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M A H i
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EVERY DAY, more and more women are adopting Norforms as the most modern, convenient and satisfactory form of feminine hygiene. Norforms are easy-to-use antiseptic suppositories that melt at internal body temperature, and spread a protective, soothing film over delicate internal membranes — an antiseptic film that remains in effective contact for many hours.
Norforms contain Parahydrecin — a powerful yet harmless antiseptic developed by The Norwich Pharmacal Company, makers of Unguentine. Parahydrecin kills germs, yet is non-irritating to tissue. There is no danger of an "over-dose" or "burn." Norforms are completely ready for use. They require no awkward apparatus for application. They leave no lingering antiseptic smell around the room or about your person.
They are dainty and feminine, and actually deodorizing. Many fastidious women use them for this purpose alone.
Send for the Norforms booklet, "The New Way. " It gives further facts about modernized feminine hygiene. Or, buy a box of Norforms at your druggist's today. 12 in a package, each individually foil wrapped. TheNorwich Pharmacal Company, Norwich, New York, makers of Unguentine.
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KNOWN TO PHYSICIANS AS "VAOIFORMS"
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Shirley Temple's First Year
[Continued from page 53]
word "career" signifies. There is merely the thought lodged in her pretty little head that she will be an actress bye-andbye, "I want to be a star like Miss Gaynor," she will tell you, simply.
The past year, of course, has resolved this course of action. It has taught her the elements of acting and what constitutes a good actress. She isn't too young to understand that the more she works to improve herself the more advantageous will it be for her. She is ready and eager and willing to learn.
In no sense of the word a child prodigy, Shirley combines a rare perception with her acting talent. If everything is not perfectly clear and comprehensible, she will ask questions . . . and most penetrating, too, indicative of a more experienced mind, are many of her queries.
When she was given the song, Morn Till Night, to memorize, she seemed puzzled. "What does 'morn' mean?" she inquired of her mother. When told, she answered, "Well, why don't they say 'morning,' then." She is directness itself.
The fine hand of her attractive mother may be seen back of the tiny star's every move. Her alert mind and patience are the directing forces behind the throne.
Unwilling, at first, that her daughter's freedom be sacrificed for toil under the hot lights of a studio set . . . when she realized that Shirley regarded the whole matter as a pleasurable lark and was missing none of the fun every child is privileged by right to enjoy, she assented to her continuing on the screen.
Never for a moment, though, did the thought occur to her that Shirley should be raised differently from all' the other little girls in the world. As a result, she has been beautifully trained to obey with a smile, despite the fact that she is now a celebrated figure.
The starlet began her schooling formally coincident with the start of Baby Take a Bozv. In her bungalow at the "studio — once the property of dainty Lilian Harvey — she sits behind a small freshly-painted school desk and learns her lessons under the gentle guidance of the studio teacher, who, among other studies, teaches her French.
LfREQUENTLY, girls of all ages " knock at her door and ask if they may come in . . . strangers, many of them, and some merely acquaintances. If they'll play, well and good . . . but not a few just sit and stare at this world's best-known baby. Shirley then grows restless . . . polite, yes, but suddenly quiet, where before she was vivacious and chattering.
One evening, as her mother was putting her to bed, the doorbell rang. When one of the two sons of the house answered, a middle-aged couple accompanied by two stalwart children pushed
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