Photoplay (Jan-Sep 1937)

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ItTOP LAY has dug into Iter past and comes back with the missing chapters There were factors in Jean's early life that prepared her, as she grew pp, for the bitter heartcaches she was to encounter before she ibecame the husky-voiced glamour girl (right) with Ray Milland in Paramount's "Easy Living" \, ground at the mill, when meat from the pigs they had slaughtered was smoked and stored away, when the Greenes looked forward to their first winter of plenty, that friendly Indian came again — but this time with a frightening stealth. They must leave at once, he told them, for his people were going on the warpath and they wouldn't be safe if they stayed. Even as that Indian, swift and silent as a shadow, disappeared into the woods, they began to hitch their two oxen to their dray. On the dray they loaded all the foodstuff they could carry, as well as the sharp axes and farm implements they would need to clear and plant another field and build another cabin Then they set off into the wilderness. North they traveled, always north, losing all count of time, until one cold morning they came to a place where autumn colored hills sloped down to the misty blue waters of Lake Cham plain. There they dared stop and fell trees to make a temporary shelter. Miraculously enough, hope and courage had survived the deep fear that was in their hearts. And because this was so they became the first settlers of what is now St. Albans, and there have been many more generations of Greenes who, in various ways, have lent luster to that name. IT was about one hundred and fifty years later that Hubert S. Greene and Johanna Nelson Greene, a girl he met and married in Montana where he had gone to paint and photograph Indians, settled down on the opposite shore of Lake Champlain, at Plattsburg, New York. There, on October 17th, 1908, their daughter, Gladys Greene, was born. She grew up as little girls do, the activities of her parents taking her from one place to another and forming a background for her life. Wherever she lived she had dogs and cats, just as she does still. In Portland, where her mother ran a boarding house, eight-year-old Jean set the tables and made the beds and dusted the rooms. And after this, when her mother went West to visit relatives, she was sent to her grandmother in Schenectady. There she lived in [please turn to page 901 33