Modern Screen (Jul-Dec 1945)

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says Mrs. Charles Boyer— glamorous wife of the screen's leading romantic aetor MBS. CHARLES HOVER: Smart modern make-up is a "must" for a wife who wants to hold the screen's leading romantic actor. Your exciting new shades in Tangee SatinFinish Lipsticks are just what my lips were waiting for. And for super-excitement I choose that rich dark Tangee Red-Red. CONSTANCE LCFT BUHN: Yes, Mrs. Boyer, my new shades in Tangee SatinFinish Lipsticks really are going places ... they're going on the smartest lips in America. You'll find, also, that these heavenly colors have a perfectly delightful habit of staying on for many extra hours. There's no run ... no smear. Tangee's exclusive Satin-Finish insures lips that are not too dry— not too moist... lips with a soft, satin-smooth radiance that works wonders for your charm... In Red-Red, Theatrical Red, Medium-Red and Tangee Natural. CONSTANCE LUFT HUHN Heodof theHouseof Tangee and one of America's foremost authorities on beauty and make-up. se Tangee an d see how beautiful you can hi and thought they'd made reservations at Las Vegas' fanciest tavern — but nobody ever, heard of the course of true love sailing smoothly along, even in such an ideal a match as Chris and Tom. First off, the weather switched and their plane was grounded. "You can fly tomorrow probably," said the airport. "Not me," gritted Tom, "I'm leaving today if I have to walk," and Chris felt that way too, once they'd made up their minds. But the train people shook their heads too, and it looked like a pair of hitchhikers over the Mojave desert for sure if love was ever to bloom. But then Peter Cookson and Maurine came to the rescue, like the old friends they were, and hauled them over the border to Nevada. They've only been married nine or ten years, the Cooksons, but you'd have thought they were the bride and groom, the way they carried off that sentimental mood. But at that, Tom and Chris admit, all that cooing and sentimental sighing set the stage a bit for themselves — and it could certainly have stood a little setting. Because right off, the minute they rolled into Las Vegas they knew it wasn't going to be all orange blossoms and flower girls for that wedding. Las Vegas is a war boom town and as wide open as a barn door. It's smack on the desert and the main business, outside of defense work, is gambling. There wasn't a flower in the place, although Tom was dying to buy Chris some gardenias, her favorite posy. When he got back to Hollywood, by the way, a reporter asked him about the wedding flowers and Tom tried to think fast. "I gave her petunias," he said, "Chris wore petunias," and he wondered about that funny look he got. But the flower shortage wasn't half. The little chapel in the Last Frontier, Las Vegas' snazz hostelry, was supposed to be all gussied up for the event, but something went wrong. So Tom and Chris and their wedding party ended up at a house called "Wee Kirk of the Heather" although if there was any kirk or any heather around it was keeping out of sight. A big sign stretched across this place, announcing, "Complete Wedding Ceremony including everything— $12." You couldn't go wrong at those prices and besides it was the Wee Kirk or nothing. So in Tom and Chris pranced — in a Mendelssohn mood and for twelve bucks it was cheap at half the price — although they had to stand in line while a 6-foot woman and a spouse half her height got hitched (marrying is another major industry in Las Vegas) and in between ceremonies the local marryin' Sam had to heed his wife who hollered from the kitchen, "Hey, come in here and get your eggs and coffee before you marry them folks!" And to top it off, of course, Tom couldn't jam the ring on Chris' finger — so she had to put it on herself! lucky omen . . . Tom and the new Mrs. did Las Vega£ up brown after Peter and Maurine started back home. M-G-M thought Drake waf in Palm Springs and no local Las Vegas news hawk guessed that Alfred Alderdicc (Tom used his real name) and June Dunnt were anybody worth looking at twice. Sc they had their honeymoon alone together They visited all the cafes and the house: ! of chance in Las Vegas, and it was befon the curfew so that meant all night, all ove: town, dollars clinking, wheels spinning dice clicking. At the spots — Last Frontier El Rancho Vegas and all of them — Tom ant Chris made merry, and Tom ran smacl into a good omen that their marriage wa going to be loaded with luck. He walked up to the first roulette tabk