Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1930)

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108 Photoplay Magazine for May, 1930 GLAZO'S LOVELY TONE IS SCIENTIFICALLY PLANNED TO | LOOK EQUALLY WELL IN ARTIFICIAL LIGHT OR SUNLIGHT * ^^ UUTiCQ S Gap (jrlaws lovelij color is constant . . never deceiving its users W'lTH its delicate sheen and lovely.modish color, Glazo has a gift for flattering slender fingers. And the beauty it brings is constant, under all lights! — with never a change in tone or texture. With many nail polishes evening light, especially, brings a disappointing difference. A dashing color fades to insignificance and dullness replaces a soft glow. Your fingertips, charming by sunlight, lose every claim to beauty. Correct Nail Color is Vital to Charm Varying lighting conditions have an unflattering effect upon most nail polishes. Electric light can cause a soft lustre to appear flat and dull, or change the color of your nails to a yellowish tinge or an unpleasant purple-pink. Glazo alone remains unaffected. Glazo alone guards its modish tone under every changing condition of light. With Glazo polish on your nails, your fingertips are always lovely — indoors and outdoors, under the dazzle of party lights or the glow of candles, just as in broad daylight. Would you like to prove for yourself the constancy of Glazo color? First, do your nails exactly as you want them under daylight. Then step into a dark closet, turn on the electric light and examine them GLAZO carefully. Glazo will have exactly the same tone in the closet as it had in the sun! Try this test — and we believe you will become a devotee of Glazo for life! A good polish like Glazo lasts longer than a week. It never peels, it never cracks, and gives a soft, lively sheen that never verges on artificiality. For its covering film is so smooth and thin that you will delight in its effect and you can scarcely detect its presence. No matter what you think you like in nail polishes, try Glazo. Its constant color is a great new advantage. For your polish, lasting a week, is seen under varying lights. With Glazo your nails will always be lovely. The smart twin bottles of Glazo (Glazo Polish and Polish Remover) may be found at all toilet goods counters and the price is 50e\ If you would like samples of Glazo, send six cents with the coupon below. Goupon. THE GLAZO COMPANY. Inc., Dept. GQ50 191 Hudson Street, New York, N. Y. □ Plain D Perfumed I enclose 6 cents. Please send me Glazo Samples (polish and xemover). See check above. Also booklet, "Lovely Eloquent Hands." Name.. Address.. City.. . Slate.. [ CONTINUED PROM PAGE 39 ] scarce until she was offered a little contract with the old FBO company as the foil for the Western stars, Tom Tyler and Art Acord. Her salary was small, her roles ineffective, but at least she was earning a living. At least she had her feet on the first rung of the ladder. She was not a complete failure — nor yet a coward. And then, almost overnight, the talkies descended upon Hollywood and Sharon found herself singing and dancing in "Fox Movietone Follies," and when she read the critical reviews, she discovered that her number, "Thai's You, Baby" had been the hit of the show. "Sunny Side Up" came next and then "Happy Days." Sharon was a success in the land of the cinema. Not long ago she met Buddy Rogers on Hollywood Boulevard. "Remember, Buddy, our days at old Alma Mater?" said Sharon. "You were the prize pupil. And I was the little stupid at the foot of the class. The one that wore the dunce cap." The old Rogers gallantry came to the fore. "That was another day, Sharon," he answered. "It seems to me that you're way up near the head now, yourself." _ And true enough, Sharon was. The little girl who knocked off the dunce cap went happily on her way to the F'ox lot — there to make good again in "In Love with Love!" Every advertisement In PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE Is euaranteed. Billie's debut. Honest and truly, this is La Belle Dove, as she looked in her first picture, "Youth to Youth," made on the old Metro lot in Hollywood