Radio and television mirror (July-Dec 1949)

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Gives two-way protection that lasts far longer — yet is harmless — does not stop perspiration or injure clothing or skin. At drug counters, or write for generous FREE SAMPLE bottle, to NEVER-TEL— Depl.8-C. Kansas Oily 6, Mo. Come and Visit Roy Rogers (Continued from page 61) gives a casual, friendly air to the whole structure and reflects the attitude of its occupants toward the world. Being a cowboy star in movies and on MBS's Roy Rogers Show is a full-time job with no overtime pay. It means being a hero to several million children from coast to coast and, as a result, being asked for advice every week by thousands of parents on every subject from how to keep Junior from biting his nails, to how to get Junior into movies, or radio. He has to be a model of perfect behavior. Roy occasionally wishes he'd stayed in Duck Run, Ohio, and opened a barber shop. Being a hero to other people's children left the Number One box-office attraction in Western pictures a bit unprepared for the comeuppance he got at home when he sat down to discuss with Cheryl the plans for her ninth birthday party. The guests she most wanted to attend the festivities were Allan "Rocky" Lane, Eddie Dean and Jimmy Wakely, all of whom ride the screen ranges in competition to her father. "IlJell, what d'you know?" Roy asked II Dale later. "Do you think she'd mind if I just drop by?" If Roy isn't the top star to his children, he is their favorite person. They are in agreement that he is the most fun, the most exciting companion in their world. All three follow him around the house and the grounds, tagging his footsteps, and, with the aid of a couple of shepherd dogs and such hounds as are out for exercise, generally impede his progress. When both Dale and Roy are working they make it a point to be home for dinner with the children. During the shooting of a picture, the youngsters are allowed to stay up a half-hour later to make a family dinner possible. Dusty is the undisputed top-hand around the place. He has a cowboy suit like his Dad's, and his prize possession is a toy gun which he makes an effort to spin around a chubby finger. At night the gun is carefully bolstered and left within reach of Dusty's bed, probably, Roy says, in case of an Indian uprising. Dusty has had the greatest honor his father can give him — he has ridden Trigger. No one but Roy and the trainer, Glenn Randall, ever rides the great Palomino who shares billing on theater marquees with Roy. One of the first words Dusty learned was the horse's name, which he interprets as "Tigger." Dale, who stepped into the void left by the death of the children's mother three years ago, has known Cheryl, Linda and Dusty almost all their lives, because she has worked in pictures with Rogers for more than six years. Therefore, her coming into the family as a step-mother presented fewer problems than it might otherwise have done. If she has had difficulties, they have been ironed out by her patience, kindness and friendliness. She is called Mama by Cheryl, Dale by Linda and Mama-Dale by Dusty. Dale, who is a real Westerner, was born in Texas, but had never been on a horse until she made her first picture with Rogers some six years ago. She'd dreamed, when she came to Hollywood, of doing musical comedies. When she was asked to do a singing role in a Rogers Western at Republic she didn't know a horse would be a part of the equipment. But now she rides in rodeos with Roy, she can rope and shoot as though she'd been in the buckeroo business all her life, and she's won the title of "Queen of the Westerns." She designs most of her own clothes and has had suits made for herself that are modified copies of Roy's own attire. She wears soft-brimmed Western hats and is used to other women asking who designs her smart chapeaux. "Tlie name," she tells them "is Stetson." Since Roy wears his fancy cowboy get-up both at home and abroad, he has a huge wardrobe for his clothes and built-in shelves for his boots, which carry the Indian Thunderbird as a design. He has only one superstition, and that's about an old, worn pair of spurs. He wore them in his first picture, and he wears them at least once in every picture he has made since. He thinks they bring him luck. If Roy never did another radio show, never made another movie, never toured with another rodeo, he probably still wouldn't be able to fill all the requests for his time. . Schools, clubs, hospitals, and civic groups interested in juvenile problems ask him to appear before them. Roy, who has known tragedy himself, gives unstintingly of his time to children who are ill. He never finds a trip too far, nor the hours too difficult, to visit a sick youngster. He doesn't like the stories of his generosity told, but the days he drove from the studio on his lunch hour across the city of Los Angeles to spend a few minutes with a small boy while the youngster ate his lunch and took a painful treatment, have been duplicated hundreds of times. He does innumerable appearances for children in hospitals and Trigger has learned to perform some of his most astounding tricks in the little space allowed in a ward almost filled withbeds. Roy and Dale don't go out to the Hollywood night clubs. For one thing, they have little time. For another, a night club as Roy points out, is no place for a cowboy. And for company, they prefer their family and friends. Roy can call a square dance, and the game room is often cleared for hoedowns. Friday evenings belong to the children at home and Roy generally shows them a movie. They prefer Westerns but they like variety in the way of heroes and horses. On Sundays Dale takes both girls to Sunday school and later she and Cheryl attend the regular morning service. Generally, Roy and Dale go back to church on Sunday evenings. Dale's own son. Tommy, now grown, leads the Junior choir at the same church. Dale handles most of the minor disciplinary problems with the children but when a major offense comes up Roy carefully explains to the culprit the reason for the punishment before justice is meted out. Then he does the meting. Visitors to the Rogers' rarely get away without making a tour of the grounds to see the pigeons, the hounds, the workshop. Back at the house they'll comment, "Mighty nice place." "Well, thanks," the King of the Cowboys will drawl, "I think it's purty great myself." But he'll be looking at Dale and the children.