Screen Mirror (Jun 1930 - Mar 1931)

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28 Screen Mirror • For March 0-4 Weaver Jackscn PERMANENT YOU, too, can have beautiful, wavy hair! By our genuinely amazing method you are assured of the Perfect Permanent . . . soft, luxurious, natural-looking, longer-lasting. And you’ll be thrilled to find how easy you can care for your wavy hair! The Perfect Permanent CONSTANCE CUMMINGS Columbia Star, featured in “The Last Parade" COSTS BUT $000 INCLUDING FINGER WAVE AND SHAMPOO AND ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED MAKE YOUR APPOINTMENT AT ANY ONE OF THESE SHOPS 621 South Olive 202 No. Larchmont 6804 Sunset Hotel Ambassador 538 So. Broadway 3138 Wilshire 6759 Hollywood 301 No. Western in Los Angeles and in Beverly Hills Pasadena Alhambra Glendale Long Beach Westwood Culver City San Diego What s New BEAUTY? i n // How to care for Your Hair . . Youthful Beauty . . a Skin Without a Blemish . . and Other Valuable Ideas. 621 So. Olive Street SEND FOR YOUR COPY — FREE Los Angeles, Calif. Name Address.. . "AMERICA’S FINEST BEAUTY SHOPS SINCE 1887 " WEAVER JACKSON In April John Mack Brown and Cornelia Foster went house-hunting and found a quaint, little bungalow with a rose garden and a gabled roof. In May they spent every possible moment roaming through the furniture stores of Tuscaloosa and Birmingham. In June, in the high-ceilinged living room of the Foster home, Johnny and Connie were married, while the entire football team and half the college sighed and smiled and wished them happiness. They settled down with the shining, new furniture in the little house. Every morning Johnny started forth to find new signers for the dotted lines. Every evening he came home to find Connie waiting for him in the rose garden. Then the leaves grew brown and the roses were gone and football season returned. Johnny put away his fountain pen and his blanks with dotted lines. Connie dragged the moleskins and spiked shoes and sweaters out of the closet so that Johnny might return to the gridiron which he loved. He was one of the assistant coaches who perfected another championship Alabama team. Once again the boys from Tuscaloosa were invited to appear in the New Year’s game and once again they accepted. This time Johnny went along to sit on the bench on the side line instead of to dash ninety yards in the roar of an excited pandemonium. Connie went, too, and sat in a box and wished with all her heart that her Johnny were out on the field instead of huddled in an overcoat outside the white lines. But this time Johnny and Connie Brown did not return to Alabama. They remained in California. The story of Johnny’s first screen test has become film history. The story of his friendship with George Fawcett, grand old gentleman of the stage and screen, who persuaded the handsome boy from Alabama to take that test, is known to all followers of the stories of screen folk. The story of the success of that test and the decision of Johnny to give up a football coaching career for a life in front of the cameras needs no re-telling. The little house in Tuscaloosa with its gables and its new furniture was closed. Johnny and Connie Brown found an apartment in Hollywood. Every morning Johnny started forth for the studio. And every evening he returned to find Connie, waiting for him in the little living room. When brown-haired, brown-eyed Jane Harriett arrived, the three Browns moved into a little bungalow in Beverly Hills. Now they are building a gabled English cottage on a hilltop. From the terrace outside the latticed windows they can see all of Southern California! Just six years have passed since the night when a tall young man watched a girl in white with coal-black hair walk through the door of a fraternity house in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. But those six years have held a lifetime of happiness for Johnny and Connie Brown.