Picture Play Magazine (Sep 1919 - Feb 1920)

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Bye, Baby Bunting" By Edna Foley YOU remember the rest of the old nursery rhyme, of course : "Father's gone a-hunting, To get a little rabbit skin To wrap the Baby Bunting in." Nowadays Mr. Bunting wouldn't have to exert himself, for Baby Bunting is a grown-up young person who does her own hunting in the shops, and doesn't bother about rabbit skin — it isn't being worn this season. But perhaps it's distantly related to the ermine which is so popular with the screen stars : there's a strong family resemblance. Madge Kennedy goes on record, up here in the corner, as an ardent supporter of the tailless ermine wrap, and when Norma Talmadge was asked what she most wanted for a wedding anniversary present she put an ermine coat at the head of her list. Mary Miles Minter has a new one, too — only it's so warm in California that she can't wear it. Bebe Daniels has a coat, the like f which was never seen before ebra skin trimmed with ver wolf — she wears it in "Why Change Your Wife?" Helene Chadwick, over in the other corner, wears her new mink coat in a picture, t too, "The Silver Horde." As for Viola Dana, her coat is the kind schoolgirls wear — seal and beaver — and it's far too demure for the movies. Dorothy Phillips has no end of fur coats — her favorite one is ermine, incidentally. When the north winds do blow, however, Dorothy is likely to wear a warm suit and the silver fox scarf that was sent to 'her recently by an admirer from Alaska who once played in one of her pictures.