Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1935)

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102 PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE FOR JUNE, 1935 SHU"MIILK actually CLEANSE/WHITENS all kinds of WHITE SHOES ^That's why SHU-MILK far outsells all other white shoe cleaners It actually cleans by removing spots and stains — is not merely a "cover-over". Shoes cleaned with Shu-Milk retain that new-shoe ■whiteness longer. Shu-Milk is absolutely safe — cannot cause shoes to crack or become discolored easy to apply — will not rub off. Use Shu-Milk for cleaning ALL kinds of white shoes — leather or fabric. Your guarantee— best ever used or money refunded. Sold by Department, Shoe and Drug Stores. Large Bottle 25c SHU-MILK America's Largest Selling White Shoe Cleaner can wait. Ann has very definite ideas about child rearing. It is no haphazard business to her, to be left to providence and a good nurse. She respects the individuality of her daughter, and never forces herself on the child. She waits patiently for Jane to come to her with problems. Ann does not believe the atmosphere of a motion picture set is good for the young mind, so Jane is brought to the studio only at very rare intervals, although Ann is denying herself the privilege of seeing Jane more often by adhering to this rule. Through all the exigencies of profession travel, and broken marriage, Gloria Swanson has managed heroically to keep her children with her most of the time. During enforced separations she is miserable. The worldly and soignee Gloria is difficult to picture in the devoted mother role, but she is actually one of the most conspicuously successful star-mothers in pictures. Like Ann Harding, she has definite ideas on the subject, is a strict but fair disciplinarian — a perfectly splendid mother. Gloria believes the English children are the most beautifully brought up and models her own ideas on this school of behavior. Gloria, the younger, is fifteen, Joseph is twelve, and Michele Bridget is two and a half. Bridget is very important with her little troubles. When her mother is working, she saves them all up for a thorough going-over at the first opportunity. If young Gloria gets ideas at school about wearing high heels or smoking cigarettes or using make-up, she con sults her mother who convinces the child that she must not be guided by what the other girls do, but what she, her mother, thinks is best for her. Gloria, the younger, has never been out without a chaperon — either the boy's mother goes with them, or Gloria — no matter if she has an early call at the studio the next morning. Joseph is a young inventor, with promise of genius. Gloria reads scientific treatises to keep up with him. When she has the time, she is out in the workshop pottering around engine models with him. Perfect manners are emphasized among the Swanson-Somborn-Farmer children to such an extent that their mother knows she can be absent from them for any length of time with confidence in their behavior. After all, says Gloria, good manners are simply a practical application of the golden rule " Do unto others" — and she thinks a well-mannered child has grasped the fundamentals for a good life. THIS is a secret — but Gloria has a suppressed ' desire to have a children's school — and in some not too remote day she may start one. There are two classes of screen star mothers, to divide them into general divisions — the dressy and the intelligently efficient types. The dressy type likes to have the baby brought in, pink and fresh and sweet, to show to visitors on a Sunday afternoon. Or, if the child is older, dressed up at teatime and sent in for an hour while mama tells stories — when she can be home from the studio between , pictures. Robert Young takes to the life of a carefree sea rover — for a while, that is — in his latest picture. "Vagabond Lady," with Evelyn Venable .