Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1948)

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HOW KEEP THEIR HAIR SHINING FOR DAYS WITH NATURAL CLO^Y BEAUTY Miss Nancy Valentine, beautiful Powers Girl well on the road to Hollywood Stardom, washes her hair with glorifying Kreml Shampoo Why not give your hair a "beauty-treat” with this famous hard-water shampoo! Leave it to beauty-wise Powers Models to discover how to make their hair look even more beautiful. They use Kreml Shampoo! Th is famous shampoo is especially developed not only to thoroughly cleanse hair and scalp of dirt, grease and dandruff flakes — it ALSO actually 'unlocks’ all the hair’s natural brilliant highlights and leaves it shimmering with its glorious silken-sheen lustre that lasts for days. Works like magie even in the hardest water Lise Kreml Shampoo plentifully. It rinses out so easily and never leaves any excess soapy residue. It positively contains no harsh caustics or chemicals to dry the hair. Instead, Krend Shampoo has a beneficial oil base which helps keep the hair from becoming dry and brittle. Amazing results even after the first shampoo Even after the first time you use Kreml Shampoo — notice how much softer and silkier your hair is — how it glows with lovely highlights and radiance you didn’t dream possible. Buy a bottle of Kreml Shampoo at any drug, dept., or 10ff store and ‘glamourbathe’ each tiny strand of your hair to its natural sparkling lustre! THE LARGEST-SELLING SHAMPOO WITH A BENEFICIAL OIL BASE KREML A product of R. B. Semler, Inc. FOR SILKEN-SHEEN HAIR -EASIER TO ARRANGE MADE BY THE MAKERS OF THE FAMOUS KREML HAIR TONIC (Editors’ Note: “ The Perils of Pauline,'’’’ ivhieh you’ll be seeing soon, was a sensational serial back in 1914. So we thought you’d be interested in what this reader has to say about his own experiences with movie-making in that early era.) In 1914 I was a freshman at Cornell. Located on the edge of Lake Cayuga in that beautiful upstate New York region was a branch of the Pathe Studios where such people as Francis X. Bushman, Beverly Bayne, Pearl White, Irene Castle and others were busily turning out screen epics under the direction of the Wharton Brothers. I was supposed to be trying out for the Cornell freshman baseball team, but my path to the field led me past the studio. Suffice it to say my terrific interest in motion-picture production always won out in the battle of baseball vs. Pathe freres. As a consequence, I persuaded the Whartons that I was precisely the answer to their need for an extra actor. Until the studio was closed down a year or two later most of my leisure time was spent contributing in some extremely small measure to the production of “The Perils of Pauline,” “The Exploits of Elaine” and other choice serial morsels of the day. In going through some old papers the other day I came across a snapshot that I had taken of Pearl White, Lionel Barrymore and Creighton Hale sitting outside the studio yard between shots of “Perils of Pauline.” (See above.) At the time Barrymore was playing the villain in the picture and Creighton Hale was the hero. I thought it might have some interest for Photoplay. Sincerely, H. W. Roden. Pauline’s present: Betty Hutton