WIRELESS BROADCASTING
I TO-DAY'S PROGRAMMES 4YA, Dunedin.—7 a.m.: Breakfast session. 9: Close down. 10: Recordings. 10.15 ■ Devotional service 10.30: Recordings. 10.45: Talk by Mrs E. Barrington, ' Cooking by Electricity." 11: Recordings. 12 noon: Lunch music. 2 p.m.: Recordings. 3.15. A.C.E. (Home Science) talk, " Canapes and Other Savouries." 3.30: Sports results. Classical music. 4: Weather forecast for farmers. Recordings. 4.30 : Light musical programme. 4.45: Sports results. 5: Children's session. 6: Dinner music. 7: News and reports. 7.30: Talk by 4YA motor expert, "Helpful Hints for Motorists." 8: Chimes. Special recordings of band music. 8.10: "Ku Ku Klams," being a further episode in the lives of a Japanese houseboy and his employer (recordings). 8.25: "The Easy Chair," a memory programme of songs and melodies of days gone by (recordings). 8.40: Talk by a Dunedin barrister, " Celebrated • English Trials.'' 9: Weather report and station notices. 9.5: Relay from the Town Hall Concert Chamber of the third concert of the 1936 season by the Dunedin Symphony Orchestra (conductor, Mr Gil Dech). Soloist, Miss Freda Elmes. 10: Dance music. 11: Close down. 4YO, Dunedin, will broadcast an alternative programme from 5 p.m. 3YA, Christchurch.—7 a.m.: Breakfast session. *9: Close down. 10: Devotional service. 10.15: Recordings. (Time signal at 10.30.) 11.30: Talk on diet by a food expert 11.50 Recordings 12 noon • Lunch music 1.50 p.m.: Educational session—Mr George M. Martin, talk on "Work and Play" (for the infants); Mr L. W. M'Caskill, "The Seagull Monument of Salt Lake City" (for Standards 3 and 4); Dr G. Jobberns, " The Dawn of the Machine Age." 3: Classical music. 3.30: Time signal. Recordings. 4. Special weather forecast. Light musical programme. 4.30: Sports results. 6: Dinner music. 7: News and reports. 7.20: Addington Stock Market reports. 7.30: Time signal. Talk by Messrs G. Lawn and P. W. Campbell, " The Threshold of Our Age: Economic Life and Thought" (Part 1). 8. Chimes. 3YA Orchestra (conductor, Mr Harold Beck) presents a Mozart symphony. 8.30: Record, soprano with orchestra. 8.36: Record, violinist. 8.44 ■ Special recordings of orchestral music 9: Weather report and station notices. 9.5: Ken Mackwell, boy soprano. 9.20: Record, baritone. 9.24: Special recordings of orchestral music (" Symphonic Espagnole," by Lalo). 10: "Music, Mirth, and Melody" (recordings). 11: Close down. 2YA. Wellington.—7 a.m.: Breakfast session. 9 : Close down. 10: Chimes. Recordings. 10.30- Time signal. Devotional service. 10.50: Recordings 12 noon; Lunch music 12.30 p.m. Relay from Town Hall of community singing. 1.30: Continuation of lunch music. 2: Classical hour. 3 Sports results. 3.30: Time signal. Special weather forecast for farmers. Record ing£ 4: Sports results. Recordings 5: Children's hour 6: Dinner nusic 7: News and reports. 7.30 Time signal Talk by 2YA gardening expert. " More Hints for the Home Gardener.' 8: Chimes. Light orchestral and ballad programme. Overture by the Hamilton Dickson String Orchestra (conductor, Mr Hamilton Dickson). 8.8: Madame Irene Ainsley (contralto). 8.14: Two light syncopated pieces by the Hamilton Dickson String Orchestra. 8.23: Record, tenor. 8.26: Madame Irene Ainsley (contralto). 8.33: Waltz, Hamilton Dickson String Orchestra. 8.40: Talk by Dr Guy H. Scholefield, "World Affairs." 9: Weather report and station notices. 9.5: Mr Freddy Cholmondeley, English humorist. 9.15 : Recorded feature — " Lost Horizon," a radio play based on the novel by James Hilton. 10.5: " Dancing Time "—recorded programme of dance numbers in strict tempo. 11.5: Close down IYA, Auckland.—7 a.m.: Breakfast session. 9: Close down. 10: Devotional service 10.15: Recordings. 12 noon: Lunch music. Relay from the Town Hall of community singing. 1.30: Continuation of lunch music. 2: Recordings. 2.30: Classical music 3.15 : Sports results. 3.30: Light musical programme. 4: Special weather report for farmers. Recordings 4.30: Sports results 5: Children's session 6: Dinner music 7: News and reports. 7.45: Talk under the auspices of the New Zealand Lighting Service Bureau, "Better Light, Better Sight" 8: Chamber music programme. Mr Paul Vinogradoff, Russian pianist, presents Liszt sonata. 8.25 : Record, baritone with pianist. 8.28: Special recordings, instrumental quartet (Brahms composition). 9: Weather report and station notices. 9.25: Presentation of the 8.8. C. programme "Devonshire Cream," a recorded comedy. 10.40. "Music, Mirth, and Melody" (recordings). 11: Close down. Empire Transmission No. 1, Daventry (for New Zealand and Australia).— 5.45 p.m. N.Z.S.T.: The opening of the Johannesburg Exhibition. 6.11: Musical interlude. 6.15: Talk by Mr H. V. Hodson, "Imperial Affairs." 6.30: "Daylight Robbery" or "The Thief in the Night," a musical burlesque by the Melluish Brothers; the cast supported by the 8.8. C. Revue Chorus and the 8.8. C. Empire Orchestra (leader, Mr Daniel Melsa ; director, Mr Clifton Helliwell); the programme produced by Mr William MacLurg. 7.20: Musical interlude. 7.25: News and announcements. (Greenwich time signal at 7.30.) 7.45: Close down.
What's on the air to-night? . . . and every other night? You'll find in the radio programmes published weekly in advance in the "N.Z. Radio Record. 4d All booksellers.—Advt.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ODT19360916.2.7
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Otago Daily Times, Issue 22987, 16 September 1936, Page 2
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795WIRELESS BROADCASTING Otago Daily Times, Issue 22987, 16 September 1936, Page 2
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