KATHLEEN BELDON (Soprano)
RICHARD FORD (Baritone)
by EDWARD O'HENRY
From Tussaud 's Cinema
LEONARDO KEMP and his PICCADILLY HOTEL
ORCHESTRA
From the Piccadilly Hotel
JACK PAYNE and THE B.B.C
DANCE ORCHESTRA
ALPHONSE DU CLOS and his ORCHESTRA
From the Hotel Cecil
' Valse Mignonne ' (Schütt) and other Piano
Solos played by CECIL DIXON
' Wolf Brother ' from ' Long Lance' (Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance)
Songs by. ARTHUR WYNN
A Few Hints on How to Play Lawn Tennis' by Mrs. LAMBERT CHAMBERS
MR. POWELL-OWEN'S series, of which the present talk is the second, is a continuation of that given in the spring ; it deals, however, with poultry-keepers in general and not, as was the former ease, exclusively with the small poultry-keeper.
; WEATHER FORE
CAST, FIRST GENERAL NEWS BULLETIN
MR. BALLARD, who is one of the senior Education
Inspectors of the London County Council, and is also on the Council of the Child Study Society, will give some information in his talk tonight about what is being done to counteract the monotony of so much of the modern repetition work in factories, etc.
Played by DOROTHY MOGGRIDGE
(Pianoforte)
Sonata quasi una Fantasia, Op. 27,
No. 1, in E Flat
MABEL CORRAN (Contralto)
VICTOR OLOF (Violin)
MARSDEN COLLIERY BAND SVENDSEN was the son of a military bandmaster, and himself held such a post while only in his teens. He had some experience, too, as an orchestral musician, and when only twenty-one set out on a tour of Sweden and northern Germany. No great good luck attended him, until, two years later, he obtained a grant from Charles XV to enable him to carry on his studies of the violin. Again misfortune overtook him and paralysis of one of his hands brought his career as a violinist to an end. Turning his energies to composition, he produced some quite interesting chamber music and a symphony, travelling in Denmark, Scotland and Norway, introducing his own works. For two years, 1868 until the war of 1870, he was in Paris, and thereafter his life was a succession of journeys, in the course of which he held posts as conductor in many centres of music. He enjoyed the friendship of the- greatest men in the world of music, and had opportunities of hearing many of his own works performed under the best possible conditions. His music, though reminding one pretty often of Grieg's, does not concern itself so constantly with Norway, partly, no doubt, because of his own wide experience of many different lands. But it has the same finely melodious qualities and this piece is admirably laid out for the violin, as not even pieces composed by violinists always are.
(Soloist, Master W. BLACKETT)
PHYLLIS MONKMAN BETTY CHESTER ELSA MACFARLANE PEGGY PETRONELLA CHARLES COLLINS DAVY BURNABY MELVILLE GIDEON
STANLEY HOLLOWAY
SYDNEY HOWARD
HARRY PEPPER
Relayed from the Vaudeville Theatre
WEATHER FORECAST; SECOND GENERAL NEWS
BULLETIN
A Dinner in Honour of SIR ABE AND LADY BAILEY
Relayed from the Mansion House
(Daventry only) Shipping Forecast and Fat Stock Prices
WINIFRED LAWSON (Soprano) ROBERT CHIGNELL (Baritone)
THE WIRELESS ORCHESTRA
Conducted by John ANSELL
TEDDY BROWN'S BAND FROM
CIRO'S CLUB