Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1930)

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■44 mwu o o AN ANTISEPTIC LIQ.UID ml &m!m (gXTONSPl destroys the Q*Jor and di' -* ^*3 verts the underarm perspiration to parts of the body where there is better evaporation — and need be used on an average of but two nights each week. NONSP1 will also protect your clothing from those ruinous, discoloring, destructive perspiration stains, in addition to keeping your armpits dry, odorless and sweet. More than a million men and women keep their armpits dry and odorless and save their clothing by using this old, tried and proven preparation which is used, endorsed and recommended by physicians and nurses. Get a bottle of NONSP1 today. Apply it tonight. Use it the year around— spring, summer, fall and winter. Your Toilet Goods Dealer and Druggist has it at 50c (several months' supply) or if you prefer Accept our 10c Trial Offer (several weeks' supply). Photoplay Magazine for June, 1930 "Honestly," she said, "I simply didn't know that there were people like that in the world. They're all so alive. They talk about such interesting things. And will you believe it, nobody even mentioned pictures! I was out of my depth, so I didn't say much. I simply sat by and absorbed everything I could. I felt as if I were going to school. I didn't know there was a life like that.'' THE only life she knew, you see, was one of work, a life wherein her days were given to doing the task that fell before her. She did not have a chance to sit back and analyze herself. The battle for existence had been too hard to admit of introspection. She had no tune for the luxuries of the mind. Her marriage to Jack White was a great surprise. She had known him for several years. They had been excellent friends, but nobody thought that they would marry. And then they did. And Pauline's life took on a new color. She had been a workman, now she became a woman. She had wealth and position, and the sort of man that Pauline needs — a companionable, understanding man. For the first time she began to think — to stand off and watch the little Pauline who had been caught up so early in the whirl of life that she had had no time to live. She was tired, very tired, when she first married, and she was content to bask in the glory of her new surroundings. She became a wife, and felt that she wanted to put her career out of her mind. She felt settled, somehow. Everything took IThe Nonspi Company 2641 Walnut Street Kansas City, Mo. Name _ For the enclosed toe (com I or stamps) send me a trial \ size bottle of NONSPI Address \City Miles of Mountain Lake Fragrant pines pierce the sky . . . calm water as smooth as lacquer . . . no need to dig deep with your blade . . . just flowing, tireless strokes. Your "Old Town" makes tlie trip one long glide. "Old Towns" are beautifully balanced. They're modeled after the Indians' crafts man ship . . . reinforced through modern manufacturing methods. Free catalog shows many models. As low as $67. Also shows big. fast, seaworthy, all-wood outboard boats for family use; rowboats; dinghies; and speedy step-planes. Write Old Town Canoe Co., 126 Main Su. Old Town, Maine. "Old Town Canoe f $60to$150aWeek Be a Motion Picture Projectionist ^^ Big demand now for motion picture B^ projectionists — in theatres, schools, industrial motion pictures or for sparetime entertainments! You can quickly qualify! Free Book gives details about opportunities awaiting you as: — □ Motion Picture Projectionist D Motion l'icture Cameraman □ "Still" Photographer □ l'hoto Finisher. Send for it NOW1 NEW YORK INSTITUTE OFPHOTOGRAPHr Dopi. M.1234, 10 W.st 33rd St.. N.w I City on a meaning. She had glimpsed a new life in New York, but she saw now what she wanted, something staple and solid and fine. I believe it was at this time that her beauty began to develop. It was not the beauty of blonde hair and a rounded figure and shadows gone from her cheeks, but the glory of a woman who had found that for which she had been unconsciously seeking. But she began to grow restless. She had been in the race too long to sit back and watch the winners come in. She felt herself growing useless. She had nothing to do, so she tried creating certain jobs. She would manage the marketing herself. But she was not content for long with unnecessary domesticity. She had found everything in her life with Jack. She was a real wife, but not a housewife. There is a difference. Jack encouraged her to go on with her screen work. When the whistles blew at midnight of 1929, she said to herself and to him, "I've been futile for a year. I've been leading a useless life. I have not justified my existence. It is true that I am content. It is true that I have found happiness. But there is no real happiness for me without work. " NOW she began to look for roles. She knew that she must make a talking picture or, perhaps, her last chance was gone. She had been off the screen for almost a year and she pitched into work in earnest. She took a part with Columbia and she had a good manager. When Mary Nolan pulled her famous temperamental act at Universal, Pauline was the lucky girl *P 'vk ^^^W . *iJ?j£ 1 ^ 1 .• ..-'--/'-.".>• Hf1*^ "si '' ^B i r % i^HM 'ry'f^iBhrOjBB W> i. -.-. Mb ™ "^— ^SMT^^ * •' 1^^. ii^teL* • ~dritii WB a $ ■1 ■ * Hfc_ • ^* \ ■ 1 IjSr j Wrm '.. . bbbbI Maurice Chevalier and Cameraman George Folsey of Paramount are inspecting the very last word in enclosed cameras for use on sound stages. Absolutely silent in its work, and mobile because mounted on the light geared truck, this is what studio technicians have been laboring on for nearly three years Every advertisement in PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE is guaranteed.