Radio and television mirror (July-Dec 1951)

Record Details:

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18 Are you in the know ? If you're conversation-shy in a crowd, what helps overcome it? I I Take a public-speaking course Q Avoid gang gatherings Q Go in for sports Your sound track fails you in "parlor" chatter? Join a sports group. Go skating. Bowling. Hop on a snow train — and look who's talking! You, leading the yacketty-yak about ski lessons, boots, waxes. Once in the sports whirl don't be a quitter. On difficult days, choose Kotex for comfort: downy softness that holds its shape because Kotex is made to stay soft while you wear il. (Comfort and confidence are team-mates!) And try all 3 absorbencies; see which answers your needs completely. For some gals, which style demands special grooming? I I Horseshoe neckline ] Bat wing sleeves □ Pleated skirts Squires soon tire of gals who perspire and don't do something about it! Use underarm deodorants; dress shields. And with batwing sleeves, you can wear a bra with built-in shields: special precaution to save your dress, your daintiness. At "calendar" time, smooth grooming's no problem — when you let Kotex banish revealing outlines. With those flat, pressed ends you can flaunt any smart new fashion — minus a single qualm! How to straighten out a feud you started? I I Make fhe first move □ Wait for him to call I I Try the weeping technique You blow your top. And you're sorry — even before you hear the door slam. Well, tell him so, in a little note. Or ask the crowd over and include your bitter half. If that doesn't fetch him, why knock yourself out? 'Tain't worth it . . . any more than it is to fret over trying days' woes. You needn't, for Kotex gives you the extra protection of an exclusive safety center. Spares you "those" nagging cares. *T. U. REG U.S. PAT. OFF. Afore women c/?oose KOTEX* f/ian a// other san/fary na/?hhs 3 ABSORBEIVC/ES : REGULAR. JU/V/OR. SURER Have yoo tried Delsey* ? It's the new bathroom tissue that's safer because it's softer. A product as superior as Kotex. A tissue as soft and absorbent as Kleenex.* (We think that's the nicest compliment there is.) • 1IIBV LEWIS Abby Lewis is well known to listeners as Ada Overton of Road Of Life. Because she has acted characters in every age group from eighteen to 118, Abby Lewis has been labelled the "young woman of years." This is due not solely to Abby's exceptional voice range, but to her physical characteristics as well. A slender, fragile blonde, she has been likened to, among others, Madeleine Carroll, Jean Arthur and Marlene Dietrich. And she runs yet another gamut in her versatility. In Broadway's production of "Macbeth," she was the Second Witch, while in "You Can't Take It With You" besides playing the Russian duchess, she subbed for the ingenue, the ballet dancer and the actress. In addition to her role of Ada Overton, wealthy matron on Road Of Life, Abby is heard regularly on Eternal Light, The Big Story and Storyteller's Playhouse. At this point, it is almost repetitious to point out that she portrays queens, cooks and cronies with equal ease. Abby's one great extravagance — furs — offers a penetrating glance into her background. She explains it this way: "Furs make me feel as if I belonged to the idle rich. They help to cover up the fact that I'm a pioneer's daughter." For Abby is a direct descendant of Meriwether Lewis, of the historic Lewis and Clark Northwest Expedition. Her mother Edith, a schoolteacher and newspaper correspondent, and her father, the Reverend Hunter Lewis, were actual pioneers in their own right settling in New Mexico before it was admitted to the Union. Father Lewis, until his death a few years ago, was known throughout the Southwest as "The Padre of the Rio Grande" — favorite preacher, missionary and everyman's friend of that area. Abby claims her childhood pastime of tagging along with her father was responsible for the vast repertory of characters she has collected, which has proved invaluable in her acting career. It was at New Mexico State College that she decided to make acting her life work. After working in stock, she reached Broadway and radio. For ten years now Abby has averaged a broadcast a day — including Saturdays and Sundays. Abby is especially overjoyed with her role in Road Of Life — she says, "Ada's such a lovely, normal woman; I'd almost forgotten there were any such left!"