 Welcome home, Mary! Jason! Well, come in, come in, come in, come in. Oh, I'm glad to see you bearing. How do you feel? Oh, I feel fine. Uh, as for these crutches here, I'm throwing them overboard any day now. Friendly yours here, eh? Yeah. Well, don't tell me this is Jed. Bless me with a fine, big lad. And, uh, you're sure you're really feeling all right bearing? Oh, thank you. Jason, stop asking me how I feel. Well, I've been worried about you. Last word we had was from Eli Bacon after he hails you off New Zealand a year ago. Yeah. Yeah, but maybe it kills you. Let me go to see how it's like you were. Eli Bacon. Can't wait to sew me up in canvas. How much oil have you missed the long-nosed bacon bring back? Well, yeah, bad luck. $1,400. $1,400, that is. What's the record for this? You recall? You know very well the record's 2,217 barrels. Well, it ain't no more. What's that? It's 2,246. Hey, is that the truth? Are you just... Mr. Stone says maybe it's even a world record. Back to them books. That's the last time though, right? Right, sir. Hey, I can't tell you how proud I am for you. Then it doesn't often happen for a man to have a record to retire on. Retired. Who says I'm retiring? Well, I didn't mean to bring it up right now, but... Well, why not, Barry? The board of directors are giving you a pension. Please house me here. Well, isn't that nice? No. I figured there ain't got enough of a voyage in me, huh? Oh, be reasonable. It's not just the directors. The insurance company says so, too. Oh, don't tell me you want to go to see again? Maybe so. Maybe not. I have decided. You know, what is it? Is it the boy? You want to leave someone else named Joy on the court today? Because if that's it, it's nothing but pride. No, look. My hand's working. No, it may be like this. There's no insurance company doing my deciding for me. No, you're amazing. All right, Barry, all right. Here, you'll be needing this. Key to your house. Everything's clean and ready for him. It's all right. Pleasant house, Barry. You and the boy should be real comfortable there. Me and the boy, Barry. Good to see you, kid. He's a fine lad, Barry. Thank you. Are we going home after this? Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Come on, boy. We're going home. Are you still up, kid? Fast-forward. I've been studying, Grandpa. I teach only two. Oh, well. Well, I've just been called on the school superintendent. She'll take the examination. Tomorrow morning. Yes, Grandpa. If I fail, I can't go to see no more. That's it, ain't it, Grandpa? Well, I ain't saying it isn't. I ain't saying the date. And no more gab about feeling. You hear me? But I just don't know nothing about this book we're in a village. It ain't a village. Useless, maybe, but don't you ever let me hear you calling it a village? Yes, sir. What's written here special? What book you've been studying? This one. It's a grammar book. Well, what don't you know about it? Well, once and one thing, I don't know what parse means. Parse? It says parse the following sentence. Parse. In the front of the book, it says parse the verb trance attempt. Yeah, I'm just a man to tell you that, boy. Excepting that I didn't think you'd understand. I don't. What? It means... It doesn't mean to resolve. I know what it means. I wish you'd told him then. Well, resolve means to kind of take something apart, like you take a not to part. See how it's tied. Well, that's what you do to a student. You bust it all up and add verbs and adjectives. It's interesting, isn't it? I'm scared, Grandpa. I just can't think anymore. I get all mixed up. I just can't think. All right, boy. All right now. You've done enough for one day. Time is both in our beds. Can I sleep in your room, Grandpa? It's got two bedrooms. Well, it's beautiful. Grandpa, it's got two bedrooms. Well, it's being your first nightly show. Thank you, Grandpa. Grab hold of that lamp, boy. Get it both. Lively now. Lively. Huh? Just now, you were praying. You were praying like I wasn't going to pass the examination. Oh, I didn't mean too good. I must just let the Lord know that if he's got some disappointment for us to face tomorrow, well, we... I'll try, Grandpa. I'll say well. But if you don't pass, well, it could be that the Lord means it's for our own good. But I've got to go to see Grandpa. He'll get me proper, like we always said. And I'm saying that maybe he don't want me to raise you in no place like that. You know, it's a rough, tough hard life, boy. I want to go to see Grandpa. Yeah, sure you do. Sure you do. Uh, Jed. To this house here. You don't remember much about it, do you? I... I was pretty young, I guess. Yeah. Mighty interesting subject. Remembering mighty scientific subject. It is? Yeah. Now, just being scientific, you wouldn't remember the night you was brought in here to my room to sleep, would you? Night you more died. I don't think so, Grandpa. No, just lonesome you were. Just lonesome. I think