Hollywood (Jan - Oct 1934)

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# I could only find bolpins which cant he seen You can, LADY, you can! ...Just use HOLD-BOBS The new HOLD-BOBS are quite inconspicuous in your hair. . .thanks to the new harmonizing colors, which match all shades of hair — Brunette, Brown, Auburn, Blonde and Gray or Platinum Blonde. TRY HOLDBOBS AT OUR EXPENSE Fill out the coupon — check your shade and send for your sift card NOW— and prove how easy HOLD-BOBS slide in; how fast they hold; how inconspicuous they are. Only HOLD-BOBS have small, round, invisible heads, non-scratching points; and flexible tapered legs, one side crimped to hold fast. THE HUMP HAIRPIN MANUFACTURING COMPANY Sol H. Goldberg, Pres. 1918-36 Prairie Avenue, Dept F-74 , Chicago, III. Hump Hairpin Mfg. Co. of Canada, Ltd. St Hyacinthe, P. Q., Canada SlroJght Style HOLD-BOS Gold and Silver Metal Foil cards identify HOLD-BOBS everywhere . . . made in all sizes and colors to meet every requirement. Also sold under brand name of BOB-ETTES. :;MA'L coupon -fin*!. Cfiift card The Hump Hairpin Mfg. Co., Dept. F-74,Chieago, III. I want to know more about these new HOLD-BOBS that match my hair exactly. Please send me a free sample card and new hair culture booklet Name ..State City D Gray and Platinum □ Blonde □ Brow,\ □ Auburn □ Brunette Copyright 1934 by The Hump Hairpin Mfff. Co. 10 What's New on the Screen Continued from page eight Rochelle Hudson leaves her home town and goes to New York to show her poems to Warner Baxter, a sophisticated and successful novelist. She becomes a nuisance and although Baxter is kind and considerate, he is finally forced to tell her the truth. She kills herself, leaving circumstantial evidence with which the prosecutor makes a case against Baxter. Unable to offer a satisfactory alibi, he is seemingly on the way to the electric chair when a surprise witness appears and saves him from conviction. Others who do good work are Rosemary Ames, Henrietta Crosman, Irving Pichel and Herbert Mundin. Wild Gold • • • Here we have melodrama staged by modern gold seekers in an abandoned '49 camp. John Boles is a drunken engineer who loses his girl friend, Claire Trevor. Monroe Owsley is the villain and Roger Imhof a desert prospector. The picture has a lively dance hall and other gold camp trimmings. Change of Heart • • • • This delightful story, written by Kathleen Norris, gives Charles Farrell and Janet Gaynor one of their finest opportunities in this, their reunion picture. It details the experiences of a group of college kids who go to New York to conquer the world. Janet and Charles, after many trials and troubles, marry and become real Manhattanites. Janet is more grown up in this than in any previous roles. Fans of the famous sweetheart team will welcome them back with glee. Sisters Under the Skin • • • A highly emotional drama featured by excellent character portrayals. Elissa Landi depicts the character of an actress who supplies Frank Morgan with romance lacking in his relationship with his wife, Doris Lloyd. Then Joseph Schildkraut comes into the triangle and wins Elissa, affording Morgan a chance to be a good sport in defeat. The story is human and the acting effective. Wh ere Dinners Meet Stingaree • • • This story was famous on the stage as Dover Road. It is an amusing fairy story, well directed and splendidly acted by Diana Wynyard and Clive Brook. The plot deals with an eccentric millionaire who lived on that well known thoroughfare over which most English couples elope for France. A spy system informs him of the plans of these couples and he abducts them, giving them an enforced week to think it over. Alan Mowbry, eloping with Billie Burke, gets into his net, as do Diana Wynyard and Reginald Owen. The fun starts at that point, but why spoil it for you? Light humor at its best. • • • Although this picture falls short of being another Cimarron, Richard Dix and Irene Dunne, hero and heroine of that immortal, do well in this vivid story of adventure and romance in the Australia of 1875. Dix is Stingaree, notorious outlaw. He falls in love with Irene Dunne, a poor girl who has been given a home by a wealthy rancher. By a daring ruse, Dix forces Conway Tearle, cast as a famous impresario, to listen to Irene sing. The result is that Irene goes to London and becomes a famous singer while Dix goes to jail. At the height of her success, she returns to Melbourne to sing, hoping Dix will find her. Jack Oakie introduces none other than the Pabst Beer maestro, Ben Bernie in person! Ben and his orchestra, Jack, Dorothy Dell, Alison Skipworth and a number of other prominent favorites are filming Thank Your Stars HOLLYWOOD