Photoplay (Jul - Dec 1943)

Record Details:

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Should unmarried girl go alone to an rmycampi its£tiquet to wait for an invitation — and then, take another girl with you. Don't embarrass him by arriving, bag and baggage, all alone! And remember — he'll be doubly embarrassed if he notices under-arm perspiration or its odor. Protect your daintiness with Etiquet —the new antiseptic deodorant cream. More effective!* Works 5 ways! CopyriKht. 1943. by Lehn & Fink Products Corp.. Bloomfield. N. J Buy War Bonds and Stamps! /fs Cf/quef ihatsfops anc/er-arm persp/rat/on /to3c/a/s SAFELY STOPS underarm perspiration itself 1 to 3 days. Use twice a week or oftener. SAFELY STOPS under-arm perspiration odor 1 to 3 days. 24% more effective than other deodorant creams tested.* SAVES CLOTHES. Prevents clothes-stains, clothes-rot due to under-arm perspiration. ANTISEPTIC. Pure. Soothing. Not irritating to normal skin. Safe to use every day. WORKS FAST. Disappears from sight. Not greasy, not sticky. No need to rinse off. Dab on „ „ . dress . . . dash ! LOOK FOR THE BLUE PLAID JAR AT TOILET GOODS COUNTERS. 10c, 39. £figu€t we ^A/r/sfPr/c D£Oporaa/t cream The Truth about the Stars' Home Lives (Continued jrom page 70) big servantless house. She can make a bed and vacuum like mad. In some cases it is children who dictate the pattern of the stars' lives. But here again the way a star responds to the circumstances of her life and her maternal responsibilities gives a fine off-the-record picture of the star as a woman. When Anne Shirley and John Payne separated Anne moved out of the Bel-Air house they had built together. But she soon moved back again. For Julie. In Bel-Air, Julie has Deanna Durbin's little nephew, who lives with Deanna across the way, and the Walter Langs' son for playmates. All of which looks as if the happiness and closeness had drained out of the Shirley-Payne marriage before they ever moved into that house. Anne would be too smart, too sensitive to return, alone, to a place where she and John had once been happy — to torture herself with memories! For the most part only the girls who are on their own escape complicated lives these days. Take Ann Sheridan and her ranch at Encino, out in the Valley. Annie spends half her time coaxing the grass to grow. She tells all the boys she prefers plants to flowers. Plants can be transferred from their crepe paper fluted pots to the garden. If you think Annie hasn't built up a lavish garden in the two years the boys have been saying it with flowers you underestimate her. THE house isn't entirely furnished. It's ' not a large house. It only has two bedrooms. Annie's room, with a canopied bed and perfume shelves but no antiques, satins or brocades, is a room to which any working girl who likes nice things might very well aspire. The first room to be completely furnished was the playroom. It's Tahitian and Spanish in feeling and features bamboo. If you should ever read about lavish parties being given here be sure it's pure invention. Annie practically never entertains stars in her home. The guests who usually listen to the Capehart play music are her wardrobe girl, hairdresser, secretary and their husbands. . Annie's a smart girl: She's waiting until she owns the place, free and clear, to install a swimming pool. The money she gets for her walnut crop pays her taxes. She invests the money neighbors pay for her eggs in Victory Bonds. Previously her chickens laid only twelve eggs a day. But Mr. Buick. who runs the ranch while Mrs. Buick runs the house, fed the hens a hot mash stew. Production increased to forty eggs a day. Ann also has a Victory garden. The mother of Martha Giddings, her wardrobe girl, comes over to do the canning. Come winter Annie's cabbages will be sauerkraut and the tomatoes will be sauces and juices. Ration points? Annie doesn't need them! This is the first home Annie has owned in Hollywood. She saved the money with which she made a down payment on the house and the four fertile acres while living in rented houses for which she never paid more than seventy-five dollars a month. Home life in Hollywood, as you can see, very definitely is not what it used to be. But, we repeat, it's exciting — because it's so thoroughly in step with the times and because, as always, it reflects the truth about the stars as nothing else could do! The End