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(Left) Radio's queen beauty, Dorothy Pag Would you like t< learn how to acquir loveliness like hers Then write for Mar Biddle's leaflet o "The Zero Hour Beauty."
Seymour
BEAUTY SECRETS OF A QUEEN! WANT TO KNOW THEM? READ ON
YOUXG AND BEAUTIFUL . . . we can't think of a more appropriate title with which to crown Miss Dorothy Page, voted Radio's Queen by the most distinguished group of radio editors in the world. How many queens in centuries past would have exchanged their crowns for her beauty !
With glorious Titian hair that the great Titian himself might well have reveled in painting, Radio's Queen has posed for portraits by many American illustrators. Her story reads like a glamorous day-dream that many a secretary busily pecking away at her typewriter has secretly harbored in her heart. When Dorothy had a secretarial job at the Curtis Publishing Company in Philadelphia, the Curtis employees staged a beauty contest not long after Dorothy's name was added to the pay-roll. Her friends prevailed upon her to enter at the last minute, with the result that Dorothy of the Titian hair, and the velvet brown eyes, and the gorgeous figure walked away with the blue ribbon.
One of the judges in the contest was Neysa McMein,
Dorothy Page is on these NBC stations each Monday at 8 p.m. EST: WJZ, WBAL, WMAL, WBZ, WBZA, WSYR, KDKA, WGAR, WLW, WLS, WHAM, KWCR, KSO, WREN, KOIL, KOA, KDYL, KPO, KFI, KGW, KOMO, KHQ, KWK, WKBF, WJR.
noted American illustrator for Curt publications. A couple of days late she sauntered by as Dorothy was tyi ing away at her desk in the Curt offices. "Miss Page," she said, "y are verv beautiful. Will you po.' for me?"
To make a short story shorter, within the next mont thousands who bought the Saturday Evening Post we" admiring Neysa McMein's portrait of Miss Page on tl front cover. Soon Dorothy looked at America not on', from magazine covers but also from Red Cross an Tuberculosis League posters, as the very personificatic of health and beauty. Now she has made America ea conscious of her, as well as eye-conscious.
When I had my interview with her, I wanted to s? just as Neysa McMein had some years ago, when si was unknown to Radio, "Miss Page, you are very bea tiful." Somehow she radiates personality as well beauty . . . and I was reminded that it is dramatic vak which the radio seeks in a voice and the artist seeks a model. All artists tell us that in order to be real beautiful, a woman must have {Continued on page 7