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Home Shampoo
W°^
It's the real egg* that makes the magic in this luxury shampoo . . . the very same smooth liquid creme used in the famous Richard Hudnut Fifth Avenue Salon to make hair more manageable, tangle-free, easier to do, and permanents "take” better. Whisks in and out like a dream, removes loose dandruff, leaves hair extra lustrous because it’s clean, clean, clean! Try this gentler, kinder, luxury shampoo today. Wonderfully good for children’s hair, too! $1.00
INSIDE STUFF
( Continued from page 12)
Caskill, the youngster crowned by an oatmeal bowl in “Sitting Pretty,” Cal is hap py to say he’s very much around. In fact he’s playing one of the younger childrer in “Cheaper by the Dozen” with Cliftor Webb, no less, playing his father.
Between scenes one day, Jeanne Crain who plays his older sister, and Clifton were chatting with Roddy who is no\i going on five. Jeanne asked Roddy if he had any brothers. Roddy said, “yes, he had four.”
“And what are their names?” Jeanne asked.
“Earl,” said Roddy.
When Jeanne explained that was only one and not four, Roddy said, “Well. Earl’s my brother and I’m his brother and we’re both brothers and that makes four brothers.” Clifton regarded him curiously for a moment. “That’s the Iasi time I ever crown a growing child with an oatmeal bowl,” he observed and strolled off.
From the famous Richard Hudnut Fifth Avenue Salon
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Shampoo
with egg
It’s the real egg in Hudnut Shampoo that makes hair more manageable. Home permanents “take” better
* powdered, 1 % Listen to Walter Winched, ABC Network Sunday Nights.
Kidder: That gleam in Johnny Sands’s eye, foretelling a certain prankishness, could have been a factor in his selection by fans as a favorite newcomer.
For instance, a Photoplay editor telephoned General Sex-vice studios for a certain picture of Wanda Hendrix; Wanda being quite the chic miss with the new short hair-do she got when she reconciled with husband Audie Mui-phy.
“Johnny Sands is on this lot, too,” the male voice answered, “why not use him in your article?”
The writer explained it was a beauty column in which Mr. Sands had no place.
“You could make a place,” the voice insisted. “Why not something about the New Johnny Sands Look or How Johnny Sands Keeps Young and ... ?”
“Now, see here,” interrupted the writer, when over the ’phone came a great shout of laughter. It was Johnny himself, of course, who isn’t above ribbing an editor.
Learning to Play: A middle-aged business man from Chicago who was tired in mind and body and weary of the monotony of his job decided to chuck it all and head for Hollywood. He was going to learn ( Continued on page 16)
Broderick Crawford, hit of “All the King’s Men,” with wife at The Helpers dance