Modern Screen (Dec 1949 - Nov 1950)

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Corinne Calvet and her husband, John Bromfield, share a secret before being seated at Las Palmas Theater to see Light Up The Sky. After everybody goes, Bette and Anne, who have become very good friends, usually sit and "hash" for hours. Did you hear the one about the "car caller" at the premiere who got tangled up about Deborah Kerr's name and yelled loudly over the public address system: "Calling Miss Car's Kerr — Miss Car's Kerr?" Dropped over to the blue-and-silver salon of Rex, the hat man, in Beverly Hills, to pick up my new chapeaux and ran smack into Joan Caulfield being fitted for her wedding hat. She can't be superstitious because the gent who was putting his okay on it, even to the way the veil should be draped, was Frank Ross! Some people believe it is unlucky to let the prospective groom get a look at the wedding finery before the Wedding March strikes up. Joan just laughed. "I think Frank has such good taste," she said, "and, after all, I want him to like the way I look on my wedding day, more than anyone else. Fact is, we just came from Orry-Kelly where my wedding dress was fitted." Yes, Frank thought it was lovely. He certainly has good taste — and in more than one department, too. Phil Reed is an honest fellow as well as a handsome one. Phil admits he was scared to death searching the Donald Nelson house for a burglar who stole $10,000 worth of Nancy Oakes' jewelry. Phil and Nancy had been out dancing. When they returned to the Nelson home, where the heiress was visiting, they noticed a panel in the door had been broken and the latch had been slipped. "In the movies," Phil grinned, "I often play a daring guy who rushes into situations like this, pops the bandit on the jaw, and returns the jewels to the gal. "But in real life — whew — it sure is a dif ferent feeling wandering through rooms where someone who likes to use a gun may STILL be lurking!" The Nelson party was held the very next day after the house had been robbed. The robbery had a definite note of mystery. Although several valuable pieces of Mrs. Nelson's jewelry and $150 in cash were in plain Soaping dulls hair. Halo glorifies it ! Not a soap, not a creamHalo cannot leave dulling, dirt-catching soap film! Removes embarrassing dandruff from both hair and scalp! Yes, "soaping" your hair with even finest liquid or oily cream shampoos leaves dulling, dirt-catching film. Halo, made with a new patented ingredient, contains no soap, no sticky oils. Thus Halo glorifies your hair the very first time you use it. Ask for Halo— America's favorite shampoo — at any drug or cosmetic counter! Gives fragrant 'soft-water" lather _needs no special rinse! Halo leaves hair soft, manageableshining with colorful natural highlights! Halo reveals the hidden beauty of your hair! 15