Modern Screen (Jan-Jun 1945)

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TIPS pur ,/t f ~ . . . avoid crowds when you have a cold. Not only do you expose yourself to other germs, you expose other people to yours! If you must be near others, use absorbent Sitroux Tissues for protection. I ... eat the right foods! Have ■ » plenty of citrus fruit in the house *■ — oranges, grapefruit, lemons. Get plenty of rest, too. Avoid draughts, especially when sleeping. . . . use absorbent Sitroux Tissues for "overblown" noses! They're kind to tender skin — more sanitary, because you can so easily dispose of them! Saves laundry bills, too. (Use sparingly, don't waste Sitroux.*) f~ m — J-^"^^ re faced v/Hh S,.r.< r,,«... ;> «£ * 0„ W* » SITROUX TISSUES DREAM MAN (Continued from page 43) the pneumonia he had battled during the making of the picture. Anxious studio guardians had him by the elbow, rushing him here and dragging him there. This afternoon he was to make his first coastto-coast broadcast on the Kate Smith Hour. As he stepped down from the car, he ran smack into a mob of young admirers — the first Alan Ladd fans he had ever faced in the flesh. They swarmed around him like bees. "Mr. Ladd, can I have your autograph? . . . Sign this, please . . . Have you got a picture? . . . Here . . . Please . . . Me! . . . Me! . . . Write my name!" Alan paused for a moment, stunned. This had never happened before because nobody had ever paid any attention to him before. The radio people started to hustle him brusquely through the mob. But Alan held back. He knew he was late for the show. But he was touched and appreciative. "If you'll wait until I come out," Alan promised, "I'll sign autographs for all of you." Then he was whisked inside. from papeete to peoria . . . But when he came out, his managers didn't want to risk any foolishness. They steered him out another door and hustled him into a taxicab before Alan knew what was happening. But the throng of admirers spied him and chased the cab, and Alan, looking back, saw one kid's face fading in the distance. It wore a disappointed, injured look, and his shout rang as a reproach — "Mr. Ladd!" he cried, "You promised . . . you promised!" Alan saw that kid's face all evening, and that night in his room at the Waldorf, he made a vow to Sue. "I don't care how famous I get or what success I have," Alan promised, "I'll never pass up anybody who wants to talk to me. I'll never refuse an autograph or snub a fan. If they're interested in me, I'm interested in them. They aren't just fans — they're friends." Alan has kept that vow and that outlook on his millions of fans. He's kept it so earnestly that today he has the greatest circle of real friends any Hollywood star has ever had. They live all over the world — from Papeete to Peoria. They flood him with hundreds of letters a day, telling Alan all about themselves, their problems, good times, hopes, plans and the little things that happen in their daily lives. And Alan replies in kind. Because Alan hasn't yet sent out a stock letter or a canned reply since he became a star. It's a lot of trouble that most Hollywood stars don't bother with, but it isn't trouble to a guy who likes friends and has known what it is to be lonesome. In fact, it's the biggest reward he's had from his movie fame. One day, chatting with Al over a late lunch, I remarked that keeping in touch personally with the flock of pen-friends he has all over the globe must be a job built for a typewriter factory. "Look," Al said earnestly, "you say it's a lot of trouble. Well, what about this?" He handed me a letter he was carrying around with him. "Dear Al," it read, "thanks for your swell letter. It did me a lot of good because I get plenty blue sometimes. It isn't exactly a picnic here in this hospital. But I've got a confession to make. I didn't write you that last letter myself. My pal did it for me. I hope you don't mind. But you see, I can't write them myself. coWtf Jcx BOB PINS Never Let Your Hair Down JV *■ Guaranteed by ^ Good Housekeeping , The pins with a lasting grip Smooth finish , inside and cut CREAM softens and loosens blackheads so they all but drop out! Apply cream . . . gentle pressure . . . and blackheads slip out! Then use astringent to help shrink enlarged pores so blackheads cannot quite so easily form again. Attach $1 to this ad, mail to HOUSE OF LECHLER, Dept. B-323, 560 Broadway, New York 12, N. Y. i For Good Reading— DELL BOOKS A New Line of Handy-Sized 25c Books Full-Length Reprints of Famous Titles Selected by the Editors of America's Foremost Detective Magazines MYSTERY! ADVENTURE! ROMANCE! JUST OUT DEATH FROM A TOP HAT by Clayton Rawson THE RED BULL by Rex Stout MURDER IN THE MIST by Zelda Popkin THE MAN IN THE MOONLIGHT by Helen McCloy ON SALE EVERYWHERE25c EACH