I remember, Grandpa. Kind of. I had to kiss you goodnight. Even just like I knew you more. Seem to make you forget about being lonesome. Funny, isn't it? I guess so, Grandpa. Yeah. I don't suppose that right now You are? Oh, nothing, boy. You was mighty young, like you said. Go to sleep. Go to sleep. I would like to wait here in my office, Captain John, until the examination is over. Are you sure I'm bothering you, Mr. Bush? After all, you'll be in the school soon. I told you I wish you'd stop worrying about the boy. Mr. Bush, you're a married man, huh? He's rather insane. No, we've never been blessed with any, Captain Ty. But you know about him, though. I guess it ain't so hard, is it? Being a parent? Well, every day, it ain't just being a parent. Which being a parent? A sure. Well, some pretty poor people have managed to get ready to show up. Yeah, that's right. It's Aide Lincoln now. He made it handsome. More handsome. The Lincoln's folks were sure folks. And that makes a difference. If need be, Captain, if Jed doesn't pass, I think you will make it handsome, too. You've given the boy something to look up to. That's the hardest part. You brought home a record, didn't you? A record that will stand yet. I'll tell you the kind of a record I brought home. I had one in my hand to keep Jed out there for one more watch. I told you, just one more watch. All right, it ain't going to come about. Now, why? Because of me. Because I kept him ignorant. Because I couldn't teach him, Papa. I didn't know it. Isn't that much to you? If you'll excuse me, Captain, I have a message for one of the teachers I almost forgot. Yes, Mr. Bush. That's the kind of a record I brought home. A record that will stand yet, Mr. Huckins. A rhythmic expelling in English, Mr. Bush. He's working on geography now. Simply deployable. So far, his average is fit with two. Miss Huckins, you were given a mark of 70. What did you say, sir? I said you were given a mark of 70. I am not going to tell that old man that his boy failed. But he did fail. And he didn't want me to falsify an examination. All right, then. You tell him. Go on. Tell him that he has to raise that boy, I'm sure, that he can't take the last of the choice to see again to make a wailing master out of him. You go ahead. I'm not men enough. They have no right, Mr. Bush. No right to send him where the only thing they'll learn about are the sin and that terrible, rough life. It's not enough. It's a little medical character, Miss Huckins. That old man has a textbook that builds character. There's no way, Miss Huckins, that I could learn to read that book of his. I'd give up knowing how to spell. Then I'd give up a good deal more if I had that boy's chance to be an actor. Oh, I know, I know. But the point is... The point is, Miss Huckins, that we can mark the paper 70. Ladies and gentlemen of the office, you can show your adjudication. Just tell me what you've done about refining the vessel. Well, we haven't done anything yet. Oh, I'd like you to meet Mr. Lunsford here, Mr. Lunsford. This is Captain Joy. I'd love to. Oh, the matter, sir. Oh, what do you mean? We haven't done nothing. Well, I... Oh, I see. Jet must have passed, eh? Passed? Of course he passed. 70% in every subject. The bad for a boy who never went to school. Now, look, where has it been? We've got a crew to line up and their first mate to find. Strange, I was just talking about that with Mr. Lunsford. Oh, you were, eh? Yes, Mr. Lunsford from Boston. And, uh, was he to get a chance to sail with you? Well, it might work out just fine all around. Yeah. Young, sir, ain't he, Jason? Yeah. Young and helper. Well, I imagine I could survive another boy, sir. Jason? A body would happen, and I can see the wheels running on your head. Once again, Captain Boston. Boston, there are then insurance companies, but... Now, it wouldn't be possible that Mr. Lunsford got his master's papers on him, would it? Well, uh, well, yes, yes, yes. Look, uh, suppose we let Captain George lift the record over if he wants to. And if he's got any questions, he'll ask you. Good job, Mighty. Fine idea. Very well. Yeah. Uh, let's see them papers. If you don't mind. Yes, sir. There. Here. With me and son. That's a good firm. Later promoted to first mate of the Albatross. Yes, good ship. Mm-hmm. What's this? Shut some school credits there. Won't this screw the man how to take wheel, huh? Oh, that's mighty interesting. What they made me in that screw, Mr. Lunsford? I studied engineering, seamanship, navigation, marine biology. Marine by me? What? Biology. Now, I'd take it maybe kindly if you were to tell me about that, Mr. Lunsford. Yes, sir. Marine biology covers the feeding habits of the whale, his seasonal movement, his breeding and calving habits. Oh, no. That's mighty wonderful interest in ancient cases. Barry, I think that we better get out of here. No, no, no, I'm worried. For near 200 years, my folks may have terribly lived