Film Fun (Jan - Dec 1919)

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38 Let a wounded soldier read this copy of Film Fun after you've read it. The Army Authorities tell us they can't begin to supply the soldier-demand, especially in the hospitals, for good periodicals. T here never are enough of Film Funs to go 'round. Simply place a 1c. stamp on the cover and drop it in the nearest mailbox. Uncle Sam will do the rest. Y0JLJ, TOO. CAN HAVE BEAUTIFUL EYEBROWS and LASHES ■ They add wonderfully to ™ one's beauty, charm and at* tractiveness. A little j applied nightly, will nourish, * stimulate and promote growth \^^k\^ '■-! of eyebrows ana lashes, making I^n5\// them long, thick and lustrous. /Guaranteed absolutely harmless. Thousands have been delighted with ie results obtained by its use; why not you? Two sizes, SOc and $1.00. At your dealers, or direct from us by mail, in plain cover, prepaid. Satisfaction assured or price refunded. A void disappointments with imitations. Get €h* full name correct-' LASH-BR0W-1NE." It's imitated. LOOK FOR The Girl with the Rose. It's on every box. MAYBELL LABORATORIES. 4303-57 Grand Blvd., CHICAGO :artist Earn $25 to $100 per week. Cartoon inff, Illnstrating, JleRipning snocessfully taugrht by mail through new instruction method. Entire ontfit free to new students. Write todar for beautiful new hook. ' HO« TO BROOKE AN 1 ItTIs'l ■•■ and speeinl free offer. WASHINGTON SCHOOL OF ART, Ine. 1*81 II. ST., N. W. WASHINGTON, D. C. NEW SCIENTIFIC WONDER PRICE ^. MM 1 "" C. SILVER ONLY-B | G FUN n f\\fC ^ou apparently see thru Clothes, Wood, E&\J T ^S Stone, any object. See Bones i™ Flesh. A magic trick novelty FREE with each "X-Ray." MARVEL MFG. CO., Dept, 45, NEW HAVEN, CONN. — SEX KNOWLEDGE — A 276-page Illustrated book which gives all the sex information you should have — in a wholesome and clean way. Sent prepaid, in plain wrapper, for $1.00. MODERN BOOK CO., Oept. 1608, 32 Union Square, New York City. GET ON THE CTA/NF VAUDEVILLE O I MV*C I tell you how! Fascinating" profession. Big salaries. Experience unnecessary. Splendid engagements always waiting. Opportunity for travel. Theatrical agents endorse my methods. Thirty years' experience as both manager and performer. Illustrated book, "All About Vaudeville, " FREE. Send 6 cents postage and state age and occupation. FREDERIC LA DELLE.Sta. 220, JACKSON, MICH, $-01d Coins Wanted— $ $4.25 EACH paid for U. S. Flying Eaele Cents dated 1856. $2 to $500 EACH paid for hundteds of Coins dated before 1910. Send TEN cents at once for our New Illustrated Coin Value Book, size 4x7. It may mean your fortune. Get posted. CLARKE COIN CO.. Box 26, LE ROY. N. Y. IVi;lU*iil4W*l-M.-);rm,H We write music and guarantee publisher's acceptance. Submit poems on patriotism, love or any subject. CHESTER MUSIC COMPANY 820 So. Mlrhlfrnn Ave Koom 118 CHICAGO ILLINOIS PAR.\M"tTNT-INCE big purple checks and a purple tricolette jacket to go with it. But in my pictures I try to keep to the light, fluffy things. No, I can't say that I like very simple things. I have a type that requires a few fluffs and frills, and so I wear them. Anyone ought to who has curly hair; plain, severe things look out of place with curls. ' ' On the contrary, Enid Bennett, one of the Ince stars, believes in absolute simplicity. I found her in a set at the studio, accepting, somewhat reluctantly, a dinner invitation from her employer— her film employer, I mean, of course — and the frock she wore was one of those perfectly simple — and simply perfect — things. It was of gingham and percale, the gingham being of checked lavender and white, and the percale was fastened to the gingham at the hips with big pearl buttons. Little bows of wistaria ribbon at the collar and cuffs completed the dress, and any stenographer who would wear such a creation to the office shouldn't be surprised at a dinner invitation. "This is the style of dress I generally wear," said Miss Bennett. "Not always gingham, but something extremely simple. I want beauty of fabric and line; then, no matter how simple it is, the effect will always be good. ' ' Blondes, says Miss Bennett, should always wear delicate colors, with black for evening. Red on a blonde — oh, well, we won't talk about it, because the very thought makes Miss Bennett ill. Not all film stars go in for graceful, stately or fluffy things. There is Fay Tincher, the Tomboy-girl of the Christie Comedies, who wears nothing but tailored things and mannish ones. "I'm happiest in a sport suit," says Fay. She has the most fascinating eyebrows that sort of play hide and seek between her eyes and her hair when she is talking. "When I get into an even " Touch a tiger kitten for luck,''.'' says Enid Bennett, "and get all you can of a good thing while your luck holds.*' ing dress with lots of frills and fluffs on it, I look like Bertha, the Beautiful Boiler Maker. So does any girl whose type is 'boyish,' only most of them don't know it. Of course we all have to wear evening clothes, but the girl who wears mannish things the best should choose evening gowns that are very plain and that aren't baby-stare things." I'm willing to bet that Fay would look like a gold mine in any kind of a gown whatsoever, but if she says not, we'll let it go at that. Anyhow, she wears sport suits with plaid wool skirts and velvet jackets, and her hat usually has a touch of blue on it — and Fay is a brunette, too. I found one screen beauty whose fetish in the way of clothes — I almost said clothes line — is not so much the gown itself as the accessories. She is Edna Mae Cooper, one of Cecil B. De Mille's finds, and she is now making "Peg o' My Heart" with Wanda Hawley. "One beautiful evening gown looks pretty much like another," said Miss Cooper. "To my mind it's the accessories that count ; it may be a gorgeous ostrich feather fan, it may be a single long-stemmed American Beauty rose, or it may be an antique girdle. "When I played the blor-d vampire