Radio-TV mirror (July-Dec 1954)

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.

-ttiaknfr wjftfukfjt wkm ijon sit \^i panties o§ £buK-U J RAYON FABRIC on&j abet £9t These are the panties that g-i-v-e with every motion, fit each curve. They're famous for comfort, famous for wear — everybody's favorite. Important — Come winter, they won't get cold and clammy\ They're naturally absorbent. Time-savers too, because they wash, dry quickly, need no ironing. In all your favorite styles. lustrial Rayon Corp., Cleveland, Ohio /^JjjT^ oducers of Continuous Process ^Good Housekeeping y ijron Yarns and®Tyron Cord forTlres Jultone ®Covinair — other fine fabrics by Industrial The Joy of Sharing (Continued jroin page 65) John is, of course, John Larkin, — Sharon's daddy— who stars in radio as Perry Mason and also plays Miles Nelson on The Right To Happiness. Teri plays Loretta Cole in The Romance Of Helen Trent, appears frequently -on other dramatic programs, and has long been well known to listeners as Chichi in Life Can Be Beautiful. "I began my career as an actress at nine," Teri went on. "By the time I was nineteen, I had played dramatic roles in five Broadway shows and was already a radio veteran. When John and I were married, on June 10, 1950, I added wifehood and then motherhood to the joy of going on with the work I love. I wouldn't change my life for anyone else's in the world. Yet I want Sharon to grow up a little more slowly than I did. I want her to have the natural, normal childhood that other little girls have, and to take her time about deciding what she wants to do with her life. I believe all mothers want more for their children than they had themselves." At the moment, Sharon seems very much an individual in her own right. First, in her looks, so unlike her mother's blond ness and yet so unlike her daddy's black hair and blue eyes. And in her whole personality, in the seriousness of her manner, the sweet gravity of her smile. Perhaps she will show some of her parents' talent for acting, and their love of it. It's too early yet to tell. Perhaps she will be a musician, like Teri's mother, who was a concert singer. (Teri herself, a lyric soprano, hopes some day to combine singing with acting.) "I think the best thing she can be, for a long time to come, is a happy, healthy, normal little girl," Teri says firmly. "I have very definite convictions about what is best for her, for a while, although you might think at times that I am hopelessly sentimental. You might think — at other times — that I am almost too realistic about the way she should be brought up, because I feel that modern life is realistic and she must be prepared to face it. Actually, we mothers of today must be a mixture of both sentiment and practicality. We can't neglect either, if we want our children to be happy adults." Teri tells a story about her sentimental side and how she was affected by a visit to the Central Park carousel with Sharon. The carousel that has been whirling New York children around and around and around on its galloping wooden horses for many years. "I suddenly remembered how, when I was about nine, my mother used to take me riding on this merry-go-round, and now here I was bringing my own little girl to enjoy the same thrills. As we swung around the circle on our handsomely painted steeds, my throat suddenly felt all choked up and tears came to my eyes. I saw Sharon looking at me curiously, and then I told her how Mommy had loved this carousel as much as she was loving it. I think it made the whole thing seem even more exciting and wonderful for her. It was for me." On the other hand, Teri's realistic approach to Sharon's education is illustrated by the way she put her in nursery school before she intended to. "I have a wonderful maid, Nellie, who is like one of the family. She has been with us since Sharon was born, so there was no need for school to keep my little girl happy while I work. I wouldn't and couldn't go on working if Sharon were not well taken care of at home by someone she loves and trusts. But I had begun feel it~... Ifl fabric ! softest [jot m ,~ baby pants * waterproof § RAYON FABRIC Now — Spun-lo for Baby! So soft, so light, so comfy ! They're new, wonderful everyday waterproof panties with a Sunday dress-up look! Knit Rayon... completely waterproof! No rubber! No separate lining! Fabric outside; waterproof inside! Won't acid-stain! Non-allergenic! No special washing care needed! In five dainty baby colors. /^^^X pull-on style, about / 9 V (.PARENTS^ A A A <Z1V snap-on style, about WqV ^GUarameedby%lndns,ria! "W Corp.. Cleveland. Ohio ^Good Housekeeping ^Producers of Continuous Process wsfSS Rayon Yarns and ®Tyron Cord for Tires ^£«VIB1IS10J; 69