Evening Star Newspaper, April 10, 1932, Page 91

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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. 1‘,—/,(3]{\\'('1{]'] SECTION—APRIL 10, 1932 America’s Sweethearts By W. E. Hill (Copyright. 1932, by the Chicago Tribune Syndicate ) And down Louisiana way, Mandy Lou, the Dixieland charmer, I Rthe mocalonl e shor was a spot of color in her bright bandana along the levee. Al e the great Northwest, where West Coast there men were he-men and girls was Culver City were not far behind, Sure- “ Winnie, idol of the Shot Sal, the pride of the g N\ two - reelers, who rairie, dressed like this. /, set the styles for the screen ingenue Just as Della, the pert and stylish soubrette of “The Giddy French Widows,” was obviously from Broadway (New York, not Los Angeles) While Prudence, the farmer’s daughter, who made hay while And Dottie, the co-ed flapper from the Middle Western seat of learn the sun dlom'_ in her sun meu'! and mother hubbard, had “north ing, was a typical collegiate from head to toe. of Boston™ stamped all over her features. But in these enlightened times, with all this standardization of everything, including the latest hints from Paris, it's getting more and more difficult to distinguish between the prairie belle, the Dixieland charmer, the screen star, the New England home girl, the queen of the I/ burlesque and the co-ed

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