Hollywood (1938)

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You'll like everything about this surprisingly different powder — its delicate, lingering fragrance, smooth feel and above all, the rich, satiny finish it gives your skin. FACE POWDER deaer • Try this ideal summer-time powder which really clings. Eliminates the bothersome, untidy touch-up habit and meets the need of the most fastidious. Made in 7 lovely, harmonizing Paris shades for business, sports or evening wear. Try Boyer's today. 50c at your druggist or send the coupon for liberal purse size box. Specify shade desired. BOYER, Societ £702 South Wabdfh Avenue, y P arfumeur Chicago, Illinois I enclose ]0p for FW-5 purse size box of BOYER FACE POWDER Shnde Millions for Insurance Stars are insured, not only against personal disaster, but against horse rustlers, tourists, fans and pirates, among many other things By IVY CRANE WILSON ■ Hollywood has become insurance conscious. The servant problem, the latest operation, and even the dear children, are no longer conversational "tops." Insurance is sweeping the picture colony. The insurance agent has the right of way on the telephone. The "big boys" are no longer in conference when he calls. The columnists give him a break. He is on the party list of the brightest stars. WHY? Because the motion picture industry pays around a million dollars a year for insurance. The movie great have been the victims of many expensive law suits, and so today many odd policies are written which give the harassed stars a certain amount of peace of mind. Stars are insured against tourists, wild animals, pirates, freak accidents, kidnapers, acid throwers and a hundred and one things. | Dick Powell is insured against tourists. If a curious fan insists on climbing a tree on the Powell estate hoping to glimpse Mr. and Mrs. Powell in home activities, and falls headlong from his perch, breaking a leg or an arm — all Dick has to do is call his insurance company for help. If tourists trample on Mr. Powell's imported Dutch bulbs, or break down a rare shrub whose blossoms are the pride of his horticultural heart — again the insurance company comes to the rescue. Dick recently broke one of his resolu The only really safe mount is a hobby, thinks Joe E. Brown, so he took out insurance on himself as well as his horses tions and bought a yacht. He and Warren William, an ardent yachtsman, were discussing the joys and sorrows of maintaining a boat, and Warren recalled the time when he was sailing off the South American Coast. "We anchored near the mouth of a lagoon," Warren told Dick. "It was a moonlit night, so we took the dinghy and putt-putted along as beautiful a bit of shore as I have ever seen. Neither of us wanted to go back to the 'Pegasus.' Helen thought she heard the sound of another boat. I thought it was just the echo of our own motor, so we drifted along until sun-up. "As we were heading back, I had an uneasy feeling; perhaps Helen had heard a boat. I wondered if anyone had boarded the yacht. We climbed aboard. I noticed things had been disturbed. 'Well, I'll be darned,' I said, 'Pirates!' " 'Who ever heard of pirates in this day and age,' Helen said, but she made a quick dive to her cabin, to find they had taken everything, even her powder and lipstick; everything that was not nailed down. We'd been cleaned out. "There was nothing to do but get back to the nearest port for provisions and clothing. The sad part of it was we were not wholly insured. But you bet your life we carry everything now — even pirate insurance!" ■ I caught Harold Lloyd transacting a bit of insurance business the other day in between shots on the Professor Beware set. He was insuring his glasses for twenty-five thousand dollars. They are twenty-two years old and very fragile. Harold keeps them in a specially constructed humidor. He wore them in his first picture, and has worn them for the opening shot in every picture he has made. As far as Harold is concerned, even twenty-five thousand is nothing to him compared to those glasses. ■ Pet insurance is quite popular, for it is an expensive matter when a star's dog takes a bite out of the butcher boy, or raids a neighbor's chicken coop. Joan Crawford has a couple of dachshunds, so far a well-behaved pair. But Joan is taking no chances, and is well protected against any wild desires on their part. Paul Muni, Edward Everett Horton, Carole Lombard, Clark Gable — in fact, ninety-nine per [Continued on page 64] 40 Accept No Substitutes! Always Insist on the Advertised Brand!