Photoplay (Jul - Dec 1933)

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I 12 Photoplay [Magazine for October, 1933 When in ' LOS ANGELES V Dance WITH THE STARS at the WORLD FAMOUS Cocoanut Grove" of The AMBASSADOR HOTEL "(There the World meets Hollywood and Hollywood meets the World ..." The center of Sma and Social Life of California. Every outdoor spo available at t great hotel. R lowest in years. a B. L. FRANK Manager •Jj-\ Miss BLONDE . . . want to be Mrs.? A OF COURSE you do! Then don't let dull, faded blonde hair spoil your chances. Use Blondex, the special blonde hair shampoo, that safely brings back all natural gleaming beauty. Prevents darkening, too. Contains no dyes — no injurious chemicals. Gives new life to scalp. A million delighted users. Now Blondex comes in the new, inexpensive 25fi size. At all good drug and department stores. k% FiftHAvemieV "7 / V Newest Sensation vine □ rir-mif iful o city of OXquisitC beauty and USefuln IT'S NEW AND DIFFERENTI Your fri-ml* »ill rave about ill No t . nbling in your bag I There 'b always change ut your gcr 1 1[> for bus, carfare or phon ' . ,., . th hi ■ k. brown, blu red and sliver. Just pin a Dollar Bill to thi tisementand marl TODAY, mentioning color AGENTS WANTED! CH&NGETTE. Inc.. 565 Fiflh Ave., Depl. w.'.n:»n:MJji:i*m DO YOU $EEK IT?' Have happiness in your home; make new friends; change (he aspects of your life. Us the unknown creative powers of your mind. Let the Rosicrucians send you a FREE COPY ' ' of "The Wisdom of the Sages*'. It tells ho I you may learn to MENTALLY DOMINATE yc I conditions. Address Friar K.W.W. ROfKRUCIAN BROTHERHOOD SAN JObt (A.MO.K.C.I LALIIOHMA and made the most of it — but money was the smallest part of their reward. "Hard times could not rob them of their reward — for they were prepared against the future. "To them their country homes or cars or clothes were only homes, cars and clothes, not their life's blood and the net of all their efforts. "WTE have learned that there is no such ** thing as absolute security in regard to a position, to fame or to worldly goods — that the only things which cannot be taken from us is that which is a part of us. "So, that's why I'd prepare against the future, as much as for the future." "I'd turn my whole efforts to overcoming shyness," says Sally Eilers. "I would put that ahead of everything else. "Maybe you wouldn't think so now, but I used to be so shy I was terrified at the thought of meeting strangers. Because of my fear of meeting people I lost a lot of valuable time when I should have been getting acquainted and getting ahead. " Finally one of my friends was good enough to tell me that unless I learned to meet and talk to strangers I could never get anywhere in life— and proved it to me. ""R IGHT there and then I determined to ■^Vmeet people — and to stop worrying about what they thought of me and being so miserably self-conscious. "Almost from that moment on things began to break for me." Elissa Landi says she would ask her mother's advice about her career, and then take it. Indeed, that is what she actually did do, and says she has never regretted following that advice. Says May Robson: "I'd make up my mind to live my own life, even if it meant the choice between the one man and my work. " Perhaps my background did not fit me for the part of wife. "My father was a navy officer and when I was a small child our family traveled from Australia to England, stopping at various ports, and later I was sent to school in Brussels, Paris and London. "The varied background of my upbringing proved a great stimulation to my ambition — and was probably responsible for my resisting the romantic impulse that usually leads young girls into domesticity. I had seen too much of the world to settle down as the wife of any man. "TT broke me up at the time, to have to -••make a decision between the theater and the young man I was in love with, when the company prepared to go on the road — but I still say that if I had to do it over again I'd determine my own life." So it all seems to boil down to this: First, know what you want to do. Second, face things squarely and don't look for the easiest way out. Third, follow your own inclinations. Fourth, give the best you have and bravely take what comes your way. Finally, prepare against the future as well as for it. Lots of excitement at the Chicago World's Fair. That famous stutterer, Roscoe Ates, and his charming daughter Dorothy created a great stir by autographing thousands of copies of PHOTOPLAY Magazine. Roscoe's inimitable vocal hesitation was broadcast through amplifiers over the Fair grounds. If you were at A Century of Progress and you did not get your copy of PHOTOPLAY autographed "by Roscoe, as did Director Jack Sullivan, extreme left, and Director George Jesske, just back of Dorothy, or see these four busy making a motion picture, then you were gypped