarest
Abridged by Terry Gompertz
Read by Jill Balcon
The eleventh of fifteen instalments
Programme introduced by Marjorie Anderson
Conducted by Lieutenant O. Birkin
Director of Music
Alfred Swain (baritone)
Cecil Norman and the Rhythm Players
Jenny's twenty-first birthday was a great success. She had some wonderful presents and Bob gave her a ring. Sally tried to press some of the outstanding debtors of ' Stephanie' for payment, with little success. Monument was confined to bed with rheumatism and Mrs. Meadows did not give him enough to eat, so Mrs. Dale annoyed her by cooking him a meal. David and Gwen were very worried as their neighbour insisted they should carpet the bedroom as well as the passage. Fickling spent most of his time grooming Cho-Cho-San for Cruft's show.
by John Galsworthy
Cast in order of speaking:
The play opens in the Board Room of the ' Island Navigation Company, Ltd.' in Liverpool, on February 12, 1905
Produced by Mary Hope Allen
(Continued)
leaves London Airport for Trinidad See column 3
and his Viennese Music
for Good Neighbours
* Records you have asked for, In grati- tude for some act of friendliness
Presented by Michael Brooke
The story of a school seen through the eyes of the Head- master and his wife by Warren Chetham-Strode
(Continued in next column)
Episode 2
Production by Audrey Cameron
A series of stories about the constant war between the Continental criminal and the Continental police with Wilfrid Thomas as narrator
Written by Tom Fallon
5—'The Migrant Ghosts'
Telling how criminals came to Copenhagen with a safe' plan.
Produced by Tom Waldron
Cyril Stapleton directs the BBC Show Band
Alfred Marks does his best to misdirect it and Rikki Fulton makes the introductions which include
The Stargazers
Ray Burns
Bill McGuffie
Harold Smart
Bert Weedon
The Show Band Singers
Production by Johnnie Stewart
Gilbert Harding brings his guests to the studio, records them in their homes, or talks to them across seas and continents by telephone and short-wave tele- communications
remembers the Johnny Dankworth Seven
Introduced by Dill Jones
Produced by Jimmy Grant and Donald MacLean
A musical programme featuring songs of many lands
Presented by Frank Hooper
' Pied Piper ' by Nevil Shute
(to be read in seventeen instalments)
Reader, Francis de Wolff
Abridger, Jocelyn Bradford
11--' Nicole Takes Charge'
Frederic Curzon at the BBC theatre organ