Hollywood (Jan - Nov 1935)

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Gadget Gossip # It Is Embarrassing to suggest a drink — and then not have any soda in the house for a high ball. Raquel Torres, in photo above, has a sure remedy for such a situation. She possesses one of those extremely handy Sparklet Syphon bottles which charges its own water in no time! With these bottles comes a box of "cartridges" or refill bulbs so that potential "charge" is available at all times. You just slip a bulb into a little gadget at the top of the bottle, press a lever, and the rest is easy. Raquel keeps it on a shelf just above her bar. It's made of hand blown crystal, sheathed in silvery woven wire, and looks very swanky. # Adrienne Ames has a remarkable new roaster — one of the electric variety known as a Nesco Automatic Electric Roaster, "The Royal Line." Really, it is an electric oven, and in it you can cook whole dinners. Of heavy insulation, it confines heat to the food instead of allowing it to escape into the room. Of course, you can use one of these in any part of the house where there is an electric socket. Four sizes are available. • Those Club Aluminum griddles which bake hot cakes on one side and broil steaks on the other (no, not at the same time) are simply swell, according to Barbara Stanwyck. They are heavy and shiny and don't need greasing at all. Then, when you turn them over, there is another flat surface, surrounded by a groove which catches the "drippings." Barbara also has sauce pans which she uses, covered, on the top of the stove for baking things such as potatoes and such. • Worried About moths getting into blankets, draperies and so on? "Think nothing of it," says Joan Crawford, who has solved her own moth worries by using Mortex, a moth proofing spray manufactured by the Murray and Nickell Manufacturing Company, of Chicago. You spray it on with a special gadget. It is stainless and harmless to all fabrics. ldofeeUorry ..pcarnte,1 ^rningfor my^li '*? ^at « What o»*8* ' a g"1 # hpr beauty » » nrickge kin'* all over p" her shin ' •» les and chafe* ourUfel^PJuds and rny«V «fj Johnson'* clouds tfyLi'dlikemyBahy Voider telf agav1' -Umta-^80ftpau>deT That tmoothy }Jnicernahe* rue/** and and *mens° ujust have leiss. Tb£r£r OCTOBER, 1935 "Pm Johnson's Baby Powder. . . count on me to keep babies fine and fit! Just feel my satiny-smoothness between your thumb and finger... Pm made of finest Italian talc. No gritty particles in me . . . and no orris root, either. Try me — and don't forget my partners, Johnson's Baby Soap and Johnson's Baby Cream." 49