From page 30 of ' When Two or Three'
EMELIE WALLER: Buns and Biscuits '
At The Organ of The Regal,
Kingston-on-Thames
Directed by Joseph Muscant
Relayed from
The Commodore Theatre,
Hammersmith Time Signal, Greenwich, at 13.00 (1.0)
An Eye-Witness Account of the Day's
Play, by HOWARD MARSHALL
From Lord's Cricket Ground
Dance Music
Directed by Frank Cantell
(From Birmingham)
Conductor, ERNEST W. GOSS
LEONARD GOWINGS (tenor)
Relayed from The Pavilion, Torquay
A Running Commentary by Major H. F. FAUDELL-PHILLIPS on the competition for The Kings Cup
Relayed from Olympia
THE INTERNATIONAL HORSE SHOW, which opened on Friday at Olympia, and is to continue throughout this week, has many delightful classes, from ' Shetland Ponies ' and ' Donkey Turnouts ' to ' The Coaching Marathon ', arriving at Olympia as if from thirty years ago. But, spectacularly, the jumping classes stand alone in the affection of the public. If ' Children's Jumping ' in its very prettiness awakes our most generous applause, the competition for the King George V Gold Cup is the pièce de resistance.
The finest military riders and jumpers in the world compete. Horses have to be ridden by officers in uniform and must be the property of an officer or regiment or cavalry school. Only the first fifteen horses in the qualifying round are eligible. It is a competition of superlative excellence.
It is of interest to note that eight cut of about two dozen different types of jumps are selected by the judges a day or two before the Show, so that no horse can be trained over a particular kind of jump.
The International Horse Show was abandoned in the war years, and was, unfortunately, not held last year. In the thirteen years, 1920 to 1932, France won the King George V Cup four times, Italy twice, U.S.A. and Belgium once each, and Great Britain five times. In 1930 and again in 1932 it was won for Britain by Lieut. J. A. Talbot-Ponsonby on his sterling jumper ' Chelsea '.
THE BRONKHURST TRIO
John Fry (violin) ; Edward Robinson (violoncello); Henry Bronkhurst
(pianoforte)
THE B.B.C. DANCE ORCHESTRA
Directed by HENRY HALL
5.15 Daventry
The Children's Hour
' Hans in Luck', a short play based on an old fairy-tale, by ENID HILL ' My Sing, the Siamese', by Mortimer Batten , told by MAC
Weather Forecast, First General News Bulletin and Bulletin for Farmers
An Eye-Witness Account of the Day's
Play
By HOWARD MARSHALL
From Lord's Cricket Ground
HANDEL Trio SONATAS (Op. 2)
Played by JOSEPH SLATER (flute)
ANDRÉ MANGEOT (violin)
BERKELEY MASON (harpsichord)
Sonata No. 4 in F
Larghetto, Allegro; Adagio-Allegro; Allegro
MAX KROEMER (Instructor of German at the Polytechnic, Regent Street,
London, and for the L.C.C.)
This listing contains language that some may find offensive.
Directed by HENRY HALL
' The Web is Spun'
H. LEVY , Professor of Mathematics at the Imperial College of Science and Technology; A Discussion
Weather Forecast
Second General News Bulletin
(Section B)
(Leader, ARTHUR CATTERALL )
Conducted by FRANK BRIDGE ]
LEW STONE and his BAND, Relayed from Monseigneur
Shipping Forecast, on Daventry only, at 23.00 (11.0)