Movie mirror. (1936)

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MOVIE MIRROR uncertain^ Ni Do sudden swerves Upset your nerves? Does traffic get your goat? Do stomach ills Disrupt your thrills On board a train or boat? If so, be ready— Keep calm and steady— Give Beech-Nut Gum your vote! nui uum vuic: Irave/lers ! keep calm With BEECH-NUT BEECH-NUT PEPPERMINT GUM... is so good it’s the most popular flavor of any gum sold in the United States. BEECH-NUT PEPSIN GUM . . . candy coating protects a pleasing flavor . . . and, as you probably know, pepsin aids digestion after a hearty meal. BEECHIES. . .another really fine Peppermint Gum — sealed in candy coating. Like Gum and Candy in one. especially tive flavor. A Beech-Nut duality product. ORALGENE ... I firmer texture gives m uc needed mouth exercise . and its dehydrated milk t magnesia helps neutralii mouth acidity. Each piece ind vidually wrapped. GET YOUR SUPPLY OF BEECH-NUT BEFORE THE TRIP BEGINS Both of them plunged into troubles and responsibilities when they reached New York. They moved into adjoining apart¬ ments to conserve their rapidly decreasing savings. More than once they made three dollars a week do for all expenses. ‘‘We’d allot ourselves only thirty cents some days. We’d have some fruit on hand, it took ten cents each for the subway down to the casting offices and back. We’d buy a dime chocolate bar with the re¬ maining cash.” For awhile it was fun ; they were starv¬ ing for their art. When they could wangle matinee tickets they’d hide in the balcony after the performance and so study the show' anew in the evening. Or they’d get dressed up in their best — they had to put everything they could into as decent clothes as they could contrive — and mingle with the crowds during the firstact intermission. Then, with superb non¬ chalance, they’d stroll in as though they’d strolled out ! Gertrude was the popular one ; she has glamor and wit, and she had a lot of dates that didn’t mean a thing in the long run. But Isabel fell wholly in love. She was excited by Lee Tracy at her first sight of him, when she tried out for a part in a play in which he was starring. She didn’t get the job, because they wanted a siren. But Lee asked her to lunch and from then on she wouldn’t glance at any other man. STILL, she couldn’t be with Lee all the time. She and Gertrude hunted spa¬ ghetti joints and split an order; they idled away many hours in the apartment house’s general parlor, where Gertrude could play the piano. It was mid-winter and being broke had ceased to be a lark. The depression threatened to lift nicely when Rachel Crothers selected Sister, as the petite Jewell affectionately calls her pal, for the lead in the comedy “Caught Wet.” Unfortunately, it was a misnomer; the humor failed to impress so Gertrude was still on her uppers. However, by now Isabel had won the second lead in the hit “Blessed Event.” So meals went on. In the late spring, Gertrude essayed a part in a picture over on Long Island. No one instructed her in make-up; the light¬ ing was definitely all for the star, Nancy Carroll. The experience was regarded by all as an error. Not until fall did she get another play ; this time the lead in “RoundUp.” Five days before the opening she developed acute laryngitis and a 103 fever; but Gertrude refused to be conquered. She went to rehearsals anyway and the critics clapped hands on opening night. Metro’s scouts suggested film tests. They said they’d pay her fare to Hollywood — and back, if she didn’t register well. “I thought she’d be in Joan Crawford’s shoes in no time,” remembers Isabel. “She has beauty and is a grand actress. Of course I was tickled for her. But I was ill at the time and I felt terrible because it seemed to me a permanent goodbye. I was sure she’d be a star. Lee had gone West, too. I thought I was losing them both, and with my funny face I didn’t think I’d ever get a movie bid.” At the Grand Central station there was a hectic farewell. “I had my fare, but only seven dollars in cash to my name !” confesses Gertrude. 80