Hollywood (Jan - Oct 1934)

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somebody wou ISN'T it a shame? There's a girl who has 'come hither' if I ever saw one. But it becomes 'go thither' after a minute in her presence. Why doesn't some kind girl friend put her wise?" The surprising thing is that there still are girls and women — attractive ones, too — who need to be told that soap and water cannot keep their underarms free from that ugly odor of perspiration which refined people hate. Smart girls who prize their popularity know that the quick, the easy, the sure way to keep their underarms always fresh and odorless, is with Mum. It takes just half a minute to use Mum. Then you're safe for all day. Mum is perfectly harmless to clothing. It's soothing to the skin, too — so soothing you can shave your underarms and use Mum immediately. Don't ever let anybody say you are careless about underarm odor. Use Mum regularly and you'll be safe. Mum Mfg. Co., Inc., 75 West St., New York. TAKES THE ODOR OUT OF PERSPIRATION ON SANITARY NAPKINS, TOO. Ml Mum is also a wonderful deodorant for this use — guarantees protection *£ from unpleasantness. 12 EDITOR'S MAILBAG An open forum in which readers express their views on stars arid pictures. $5.00 is paid to each of the five best letters received each month Anna is magnificent No Bunk FOR once the build-up ballyhoo for a new cinema star wasn't a gross exaggeration, because Anna Sten really is a magnificent actress, a beauty of distinctive loveliness. In fact in Nana, despite a trite story, Miss Sten out-does even the most enthusiastic of the publicity boys. Her subtle charm and her enigmatic allure make Garbo seem quite ordinary and Crawford just another clothes horse. ($5.00 Letter) F. H. KENNEDY, 1946 W. Jackson Blvd., Chicago, 111. Craves Something New Why Is It That the newsreels are abandoning the service of history and putting out a shingle as entertainers, with the result that they are simply a collection of sideshows, recurring athletic events and things which can better be viewed at a fair or vaudeville theatre? Even the newsreel announcer seems to regard it as a fence post to which is attached a complacently cheery and atrociously facetious brand of humor. I realize that history caught off guard is rare, but surely there are more interesting sights than cute kids, speechmakers, King Faud opening parliament, girls showing shapely legs and all the other events seemingly so vital to the twentieth century. For instance, why doesn't some news camera give a sight of the old studio lots in Hollywood? On a recent visit there I saw some of them, so interesting as a panorama of past screen productions. Why aren't sights like these incorporated in our newsreels? Are other fans just as tired as I am of being fed fillers, prepared speeches and bathing girls? ($5.00 Letter) KERRY KAVANAUGH, 6220 37th St., N. W, Seattle, Wash. Cynical Critics THIS hue and cry for something new and different in pictures sounds a hollow note when we see nurses and doctors flock to see pictures concerning the medical field, college students crowding to watch college pictures, aviators and mechanics filling the seats for air Alms and so forth. Surely, they don't expect something new and different in a picture dramatizing something which is an everyday common occurrence in their lives. Do you suppose the instinct to critisize and find fault is the answer? You so often hear nurses behind you say loud enough to be heard, "Oh, poofl No surgeon ever wore an ironed gown to operate in," or some collegian in the front say, "We couldn't get away with that in our college," or an aviator on your right say, "Yep, that's Hollywood's idea of flying." Why do these people yell for something new and different? ($5.00 Letter) JESSIE CZARNECKA, Children's Hospital of Michigan, Detroit, Mich. Aristocratic Cameo Irene Dunne, you charming little aristocrat. To me you seem like a clean cut cameo, endowed with human emotions. You possess an illusive something which at times causes Homeric impulses, later soothed by the sweetness of your personality. After viewing one of your pictures, I go home with a feeling of contentment, knowing I have seen that rare thing, a perfect performance. ($5.00 Letter) NORMAN H. YOUNG, 316 S. Broadv/ay, c/o Russell Hotel, Los Angeles, Calif. Irene, charming aristocrat HOLLYWOOD