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I IO
Photoplay Magazine for April, 1934
would either come back or drop forever into oblivion.
It is said among his friends that the filming of this picture precipitated the marriage rift. He thought he might fall down on the studio job. He worried over it. He brought these studio worries home to his young wife, who tried to understand the seriousness with which he regarded this new chance.
Surely, that was nothing to bring joy into
"When a man takes three years to pop the question, it's time for action . . . and action is one thing at which I'm an expert. I find that once a member of the male sex gets a whiff of that scent Gabilla blended for me — he begins to forget his ten reasons for remaining a bachelor."
Now you, too, can use PARFUM
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can enjoy that strange fascination
which is Mae West's. PARFUM MAE
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with sex appeal. A few drops behind
your ears — and it's all over but the
wedding march!
PARFUM MAE WEST is now available at your favorite drug or department store — priced from 65c toS25per bottle. Better not lose any time. Some one else might start working on him with PARFUM MAE WEST.
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As a special introdnc
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NOTE: This is not merely an endorsement — this is the personal perfume of Mae West.
P2
the life of a young wife who wanted parties and fun! But does this pathetic experience mean that John Gilbert will be "fed up" on women — that if the beautiful girl-wife divorces him, as she says she will — that she will be the last woman to figure largely in his life?
One doubts it.
Women have always loved Gilbert.
There's something about him women adore. Probably they always will!
Spring! 'Tis Forgiving Time in Hollywood
1 CONTINUED FROM PAGE JJ
"Anyway, I found out afterward it wasn't the Holland Tunnel at all. It was just a billboard picture of Joe E. Brown with his mouth open. But I'm not really mad at Joe anymore. If he'll just hang a red lantern in the opening after this, I'll never make that mistake again. So please tell Joe E. he's forgiven."
You're forgiven, Joe E. Happy?
T5ILL POWELL forgives Adolphe Menjoufor ■'-'choosing himself the best-dressed man in Hollywood. "I forgive him," big-hearted Bill smiles, "and not only that, I nominate him the best gum chewer, bar none, in Hollywood. 'It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that swing,' and Dolphie has that swing. (You should have seen the downcast look on Will Rogers' face when he heard that.) Now, Adolphe chews well with everything," Powell concedes. "He's marvelous with a lounging suit. But you should really see Adolphe's technique with a tuxedo. There's rhythm for you."
Curly, stooge number two, forgives Ted Healy for that awful accident. Ted, fond of playing with Tillie, the M-G-M lion, prevailed upon Curly to accompany him into Tillie's cage. And then, in his hurry to get back to the set, he forgot Curly. And locked him in with Tillie. Just from Tuesday morning till Wednesday evening.
"I was just raising my tea-cup, with my little finger well out, of course," said Ted, "when I happened to think of Tillie. And, thinking of Tillie, I naturally thought of Curly. Strangely enough, Curly, at that very moment was thinking of me."
But, mind you, it wasn't until the pretty dandelions peeped their innocent little faces through the grass around Tillie's cage that Curly could bring himself to forgive. Ah, spring. What wonders are performed in thy sweet name.
Why, Jean Harlow actually forgives Joan Crawford for refusing to work on that set with Harlow's picture on the wall. It was a night club scene, when the face on the barroom wall startled Joan out of that Franchot calm. But now it's over. And Jean has forgiven. Like Brutus forgave Caesar.
Even li'l Lee Tracy — bless his heart — steps up in the budding business of springtime and forgives. Everybody. Mexico, that balcony, and a fellow named Romeo who got away with more monkey business on a balcony than Lee ever dreamed of.
Why, our own Garbo, ours and Sweden's, forgives those Arizona custom officers who insist upon prying into people's cars for bollweevils and such. When she was scurrying gaily from one state to another, they insisted
No, he isn't watching for the enemy. He's looking for his horse. It's
Walter Huston, as the hero soldier, in "Keep 'em Rolling," an army
story about a friendship between a private and his mount