Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1944)

Record Details:

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□ CREAM? □ POWDER? □ LIQUID? For ordinary uses, you may prefer one type of deodorant, your neighbor another. But for one purpose — impor> tant to you and to every woman — there's no room for argument. Use Powder for Sanitary Napkins For while creams and liquids are suitable for general use, a powder is best for sanitary napkins. That’s because a powder has no moisture-resistant base; doesn’t retard napkin absorption. There is ONE Powder . created especially for this purpose —QUEST* POWDER— soft, soothing, safe. It’s the Kotex* Deodorant, approved by the Kotex laboratories. Being unscented, it doesn'tmerely cover up one odor with another. Quest Powder destroys napkin odor completely. It’s your sure way to avoid offending. Many months’ supply, only 35c. COMPOUNDED ESPECIAUY FOR THIS USEI Take KURB tablets only as directed on the package and see how KURB can help you I VA cause I’ll never get rid of the gypsy in me.” Her worst fault is never being on time, but her best pal, Paulette Goddard, has just about broken her of it. She credits Paulette too, with giving her a very workable philosophy: “When it comes to deciding things, I’m very bouncy. I decide ‘no,’ then I worry and change it to ‘yes’ and then I still worry — and vice versa. Paulette has a beautiful way of making a decision and following it through. Once she has made up her mind, instead of jittering around, she concentrates on making the plan a success. I’m gradually learning to do the same thing.” The friendship between these two has little to do with the responsibilities of fame and fortune. It is composed mostly of animated chatter, giggles, plans for dates and dresses. They love to “stay all night” at each other’s houses. Since the Falkenburg menage is a happy-go-luck hostelry whose walls usually bulge with visiting foreign dignitaries, college boys and their athletic equipment, a lion cub and a whole family of Mexican servants. Jinx often moves in for a week or a month with Paulette. Recently when her family was out of town and her home turned over to the decorators. Jinx moved bag and baggage, plus her Spanish butler, over to the Goddard mansion. Gleefully the girls quartered the butler in Paulette’s guest room, where he slept all night in a huge bed between silken sheets and satin comforters. The glee was occasioned by the fact that said butler, Rito, is only twelve years old and so small he was quite lost in the bed. Rito is just one of those things that happen with the Falkenburg family. Several months ago, a Mexican woman needing a job, was given one as a maid of all work, she liked her new situation so well, she soon brought her two children, Rito and ten year-old Hulia, to stay with her. Romantically, Jinx prefers men who can “work hard at something worth while.” Which is as it should be, since her fiance. Major Tex McCrary, is currently working very hard at bombing Berlin. They met when McCrary, prominent New York newspaperman, interviewed her for his column. TTie write-up was a little sarcastic in places. Asked what kind of a home she would eventually like. Jinx had replied, “Oh, something simple and ranchy, with tennis courts and a swimming pool.” “ — -just a simple little mansion — ” commented Mr. McCrary. Later, when he proposed, he was careful to state that the “something simple and ranchy” was included in the offer! McCrary has been overseas for more than a year, and letters take a while to travel back and forth. One night, when Walter Winchell menioned a McCrary exploit on the air, some twenty well-meaning friends called Jinx, who hadn’t heard the program. No two reports were alike, ranging all the way from the fact that he was killed over Berlin, crashed in Holland, and missing in Paris. On inquiry, the network was kind enough to send her a transcription of the broadcast, saying his mission had been entirely successful. For that reason perhaps. Jinx wasn’t too perturbed when a syndicated columnist recently printed that Tex would marry a titled British beauty. The studio publicity department, obligated to protect its star’s romantic as well as other interests, asked her if she hadn’t better check the report. Dutifully she sat down to draft a cablegram, which was typically Falkenburg: “'The papers say you are marrying Lady So-and-So.” She thought a minute, then added, “Happy Thanksgiving!” The answer to that was some three pages from the Major saying as far as he is concerned, the Falkenburg-McCrary contract is still airtight. As this goes to press, it looks as if someday they’ll be Fabulously Happy! The End Five-star tennis family: Jinx Falkenburg with her two brothers and her mother and father — all A1 athletes