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

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C FIBS Kotex Tampons COSTLESS I ONLY 20 J? a package— and with Fibs you can be free as a breeze. Slip into slacks, shorts or even a swim suit with nobody the wiser. Worn internally, Fibs provide invisible sanitary protection ... no pins, pads or belts ... no chafing, no disposal problem. only FIBS ARE i QUILTED f "QUILTED"-to avoid danger of cotton particles adhering to delicate tissues — to prevent undue expansion which might cause pressure or irritation. That means greater comfort and safety! And Fibs have a smooth, gently rounded end for easy insertion! ' Priscilla Lyon , below, is the star of Meet Corliss Archer, CBS. At the right is Lillian Leonard, the pretty new singer of the Gay Nineties Revue, THE Bing Crosbys, who were burned out of their Toluca Lake home several weeks ago, have just moved into a house in Holmby Hills. The new house is just across the street from the Los Angeles Golf Club. Dixie Lee, Bing's wife, says the crooner was sold the second he saw how near the golf course was to the house. Incidentally, when the Toluca Lake house burned down, Bing lost his pipe collection. The Athletic Round Table of Spokane, Bing's hometown, decided to do something about it. They've adopted the motto, "Briars for Bing" or "Cobs for Crosby," and members have been sending him pipes, old, new and fancy ones. Harry Finfrock, a member of the U.S. Coast Guard, got the biggest kick of his life recently when he made his debut on the CBS Crime Doctor program. Harry haunts the Sunday night show whenever he is on leave. Finally, the directors chose him to act as foreman of the jury which brings in the verdict of the case that is dramatized. * * * Nashville, Tenn. — "It has nothing to do with tweed and it certainly has nothing to do with twill;" so says Freddie Rose who writes so many of the songs featured on WSM's Grand Ole Opry. "It's just one of those things that seem to fit the music, so I let it become the title for a little song." "Tweedle O Twill" that Freddie has reference to is the present high spot in a career of composing that started in Chicago 27 years ago. The intervening years have seen Freddie write everything from the "Red Hot Mama" songs of Sophie Tucker to recent hits in the old-time music field. In 1929 Freddie abruptly stopped the flow of popular music from his pen By DALE BANKS and went into radio, singing the songs he had written. His latter day efforts, made famous to lovers of homespun music by such names as Gene Autry, Jimmie Davis, Bob Wills and Roy Acuff, are rural favorites throughout the country. People who like their music the old-time way swear by such Freddie Rose favorites as "Be Honest With Me," "The End of the World," "Tears on My Pillow," and of course the latest sensation done to a turn on wax by Gene Autry— "Tweedle O Twill." There's no way of knowing how many songs Freddie has written, but he recalls at least 200 of the old-timers to his credit. He is currently heard on the WSM Grand Ole Opry singing songs of his own composition. Needless to say, many of the other stars of the Opry also draw from his vast resources. Recently returned from the West Coast where he wrote songs for Gene Autry, Freddie has now turned his talents to music for Roy ■ Acuff, Grand Ole Opry big name. Says Freddie about music with a homespun flavor, "Oldtime music is definitely coming into its own. Eventually it will top popular music in appeal." * * * Boston, Mass. — The Yankee Network's recent search for tomorrow's talent has resulted in the discovery of the Yankee Starlets — new singing sensations of radio. These four talented young girls from Boston are absolutely new to radio. They are Loretta Fitzgerald and Eileen Murphy, both 17 and Boston high school students; Marjory Cochrane, 21, who works as a froster in a bakery; and Priscilla Howe, 19, a defense factory worker in a Boston suburb. Each Starlet has a natural voice and a distinctive style all her own, and RADIO MIRROR