Radio and television mirror (July-Dec 1942)

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What's New From Coast to Coast Continued from page 7 And that explains why you don't hear the voices of John Mclntire or Jeanette Nolan on the air any longer— and why you may never hear them there again. The homesteading Mclntires have returned to Montana, and this time they hope to stay. * * * NASHVILLE, Tenn.— Do you know what the Talking Blues are? The chances are you don't, unless you've listened to Robert Lunn on the WSM Grand Ole Opry, because they're his specialty. The Talking Blues are a completely different kind of entertainment — half singing, half talking, with a strong flavoring of comedy. Robert Lunn writes the verses himself, delivers them to his own accompaniment on the guitar, and captivates everyone who hears him. As for the verses, they tell about practically anvthin^ current events, history, legend — and at times they run on and on and on. Robert's career started eleven years ago when he was a bell hop in Nashville's Hotel Hermitage. In those days he strummed the guitar and sang the Talking Blues mostly for fun, but his unusual talent attracted the attention of George Dewey Hay, the Grand Ole Opry's Solemn Old Judge, and almost before Robert knew what was happening he was one of the Opry's star attractions. Besides WSM, he has been on stations KWTA and WCHS, and has made personal appearance tours that have taken him into twenty states. He's married, very happily, and has two children, a boy nine years old and a girl six. In between Opry broadcasts, Robert is part of the Grand Ole Opry tent show that is touring Army camps in the South. * * * CHICAGO— One way to travel and see the country is to become a radio performer — at least, that's been the experience of Don White, who is heard on stations WIND and WJJD as an important part of the cast of the Breakfast Frolic and the Supper Time Frolic. Don was born Walden Whytsell in a one-room log cabin near Wolf Creek, West Virginia. That was in 1909. He grew up in the West Virginia hill country, working at odd jobs and going to school. But he always liked to sing, and in 1930 he went to Charleston, West Virginia, and managed to get a job on a radio station there as one of a troup called The Hawaiian Troubadours. It didn't bother either Don or the station management that he'd never been anywhere near Hawaii. That was the start of a radio career that took Don all over Ohio, into North and South Carolina, Georgia, and Washington, D. C. At WBT, in Charlotte, N. C, he was one of the famed Briar-Hopper Boys, and at WLW, Cincinnati, he was one of the Carolina Boys and also one of the Smiling Cowboys. He came to WJJDWIND in the fall of 1941 from station KFAB, Lincoln, Nebraska. With all that experience behind him, you'd expect Don to be versatile, and you'd be right. He plays the Hawaiian and Spanish guitars, mandolin, tenor banjo, and violin (which he prefers to call a fiddle). He sings, SEPTEMBER, 1942 PSORIASIS MUST YOU DROP ACTIVE Siroil Laboratories, Inc., Depf. M-4, Detroit, Michigan Siroil Laboratories of Canada, Ltd., Box 488, Windsor, Ontario Please send me your free booklet on Psoriasis. NAME_ ADDRESS. CITY .STATE. Please print your name and address plainly BECAUSE OF IT? Many sport-loving women are unwilling bystanders because unsightly psoriasis lesions prevent them from wearing modern sports clothing. SIROIL may solve this problem for you. SIROIL tends to remove the crusts and scales of psoriasis which are external in character and located on the outer layer of the skin. If or when your psoriasis lesions recur, light application of SIROIL will help keep them under control. Applied externally, SIROIL does not stain clothing or bed linen nor does it interfere in any way with your daily routine. Sold on a two-week's satisfaction-or -money -refunded basis. 10 Write for Booklet today SIROIL ON SALE AT ALL DRUG STORES MAGNIFICENT PRETENDER When an army nurse falls in love ^"W^WW lucky playboy, anything can happen. Twice she xejectea his proposals ^ but what happened when romance caught up wSTthem behind the walls of a bomb-shattered British town makes a delightful story of love in war time. You 11 thrill to its exciting and unexpected climax. These Are Real Experiences These stories are about people like you and me, like the young ouple next door, stories told with a compelling Ckness. Other titles in the delightful September issue of True Experiences are: « t i Tomorrow's Love • The Hear* Cannot Forget u.i-Mnnc On Trial • tomorrow » u»#»^ Marriage On ir.a Holiday. Broken Enchantment • You Cant Cheat Lire plus interesting and he.pfu, special articles and regular department, SEPTEMBER ISSUE True Experiences ON SALE NOW BUY YOUR COPY TODAY 79