and taken wheel, and not one of them ever studied that marine by, by, by the, the one you called it. You reckon we was all that time not knowing that we didn't know what we was doing, Mr. Lunsford? Captain, sorry. I'd like to have been a fourth generation woman too. All right, I'm not. But I do know my trade. I'm sorry, Barry. I thought you'd be pleased with Mr. Lunsford's work. No, I'll give you a notion that I'm pleased. Well, he suits me fairly proper. Yes, sir, he suits me fine. Oh. You know, to make a mighty interest in voyage, Jason, Mr. Lunsford can tell me about this by what he called it, and it just might be that there's a little point of truth I could tell him. Against the time, I mean, he takes over command and resilience. Well, it just may be that Mr. Lunsford would rather ship aboard than the vessel. No, no, the ship and the master suit me fine. If you'll excuse me, Captain Jire, I'll see you at the vessel, sir. You'll bet you will, Mr. Lunsford. Mr. Lunsford! We've cleared the case, sir. Both sales are off, making ten knots, sir. You've formed any opinion of the crew yet, Mr. Lunsford? They appear able enough, sir. Some good things about them, maybe. You may have noticed that most of my crew generally sign on me. Out of affection, no doubt, sir. Could be, Mr. Lunsford. Oh, yes. Could be. That's possible. However, I make no contact with the crew. Now, maybe you think that's because I'm an old man who needs these here crutches to make my way about. Is that what you think, Mr. Lunsford? I hadn't thought about it at all, sir. I deal with my crew entirely through my first ups, and don't meddle. Yes, sir? For instance, it so happens I got chinned aboard. But yes, being my grandson, they'll make me no different from no other folks around. Yes, sir. Now, we've got a special little problem, Mr. Lunsford. My grandson was permitted to make this voyage with the firm understanding that he was to give his proper portion of bookland like the law says. Once he was cabinboiled, I earned him. But him being crewed now is different. I guess it's better than the crew, no lies, whatever, like we said. See, Mr. Lunsford? Well, yes. But then, who's going to... It's a vexing problem. At least it was a vexing problem. Until it comes to me to remember you and your school. Because from now on, it can be your duty to oversee his book learning just like this vessel profits. Oh, but my time is going to be pretty well taken up. Yes, sir. Get the lessons in any time. Your off hours will be fine. And don't look so long your face. I had the feeling when you come aboard that you was ready to take on extra duty was the chance to show itself. Yes, sir. Anything else, sir? No, nothing, Mr. Lunsford. This has been a mighty interesting check. Yes, sir. It might be interesting. In just a moment, our stars will return with act two of Down to the Sea and Ship. And now he'll do the columns with the luck-moving years of the week. Libby, didn't I see you at Universal International's preview of Katie Bidditt? I was there, all right, John. And I want to report to Anne's live fans that she's a real comer. You know, she won one of Futterport's Gold Medal of Words for 1950. In her new picture, she's killed with handsome Mark Season and has offended the slightly skinner story. As Katie, she poses for a billboard with bare shoulders coming out of a milipond and that makes her hometown gush. Katie does it to tell her uncle's gambling debt but her favoring the land is shocked. Now, if you want to know whether she married the artist who painted her or the hometown boy who offers to save her from disgrace, please send Libby to the south. I take it that Anne of the Lovely Shoulders dresses quite conventionally at other times. Oh, yes, and just the kind of clothes girls hurried love. A pad-cotton shirt with slacks or casual wear and a bar and shit-naked dress in rows, simple but beautifully tailored. Perfect. Some are luxables, I'd say. Indeed they are, John. And these summer cottons have never been lovelier. New rocks with color fashion is here just in the nick of time. That white cotton's beautiful white. Pink looks so gay and alive, you can see gaming. All colors have varying sparkle such as you've never seen before. It's a fact. No other way of washing leaves colors pressure or brighter. This is a national cotton week. The public new cottons come to mind first. But new rocks with color fashion is just as wonderful for all whites. All colors. And so safe for everything sourced in water. Hollywood screen stars rolled about it. And God says it gives the most wonderful results you've ever seen. Now, while your cottons are new, start them off right with this sensational care. New Lux with color freshener. Your bright pink, your green color, your pink and white will spin all from along. Get a big box of new lux with color freshener tomorrow. Give your washables that nice new lux look again and again. Here's our