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Show V :.:!. - V- - ' - I - I .i. . V - - , ' . :.. nL s ' ' iV f sm smm g - '' Boo hirley 8 3 ij !.,' 'i " .i Is She ','-s : , V,. .i,. - - a . . , Married women are shanng this secret ... the new, easier, surer protection for those most intimate marriage problems 8! anything it had ever used. Nor- forms eliminate (rather than cover up) embarrassing odors, yet have no "medicine" or "disinfectant" odor themselves. u hi And what convenience! These small mm feminine suppositories are so easy a H and convenient to use. Just inser- t- tit no apparatus, mixing or measuring. They're greaseless and they keep in any climate. jlow available in new packages of 6, as well as 12 and 24. Also available in Canada. What a blessing to be able to trust in the wonderful germicidal protection Norforms can give you. Norforms have a highly perfected new for- mula that releases antiseptic and eermicidal iheredients with lone- lasting action. The exclusive new base melts at body temperature, forming a powerful protective film that guards (but will not harm) the delicate tissues, And Norforms' deodoranlrotcction has been tested in a hospital clinic and found to be more effective than Tested by doctors... trusted by women. . . proved in hospital clinics f ', ! ' U r Norforms' '?sJtfi J. Really That Nice? ' . IM M ' informative Norformi booklet Just mail this coupon to Dept. FW-- S Norwich Pharmacal Co., Norwich, N.Y. Please end me the new Norforms booklet, in a plain envelope. JFREE 9-- 16 Namc- - (n.tAtc mint) Street. booth has become the Shirley successful NORWICH r0O OCT State. .Zone City Keep freedom in your future with SAVINGS BONDS U. S. I !S3 "nonglamor-ou- s actress" to use her own phrase in everything from drama to radio and tv comedy. Most notably, she was Miss Duffy, the caustic bedeviler of bartender Archie in radio's "Duffy's Tavern"; the aing housewife losing her husband in "Come Back, Little Sheba," which won her a Tony Award on the stage (one of three for her Broadway portrayals) and an Oscar on the screen ; and the meddling Jane-o- f maid in tv's "Hazel," which this year brought her an Emmy. She looks like everybody's favorite aunt, and Marleire Dietrich sums up the way she wins audiences: "She comes on .stage, says 'Hello,' and I begin to cry." Is Shirley-Boo- th really as "nice" as she seems., when acting? Hazel's director, William" Russell," fiufes"the impression dythat Shirley is a tough namo comes only from her determination to do her job exactly right, whether" it's a: Broadway-tragedor a tv, comedy. "I guess that exactness is ingrained," !.SWrley..say5J.Tmihe..kindwha-caa'- t leave the house in the evening without cleaning up everything first. my mothftroiiLmgiLJXQJL -a- i ll-trades all-busine- ? I' " ' ' l r - ' - i xi v . " ' ,1 ' . n ? f . . " is 1 , -:- - . -- a- .V . f a t m m n HI Mt for freezer foods, leftovers. Air- -, tight, unbreakable. Use them again and again. Stack-o- n covers . fit tight, prevent leakage and spoilage. In 6 sizes: Oi 6i Mxfe 12-oun- ce, fcy REPUBLIC MAKERS OF you buy are REPUBLIC'S Not just Food FREEZETTES At FREEZETTES. Containers 1 department, hardware stores. MOLDING CORPOtATION, Chicago 31, Ulinoh PLASTIC HOUSEWARES X POLLY-FLE- but I cairritop ingTi6uMi,r It was her mother who opened the Booth. s n a sales executive, blanched America's Finest Freezer Food Containers I H-Gall-on, As-a-ehild, stageiloor-for-Mis- 1 Pint, Wr Pint, Quart, Gallon. Be sure the containers -- a- tM H H H Mt MM 'Most dependable containers made y " w i . ss have the soul of a chambermaid. Never do anything you can hire others to do:' Today I make good money playing a maid ( K m fW w MM m MM N MM St Mt Mt Mt Mt Mt Mt Mt Mt Mt Mt Mt Mt -H- er-father, at his 208-- A in-Ne- w B MM Mt Mt a 12-year-- daughter's determination to become an actress, but Mother cajoled him into consenting provided she didn't use her family name, Thelma Booth TPord. "I never wanted to do anything else," says Miss Booth some 40 years later. "No, that's not true: I retired twice, each time to be a housewife." During the Depression, she married Ed Gardner, who played the grammar-garblin- g Archie. "We were in Hollywood when 'he got a job York," Miss Booth recalls, "so I 'retired' to keep house for him there. But Ed wasn't much for having MM Write for free Catalog 4 She's the darling of Broadway, movies, tv but some think a Jot tougher than she acts " - i Family Weefclj, September 16, 1962 " .... ''Hazei" vvith her Emmy I. & avvard-she'- s By JACK RYAN somebody look after him full time, so I headed back to a career." The Gardners were divorced in 1942. A year later, she married W. H. Baker, Jr., an investment- - broker. "I retired again, this time to a farm in Bucks County, Pa., and itr was wonderful. But I was offered a fine Broadway role, and my husband said, 'You're a great actress; you should not deprive the stage.' " Shirley gives her trademark wink, and her reedy voice quivers a little with the enjoyment of her favorite kind of joke-- one on herself. "I've often wondered whether I was that great an actress or J:haA bad a housewife!" Mr. Baker died in 1951, and for a time Shirley was disconsolate, living the role of a loriely, childless widow. But she soon learned she had won a vast family over the years. A sister and ,a circle of close friends, in and out1 of the theater, dispelled loneliness and encouraged her to stay in the theaters Two years later them by winning the Cannes Festival award as "the world's greatest actress." Home came alive again with two poodles she was able to lavish her natural affection on. Most important, a HazeUike-maidJiecame a riose friend.. she-reward- ed -- 1 une smith is the maid who takes up in real life where Hazel leaves off in fic tion. "She's my confidante,!' Miss BoofhT says warmly. "She has been with me 20 years. People have trouble keeping maids with sayr I cou Id n't - get; rid dynamite, thank goodness!" Miss - Smith maintains aNewYork apartment for Shirley during the months she's on the West Coast filming "Hazel." During the summer.TVliss Booth lives in house on Cape Cod. an 1825 salt-bo- x Miss Smith avoids the isoOrdinarily, lation of Cape Cod, but this year she telephoned Shirley in California just before the holiday, "This time I'm going to the Cape with you," Miss Smith said flatly. "With you on the Coast and me in New York, I never get to see you." "She sounded like she had the Cape and the Congo mixed up," Shirley sighs, "but I don't argue with her. I never win." But the nice ones never do. -- of-mi- ne , .... |