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By Miss BARBARA CARTLAND
NEW YEAR resolutions are a subject fairly well-worn, but this. evening Mrs. McCorquordale (who is better known to the public by her own name, Barbara Cartland , under which she wrote her novels 'Jig-Saw', 'Sawdust' and ' If the tree is Saved') will introduce a new and more attractive theory. Her idea ia largely to do good to others by doing good to oneself. Nothing is so depressing as a plain woman. It is possible, by making up one's own face, to confer a good deal more gladness in the New Year than by giving up smoking or getting up early in the morning. This comfortable doctrine should appeal to most people who listen to this evening's talk.

Contributors

Speaker:
Barbara Cartland

THE first day of the New Year is an occasion for looking backward aa well as forward, and when one gets to the evening of life, looking back becomes more worth while. Sir Alfred Yarrow can look back for more than eighty years; he was born in 1842, into an England that many of us can hardly visualize now. He founded the great shipbuilding business that is now world famous, in Poplar, in 1866, and in tonight's talk he will give some exceptionally interesting reminiscences of the changes that he has seen in the world at large.

A GREAT deal of nonsense is talked about
A appreciation of pictures by people who seem to believe that an intricate knowledge of ' the technique of painting is necessary before one can recognise a great picture, or distinguish it from one that is fairly good. Mr. Barton is a firm believer in the 'common-sense' view, and has done great things with it at the Bristol Grammar School, whose headmaster he is. His talk tonight will be especially appropriate in view of the Dutch Exhibition which opens later in the week, and on which Mr. Wilenski will broadcast a talk on Thursday night.

2LO London

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This data is drawn from the Radio Times magazine between 1923 and 2009. It shows what was scheduled to be broadcast, meaning it was subject to change and may not be accurate. More