IN this, and in her talk next week, Mrs. Crofts will deal with the great changes that have taken place in the last few years with respect to the legal powers of mothers over their children, which have now grown to bo practically equal to those possessed by fathers.
Mai Ramsay (Soprano)
W.E. Turner (Tenor)
by EDGAR T. CooK
From Southwark Cathedral
Miss CAMILLE VIERE , Reading for Secondary Schools : La Fontaine-Fables (Hachette)
Toni FARRELL (Soprano) RAYMOND NEWELL (Bass)
MANTOVANI(Violin)
From the Hotel Cecil
Other Countries' Stories—Japan: The Wonderful Tea-kettlo,' taken from tho Japanese Legend by Mrs. T. H. James
C. E. Dixon will play two or three Piano Solos. including ' Serenata ' (Sgambali)
Captain H. B. T. WAKELAM will give ' Further
Hints on How to Play Rugby Football '
' Trade Winds ' (Keel) and other Songs sung by REX PALMER
EVERY Londoner knows the work of the ' bus-conductor well enough from the outside point of view. In this evening's talk Mr. Young will toll the other side of the story.
A RECITAL OF SONGS BY PURCELL
Sung by HERBERT HEYNER (Baritone)
THE actual date and place of the birth of our great English composer have never been quite definitely fixed; all that one can say certainly is that Purcell was born in 1658 or 1659 in London, and that he died there in 1695. Nor can we say with any certainty when many of his greatest works were produced, and bad it not been for the industry and enthusiasm of tho Purcell Society, comparatively few of the works themselves would be known to us today. As it is, we possess a great store of music, grave and gay, for almost every known combination of voices and instruments, ranging from opera to quite small pieces.
Some of his songs are known to every concertgoer, almost to every listener, by now, best of all possibly 'When I am laid in earth,' the beautiful lament which Dido sings in the opera Dido and Aeneas, one of the very earliest of our English operas. Many of the songs by him which we have today are taken from operas or other pieces originally written for the stage. Some of these were plays with music, incidental music and songs, rather than operas in the modern sense. Sometimes the singing parts had no connection with the course of the drama, and very little relation to the action of the piece.
Other songs come from Odes and Festival pieces composed for special occasions, and some belong to his church music.
STUART ROBERTSON (Bass)
THE WIRELESS MALE VOICE Chorus
Conducted by STANFORD ROBINSON
(All from' The. Scottish Students'
Song Book)
IN A SPECIAL PROGRAMME of his
LATEST MUSICAL SUCCESSES
LORD FEVERSHAM, who is still only twenty-three, is Vice-
President of the Association of Probation Officers. On leaving Eton ho went to South Africa, dropped his title, and worked for two years under the Chief Probation Officer of the Union Government, finding out how people of all sorts really lived. Ho is now studying agriculture at Oxford/ andworking as a probation officer in London.
GWLADYS NAISH (Soprano)
BEATRICE EVELINE (Violoncello) THE WIRELESS MILITARY BAND
Conducted by B. WALTON O'DONNELL
:
MARIUS B. WINTER'S BAND, from the Hotel Cecil