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.
Advertisement a lot, that it had four wheels, tires and a running board. If they got down there fast they might get it. “I told the parents to bring their children along and I’d tell stories while the parents were examining the car. The car was sold to the first looker, but I stayed all day telling stories. From then on I had a spon¬ sor.” The “Princess” began to evolve as Alene was obliged to make public appearances. At first an unseen voice, she now had to materialize as a be¬ lievable princess. She had a costume run up for herself, with a wide, wide skirt—six feet across, to stand out and swirl enough for any little girl’s fancy. A Princess Indeed Her costumes and sets now recreate the spirit of fairyland. As she floats (and she seems to be floating) down the staircase every Monday to the fanfare of tnlmpets, she is a fairy princess to the millions watching her. Her costumes are all lace and billows, spangles and brilliants, the sort of clothes any child “knows” a princess should wear. The stories the Princess tells are compounded of the new and the old. She builds new tales from old classics. “I don’t change the plot,” she explains. “I just change details which might not be credible. Also, some fairy tales have ethics I don’t care to perpetuate. For example, in ‘Hansel and Gretel,’ I have the witch fall into the oven, instead of the children pushing her in. And I have her changing her captives into ginger¬ bread children instead of burning them up.” As for the real-life Alene Dalton, aside from the fact that she was born April 10, 1925, and later moved to Salt Lake City, her vital statistics are strictly state secrets. Her man¬ ager, Ted Collins, wants her to be simply the “Fairy Princess,” detached from such mundane realities. WIN A FREE TRIP I TO PARIS enter NBC-TTs of Today'' m Contest A ten-day trip to Paris for two, via Pan American Clipper! A Molly Parnis ward¬ robe! A five-day holiday in New York! An NBC Television audition and personal ap¬ pearance with Dave Garroway on the NBC- TV program TODAY! All these exciting things may happen to you! NBC-TV’s TODAY program is conduct¬ ing a nationwide search for the GIRL OF TODAY. Here’s how easy it is to enter the contest. If you are between the ages of 18 and 35, simply fill out the entry blank below, attach a recent photograph of yourself (a snapshot will do) and send your entry to “Girl of Today,” Box #4, New' York 36, N.Y. Eight “finalists” will be flown to New York by Capital Airlines to be guests of NBC for five days with all expenses paid, including sightseeing, television shows and accommodations at The Savoy-Plaza hotel. The winner will be chosen for attractive¬ ness, poise and personality. Send photograph (photo cannot be re¬ turned) and entry blank Today. And watch TODAY with Dave Garroway every weekday morning from 7 to 9 on your local NBC-TV station. ENTRY BLANK-NBt-IV CNl OF TODAY Contest « K _KE__. STREET ADDRESS_ CITY_STATE_ On What station do you sea NBC-TV's TODAY inogram?_ (Send this coup and your photograph to: eiRl OF TODAY contest, Box ^*4, New York 36, N.Y.) 19