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ON FOUNDATIONS ASSURES
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First, Maiden Form's brassieres and girdles support and mould perfectly; second, they give you complete ease and comfort plus many months of good, hard wea third, Maiden Fori., designs each style for a different figure-type, so you are sure of finding exactly the right garment to suit your needs Try them — and know the satisfaction that comes from Maiden Form's super-skillful designing, quality materials and master-craftsmanship!
BRASSIERES If. 00, $1.50, $2.00 up GIRDLES— j
$1.00 to $5.00
Right— •"Allo-E-tte" brassiere for slightly heavierthan • average breasts, above with*"Curtsy" girdle No. 1453. Left •"Variation1* brassiere, for overage bosoms. Send for free Booklet F: Maiden Form Brassiere Co.. Inc., New York.
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IF YOU HAVE
GRAY HAIR
and DON'T LIKE a
MESSY MIXTURE....
then write today for my
FREE TRIAL BOTTLE
As a Hair Color Specialist for over 10 years, I am proud of my Color Imparter. As you uso It, the Gray Hair slowly becomes Darker; each application deepens the color. EASY and CLEAN to use; it can't leave stains. I want to convince you by sending my Free Trial Bottle, and booklet AM About Your Hair. CAUTION: Uso only as directed on lah,-]. No skin lost needed. ARTHUR RHODES. Hair Color Expert. Oeut. 36 LOWELL. MASS.
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COSMETICS I IT
^ou can be sure young Diana
Barrymore will make a loud splash
in the Hollywood pool or vanish from the
scene entirely. She's thai much like her famous
father, John. Diana's in IJniversal's Eagle Squadron
II v CONNIE CURTIS
| Well, well! Who would ever have thought that of all the younger generation Barrymores it would be little Diana, daughter of the Great Profile himself, who would carry aloft the torch of the family's theatrical tradition.
Certainly, of all the various and sundry young members of the clan, Diana had the least encouragement. And now look: a star in her very first picture, Eagle Squadron, for Universal.
Quietly and, believe it or not, all on her own, Diana is the dark horse of the family who is the winner in the stardom sweepstakes.
Certainly, the three children of the great Ethel Barrymore were conceded to have the greatest chance. Close to their mother and their uncles John and Lionel, they wallowed in stage-dust and had the best opportunity of all to cash in on the Barrymore solidarity. But nothing came of it.
Even John's two youngsters by Dolores Costello were given odds to make it before Diana. Flanked on both parental sides by theatrical traditions, living in Hollywood, they were expected to blossom early as child starlets.
But Diana, who was always in the background! Raised as a typical debutante by
a writer-mother, Michael Strange, and socialite stepfather, completely removed from the influence of her spectacular old man, a stranger to Lionel, estranged from Aunt Ethel by a family to-do, she had little occasion to travel in the theatrical set. In fact, she had never even been in Hollywood prior to signing a movie contract! And she turns out to be the first of the Barrymore juveniles to make the grade!
Diana was born in New York in 1921, and when she was seven she was sent to a convent school in Paris. When she returned home", at the age of 12, her mother and father were divorced and John was living with his new wife, Dolores Costello, in California. All that she knew about her famous Hollywood parent was what she read in the papers.
Diana was sent to several select private schools in the East where she hobnobbed with other proper little scions of the "400," and had no occasion to be bitter, by the acting bug. But blood will out. Diana was a stormy, impetuous student, flouting rules, getting into hot water and behaving like a little tornado. A real chip off the old block.
Once her pa, in a rare moment of paren
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