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RADIO PROGRAMME

'Supplied by the Radio Broadcasting Company of N.Z. Ltd.)

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 13

A relay from the Auckland Town Hall of the concert to be given by the Municipal Band under the director of Mr Hal McLennan, will be carried out by IYA this evening. The Wellington Y.M.C.A. Optimist’s Club, a band of business men whose object is to spread optimism everywhere, will, with the assistance of the Salon Orchestra, contribute the whole of 2YA’s programme. On this occasion it will be a. programme that will serve to bring Christmas to the “Old Folks at Home.’’

Miss Cicely Audibert, an entertainer from the professional stage, who recently made here first appearance at 3YA, will be performing again tonight. She will present a budget of songs which will demonstrate her versatility as an artiste. Some- favourite songs will be sung by Mr Oliver Foote (tenor) and by Mr Findlay Robb (bass). Mr Stan. Birch (banjoist) will play selections from “Faust.” Miss Elaine Moody’s Hawaiian Trio, with steel guitars and ukelele will present popular airs, with vocal refrains and Miss Moody, Mr Hay and Mr Norman Coffin will play flute and cornet solos, respectively. Mr Jock Lockhart, Scottish humorist, is also on the progammo in in song and story. Mr Arthur Gordon’s orchestra playing popular melodies. Miss Ray Stubbs, singing soprano solos, Miss Betty Hamilton (contralto), Dir N. C. Gamble (baritone), Miss M.-. Juriss (elocutioniste), Mr H. Stokes (banjoist), Mrs C. Drake (pianist) and Mr L. Beath (violiniste) will be providing 4YA’s vaudeville programme.

The church services to be broadcast on Sunda.v evening will be:— IYA—Church of Christ. Preacher, Pastor W. Campbell. 2Y\—Taranaki Street Methodist Church. Preacher, Rev. T. R. Richards. During the afteivchurch concert. Dr. John E. Borland, will give a talk on “Beethoven Melodies.” BY A—Holy Trinity Church. During the service a cantata “A Story of Bethlehem” will he sung. 4YA Morav Place Congregational Church. Preacher, Rev. A. Mead

MONDAY. DECEMBER, IS. From to-day continuing until Christmas, all the YA stations will be on the air daily at noon. There will he no silent days. This extension of hours will increase radio dealers’ facilities for demonstrating sets to buyers of Christmas gifts. There will bo a variety of artists to he heard from IYA this evening. Misses Edna and Phyllis Tye (vocal and piano solos), Frank Wade and his Me Hod y Boys (always very popular with their instrumental and vocal items and instrumental imitations), Mr S. Hislop (popular bass-baritone). Miss Ainiee Clapham (contralto, singing some popular ballads), and All* and Airs J. W: Bailey (sketch artists). A gramophone lecture-recital to be given by Afr Karl Atkinson will be entitled “Living Master Pianists.”

The Wellington Orpheus Musical Society assisted by the 2YA Orchestrion will give a studio concert of outstanding merit from 2YA. An item of more than passing interest will be “Ootea-Roa,” an ode in chorus form by Mr Carr, the President of the Society. Of,her choral numbers will b° “Tf Fortune Had Made me the Master” (by Bncb), the part songs “Sleep Gentle Lady,” and “Oh, Tell Me Where,” and a group of sea chanties sung by Mr Harison Cook and tlve male members of the choir. At 0 o’clock from 2YA. the eminent English elocutionist and Dickensian artist. Mr Clement May, will give the first of a series of four recitals. ' The instrumental portion of 3VA’s programme will ho provided by the New Brighton Municipal Band, under Mr J. Nuttall. Soprano- songs by Miss Eveline Hill, contralto solos by Miss Bond, tenor and baritone soles by Mr W. J. Bisclilager and Mr P. Francis Jones respectively, with humorous items by Mr Den vs Cow, will constitute the vocal portion of the programme.

A courtesy concert to ho given b\ the combined musical societies of Dunedin to Mr James Coombs, the retiring conductor of the Dunedin Orehestrsil Society, will be broadcast on relay from the Dunedin Town Hall by 4YA. Mr Coombs founded this society over 40 years ago and ever since has been connected with it. He lias been a very able conductor. A concert worthv- of the occasion is to be presented bv many local societies, including tlve R-ovn-l Dunedin Male Choir, the Choral Society, the Returned Soldiers’ Association, the Philharmonic Society, the Orchestral Society and the Council of the Society of Professional Musicians of Otago.

DELAY IS DANGEROUS. AVe all remember the pretty story of the little hero who saved his native village in Holland by stopping with his hand, throughout the whole of a dark, tumultuous night, the gentle trickle of the sea through a leak in the dyke. Had he not done so the wild sea must surely have worn its way through the dyke and flooded the village. Similar danger threatens us here. Hundreds of backs are aching, yet people are neglecting this warning, and it’s so easy to check kidney disease if taken in time; but don’t neglect the first warnings. Read how the danger can be averted. Mr AV. Pascoe, Revell Street. Hokitika, says: “For a good while I suffered terribly with backache and rheumatic pains, and at times could hardly move without enduring torture. I was also troubled with dizzy turns and felt tired and languid, having no energy for anything. The constant backache apart from being very trying, handicapped me a lot at my work as I could not stoop without increased suffering. Seeing an advertisement for Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills, the thought occurred to me to try them, so T got a bottle at once, and am delighted to tell you that they gave me relief very quickly and gradually made a complete cure. Kidney sufferers cannot do better than take Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills. They are the most reliable remedy known.”

Twelve years later Mr Pascoe says: “T have had no return of my old complaint since Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills cured me over twelve years ago.”

Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills are soTd by all chemists and storekeepers. Foster-McClellan Co., Proprietor 15 Hamilton Street, Sydney. But, besure you get DOAN’S.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HOG19301213.2.58

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Hokitika Guardian, 13 December 1930, Page 8

Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,005

RADIO PROGRAMME Hokitika Guardian, 13 December 1930, Page 8

RADIO PROGRAMME Hokitika Guardian, 13 December 1930, Page 8

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