Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1948)

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eager-to-swim WATER FASHIONS Caltex of California’s own wonderful ”Sun Foam” water fabric— rich textured two-way-stretch of fine *Botany Brand wool combined with * Lastex yarn... in a two-piece classic, front-skirted, that molds your figure yet gives with every motion. In inviting sun shades: foam white, sea aqua, shore pink and sunny yellow. Sizes 10 to 20 . . . $12.95 p ...at better stores everywhere L *REG. U. S. PAT. OFF. A Y CALTEX OF CALIFORNIA • 2126 BEVERLY BOULEVARD • LOS ANGELES 4 100 high note. “Sherry!” she called, “Let’s show them the ski trail.” Whereupon Sherry took over the party as we slipped and slid down the thick carpet of maple and birch leaves that covered the hillside. Once down, the woodlands gave way to rolling fields and a pair of farm houses which Sherry pointed out as the subject for the first oil painting he will have done in New Hampshire. His taste for art started as a little boy. He was born in East Hampton, Long Island. In those days, he will tell you squarely, he did everything, from work in a grocery store after school hours to being a deck hand aboard fishing boats. And you can understand the latter when you note the powerful muscles of his neck and shoulders. “I don’t know how successful I’ll be as an artist,” Sherry said with his fine frankness. “I haven’t done enough to tell.” What tells part of the story, however, are the medical sketches he did while on sea duty in the Atlantic as a pharmacist’s mate. Working with the ship’s surgeon, he sketched various stages of operations performed by the surgeon; a technique so revolutionary that it won considerable attention for them both from the American Medical Association Journal in an article reproducing the sketches. Of that he is rightly proud. flE trouble with a toboggan is that you have to go up again. So now we started the three-quarter mile up-grade. And be it said for the Spartan quality of our little mother-to-be that we never gave her physical welfare a thought until Sherry threw a strong arm around his wife’s waist and fairly boosted her up the trail. P. S. Characteristically, she arrived at the top in far better condition than the guests. A round of cider to wet our whistles was a welcome refresher in front of the fire on the living room side of the great chimney on the lower floor. Then came a wonderful bull session for the girls while the men went off for target practice in the woods. Guns are one of Sherry’s enthusiasms and as they left he was proudly bearing a German Luger, which Bobbie and Bette had unearthed in the nearby town of Littleton, a far cry from the battle lines of Hitler. We led off with strictly female talk — about the coming baby. “The baby’s due in early May. I’m booked in at the Hanover Hospital April 28 and will move in with a pile of books and magazines — till ready,” Bette grinned. And the grin softened to a smile that skipped over the intervening months of snow on the mountains to a day when the winds would be gentle and a new little voice would be added to the world. In her plain little white wool sweater, her legs in slacks curled up under her on the deep divan and her hair falling loosely about her face much as you saw her in her last picture, “Deception,” she looked far more like a New Hampshire girl than Hollywood’s Oscar lady. “You know,” she said, suddenly looking up, “I’ve thought I’d like to write a book this winter while I’m here. Oh, a very short one.” Her hand flicked out deprecatingly. “Everyone says, ‘But what do people do in the country, isolated there for six whole months?’ Well, for one thing, they have a lot of time to think. So I’d like to put down what people are really thinking about these days. . . .” A fascinating project for the days when Sherry is painting, but particularly an item that publishers might take note of. Suddenly Bette jumped up and went to the phone. “Time to make our weekly call to Ruthie,” she called gaily and placed a long distance call to Palm Springs, Cali