Screenland (May-Oct 1928)

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We found Frank Dazey arrayed in polo togs, as he was going to sub, and we knew that he was just hoping and hoping that somebody might at the last moment decide not to ride, so that he could have a chance at the ponies. Ruth Chatterton came with James Creelman, the scenario writer, and she was looking' very pretty in a cornflower-blue sports suit and small hat to match. She had driven herself and her escort down in her little roadster. Doris Kenyon looked bloomingly beautiful in a pale yellow sports suit and hat, with a little bouquet of blue flowers on her coat. She told us that her baby had been a year old the day before. "I suppose you gave the child elaborate toys and probably a fifty thousand dollar U. S. bond, didn't you?" our hostess inquired. Florence Vidor, as beautiful as French, vermouth and Gotdon gin. C[ Edouard Raquello. They li\e him in Hollywood. QBillie Dove, the First Choice of First Rational. ™ "No," Doris laughed, "we gave the youngster a brand new shiny tin sink-strainer! Expensive toys are wasted in our nursery!" Milton Sills told us he had known Isadora Duncan, and how much he admired her bravery and grit. "I met her once when her finances were at a terribly low ebb," he said, "but she refused a very lucrative vaudeville engagement because the managers wouldn't let her do what she wanted, but wished her to perform some cheap popular dances." Over at the polo game, Doris Kenyon went quite wild over the beautiful horses, as she always does. Snowy Baker was riding and so was Jack Holt, both of course wonderful players. Will Rogers didn't play, but he (Cont. on page 94) 25