The New Movie Magazine (Jan-Sep 1935)

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.

YOUR SKIN IS SO LOVELY, DEAR! 3~„ 4^ HffififP <m& TO END SKIN TROUBLES Try This Improved Pasteurized Yeast That's Easy to Eat F [N case after case, pimples and blotches, like muddiness and lack of color in the skin, are caused by a sluggish system. That is why external treatments bring you so little lasting relief. Thousands have found in Yeast Foam Tablets a pleasant, easy way to correct the skin troubles caused by digestive sluggishness. Science now knows that very often slow, imperfect elimination of body wastes is brought on by insufficient vitamin B complex. The stomach and intestines, deprived of this essential element, no longer function properly. Your digestion slows up. Poisons, accumulating in your system, cause ugly eruptions and bad color. Yeast Foam Tablets supply the vitamin B complex needed to correct this condition. These tablets are pure pasteurized yeast — and yeast is the richest known food source of vitamins B and G. This improved yeast should strengthen and tone up your intestinal nerves and muscles. It should quickly restore your digestive and eliminative system to normal, healthy function. With the true cause of your trouble corrected, pimples and other common skin troubles disappear. And your whole system benefits so that you feel better as well as look better. Don't confuse Yeast Foam Tablets with ordinary yeast. These tablets have a pleasant, nut-like taste that you will really enjoy. Pasteurization makes Yeast Foam Tablets utterly safe for everyone to eat. They cannot cause fermentation in the body, and they contain nothing to put on fat. Any druggist will supply you with Yeast Foam Tablets. The 10-day bottle costs 50c. Get one today. Resubstitutes. Begin now to let these pleasant little tablets clear your skin and build up your health ! YEAST FOAM TABLETS FREE MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY You may paste this on a penny post card NORTHWESTERN YEAST CO. TG 6-35 1750 North Ashland Ave., Chicago, 111. Please send free introductory package of Yeast Foam Tablets. Name Address City State If Garbo Wears a Hat {Continued from page 53) The effect of Jean Harlow's platinumblonde hair is well known. Many have attempted to emulate her. And, in days gone by, Colleen Moore's Dutch bob set a style for thousands of women and girls. More recently, the "frou-frou" bangs assumed by Katharine Hepburn for her part of Jo in "Little Women" caught the fancy of the so-called "weaker sex" all over the world. To mention a single instance of their popularity, a hairdresser in a Kansas City beauty shop was obliged to cut out a picture of Miss Hepburn wearing the bangs and paste it on her mirror, so that she might study the full details, so many were the requests from her customers for that style of hair-dress. Joan Crawford and Carole Lombard "both have been important factors in setting new styles in hair, and each regularly receives a vast amount of fan mail from girls and women requesting advice on how to fix their tresses. Not infrequently stars are asked by beauty parlors to sponsor a new haircut, or some way of wearing the hair, and every smart shop religiously keeps up with the styles of coiffure as worn by the stars. In furniture and house-furnishings, particularly, is seen the weight of the films. "Our Dancing Daughters," one of Joan Crawford's first successes, will be recalled as having introduced modernistic furniture to the American film public. Later productions utilized this type of room decoration still more, and ere long the pulse of the furniture-buying populace was touched to the degree that thousands, and possibly millions, of homes now are furnished along modern lines. To Cedric Gibbons, head of the art department of Metro-Goldwyn and husband of Dolores Del Rio, goes the credit for the inception of this type of furniture on the screen. Almost unbelievable are the number of requests from designers and manufacturers for new ideas in design. The point has been reached whereby a studio finds it nearly impossible to purchase furniture to dress any modern set, so marked is the influence of previous pictures on the pieces in the stores and in the factories. For this reason every studio has its own art department, which designs all modern furniture used in its productions. Among recent pictures, "The Gay Divorcee" stands as an excellent example of a film play influencing the art decoration of the day. As you may recall, ultra-modern sets and furnishings featured every scene. The chromium fixtures especially intrigued the attention of the nation, and since the release of that hit, public and decorators alike have become "fixture-conscious." From all over this country and Europe, as well, there have been a large number of