Motion Picture Classic (Jul-Dec 1930)

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sports Of The Stars {Continued from page jj) .ould look as if I were entering the rum'unning business. That, or a run on my |iank account! Yachting California TT generally happens that a man who once \_ owns a boat is a sailor for life; and such 's the hold which the sport has gained on MDuthern Californians, that at present there 's considerable agitation under way for the establishment of a yacht harbor, with faciliies for five hundred boats, just inside the breakwater of Los Angeles Harbor. With lose to twenty-five millron dollars invested n pleasure craft on the Pacific Coast, it is elt that we should have a proper anchorage, ^'achting and motor-boating are no longer he sports of a limited number of people; hey have won themselves a place wherever here is sunshine and favorable water. And kvhere will you find more of those qualities than here? Dr. Albert Soiland, senior admiral of the Pacific Coast Yachting Association, calls ihis "the logical national center for boatbuilding activity." As soon as proper facilities are arranged, that happy day may ;rrive; but until then we are using a number ■f scattered moorings. It is significant of the manner in w-hich picture people pursue t he sporting life that wherever these moorings are, you will find the craft of various of Its members. Cinema Sailors CONRAD NAGEL and Corinne Griffith have beautiful boats; whereby they differ from Lewis Stone, whose craft is as funny-looking on the outside as it is comfortable below decks. Jack Gilbert recently (iispKJsed of his boat; but Hal Roach, farther down the street in Culver City, evened things up by building a new one. This Gypsy is a marv'elous aflfair, and there -n't a yachtsman in the colony who isn't nvious of Hal. .\nd when I say "yachtsmen in the colriy, " I mean just that. There are any umber who take their sailoring with a lioroughly proper seriousness. Xeil Hamil' nn matriculated at the University of Southrn California for the spring semester to study navigation and nautical astronomy. I le is intent upon becoming an expert pilot, nd with the same determination behind I in which has taken him so far in pictures, m thinking it won't be long before he is iJtsailing us all. Of course, he will have to do some fancy andling of the wheel to best Larry Kent, ne of the best navigators among us. Larry , lends a great deal of time and money on IS two boats. A lover of solitude, he likes 'jthing more than to use his between-picure periods for extended cruises. Just beire his last jaunt, he made an arrangement ith Webster Daly, physician for a large number of film people and an ardent yachtsman. They got together ev-enings, and i.arry brushed Doc up on navigation while Daly gave Kent lessons in first aid. Where Charlie Can Be Found WHENEVER Fox can't find Charlie Farrcll, they send down to his nchorage. Not long ago the studio was the I use of a heart-breaking incident with harlie. He was competing in one of the ral races, and it seemed that he was about II win his first cup, when on the breakwater r saw a boy from the studio signaling frantically to him. He knew they wouldn't be calling unless it was something important, so he sailed sadly in — and read about someone else's victory in the morning paper. Farrell has a good-looking boat — in fact, it is so good-looking that that canny Cape (Continued on page gs) the Kleenex way to remove cold cream think of rubbing your delicate skin with a germ-laden "cold cream cloth." And do you know how dangerous these wrong methods can be? An unabsorbent cloth or towel leaves part of the cold cream in the pores, and with it tiny bits of dirt and cosmetics. That's what starts pimples and blackheads ! Even hard rubbing can't remove all the impurities, when you use an unabsorbent cloth. And this hard rubbing is injurious. Stretches the skin. Relaxes it. And so induces large pores and premature wrinkles. Kleenex just can't irritate in any way. It's so soft, so readily absorbent. It blots up every bit of surplus cream, and lifts impurities from the pores. More and more people are using Kleenex for handkerchiefs. It's especially valuable for colds, to avoid reinfection. Kleenex comes in pure, lovely tints and white, at drug and depanment stores. Kleenex Cleansing Tissues TO REMOVE COLD CRE.\M Kleenex Company, Lake-Michigan Bldg., .MPC-8 Chicago, IIL Please send a sample of Kleenex to: Namt City — 'A ddrtsi KLEENEX makes it so pleasant to care for your skin the proper way ! With this smart box filled with exquisite tissues on your dressing table, you'll never be tempted to use a towel to wipe away cold cream I You'll never "/ USE KLEENEX for removing cold cream because the tissites are so very absorbent that rubbing is unnecessary." 93