Radio-TV mirror (July-Dec 1954)

Record Details:

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Information Booth (Continued from page 8) »""'•-'"' m® m& M CAN'T CUT CIRCULATION Anywhere Made of vCREAMY LATEX Non-Allergenic S-T-R-E-T-C-H-E-S 4 times its size SOFTER SMOOTHER WATERPROOF Everywhere m F*$&i mm:[ I MIRACLE STRETCH.' No other baby parity has it. Let your own hand prove it. KEEP YOUR BABY "SOCIALLY ACCEPTABLE"* IN PLAYTEX9 BABY PANTS See how the Baby-in-MotVon picture (on top) proves that Playtex Pants — and only Playtex Pants — can shield baby with such complete comfort and provide such practical and gentle protection. Stitchless, seamless, longer lasting. Washes seconds. No wonder more mothers buy Playtex than any other make.' *m9"4 International Latex Corp'n, PLAYTEX PARK, Dover Del. InCanada: Playtex Ltd., Arnprior, Ontario without a radio part. Ned's lucrative hobby is writing song lyrics and. in 1933, his "Trust in Me" was a top record favorite for thirty-seven weeks. Ned's other titles include, "I Can't Resist You," "Trouble in Paradise," and "Sing a New Song." The handsome actor, who put on his first theatrical production at the age of five, with the help of his brother and a young neighbor, has been heard as Dr. Anthony Loring on Young Widder Brown for the past eleven years. His pet table topics are: his family — Mrs. Wever and two charming teen-age daughters; the fun he had writing and producing shows as president of Princeton's Triangle Club; and his activities with the Greenwich, Connecticut, Auxiliary Police during the war. Singing Family Dear Editor: My cousin, who is a shut-in and confined constantly to a wheelchair, is a devoted Jan Arden fan and never misses any of his appearances on the Robert Q. Lewis Show. It would be a great treat for both of us if you could tell us something about him. M. L. D., Holyoke, Mass. At an age when most children were listening to Grimm's Fairy Tales, Jan Arden was listening to tales of Verdi, Rossini, Wagner and Bizet and, even before he entered grade school, Jan was practicing from one to three hours a day under the watchful eye and critical ear of his father, the late Philip Ardizzone, Metropolitan Opera singer and voice teacher. Yet Jan was a sports enthusiast as well, ran the 100-yard dash in ten seconds for his high-school track team, and played baseball, basketball and football equally well. He was offered a tryout with the Brooklyn Dodgers, but, at the same time, the opportunity came to sing at New York's famed Leon and Eddie's, where the applause convinced him to pursue a singing career. After his Army discharge, Jan sang at top (Continued on page 29) Ned Wever