THIS concludes the present series of talks on special diets with some economical ' balanced ration ' recipes, dealing particularly with menus which provide a high caloric value at a low cost.
AMINA LUCCHESI (Violin)
MARGERY CUNNINGHAM
by LEONARD H. WARNER
From St. Botolph's, Bishopsgate
MOSCHETTO and Itis ORCHESTRA
From the May Fair Hotel
Dr. B. A. KEEN : 'The Why and Wherefore of Farming (Course III): The Farmer's Year-What happens in the Autumn'
From the Prince of Wales Playhouse,
Lewisham
Invitations have been sent to ' THE FAMILY' to gather round the microphone at 5.15 p.m.
MR. CHARLES W. J. UNWIN concludes his series of four specialized talks on gardening matters with some advice on the growing of Dahlias. The modern cult of the Dahlia has resulted in developments so surprising that it is hard to recognize in some of the shaggy species that ornament our gardens the trim, formal flower that was their 'ancestor.' In response to a considerable demand, raisers have concentrated on producing types which are free-flowering, which carry their blooms well above the foliage on long, stiff stems, and which have special value as interior decoration.
SONGS OF SCHUMANN
Sung by JOHN THORNE (Baritone)
Op. 83. No. 3, Der Einsiedler (The Hermit)
Op. 139, No. 7, Ballade
Op. 89, No. 4, Abschied vom Walde (Farewell to the Wood)
Op. 95. No. 2, An den Mond (To the Moon)
Op. 96, No. 4, Gesungen (Sung)
Op. 89, No. 5, Ins Freio (Into the Open)
THE inevitable coming of the ' great leveller ' is taken for granted ; yet why, apart from disease. accident, and suchlike unnatural events, do we die ? Professor Crew, who will deal with the problem from a biological point of xiew, is
Director of the Animal Breeding Research Depart ment in the University of Edinburgh and Pro fessor of Animal Genetics. He is, apart from his aeademie work. widely known for his biological monographs and manuals.
HELEN HENSCHEL (Soprano)
Livio MANNUCCI (Violoncello)
THE WIRELESS MILITARY BAND
Conducted by B. WALTON O'DONNELL
DOIELDIEU was so modest about his own work that. if the story- be true. lie used to take the completed sections of his early Opera, The Caliph of Bagdad, to the Conservatoire in Paris where he was a professor, to ask his pupils for their verdict on the music. If they did not like it, he referred it to the great Mehul. Ho need have been in no doubt about the attractive qualities of his work ; nearly all his light-hearted and melodious operas won immediate success, and many of them held the stage for generations after his own day.
by GEORGE BERNARD SHAW
The Second Part
Commencing with Scene Four, a Tent in the English Camp