producer, Mr. William Keely. Act two of Down to the Sea and Ship, starring Richard Woodmark as Dan Lunsford and Lionel Barrymore as Captain Bering Joy. On the flight of the board, two sails are lost. Sweeps onward to the South Atlantic. Only after that, Captain Joy's grandson keeps an appointment with his new teacher. Well, see, you passed the fourth grade examination, huh? I got so into Mr. Lunsford. He was easy. Oh, I'm sure it was. Look at the teacher you had. All right, that shows here in your book that Farmer Brown has a box of 32 apples. He gives eight away, six more lots before he can get them to market. Now, how many apples are left for sale? I don't know. Stay not. Look at the boxes on the fourth side. I asked you a question, Mr. I don't answer. Besides, I don't know why I have to learn about farms. Look, 32 apples. He gives eight away, six more apples. Look, I wonder if we could try real hard we could find something that you do know. What's the longest river in the world? The Marigansett? The Marigansett. What was the first battle of the revolution? I don't know. Why did you have to do so many questions? You didn't have to learn about farmers and with apples. And Mr. Abraham Lincoln, you didn't have to have no schooling to be president. Well, I wouldn't take long to figure out how to get through one of the public. And there are others about this ship we want to learn. About apples? About taking whales. We're putting two crews into the water. Mr. Soons taking one, I'm taking the other. That is as soon as I take my men. We'll need a gentleman, Mr. Linford. I know all about it, sir. If you're caught to the cook, maybe there's something you can do to help him. The cook, sir? You've got your orders, Mr. Yes, sir. Where's that coffee, Mr. Tubman? Well, what's the matter with you, boy? Don't you feel like whittles? I'm all right. Try them with an apple, Mr. Tubman. An apple, sir? Oh, no. No, come to think of it. Some people don't like apples. They don't even like the farmers who grow them. He had three and two apples. He gave eight away and six got rotten, so he had 18 left. And the Mississippi is the longest river in the world. And the first level of concord is 611 and 66 and 612 and 72. Is there anything else you want to know, sir? Yes. Where's the sugar, Mr. Tubman? In that, Mr. Can't see much over a royal at night. Nothing. You can't. I, uh... I was sort of hard on you, wasn't I? You're part of the crew, too. I-I don't feel like talking, sir. Well, your grandfather's back there. Maybe you feel like talking to him. Nothing. I'm not special. Uh-huh. Well, we could talk about royal, you know. For instance, how big is a blue-thin chap when he's born? How old is he before he starts to travel? What does he eat that's different from other whales? Well, come on, there's a difference in that. How big is he when he's born? Well, 20 feet, maybe. Did you ever see one? No. Well, how do you know that? I studied about it. And that's right in books. What whales eat, how they behave, the sum of what a lot of men have found out about them. I could learn that. Sure, you could learn lots of things once you got the hang of studying. Even sevens. And what about sevens? Well, that's a mighty important number in a man's life. When he's seven, he changes from a child to a boy. Now, it's twice seven. Fourteen. That's right. And that's about when he stops being a boy and he starts growing into a man. Three times seven? Twenty-one. Yeah, that's when he's all the way grown up. Well, he thinks so, anyway. But, uh, let's jump ahead a little bit, shall we? What's ten times seven? That's right, seventy. Seventy. That's the best age of all if a man has sense enough to meet it the way he ought to. Grandpa, seventy. Oh, is he? Well, that's a fine time of life, Jim. A man can sit on his front porch in the sun and think about how good he used to be and leave the work of the world a younger and better man. What are you talking about? Well, I didn't realize I was. Well, that's enough for now, boy. We'll take the eights tomorrow. You ain't mad at me anymore? Go on, get to bed. Can I miss your lunch first? Good night, Dad. Good night, Dad, enjoy. Ah, go to bed. Younger and better man. Younger and better man, my fuck. You got a minute to spare me? I'd like to inquire about your screwing. Oh, fine, sir. I've got the one Mr. Huntsford teaches it. What's your arithmetic, sir? It makes sense out of it. What dog bark navigation and how do you use it? What kind of navigation? Dog bark, sir. It's like when we're on a fog and we're near an end or something. What do we do? What do we do, then? We throw a rock over the side, and if there ain't no way to over-dispatch, we know we're in Carolina. Don't you ever forget it. Oh, no, sir, I won't. When Mr. Huntsford, he won't throw a rock over. Well, I think he throws over one of the crew. Oh, no, sir. This is a silly to carry all those rocks when all you have to do is shout. Shout? Shout