Screenland (May-Oct 1931)

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122 SCREENLAND <J(air Jiggic MILLIONS CALL IT a priceless secret and it's FREE/ Imagine a discovery that transforms dull, lifeless hair into lovely, radiant hair such as only a few lucky girls are born with! Yet so subtle is this new loveliness that it seems only to accent the natural sheen of your hair! Magic? Yes, the magic of just one Golden Glint shampooing! For Golden Glint is far more than a cleansing, film-removing shampoo ! It imparts just the 1 east touch of a tint— ever so little — but how exquisitely it accents the natural beauty of your hair! No other shampoo— anywhere like it! 25c at your dealers', or send for free sample. FREE J. W. KOBI CO Seattle, Wash. Name Address City 633 Rainier Ave., Dept. J « • # • Please send a free sample. _State Color of my hair: Would you BELIEVE it? 3 to 4 inches reduction IMMEDIATELY! AND so good looking. Dr. Walter's latest . REDUCING BRASSIERE is so dainty that women often wear it over the loveliest underthings. It reduces most quickly when worn next totheBkin — gives you that trim, youthful figure that the new styles demand. Send your bust measurement. — and IMAGINE — it costs ONLY $2.25 OBTAIN slender ankles and calves try Dr. Walter's special extra strong fleshcolored rubber ankle bands. They will support and shape the ankles while reducing them. Can be worn un $o *jc der the hose and fit like a glove. «*• ' «* Send ankle and calf measure, per pair Dr. JEANNE S. C. WALTER, 389 Fifth Ave., N. Y money order no cash The Home Hotel of New York Homelike in service, appointments and location . . . away from noise and congestion, yet but a few minutes from Times Square . . . garage facilities for tourists. Room and Bath from $3 single $4 double 500 Rooms Home folks will like this hotel HOTEL: BRETTON HALL BROADWAY at 86th ST. NEW YORK The Stage in Review Continued from page 65 Aristophanic tradition and the Moliere tradition. You will look in vain for an imperfection in this musical comedy. It is a laughing wasp. Ah, those Young Men of the eighties and nineties, those Francesco da Rimini young men, those aesthetic young men, those transcendental sissies, those je-ne-sais-quoi young men ! How Gilbert and Sullivan have forever embalmed them in their irreverent smiles and exquisite lyrics ! And all these persons — Bunthorne, Archibald the Allright, Patience and Lady Angela — are as alive today as they were in the last century because they are types of immortal humbugs, the paste culture-hounds and aesthetic bolony-and-buncombe" Modernists" of today. The Civic Light Opera Company jammed the house again with "Patience." Frank Moulan as Bunthorne was rather elderly and o'erdone, but he got many laughs out of his audience. Vivian Hart was a dainty and chic dairy-maid and Joseph Macaulay easily walked off with the show as Archibald the Allright. "Ebb-Tide" The Mandarin, a sea-going hulk, sends hundreds of orange-colored boxes ashore, down Maryland way, which are received by the folk thereabouts. What's in them yar boxes ? You get one guess. Mr. Harvey Chapman Ford, the author of "Ebb-Tide," has tried to do a play depicting the lives and what-have-you of these Chesapeake Bay men and women. There are the basin-folk and the hill-folk, and some of the acting depicting these CroMagnons of Mencken's State is fairly good. Mr. Ford in his play aimed at something, but this something wabbles away from him. They also spoke a dialect which hain't heered much in Mr. Walter Winchell's town, tellin' yer that ! Adele Carpell, Marjorie Main, SidneyEliot and William Castle were among those working. Roberta Robinson, who sings so charmingly in "The Band Wagon," has also been seen on the screen. What'U You Bet Continued from page 25 "Oh!" Julie looked wildly about for the porter or some one who could eject the maniac from her section. "Here, let me show you the picture. It was taken at the wedding!" As Julie searched again for the porter, he drew from the wallet a snap-shot, postcard size, and laid it on her palm. The girl glanced down at it. Her mouth and eyes got like little circles. It was a photograph of a boy about ten, in a miniature dress suit; and a girl a year or so younger, wearing a bridal costume of white. "That's me on this side," he said, pointing. Julie looked up at Wally's grinning face. "Why — you can't be — Wally Lindsay!" "Who says I can't?" "But you're — you're so big — and goodlooking!" Her features were alight as she glanced at the snap-shot again. "That Tom Thumb wedding!" There was a lovely gurgle of mirth. "My goodness! I'd almost forgotten it !" Wally grinned. "And — do I win my bet?" Her cheeks turned quite pink. "I'm — I'm afraid you do!" she murmured. And that, as any mathematician could figure out, required two kisses. Have you entered the SCREENLAND Star Shadow Contest? How good is your memory? How well do you know your favorite stars? See Page 68 in this issue! Back copies of our July and August issues, each containing a set of Star Shadows, are available.