During WWII she had her own radio program as the voice of "The Revelry
Girl" who woke the GI's up with up-to-date news.
According to "Variety", she is survived by a daughter.
Resourceful, redheaded, Texas-born "B" western heroine trained in dance
from age 2 and discovered by Universal. She appeared in about a dozen
1930s oaters starring such established cowboy heroes as Johnny Mack Brown,
Bob Steele and Tim McCoy.
After her film career was for the most part over, she played the
unbilled part of the Emerald City manicurist in "The Merry Old Land of
Oz" segment of The Wizard of Oz (1939).
In the late 1930s and early 1940s, Lois was working in nightclubs and
such Broadway musicals as "Yokel Boy" (1939) and "High Kickers"
(1941).
Later came back to 1960s and 1970s TV in bit or guest parts on such
shows as My Three Sons (1960) and Marcus Welby, M.D. (1969), and was seen frequently at western
conventions in later years.