who? Just shout, sir. And then he talks slow. And if any echo comes back and say five seconds, he must fly five times a thousand. Because that's the speed of sound. Then you divide by two because the sound has to go out and back. It gives you 2,500 feet. And that's the distance you have from land when I spread maybe. And that's dog bark. That's dog bark. Dog bark. Anyway, sir. Mr. Huntsford's taking his books throughout the practice. He said that I can go in on them. No, no. You don't want to miss none of Mr. Huntsford's wisdom. You don't want, Mr. Garner. You don't want to get choked, sir. What's the matter, Mr. Fetch? Hey, come back, sir. Mr. Huntsford's laying books. Hey, finally get back. Oh, handsome? Yes, sir. A bit backwards, sir. They've been pulling them over for hours. Who do you expect to have? Well, get him aboard, Mr. Fetch. Hey, Mr. Fetch. There's only one thing I want to know. Who's the chokes to report who filled that extra sale? I said, who's the choker? Excuse me. You're being interrupted, Mr. Huntsford. Nice practice. Nice long practice, Mr. Huntsford. Very commendable. I wonder we got back at all with this vessel offer. Of course we might just as well have pulled for land. I expect you could have made it too. You could have dog barked it. What do you say, Mr. Sewell? Hold your course. Watch, Mr. Huntsford. After all that rowing you've done, now let me bring you a mug of coffee. No thanks, Mr. Fetch. All quiet below? All quiet, sir. You, uh, ain't got it figured out yet, have you, sir? What are you talking about? About why this vessel was off course this afternoon? He done it raising that sale. Some people spit meanness just for the fun of it. You ain't had much truck with feelings, have you, Mr. Huntsford? Look, maybe you better get back to your gap. Can't you see, sir, that the captain, he kind of took the boy's feelings for granted. Same as we do all our kin, but you're taking a boy away from him, Mr. Huntsford. You're taking something you've got no right to. That old man loves nothing outside of himself and whale oil. He dumped that kid in my deck himself. All I've done is try to hammer his little ABCs into it. No, sir. No, sir. No, sir. Why do you think he's here at sea where he ain't got the strength to be no more? What do you think's driving him on, huh? Says, look for that boy. Now, somebody's gonna get hurt, Mr. Huntsford, but it ain't gonna be him, not now, not at his time of life. Not if I'd have to kill him. Perhaps I think you believe everything you say, but that doesn't make it true. Well, I don't mean a cobbler's nickel to that boy. But if that's all it'll take to make you happy, that's easy. I'll dump him back in the old man's day, doing quick, too. Well, it ain't all as easy as you think, sir. No, sir. Good night, Mr. Huntsford. Mr. Huntsford, we've lost both way, but for the training you give him, I have ended it in the log that way. Thank you, sir, but, uh, I'm here to talk about your grandson, sir. Ooh. James, me, Jed mentioned something that you ain't found time right to give him his limit. Well, I, uh, I've been kind of busy, sir. But he's coming along pretty well. I thought maybe he could go out on our next floor. Well, he's pretty sensible. My boat crews in fine shape, they'll give you their bestie. Just what does that mean? Well, I thought you ought to... What I mean with your liking for the boy, I, uh, well, I thought you'd want to take him out and blood him yourself. Mr. Huntsford, if any member of this crew is ready to blood and blood him, if you want to put him in there, don't put him there. But don't make such a problem about it. Don't come in here telling me when you're on a boat. The care, Mr. Huntsford? Yes, sir, but just so that we understand each other better. We'll have to wait, Mr. Huntsford. The cow you got there, Mr. Huntsford. What a better hundred miles. We're passing down to a not too far from the vessel, sir. Chances are the other boats had a longer shape. And then the fog rolling in, sir. Thank you, Mr. Huntsford. But I'm still able to tell between the fog and the black of night. You've been snugged down to the vessel as soon as you've made your wheels secure down there. Yes, sir. Boys in that boat, too, sir. But extra men in the workout room, as many as you can spare. Bring him back, oh, Lord. Bring back the boat. Still standing up on his deck there, leaning on him, crushing the old man, telling him not to search behind the sound of the vessel in less than ten minutes. That is a good man, sir. Well, he's talking about putting over another boat. Well, suppose he breaks them for once. That's his own kid out there. What could do his rules if anything happens to him? I don't know, Mr. Huntsford, but I do know he won't know or another boat. 20th Century Fox. You've lived with the figures all your life, haven't you, Gene? You did, sir, Mr. Keely, because I was born in Hollywood and went to school here. But