Modern Screen (Dec 1949 - Nov 1950)

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Back Home by 10 I II— I IIMHIHII ONE SPRAY IS WORTH A DOZEN DABS 74 Don't Let "DEODORANT FAILURE" Rob You of Good Times-Use /feed New Spray Deodorant Stops Perspiration! Don't take chances with short-time deodorants—use new, spray-on HEED in the flexible squeeze bottle. HEED stops perspiration... prevents underarm odor all the live-long day. HEED is so easy, so dainty to use ... no more messy fingers. No other type deodorant, no cream or old-fashioned liquid gives such long-lasting protection so quickly. So don't risk unhappiness. Just join the millions who have switched to HEED, the wonderful new underarm spray deodorant. At all cosmetic counters, 49^. Lasts many months! Mewbe Heed/ess and you'// a/m/s he safe/ the truth about the blng crosbys (Continued from page 25) haven't seen any of them in months. I received a letter from my wife yesterday. She didn't say a thing to me about a divorce." Six thousand miles away, another battery of reporters were querying Mrs. Crosby. After searching for Dixie all up and down the Pacific coast, they'd located her in Carmel. "You and Bing separated?" they asked. ^What does Bing say?" Dixie countered. "That there's nothing to it." "Then, that's it," Dixie agreed. "I don't know how this thing got started, anyway. People say it came from our lawyers. We've been working out a trust fund for our boys. Maybe that's how it started. Maybe someone misinterpreted that for a property settlement." That's all Dixie would say. A day later, the reporters couldn't find her. A friend in Carmel said that she'd been very much upset by a phone call from her eldest son, Gary, away at prep school. "What's all this stuff in the papers, Mom?" he'd asked. And Dixie had said, "It's nothing, Gary. It's not true. Don't worry." Then, she'd gone up to Spokane where the Crosbys are thinking of putting up a new summer home. How come if there was nothing to it, if the Crosbys were enjoying a normal amount of marital happiness the story broke in the first place? That was the question the whole world asked. A ctually, a rumor got under way that Dixie was angry at Bing for not taking her with him to Europe. Since it wasn't a business trip, she figured she might just as well go along. Bing, in fact, has admitted: "Yes, Dixie is cross with me for not taking her." From that statement, the rumor grew that Dixie had gone to her lawyer, told him that she and Bing were separating, and asked him to work out a settlement on their community property. When reporters sought to verify the tale by phoning Dixie's attorney, he said, "We have nothing to say at this time," the inference being, of course, that perhaps they'd have something to say at some future date. Bing's attorney, Jack O'Melveny, was then phoned. "We understand," one re' porter began, as if the Crosby separation were an accomplished fact, "that the Crosbys have agreed on a property settlement. What is it?" "There has been no property settlement of any kind," O'Melveny explained, and then he sought to calm the troubled waters. "There are some strained relations," he conceded, "but the whole matter is in abeyance until Mr. Crosby returns from Europe late in June. We hope then to effect a reconciliation." No one effects a reconciliation unless there's been a break. Had Dixie and Bing broken? More to the point was this question: Was the Dixie-Bing relationship any more changed or strained than it had been in the recent past? It has been no secret in Hollywood for some years now that the Bing Crosbys were not the most idyllically happy couple in the world. As a matter of fact, it has been a source of constant amazement that this knowledge has never before become public property. Everyone just seemed to take for granted that Bing and Dixie and their four boys constituted the typical happy American family, and that Bing was the 1