Picture Play Magazine (Mar-Aug 1920)

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Advertising Sectio N 85 The Patricians of the Screen Continued from page 75 education. She is a very fine pianist and singer, and might even have grand opera ambitions if she chose. Seena Owen is a graduate of high school and of a girls' college in Denmark, where she was born. Ann May is a graduate of a Cincinnati high school and of a dramatic academy. Of course, Ann May isn't her real name. She belongs to one of the old families of her home city, and she is an heiress in her own right. Pauline Frederick is a graduate of a girls' seminary in Boston. Among the many stars who have developed a talent for some form of art other than just acting is Louise Glaum, who, after graduating from high school, discovered an interest in costume designing which now monopolizes much of her time when she's not at the studio. And another star who loves "art for art's sake" is little Madge Kennedy, who fully expected to earn her living with her pencil when she studied at the Art Students' League, in New York, before she went on the stage and so into the movies. Bebe Daniels, Marguerite Clark, Mary Miles Minter, and Mary Pickford, all studied with private teachers. Most of the young women stars are going on with their education, usually specializing in French and music. Bebe Daniels, Anna Nilsson, Mary Pickfcrd, Mary Miles Minter, Margarita Fisher, Billie Rhodes, Alice Lake, May Allison, Viola Dana, Priscilla Dean, and dozens of others study French during their spare moments. There are many more patricians of the screen; to name them all would take many pages that are not available. But this mere beginning of the list is enough to convince even so conservative a person as the one with whom I talked that all actresses are not "queer people." It should also suggest to the thousands of girls who yearn for a screen career that they cease to lament the time spent on lessons when they would rather be at a movie or standing in front of their mirror pretending to be an actress. For every one of these successful ones will tell you the same thing: that the stars of the future are going to be the ones who have brains and know how to use them. Stars and Their Hobbies Rupert Julian — palmistry. Louise Glaum — designing clothes. Ford Sterling — photography. After 1 0 Days Your teeth may also glisten All statements approved by high dental authorities Millions of teeth now glisten as they have not done before. You see them everywhere. A new method of teeth cleaning has, in late years, come into very wide use. Thousands of dentists are urging it. Multitudes of people have proved it and adopted it. And every person is now offered a free ten-day test. To combat the film The purpose is to combat the film which causes most tooth troubles. Film is that viscous coat you feel. It clings to teeth, enters crevices and stays. In the months between your dental cleanings it may do a ceaseless damage. It is the film-coat that discolors, not the teeth. Film is the basis of tartar. It holds food substance which ferments and forms acid. It holds the acid in contact with the teeth to cause decay. Millions of germs breed in it. They, with tartar, are the chief cause of pyorrhea. Very few escape Very few people have escaped some of these tooth troubles, despite the daily brushing. The ordinary tooth paste does not dissolve film, so the tooth brush has left much of it intact. Dental research has for many years sought a way to fight this film, and the way has now been found. Many clinical tests have amply proved its efficiency. And now leading dentists everywhere are urging its adoption. The method is embodied in a dentifrice called Pepsodent. And millions of people are now enjoying its benefits. Sent to any one who asks The Pepsodent results are quick and apparent. Everyone who sees them will desire them. So, to spread the facts, a 10Day Tube is sent to anyone who asks. Pepsodent is based on pepsin, the digestant of albumin. The film is albuminous matter. The object of Pepsodent is to dissolve it, then to day by day combat it. A new discovery has made pepsin possible. Pepsin must be activated, and the usual agent is an acid harmful to the teeth. But now a harmless activating method enables us to constantly fight the film-coat in this way. Send the coupon for a 10-Day Tube. Note how clean the teeth feel after using. Mark the absence of the viscous film. See how the teeth whiten as the film-coat disappears. Do this now, for few things are more important. The results may be life-long in extent. Cut out the coupon so you won't forget. t% a patoff j ' REG. U.S. fca^M»««««HII^™M^^™™""l ■ I ■ u 392 REG. US The New-Day Dentifrice A scientific film combatant com bined with two other modern requi Day Tube Free B THE PEPSODENT COMPANY, g \ Dept. 647, 1104 S. Wabash Ave., | I Chicago, 111. I Mail 10-Day Tube of Pepsodent to uuicu mill inuuiiiui » ^ sites. Now advised by leading den a J tists everywhere and supplied by 8 all druggists in large tubes. Only one tube to a family