Modern Screen (Dec 1949 - Nov 1950)

Record Details:

Something wrong or inaccurate about this page? Let us Know!

Thanks for helping us continually improve the quality of the Lantern search engine for all of our users! We have millions of scanned pages, so user reports are incredibly helpful for us to identify places where we can improve and update the metadata.

Please describe the issue below, and click "Submit" to send your comments to our team! If you'd prefer, you can also send us an email to mhdl@commarts.wisc.edu with your comments.




We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.

Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.

To ADD fresh COLOR and LUSTRE to your hair after a shampoo or home permanent, use Lovalon For you who do your hair at home, Lovalon is a must. It rinses gorgeous fresh color into your hair. Gives hair sparkling highlights, leaving it attractive, soft and manageable. Blends in yellow, grey streaks. Lovalon comes in 12 flattering shades. . .has none of the disadvantages of a dye . . . washes out with each shampoo. 10' and 25 at toilet goods counters everywhere. Try Lovalon — today. LOVALON -the Hair Beauty Ri?ise 76 It's the most glamourous, crispiest washable cotton . . . the widest twirling circulur skirt n the brightest South American Hibiscus flower . . . and the prettiest bodice of bittersweet or lime yellow. Sizes 12 to 18. About &4 At these fine stores: Bloomingdale's New York City Bullock's Los Angeles, Cal. Rich's, Inc., Atlanta, Ga. Rike-Kumler Co., Dayton, Ohio Strawbridge & Clothier, Phila., Pa. L. S. Ayres & Co., Indianapolis, Ind. Stix, Baer & Fuller, St. Louis, Mo. Thalhimer Bros., Richmond, Va. ered each other. Bob personified certain thing's that Lana has always wanted. A rich man's son, he had the social position denied her through her early years, although Lana had no particular desire to marry wealth. With Bob, Lana began to lose her feeling of social inferiority. Although he is still a comparatively young man, there is very little Bob hasn't done or seen. He's a world traveler. He's known to every fashionable restaurant and night-club headwaiter throughout Europe and America. Rarely is anything new to him and the resulting sophistication creates a contrast to Lana who views each new experience with great zest. "Bob Topping is the most man Lana ever met," a friend said recently, "and she loves him no matter what the gossips say." Sometimes, Hollywood "humorists" might tell you, her love gets a little noisy. When they took a trip to Ensenada, they quarreled bitterly. Finally they sent for a friend, and with company, they made up happily, returning home ahead of schedule. Still, since this was on the eve of their departure for the Orient, they didn't want to risk being alone on a long sea voyage — and cancelled the trip. This doesn't seem like the action that's ?„rile Royal Miss, Inc., 1350 Broadway, New York 18, N. Y. . . . Paul Denis reports: Roberta Quinlan told Milton Berle she was going to see his movie that night. "I'll come over and meet you later," said Milton. "Which aisle will you be rolling in?" * * * . . . "Some people." says Gene Kelly, "love to go to the movies, while others go to the movies to love." Irving Hoffman in The Hollywood Reporter of a couple bent on destroying their lives together. In his own way, Bob has been protecting their marriage. He's been thinking about organizing Bob Topping Productions, or a company which he controls, and including Lana in the plans. Lana, however, is a practical girl. Her career is the one thing that belongs to her alone. If she goes along with Bob in this idea you can be sure that the gossips are way off base. If she doesn't? Well, their friends will tell you that no man is really smart about women, and that the real way for Bob to keep Lana's continuing interest would be not to tie her down in any way, much less in a mutual business enterprise. A wise marriage counselor once said. "Some time after the first year of marriage a certain selfishness sets in. The girl who has waited so long for her prince to arrive is determined to make him over, and if she succeeds, discovers that what he had that first attracted her is lost. The same is true of the young husband. Th€ time has now come when they are alone together, if they can't take it, they're lost' We're betting that the Toppings can take it; we're betting that when they're old enough for wheel chairs, they'll be taking them together. The Eni,