requests regarding new lighting effects. Entire sets, too, prove a lure for the public to write to the studios. A wealthy surgeon of Boston, for instance, asked Paramount to send him a detailed plan of the Revolutionary-period living-room used in "Pursuit of Happiness," since he was building a summer home at Cape Cod and wished to construct his house about such a A LARGE majority of the pieces played by orchestras were first heard on the screen. Particularly noteworthy is the fact that since "Stingaree" The Committee on Foods of the American Medical Association has accepted Heinz Strained Foods and passed on all advertising claims made in their behalf. LOOK FOR THIS SEAL WHEN YOU BUY FOOL YOURSELF ABOUT BABY'S Even home-cooked strained vegetables often have a lower vitamin retention than Heinz Strained Foods If you cook and strain the vegetables your baby eats, here is important news. With ordinary home methods it is often impossible to retain as high a degree of vitamin and mineral content as is found in Heinz Strained Foods. Heinz cooks and strains fresh vegetables with scientific equipment which excludes vitamin destroying air — then vacuum-packs them in enamel-lined tins. When you feed your baby these foods from the immaculate Heinz kitchens you free yourself from the time and work of cooking and straining — but, more important, you assure him a uniformly abundant quota of the precious nutrients he needs. HEINZ STRAINED FOODS fvroa&u 9 KINDS — 1. Strained Vegetable Soup. 2. Peas. 3. Green Beans. 4. Spinach. 5. Carrots* / / 6. Tomatoes. 7. Beets. 8. Prunes. 9. Cereal. GET THIS BABY DIET BOOK The new book "Modern Guardians of Your Baby's Health", contains many up-to-date facts regarding the various vitamins and mineral salts. Also information on infant care and feeding. Send labels from 3 tins of Heinz Strained Foods and 10 cents. Address H. J. Heinz Company, Dept.TG206, Pittsburgh, Pa. and "One Night of Love" the public has turned to grand opera in surprising numbers. Since those films reached the theaters, each with operatic scores, studios have been deluged with requests for more singing. "One Night of Love" in particular awakened for the first time the interest of many in grand opera. It produced a new appreciation of classical music. Dancing, also, has been influenced largely by the films. Radio Pictures receive on an average 12,000 letters a month, asking how to dance the Carioca (seen in "Flying Down to Rio") and the Continental (from "The Gay Divorcee"). The national association of dancing teachers even has suggested that the studios ease up on their dances as presented on the screen . . . make them less difficult for the average couple. When Edmund Lowe and Victor McLaglen directed their celebrated "Oh, yeah" bombardment upon one another, in their various pictures, they immediately popularized that expression, and Jack Oakie's "Skip it," in "From Hell to Heaven," likewise exercised its sway over the speech of the land. "Nuts," of course, has been heard in even the most conservative circles since "The Big Parade," some years ago. "\X7TTH the age of sophistication on * * the screen manners have changed. Nearly every fan has some favorite after whom he patterns himself, either consciously or unconsciously, and many a one goes far out of his way in an attempt to be like his idol of the films. By the same token, love-making has become more subtle, less a declamatory contest than formerly. Young swains, through having witnessed a picture lover woo his maid in a style which they admire, set out to win their lady-loves in much the same fashion. Ronald Colman's reserve, Robert Montgomery's breeziness, Clark Gable's virility ... all find their devotees among the young men of today. Gone are the days when the man bends his knee in proposal . . . the mode now is to sweep the girl off her feet. John Gilbert had a hand in this. Greater facility in speech and expression on these occasions may be credited to the potency of the screen. In well-nigh every field, every branch of life, the movies exert influence. There 'can be little doubt but that the screen is one of the greatest forces for good, for advancement, known to present-day civilization . . . and Hollywood may well be proud of its effect upon the modes and manners of the day. MAKE YOUR OWN BEAUTY MASK Learn how to make and apply your own facial mask at home. Masks made from honey, or yeast, or oatmeal, or sweet cream, are only a few of the many described in the new circular, MASKS FOR BEAUTY. Facial masks tend to tighten flabby muscles, stimulate circulation, and give a smooth, clear complexion. For your copy of MASKS FOR BEAUTY, send a self-addressed stamped envelope to the Beauty Editor, New Movie Magazine, 55 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. 54 The New Movie Magazine, June, 1935