professionally, I've traveled with an eye-shaded cuber when a state-sharing Chicago MTV worked there. Oh, excellent preparation for a screen career. Oh, that's in the back of my mind. But right now I still have a chance to travel. Well, you might try a darkened career like Ben Hogan. Your father's son, Glenn Ford, and Anne Baxter do a moving interpretation of Hogan and his wife, Valerie. And the sacrifices they go through to begin the professional job. I'm afraid my score isn't good enough. But I've always been a great admirer of Ben Hogan. My greatest regret is meeting him at that event for a long time ago. He came right back at chance. Too bad you met the Gene. I respect him enough to have been there. Then, if the Keith and Gene Harrick as Hogan's close friends follow the sound of your life for fortune. Quite sure, Mr. Keeney. But I always keep my suitcase as packed. I hope that includes what? It really does, Mr. Kennedy. I'm never without it for non-jewy and stockings wherever I go. And if more of that seems more wonderful than it ever was. Thank you, Gene Mayberry. That's what so many screen stars tell us. Work in Europe. And never goes without a box of luxe plates. There's a mighty good reason why stars like Anne Baxter and June Harrick can fit on luxe. I'll see you around 20 to 30. I'll answer. Remember, they were back to get into the purpose of that. But that's easy. They let out all these jacks, these feathers, but nothing out of that. You're the best that matter, but... You left the car safe and it was blinded because the door could have jumped in and jacked it, too. The good people jacked it because they had spent so much time in buying it. And that saved you three points. I must admit, given that the company gives me some power with you, I've got the idea of an Anne Baxter. Tell it about the future in six months. If Anne Baxter's used luxe by the church ever since she was born, fire is right in mother's footsteps. Anne Baxter's new luxe of character could be seen more than because of her own luxury. There's a threat in Hollywood, too, Anne Baxter. Move new luxe for character that doesn't change, but rather your own. Get it, for fuck's sake. Now, here's Mr. Kingman with our guys. And of course, we'd love them to come forward for a well-deserved second call. Richard Whitmark and Lionel Baxter. Making pictures is about the movie. Well, last time it was the movie, still, and this time it's the movie. A story of the valiant party underwater demolition team played in the last war, better known as the Fragment. Fragment, yeah. And the postman, let's go. That's a meaningless play. Did you think I was a lucky girl? Aren't the plenty of luck so long when you went on location to the Virgin Island? Oh, sure, though. We had everything. And for the pictures, 20th Century Fox took a long seven-export connects to rig up a gigantic invasion garage. And all sorts of technicians were filming the underwater sequence. Reminds me of the other heroes in the last war. The famous fan in the 47th when you know the combat team. Metro, Ode of Maze, Justine, John Smith, and a picture about them. So, go for Burtle. Lionel, that is the expression that's above me. Well, let's shoot the Burtle. We'll do just what happens that improves the media theater next week, though. Next week we'll have some especially fine entertainment because it's a family comedy. And what a family. It's the 20th Century Fox production of Cheaper by the Dust. The trials and tribulations of rearing 12 children. And a father will have none other than an inimitable incomparable perfectionist justin there. Hollywood's most wins in young stars is Diana Lin. She's blonde and vivacious. Always has that precious ability left. For a quick beauty pickup, Diana says there's nothing like a refreshing, luck-safe bath. And let's assume a new bath size is as thorough as yours. As we tried this generous patent-moved bath shape Diana Lin recommends, you'll be delighted with its rich, creamy lather. Abundant even in hard of weather. Active lather that leaves skin fresh and sweet. Looks lovely all over. The flower-like fragrance is a favorite with cream time. It's a delicate perfume that cleans. Footluck's daughter put in the good bath size on your shopping list tomorrow. Discover why nine out of ten cream stars use this fragrant white beauty. When the next lady out there presents, cheaper by the dozen, starring Captain Red. There's the women's beauty named a nice beauty from the house. I'm known as Briggs and her but a bird is bushed. Our pair is adapted by S.H. Barnett and our music is directed by Rudy Schrager. This is your announcer John Milton Kennedy, reminding you to join it again next Monday night. To hear clips and web in cheaper by the dozen, stay tuned for my friend Irma, which follows over the table and my friend Irma starring the new racer. And this is the new melody that's going to give you a band of grass as cruel and cruel as F.P.U.D.