Radio and television mirror (July-Dec 1942)

Record Details:

Something wrong or inaccurate about this page? Let us Know!

Thanks for helping us continually improve the quality of the Lantern search engine for all of our users! We have millions of scanned pages, so user reports are incredibly helpful for us to identify places where we can improve and update the metadata.

Please describe the issue below, and click "Submit" to send your comments to our team! If you'd prefer, you can also send us an email to mhdl@commarts.wisc.edu with your comments.




We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.

Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.

"Show me how to live!" she pleaded in her loneliness, never dreaming when she mailed her daring letter that one who led others to happiness could be lonely too THAT NIGHT I wrote the letter I was lonely — perfectly lonely and wretched was what I told myself — and I tried hard to put it all down on that piece of paper. I read it over and over when I'd finished and it seemed to say what I meant, especially those last two paragraphs. "So you see, Mr. Monday," — that was what I wrote — "all I want to know is how to keep the cat from getting my tongue whenever I go out with a boy, and how to stop myself from saying the wrong thing whenever I do say something. "I've been listening to you every Monday night for a long time and mostly I think your advice is awfully good. If you can just help me, too, I'll be grateful forever. "Yours very truly, Grace Jones." Of course, I realized the "Yours very truly" was a little formal, after I'd poured out my heart in the letter, but I felt it was better that way. The mere fact that I'd had the courage to write it was a personal triumph, and I sealed it up and hurried out to post it before I changed my mind. It was strange, how exciting .it was to mail that letter — as if I were starting something new, cutting the strings of the past. There was another reason, too — no one in the world except myself knew I'd written it, not even Mary Montague, my room-mate. That was curious, because it had been Mary's idea in the first place. We've been room-mates, Mary and I, for a long time, and we work in the same office. And yet we're as different . as shadows and sunlight. Mary is — the only word is lovely. But she's more than that, she's smart and sophisticated and always knows the right things to say. And she has golden hair that flops over her shoulders and large blue eyes and the way she wears clothes — Maybe you can understand how it is. I'm just the opposite from Mary. My hair is a dusty shade of brown and my eyes are hazel some times and other times they're green and no one especially minds what color they are anyway. Please don't think I'm pitying myself. It's just that I know the sort of person I am. The whole thing had started the night before. Mary and her fiance, Preston Knight — he's an executive in one of the two local radio stations — were going out to some party. Mary looked stunning in her long black sleeveless dress and Preston stood there admiring her and then he turned to me and flashed one of those handsome smiles. "What are you going to do tonight, Grace?" he asked. I was sitting over on the sofa, pretending to be interested in the evening paper. I glanced at him and said, "Oh, tonight I listen to Mr. Monday. I never miss him, you know." Preston looked the tiniest bit puzzled. "You don't mean that fellow who gives advice to the lovelorn? That—" But Mary lifted her hand and stopped him. "Now, Pres," she said, her tone reproving, and I saw the look that went between them. A little later, on their way out, Mary was talking in a low voice. "Pres, you shouldn't have said anything against — " The door closed and I couldn't hear any more. But I knew what she was saying. Mr. Monday was one of my favorites and Pres shouldn't talk against him even if Pres thought he was terrible, because the program was one of the few bits of excitement in my week. Mary was like that. She hadn't said anything but I knew she was worried about me' and the fact that boys simply didn't seem attracted to me and I practically never had dates. I knew she'd been thinking about it because I know her pretty well. We'd been together four years and were very close, even though in recent months we hadn't seen too much of each other, because Mary was out almost every night with Preston, and during the day she's