Radio and television mirror (Nov 1939-Apr 1940)

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^fe HOW THE TELEPHONES ARE \ v \ RINGING \ \ i I —to tell of Tampax! NO WONDER Tampax is traveling fast and Tampax users growing. In addition to the new converts to Tampax, many parttime users have now become wholetime users, in view of the new Super Tampax size, 50% more absorbent than Regular Tampax. Perfected by a physician, Tampax is worn internally for monthly sanitary protection. The wearer is not conscious of it, but can keep up her regular activities without fear of any chafing, wrinkling or showing of a "line." No odor can form; no disposal problems. Tampax is made of pure surgical cotton, hygienically sealed in individual containers, so neat and ingenious your hands never touch the Tampax at all! Comfortable, efficient, compact to carry in your purse. Three sizes: Regular, Super and Junior. At drug stores and notion counters: Introductory size 20tf ; but large economy package saves up to 25%. Accepted for Advertising by the Journal of the American Medical Association. TAMPAX INCORPORATED MWG-20 New Brunswick. N. J. Please send me in plain wrapper the new trial package unpsx, I enclose lOtf (stamps or silver) to cover cost jl mailing. Size is checked below: ( ) RH.C.'IAK Name ( ) SUPER < ) JUNIOR Addreti City -State. WHAT'S NEW FROM ■ Two of his discoveries meet — Rudy Vol lee introducing Alice Faye to his new prodigy, Sylvia. THE reports that Connie Boswell is able to walk were a little premature, but the truth is good news enough. After being confined to her wheel-chair since childhood, Connie can now swim and ride horseback, and is so delighted about this that she doesn't really mind not yet being able to stand and walk by herself. As she remarks, she's making a good living for herself and the people she loves, and that's more than many a person who has the use of his legs can say. * * * One of radio's most happily married couples, the Del Sharbutts, will have another baby in about four months. Mrs. Sharbutt is the former Meri Bell, who used to be in radio herself until she began being a wife and mother, and Dell announces for the Ask-It-Basket, Guy Lombardo, and Hobby Lobby programs. They already have one child, an elevenmonth-old daughter. * * * This is the saga of a hat, the most expensive one ever bought by Franklin P. Adams of the NBC Information Please program. He paid thirty dollars for it — at least five times as much as he'd ever paid before — and brought it with him to the program. While he was on the air, he laid it down alongside a few dozen other hats, and when he went to retrieve it, found it missing. The only hat left was a battered brown felt, pretty old and a size and a half too small besides. The furious Mr. Adams made the best of a bad bargain, picking up the old hat and wearing it. A few days later he met an acquaintance of his on the street — a man also connected with the Information Please show — who at sight of Adams began to scream, "Thief! Robber!" and ended up by snatching the shabby old head-piece from F. P. A.'s head and clutching it lovingly to his bosom. Of course it belonged to him, and he was convinced that Adams had stolen it, darling of his heart that it was. There was a tense moment before everything was explained, but now the two men are good friends again, each happy to be owning and wearing his own hat. * * * When Edgar Bergen made Charlie McCarthy's voice come out of Mortimer Snerd's mouth on a recent Chase and Sanborn broadcast, he got the biggest laugh of the evening. But if you think the fluff was planned, you should have seen his face. * * * If it hadn't been for the good sportsmanship and energy of Robert Benchley and Fred Allen, the Screen Actors Guild program would have found itself in serious trouble a few Sundays ago. They were two of the guest stars on one of the broadcasts which emanated from New York; Tallulah Bankhead was the other. Miss Bankhead, though, didn't appear on the program, and here's the reason why. Several days before the broadcast the script was submitted to her. She rejected it and asked for a new one, saying she didn't like the material. The new one was written, and though she still wasn't quite satisfied she consented to appear on the show. But Sunday afternoon's rehearsal came, and the temperamental Tallulah didn't show up at all. At the last minute, Benchley and Allen had to sit down and whip up a comedy script to go into the time that was to have been occupied by Tallulah. What made it all the more difficult was that it was almost time for the sponsor to renew the program's contract, and a bad broadcast might haye resulted in no renewal — and hence in no more money for the Screen Actors Guild charity fund. . . . Winchell has a word for Miss Bankhead's lack of consideration. * * * Colonel H. Norman Schwarzkopf of Gang Busters is extending his sympathies to the latest of his four name RADIO AND TELEVISION MIRROR a