Radio Mirror: The Magazine of Radio Romances (Jan-June 1943)

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BRAINS -0^ LOOKS 0% CLOTHES-^ In your new war job — as well as in romance — you already have two strikes against you if you trust your personal freshness to anything but an effective perspiration-stopper. The new Odorono Cream is! It contains an effective astringent no other leading deodorant gives you . . . stops perspiration and odor up to three days. Get wise! Get ahead! Get Odorono Cream! 39tf (plus tax) for a big, big jar. The Odorono Company, Inc., New York NEW ODORONO CREAM CONTAINS AN EFFECTIVE ASTRINGENT NOT FOUND IN ANY OTHER DEODORANT Before and After Read this new book about Facial Reconstruction. Tells how easy it is for roses to be reshaped — protruding ears, thick lips, wrinkles and pouches corrected. Plastic ( Science explained. Elaborate illustrations. Only 25c — mail coin or stamp to Glennville 313 Madison Ave. (Dept. A.L.) N. Y. C. MAY RADIO MIRROR On Sale Wednesday, April 7 To help lighten the burden that has been placed upon transportation and handling facilities by the war effort, the May and subsequent issues of RADIO MIRROR will appear upon the newsstands at a slightly later date than heretofore. RADIO MIRROR for May will go on sale Wednesday, April 7th. On that date step up to your newsstand and say "A copy of RADIO MIRROR, please," and your newsdealer will gladly give it to you. 'I've Got Troubles of My OWN!" DIDN'T SLEEP last night — a hard day ahead and "she" had used up all the Dr. Miles Nervine. Dr. Miles Nervine helps him when Nervous Tension makes him Wakeful, Irritable, Excitable and Restless. Perhaps it would help you. Why don't you try it? Get Dr. Miles Nervine (Liquid or Effervescent tablets) at your drug store— Liquid, 25c and 81.00, Effervescent Tablets, 35c and 75c Read directions and use only as directed. We guarantee satisfaction or your money back. Try Dr. Miles Nervine and see for yourself how much it can do for you. Miles Laboratories, Inc., Elkhart, Indiana. £~2 ••&?{ D R . MILES ERVI Y3fc Remember ! Continued from page 23 because it is so easy for us to create an illusion of peace and safety — it seems to me we all have a greater obligation than the people of other, less fortunate, countries, to remember the war every single moment. The only ones among us who have any right to say, :<Oh, the war is so terrible I don't even want to think about it!" are those who have actually lost someone they love, who have had a brother or a son or a sweetheart killed in battle. Not that any of them would exercise that right, any more than a Russian or Chinese or Briton would, because to them the danger is no longer remote. The madman has already entered their homes. Are you wondering what harm it does if you forget the war for a while? This is the harm it does: W/HEN we forget, it is easy to break ** the few simple rules by which we civilians are being asked to live. It's easy to lay in a big stock of the foods that we read are going to be rationed next month. It's easy to use the car for going to a movie and buy more gas at that service station you know where they don't insist on getting a coupon for every gallon. It's easy to skip tonight's Air Raid Precaution meeting. Most important of all, it's fatally easy to put off until tomorrow buying some war stamps or a war bond. It's strange, isn't it, that we should have to be reminded to buy bonds? It's as if, with the madman invading our home, we had to be reminded to pick up a gun that was lying there within easy reach on the table. Buying a bond is a simple act of selfpreservation. Of course there is always something else to do with the money — something which seems, at the moment, important and even vital. There always is. We find excuses without half trying. Taxes are high. With the cost of living going up, it takes all we have just to buy the things we need to get along. Other people are making more money; they can afford to invest in bonds better than we. But a person in danger doesn't stop to wonder if he can afford to buy the weapons that will save his life! And we are in danger. Just as long as the Japanese and German and Italian nations remain undefeated, we are in danger, no matter which way the tide of war seems to be running at any single moment. Even though we know that eventually we will win, we are in danger — the danger of not winning soon enough to save thousands of lives and millions of souls. Let us not forget. Let us build our lives wholly around an awareness of the war. Let us measure every action of the day against that awareness. On even such a small thing as the expenditure of an hour or a dollar, let us remember the war — for if we do, how many millions of hours and of dollars will be put to work bringing the war to an end! CLOTHES MAKE THE WOMAN . . . Lovely Helen Trent and Radio Mirror thank Fred Block, popular designer of Chicago, for the attractive dress which Helen wears on page 25. RADIO MIRROR