Radio Mirror (Nov 1936-Apr 1937)

Record Details:

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RADIO MIRROR HANDS need Special Moisture inside the skin cells YOUR hands chap and roughen when the skin cells lose their moisture. This moisture easily dries out— from wind, cold or water. And most women have their hands in water up to sixteen times a day. But Jergens Lotion saves the young beauty of your hands because it restores the lost moisture. It goes into the skin cells better than any other lotion tested. The two famous ingredients in Jergens are the same as skin specialists use to soften and whiten skin. Yourfirst application smooths roughnesses, soothes chapping. Use Jergens faithfully and you'll soon have charming hands your man will love. Jergens leaves no stickiness. Only 50^, 25^, 10^— $1.00 for the big bottle— in any drug, department or 10-cent store. 64 Sinks into the skin more completely than other lotions tested — soon gives back youth-giving moisture. ens I otion FREE: PURSE-SIZE JERGENS Use after having hands in water, to keep hands girlishly soft and smooth. Andrew Jergens Co., 1727 Alfred St., Cincinnati, O. (In Canada — Perth, Ontario) Please send my purse-size bottle of Jergens — free Name ■ • -State How Reducing Can Work Miracles for You (Continued from page 45) Twenty pounds is pretty tangible, especially when you have to take it off. But it was something to grapple with. Something to fight. I welcomed the battle. For the first time in years — since childhood, I guess — I adhered to a stern regimen of regular and strenuous exercise. 1 watched my diet. I confined myself to one full meal daily. I watched the scales. Down, down, down . . . went the little needle. Well, I was winning this battle. That thought comforted me. But here was the astounding thing! As each pound fell away I discovered my confidence was increasing. My fears and foreboding grew less and less. The desire to procrastinate had fled! I wanted to get back to work! I was eager, enthusiastic. It was partly physical, I know now, and party psychological. I found myself evincing an interest in clothes 1 had never felt before. Here was a new thrill. It was because I looked better in my clothes. People were commenting upon them. They'd never done that before. Nine out of every ten women who tell you that they aren't interested in clothes are fabricating a comforting illusion against an inferiority complex. The world had become a better place to live in. I felt marvelous. I was physically and mentally buoyant. This socalled "come-back" — what had I ever found about that to be terrified of? You know how you feel after you've overcome some obstacle, no matter how small? You know the elation that sweeps you, the feeling you have that even a cage full of tigers would have no terrors? Well, that's how I felt as the pounds slipped off, as I won the battle. Is it any wonder my work improved? YOU know, when I look back now at the schedules I used to have as an opera and concert singer, I laugh. I used to think I was busy. Why today my day is just about five times as crowded, yet I'm never as tired! I take five singing lessons a week, two diction lessons, spend hours with a coach and accompanist. Each week I have to learn six new songs for my radio program, and work over the orchestration with Mr. Koestner, my orchestra director. While making a picture I'm on the set for ten hours a day and have to study the film music besides. Then, of course, there are such distractions as picture taking, fittings, interviews, the business management of my farm, and other personal affairs. Honestly, I do moreaccomplish more — in a day now than I ever did in a week during my operatic work. And here is something I've learned. Overeating uses up energy, in burning up food, that can be used to far greater profit and enjoyment elsewhere! Because my system is less sluggish, my mind is proportionately more alert. I seem to be able to think a problem straight through now instead of blundering around it. For example, during the past four years my farm has been a source of constant worry. Crops have been ruined by drought and dust for three years, and I understand that this year's crop will be spoiled, too. I have received more advice regarding what to do about the farm than the average young mother with her first-born. Like most advice, it was highly conflicting, and, I dare say, a lot of it was bad, But I