Radio and television mirror (Jan-June 1949)

Record Details:

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R M 96 ••••••••••••••••••••••••• -with those high, high platforms and smart wedge heels you love. Handmade — of fine braided 2-color sisal. Hand enbroidered — in darling floral designs of gay contrasting colors. So light, comfortable! A wonderful buy! —SEND NO MONEY — New York Mail Order House Dept. S-119, 220 Fifth Avenue, N. Y. C. Send me a pair of "Aloha" Shoes, in colors and sizes I've indicated below. On delivery I'll pay postman $4.98 plus postage. If not delighted I may return in 10 days for full refund. Size 1st Color Choice 2nd Color Choice n Narrow Q Medium D Wide Address Citv, Zone, State 3 Check here if you wish to save postage by enclosing S4.98 with coupon. Same money-back guarantee. DO YOU WANT A STEADY INCOME? Big opportunity — earn extra cash in spare time as subscription agent. Write Dept. RM6-49 Macfadden Publications, Inc., 205 E. 42nd St., New York 17, N. Y. HAIR TEMPOBACY RELIEF IS NOlENOUfiH r ONLY 3Y KIUIWC THt HAH? ggPT CA/V YOU ' B£ SUB£ VMWAMTEP HA/e IS OOf^C FQgeVtgJ ' BRINGS KeU£F ANP SCC/^l fi^Af'ffMess. ^ ' OO NOT use OUff M£7HOl> i/NT/t YOU HAVe eCAP 01/ a /MSTf^UC7fON SOOfC J ' CAHerifLLY AMD l£AffM€P TO US£ TNS i MAHLCg M6TH0P SAF£CY ANff CrFfC/eNTiy^ i/S£p si/cc£ssFuiiY oves Soy£>*ssy-^^y^ 6£AUTV ' ^OR VOU j seNO 6« 'stamps "b »oomT 4 MAHLER'S, INC., Dept. 58-G, Providence 15, R. I J' Lighter V Lovelier ^/ Shinier I Hair Your first shampoo with BLONDEX, the shampoo made specially for blondes, and containing ANDIUM, proves you can wash blonde hair shades lighter, safely— brighten it if faded— and give it a lovely lustrous SHINE. Takes only 11 minutes to use at home. No fuss or bother. Safe for children. Get BLONDEX at 10^, drug and dept. stores. Dear Mrs. B. G.: I think that there is only one basis upon which you can — or have any right to — "talk his parents into letting him stay." That is the basis of health. If his mother's tuberculosis is active, being with her might endanger the boy's health. This, however, is something which I, of course, am in no position to judge, and neither are you. A physician's opinion is needed. If the mother's case is arrested, and being with her would not menace the child's health, then I feel that I must side with the parents of the boy. Believe me, I sympathize with you — I realize how hard it would be to give up a child whom you've learned to love as your own. But a child does belong with his own parents, and those parents have a right to have him with them if at all possible. Try to see their side of it— try to put yourself in their place. If the boy does go back to his parents, why don't you and your husband consider adopting a child? I know that it is very hard to get a small baby for adoption, but in many states children past the age of three or four can be had quite easily, if you qualify as proper parents. It would be a kind and wonderful thing for you to give a homeless little boy the love and care which you both seem to be able to lavish on a child. Why don't you think about it? Joan Davis TALK IT OVER! Dear Joan Davis: I have the kind of husband most women wish they had — kind, considerate, intelligent and affectionate. We have been married for seven years and have a three-year-old son — and he is the source of my problem. My husband is going to college under the GI Bill, and has another year and a half to go. Our allowance from the government isn't enough to keep us and so I worked for nearly two years while he attended school at night and took care of the baby during the day. Last week I quit my job because I feel the baby needs me. He is at the age where he is demanding the attention that his father is too busy to give him. Not only that, but it's very discouraging to come home at night to find the sink full of dirty dishes and all the rest of the housework besides. Am I being selfish to want to spend my time with my baby and my home? Sometimes my husband makes me feel as though I have done wrong because he didn't approve exactly of my quitting my job. I feel the time he spent at home caring for the baby can be spent working at a part-time job. To whom am I being unfair — my husband or my baby? Betty M. Dear Betty M: I don't believe you're being unfair to anyone — not so much unfair as unthinking. Please believe me when I say this — and I wish I could cry it from the rooftops so that every young married couple in the whole world could hear me! There are very few problems, big or small, in a marriage which can't be settled satisfactorily ij they're brought out into the open and talked over! I think that instead of simply quitting your job, you should have discussed the matter with your husband first, and told him that you felt that you should stop working. As it's too late for that now, for goodness sake sit down right away and bring all the rest of it out into open meeting. Every marriage needs a budget of some sort, and yours looks as if it might profit by a time-and-effort budget. Can your husband afford, from the point of view of his time and his health and his studies, to take a part-time job? Can you perhaps find another young mother near you who needs a little extra money and who would be willing to take over the care of your little boy — someone responsible, and whom you like and trust— so that you can return to work? If so, will what you have to pay her be justified by the salary you can make working? If you do make this arrangement, will your husband be willing to share-and-share-alike with you the household duties? Is there something which you can do at home which will help out the family income and still leave you time to devote to your baby? (There's always a great demand for typists on a college campus, for instance.) Or can you find some part-time work yourself? Talk it over. Budget your time. See how you can divide the tasks, the child's care, and the necessary earning to augment your government allowance between you. And remember, the year and a half until your husband is graduated may seem like forever, but it will pass quickly. Remember, too, that anything worth having is worth working for, worth making sacrifices for. Your husband's education, which will make it possible for him to give you and your son a better way of life, is certainly one of those things that is worth having! Joan Davis Z>aYOU^^<e«^« HEART OF GOLD? Or, do you KNOW someone whose good works and unselfishness deserve recognition? You can tell about it AND win a valuable prize on "LADIES BE SEATED" Monday — Friday ABC Stations TOM MOORE, M.C. For details of the "Heart Of Gold" contest, read the current issue of TRUE ROMANCE magazine now at newsstands!