Modern Screen (Dec 1948 - Oct 1949)

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PIE***** "Colgate Dental Cream's active penetrating foam gets into hidden crevices between teeth — helps clean out decaying food particles — stop stagnant saliva odors — remove the cause of much bad breath. And Colgate's soft polishing agent cleans enamel thoroughly, gently and safely!'" LATER-Thanks to Colgate Dental Cream ECONOMY SIZE 59t , ALSO 43* ANO Always use X 25* 5IZtS COLGATE DENTAL CREAM "HAA/\/Vn offer you eat and before ever/ date e inside story TWENTY YEARS AGO, as we understand it, Jimmy Stewart's father asked him, "Boy, when are you going to get married and settle down?" Jimmy-boy shrugged his shoulders and pawed the ground. "I like to keep all the girls happy, Pop," he blushed. Time passed. All the girls were getting hysterical. "He'll never get married!" they screamed. "Never!" Then one moonlit night, Stewart went to Gary Cooper's house for dinner. Gloria Hatrick McLean was there. Stewart's comment: "The soup was good." Well, our writer, Carl Schroeder, was under the table at the time, taking cryptic notes on a napkin. "Quite a dish," he wired (showing just how cryptic things can get — because the dish he had in mind was Gloria). Jimmy must have had that dish in mind, too, because eventually one thing led to another, and finally to page 22 of this issue, where you'll find "The Bachelor Takes A Wife." PEOPLE ARE PRETTY indifferent about what we do with our larynx. Whenever we break into song, someone invariably suggests we shut up. This throws us completely off key. Anyway, because we might have been one ourself , singers fascinate us — particularly singers like Doris Day (with all that golden hair). Another remarkable thing about Miss Day is her voice — she never really knew she had one until she broke her legs. She was IS at the time, and a professional dancer. In Miss Day's case, everything turned out for the best (as you will see if you read "There's A Great Day Comin'," on page 34). We broke a leg once, too. A lot of good that did us. . . . ONE THING THE Churchill sisters never thought : They never thought they'd have to play horsey to work for Modern Screen. They were over at Betty Hutton's home with pencils poised when the phone rang. Next thing they knew, Betty was backing out of the garage and they were being ridden by her tiny daughters — the Huttontots. (For fuller details see page 44.) Pretty soon those Churchills will be wanting to get paid for the stuff they do. . . . ON PAGE 38, there's a piece called "Hollywood's Tangled Romances." We tried figuring them out — but it'll take a better brain. All we know is. there's one good telephone number in our book — and we're sticking to that. . . . EVERYBODY'S KNOWN SINCE June 6 that Elizabeth Taylor's in love. June 6 was the day her mother announced her daughter was fixing to marry Bill Pawley, Jr. Hedda Hopper, though, knew that Liz was in love with the guy some time before that. Liz told her — only she didn't exactly tell her. Didn't have to. Elizabeth's eyes — but the story's on page 30. . . . A FEW MONTHS ago, people might have looked for Stromboli on a menu. Not any more. Now everybody knows that Stromboli's an island in the Tyrrhenian Sea, and that Ingrid Bergman and director Rossellini were on it to make a movie. Ingrid and director Rossellini also made the front pages. The exciting, exclusive pictures starting on page SO show why. Had to drag that photographer out of the darkroom before he'd let us see them! . . . JUST A NOTE to remind you we're here every month . . . There'll be some stuff in the next issue that you'd have a heck of a time buying anywhere else for 15 cents: Some intimate, some gay, some loaded with cold, hard facts. And, since we're name-droppers — how does Dan Dailey sound? Or Betty Grable? We'll have stories about them, and about Glenn Ford, Bill Holden, Roy Rogers, Susan Hayward and more. All wrapped up in our September issue . . . Don't crowd, now!