Radio and television mirror (July-Dec 1948)

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c otnina %A WontL FOR a change of pace and a change of scene, Grand Slam listeners are invited to Come and Visit Irene Beasley in October. Change of pace — Irene's very active life and very heavy schedule contrast with the more leisurely Hollywood pace of recent "come and visits." Change of scene — this time it's apartment life in New York: no swimming pools, no vast acres, no vistas except that of Central Park. But for contrast there's Irene's cabana in Connecticut, with the whole of the Atlantic Ocean for her swimming pool. Double portion of Arthur Godfrey coming up — an extra-special cover of Godfrey which all the editorial staff agreed was "the best picture we've ever seen of him, anywhere, anytime!" (For good measure, Janette Davis and Tony Marvin are on that cover, too.) Second half of double portion: October's Radio Mirror Reader Bonus departs from daytime serial stories for a change, and you'll find instead a fulllength life story of Godfrey. That, alone, is worth the price of admission! As a companion piece to the September issue memorial to Tom Breneman, written by Garry Moore, October Radio Mirror carries a story about Garry Moore. With this, a full page, four-color portrait — the keep-andframe kind — of Garry Moore, one of the busiest men in the business since he took over Take It Or Leave It, and one of the most-watched of the younger Remember when a little street waif who called herself Chichi broke into Papa David's Slightly Read Book Shop one night years ago? That was the beginning of Life Can Be Beautiful, and that's where Radio Mirror begins, too, to tell the story of Life Can Be Beautiful from that first day up to the present moment. Four pages of storyin-pictures — and two of those pages in full color! More, too: Dwight Weist, M.C. of We The People, tells the story of Joe White. Perhaps you remember him better as the Silver-Masked Tenor of radio's earlier days . . . John Nelson brings readers another heart-warming Bride and Groom true love story . . . An "it happened to me" story by one of the big winners on the grass roots quiz, R.F.D. America . . . Tommy Bartlett introduces to readers another of the journeying Americans whom he meets on Welcome Travelers . . . and that's, as they say, not the half of it. All in October Radio Mirror Magazine, on sale Friday, September 10. * S^is •Wwh Young, proud and still pioneering -that's OKLAHOMA! You'll look far and wide to find thundering herds, cowboys and Indians in Oklahoma. But— not so hard to find what makes it tick. It's the people! The pioneer spirit lingers on, in their hearts, in their actions and efforts to build a sound state. Blessed in its natural resources — oil down under, crops and livestock on top — Oklahoma has come a long way since statehood only forty years ago. Living in a land of rich harvests, Oklahomans relish the fine flavor of— , Beech-Nut Gum // has the flavor you like asH* «** *«** \ Beech-Nut ^;Sv BEECHIES ^V Candy Coated Gum —good too— WW *»H 0 e* cH -K a* i/*i K / 111 WILL ROGERS MEMORIAL at Claremore. Shrine and tomb of Oklahoma's beloved cowboy' humorist and native son. m -nm £..£* ..,.,.-. ... ..... . . .*$? if m*™ TULSA— "Oil Capital of the World" — home ojthe Interna' tional Petroleum Exposition.