Motion Picture Magazine (Aug 1928-Jan 1929)

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1 5(* in the Far West ACH dab a delight — with BETTY LOU! Always soft and fluffy. Daintily fashioned from finest deep -pile velour — and sewed with seams that won't rip. Really remarkable, this puff so fine at the price so low — but made possible by the sale of thousands every day ! Four generous sizes — in White, Pink, Honeydew, Coral and Two-tone (In Sanitary Transparent Wrappers) for sale exclusively at F.W.W0OLW0RTH CO 5 & 10* STORES A skirtless skirt: Lucy Doraine breakfasting on the verandah of her home in Hollywood. She provides a simple yet complete explanation of why porch climbers leave home So Good to Their Mothers! (Continued from page 35) sanctified and confirmed the lovely loyalty, the profound affection Mary has ever shown to her mother. An affection rooted in the twin debts of love and duty. For it was Mrs. Pickford who guided Mary's ultimate star to its high place. It was Mrs. Pickford who instituted laws and by-laws not only for Mary but for the entire motion picture industry, considerably the poorer for her going. And she began her long and fruitful labor by the toil of her heart and hand. In days gone by, Mrs. Pickford sewed and baked and washed and taught for her three small children. There was a time when, together with Mrs. Gish, she took in sewing while the tiny Pickfords and Gishes rollerskated and shouted on the pavements. And when Mary began her unparalleled climb, it was Mrs. Pickford who stood at her side, advising, defending and planning. The world knows of Mary's full return. All that money could buy or devotion devise was Mrs. Pickford's. Mary never made a trip abroad without her mother. And in the last illness there was never a day or a night when Mary was not at her side. Pictures were put aside and a single devotion glowed like a lamp of love from the daughter who had been more than daughter to the mother who had been more than mother. WARM-BLOODED GISHES THE Gish girls are another case in point. Lillian has said that she will never marry so long as her mother lives. She wouldn't leave her mother for any man alive. And when Mrs. Gish was seriously ill a couple of years ago, Dorothy and Lillian literally ran back and forth from the studio to the hospital, with their make-up on, between shots. Nurses and doctors, Europe when the trip was thought beneficial, California where she could be with Lillian — every care and attention were showered on the gentlevoiced, white-haired woman the Gish girls call mother. The Talmadge girls never make a move without Peg, if they can help it. It is too bad there are not three of her. One for Constance, in her Gaylord Arms Apartment, one for Norma in her beach bungalow and one for Natalie Keaton and the two little Keaton heirs. When I first came out here a few months ago, Norma was in the thick of buying her mother a bungalow atop the new Hotel Roosevelt. She was furnishing it and doing it all in secret, for a surprise. Peg rides in limousines and wears as many diamonds as a lady may. Lupe Velez has one bond in common with Lillian Gish. She, too, declares that she will never leave her mother for any man. In loud and ringing accents she declares that she loves her mother better than any living human. And before the ink was dry on her United Artists contract she had her mother and her tiny grandmother imported from Mexico and installed in a Hollywood home and her small brother in a military academy. Her entire time and devotion, apart from the studio, is at their service. Anna Q. Nilsson took a trip to Sweden a year or more back for the express purpose of buying her parents a new home, equipped with every modern device and furnished as luxuriously as those simple people would permit. She left a car and a banking account and so arranged matters that no dark shade of toil or worry can ever dismay them again. BABIED BY BEBE BEBE DANIELS covers her mother with diamonds. In the midst of her very first contract she dashed downtown and bought her mother the largest diamond brooch she could find. And on Christmas and all other possible anniversaries Mrs. Daniels finds a new diamond thingumbob in the toe of her stocking. Pola Negri supports her mother in a palatial chateau in France. Nothing less will do. Pola also endows an orphanage entirely with her own funds and her mother supervises it for her. Adolphe Menjou recently built a new (Continued on page Qi) 86