Radio mirror (May-Oct 1936)

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RADIO MIRROR the Linit Beauti] Bath provides ynstant @esu/ts /^ The alert girl or woman today in her quest for beauty, through the cultivation of charm, personality and good health, should not overlook the first requisite of loveliness — a perfect skin. a^ The smart woman will be glad to know of this simple way to attain a beautiful skin — the way so many fastidious women of today are acquiring it. a^. One of the most remarkable skin beauty aids is the Linit Beauty Bath. Imagine stepping into a bath as soft and luxurious as rich cream, bathing as usual and, after drying, finding that your skin is soft and satiny smooth as a rose petal. /^ To enjoy the refreshing luxury of the Linit Beauty Bath, you merely dissolve some Linit in a tub of warm water and bathe. It is such a simple means of keeping the skin alluringly soft, that there is no excuse for any woman, who takes pride in her personal charm, to have anything but a clear, soft, smooth skin. a^ Once you try Linit, you will be happy to make it the daily feature of your bath. Parents will be glad to know that Linit is a valuable aid in bathing the baby and children, for in many cases of irritation the Linit bath is most soothing to the skin. YOUR DAINTY UNDERTHINGS will be refreshed and restored to their original loveliness when laundered with Linit. Just follow the simple directions on the package. LINIT IS SOLD BY ALL GROCERS The Bathway to a Soft, Smooth Skjn departures from NBC were George Ansbro and Ellis Andrews, both of whom graduated from the uniformed staff (Ansbro is a former page and Andrews a tourist guide) to the announcerial staff. Ansbro got in a jam by permitting on the air one of the Warner Brothers' prohibited songs and Andrews resigned. Del Sharbut, Columbia mikeman, has replaced Harry Von Zell as the voice of the Pathe newsreel. The latter, now employed in the radio department of an advertising agency, is too busy in the studios to continue his motion picture work. Currently Von Zell is appearing on the Helen Hayes, Lawrence Tibbett, Phil Baker, and Fred Allen programs . . . And Frank Singiser, who resigned from NBC several months ago and who is now the newscaster for the Mutual Broadcasting System, has opened offices in downtown New York as an investment securities specialist. If you want to know what the welldressed baritone is wearing this spring it is an "elastic shirt collar." Never heard of such a thing? Neither had the Monitor Man until a stop-press bulletin arrived solemnly announcing: "Lawrence Tibbett wears elastic shirt collars to give him freedom of voice." Of course it may be snap judgment on our part but we can't suppress the comment that this is stretching things a bit too far. A woman, Mrs. Anne Hummert, vicepresident of the Blackett, Sample and Hummert advertising agency, has charge of over fifty important radio programs. Among them is the American Album of Familiar Music on which Frank Munn and Lucy Monroe are starred. Mrs. Hummert, a native of Baltimore, is a former newspaper woman and a graduate of Goucher College . . . Another woman, Ann Brae, former vaudeville comedienne, is Station WOR's own feminine producer. Mrs. Brae writes and produces the Broadway Bandwagon and the Mclntyre Amateur Revue. The program on which appear Eddie Dowling and his wife, the irrepressible Rae Dooley, was the program by which Roxy was planning his radio come-back when stricken in his sleep ... Ed Wynn was anxious to have his old side-kick, Graham McNamee, serve as his stooge on the new program but couldn't arrange it because McNamee is an exclusive NBC artist, and Wynn's travels as Gulliver are being projected on CBS. That network's star, Ted Husing, was next considered but the idea was abandoned when somebody recalled that Lennie Hayton, who supplies the musical background, is married to the ex-Mrs. Husing. It might have proved an embarrassing association for the maestro and the mikeman. WHAT has become of Annette Hanshaw?" inquires a customer. Well, the last the Monitor Man heard from Annette she was ambitious to do dramatics and declared she wouldn't return to radio unless she could act as well as sing. Finding a script meeting these requirements and a sponsor to underwrite the enterprise apparently is retarding Annette . . . The Katha Lee you hear singing on WOR is the whilom and winsome Harriet Lee, several seasons ago Radio Queen. The new moniker was selected by numerology and is supposed to spell success. Here's hoping it does. SOME men are very sensitive about being bald. Bing Crosby is one of them. He has a barren spot he camou 68