Photoplay (Jan - Jun 1924)

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88 Photoplay Magazine — Advertising Seci ion Polish "Cleans as it Polishes" — Imparts ;i soft, dry, lustrous sheen that will give you new pride in your furniture, woodwork and floors. The OCEDAR Polish Mop, used exclusively with OCEDAR Polish, insures you brighter, prettier floors without the usual hard work. Por the O-CEDAR Polish Mop cleans— dusts — polishes — all at one time, without any of the drudgery of stooping, bending or kneeling. Give the O-CEDAR Polish Mop a trial; it is guaranteed to please, or money back. Sizes: $1.73 $1.25 $1.00 O-CEDAll CORPORATION « Chicago Toronto London Paris O€feM0P Gossip — East and West [ CONTINUED FROM PAGE 74 ] A/f RS. WALLACE REED has a projection ■'•"■'■room in her own home where she runs the 1 urrent films, and the other evening she had sent to her "Black Oxen." To her bewilderment, her six year old son, Bill Reid, insisted upon staying up to see the film. Mrs. Ruid. after much persuasion from Bill, agreed to run it early, and the boy sat through the reels with the most intent gaze. When it was over hesaid emphatically and disgustedly: "They oughtn't to he allowed to do that way. There wasn't any black oxen in that anywhere, and here I sat and watched all that silly stuff, and never saw a single animal." Whereupon Bill went angrily to bed. BARBARA CASTLETON, who has been -'-'known in pictures for some time, is said to have deserted the screen for all time. She was married recently to Everly Davis, a wealthy New Yorker, and is living in Mr. Davis' beautiful home at Ridgewood. SPEAKING of close calls, there isn't a cat in the film colony of Hollywood that would have been able to go through the automobile accident Owen Moore experienced and come out with its heart still functioning. Mr. Moore was returning to the Ambassador , Hotel from a country club in Beverly Hills when his car plunged into a six foot watermain excavation. A lighted red lantern to warn autoists of the jeopardy had become dimmed with soot and Moore did not see it until it was too late. The sedan toppled over on him and pinned him down. Other motorists obtained small trees which they used as levers and lifted the car. He was rushed to the Ambassador Hotel where he was treated for bruises. For once in the history of automobiling, cautious driving was the cause of an accident. Moore was driving slowly when he hit the hole. The excavation was not over three feet wide, so if he had been traveling faster the machine would have "shot-gunned" the drop. OUT in Hollywood the police have become so familiar with picture stars of various magnitudes that arresting or summoning one of them means little in the daily grind. Even Jack Hoxie, one of our most heroic screen cowboys, is not exempt. Jack got two tickets in one day. No. not for shooting up anybody, but just for parking himself and his horse in the way of traffic. Jack was on his way to make a personal appearance at a theater where his picture, ''The Red Warning," was showing. So he loaded Scout, his horse, on a truck and started. Just why Scout had to ride in a truck isn't stated. But, anyway, he couldn't find a place near the theater to park himself and the truck, so he stopped outside the line of parked cars. Whereupon, up stepped a policeman and handed him a ticket. Jack, deeply hurt but always law-abiding, moved on. Then he found a hole alongside the curb and slid himself and his outfit into it. And along came another minion of the law and handed him ticket No. 2 for parking directly in front of the entrance to the theater. And then Jack expressed hi> opinion of personal appearances and the police, and took his horse and truck home. If he had only picked Fifth Avenue in New York, the police probably would have held up traffic to let him park, but Hollywood is kind of used to screen stars these days. WHEN you see '"The Humming Bird" take particular notice of the Apache dance .that Gloria Swanson as Toincttc does in the Paris dive. But. if you ever meet Miss Swanson. don't speak of it. because it is a tender subject — physically tender. "Run, you jack rabbit, run." says Harold Lloyd to his cousin, Keith Lloyd, one of the trad: stars of the University of Nebraska, and said to be sure of a place on the Olympic, team Kv.-ry advertisement In PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE Is guaranteed.