Radio mirror (Jan-June 1946)

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Crisp, snowy curtains dress up a room just as a freshly laundered jabot adds cliic to your favorite suit. Dainty organdies, marquisettes, voiles and rayons take on new freshness and beauty when they are Linit-laundered. I.inii restores the original finish to all household and personal washable*. 1 1 penetrates fabrics evenly and smoothly. Linil helps shed dirl and dust, keeps tilings clean longer. Linil is simple to mix, easy to us< . Sunny says: On every Linil package you'll find complete directions for starching sheets, shirts, table linens, lingerie ...and all washable fabrics. 11 Producl i Bait Co, UNIT adds the "finishing touch" (Continued from page 69) show closed she had had to go back to building up a career again, and it was harder after having had a taste of success. She said she sometimes thought people were just watching and sneering at her with an attitude of "Okay, that was just a lucky break. Let's see what you can do now that you're strictly on your own." And she hadn't done too well. She knew she could act, but she had to prove it through the ordinary daily round of jobs here and jobs there. There were already so many actors and actresses in radio who had proved themselves that it was hard to edge into that court of royalty. There was a particular man in her life, too, Kenny found out. He hadn't asked, but she told him anyway. Arthur was a lieutenant in the Marines and she had expected him home next week. She had had a letter that day saying that his home-coming was indefinitely postponed. That was what had started her tears at NBC — that, and a general feeling of hopelessness about everything. "Yeah," Kenny said, "I know how you must have felt. We had an expression overseas — 'Some mornings it doesn't even pay to get up'." "That's just the way I feel now," she told him sadly. And then, laughing a little in reaction against such profound despair, she went on, "But I guess we can't always have everything. It's high time I snapped out of this. What's the sad story of your life?" IZ ENNY laughed with her and gave " her a quick version of his own background. By this time they had reached her door and she asked him if he'd like to come in for a few minutes. He looked at his watch and realized that it was getting late, and told her he thought he should be going home. They made a date for lunch the next day, though, and as he walked down the street he found himself whistling a gay tune that the studio orchestra had been playing that day. And that, as they say in the story books, was the beginning of a beautiful friendship. Kenny met Sybil's brother and his wife, and they liked him immediately. It got so that whenever Sybil was invited to a party, and there are lots of parties among radio people, Kenny was expected to be her escort. He found that Sybil, far from being the tearful, discouraged girl she had seemed that first night, was essentially cheerful, one of the most amusing and unpredictable girls he had ever known. She had a talent for mimicry that was devastating, and a sly little trick of 'stating outrageous opinions in an ordinary tone of voice and then waiting to see how long it would take people she was with to realize she was only fooling. Sometimes they never did realize it and when that happened, Kenny, gasping with repressed mirth, would catch her eye and they would shake their heads solemnly. At the very beginning, they had explained themselves to each other. Sybil had told him all about Arthur, and Kenny had told her about Mary. They didn't try to fool one another on that score. But there they were, two anchorless young people in the biggest city in the world, with interests in common and a definite attraction between them. As Sybil said, "What we need is a Lonely Hearts Club." And Kenny replied, "It looks as though we've got one right here."