Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1949)

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creme shampoo ^ rich in emulsified lanolin shampoo half pound LARGE REG. SIZE, 600 more shampoo . . . more quality ^ for the money ^s' Guaranteed by l Good Housekeeping , Who knows what shampoo is best? Your beautician! Use this 2-to-l favorite of professional beauticians. Leaves hair misty-soft, dazzling clean, manageable, glowing. Billows of foam instantly even in hard water. No soap film! Rich emulsified Lanolin prevents drying. America’s greatest value. HELENE CURTIS I N D U S T R I E S, I N C . your problems answered by CLAUDETTE COLBERT Claudette Colbert, star of “Family Honeymoon” rAR Miss Colbert: Our small community has just organized a Mothers’ Chorus of which I am a member. We sing at P.T.A. meetings and churches. We meet every Thursday night. My husband has demanded that I resign from the chorus or get a divorce. Our two little girls are four and six. Since the six-year-old has started school I have been invited to be a Room Mother, but my husband has put his foot down on that. My husband belongs to a riding club and a card club, although I am not a member of either, and he spends an occasional evening with men friends. Am I not entitled to a little outside recreation? I am twenty-three and my husband is twenty-six, but we are considered old fuddy-duddies by our friends because we never go out together to movies or dances as many of our friends do. Can you think of any way to help me? Mrs. W. C. B. Is seems to me that there tnust be more in the background than you have indicated. On the surface , it would seem that you are public-spirited and a good homemaker and your husband a selfish, tyrannical brute. Yet surely you wouldn’t have married him had this been the case. Usually when an otherwise fair man shows signs of stubborn possessiveness it is because his ego is assailed or his emotional security is threatened. In your husband’s case , he may have been given old-world training in his own home which inclines him to the belief that a woman has no right to leave kitchen and nursery. Surely he wouldn’t be so adamant unless he had what he thought was a good reason. If your husband is really a staunch believer in the outmoded notion that woman’s place is only in the home, you are in for a rough matrimonial experience. However, if there is some reason for his behavior which you know, but which you have failed to mention, I think you should adjust yourself. Claudette Colbert Dear Miss Colbert: My sister goes out one night each week and I take care of her baby. My brotherin-law sometimes stays at home, and sometimes comes home before my sister arrives, and he makes passes at me. Really bad passes. So far I have been able to get away from him. I have threatened to telephone the police, and so far I have convinced him not to go too far, but I am terribly afraid. I can’t tell my mother because she isn’t very well and practically everything makes her cry. I can’t tell my sister because it would break her heart. I did tell my boy friend and he said he would like to kill him, but that would really be a mess. We are really a nice family. We have never been involved in a scandal. If I had a father, he would help me, but my father died when I was seven. Can you think of some way I can protect myself without hurting my family? Rosanne H. Your problem is so serious that you must have the help of an older and a wiser person who is there in your home town. Don’t you know your family doctor well enough to go to him, tell your story, mentioning your eagerness to protect your mother and your sister, and ask him for help? Aid of a competent physician would be most desirable because it is possible that your brother-in-law is in need of medical or psychiatric attention. The doctor who took care of your sister when her baby was born should be of help in case you have no family doctor. If you are nervous about talking to a doctor, go to see your pastor. Be sensible. Seek the aid of competent older people to solve your problem. Claudette Colbert t Dear Miss Colbert: When I joined the Army three years ago it was because I made a mistake and got into trouble. Everybody liked me until I made that one mistake, then everybody turned against me. I was never punished for the crime I committed, but it is always on my conscience. It always comes up to bother me when I’m alone. I haven’t been home since I joined the Army. I’m afraid to go home. I’m getting out soon, but what should I do then? My life has been miserable since that day. Jack B. Although you have written “/ was never punished for the crime I committed,” you have actually punished yourself a dozen times a day for the past three years. You have told me so little of your mistake that it is impossible for me to be specific about your problem, but there are some fundamental life facts which I think you should consider. First of all, there isn’t anyone over the age of twelve to fif ( Continued on page8)