Photoplay (Jan - Jun 1926)

Record Details:

Something wrong or inaccurate about this page? Let us Know!

Thanks for helping us continually improve the quality of the Lantern search engine for all of our users! We have millions of scanned pages, so user reports are incredibly helpful for us to identify places where we can improve and update the metadata.

Please describe the issue below, and click "Submit" to send your comments to our team! If you'd prefer, you can also send us an email to mhdl@commarts.wisc.edu with your comments.




We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.

Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.

IOO Photoplay Magazine -Advertising Section NotVj too . . when rooms are overheatedj clothing heavier . . you will want to use Deodo every day! C By Lctitia Hadley LOSE heated rooms — the intimacy of the dance and bridge table — winter problems! It has been so difficult to preserve the immaculacy that social contacts demand! You may have hesitated to use a deodorant — but now I bring good news! A -powder that prevents and destroys body odors! A fine, delicate powder, as exquisitely feminine, as delightful to use as talcum. Just apply Deodo while dressing in the morning— or before going out. Rub it under the arms and dust it over the body. It acts immediately. No waiting or repeated applications. And it continues effective throughout a whole day. Deodo does not seal the pores or prevent essential perspiration. It simply absorbs and neutralizes the odor. It is soothing to the skin, and tends to heal. And it's entirely harmless to clothing. It will do much to preserve the freshness of your winter frocks — cloth and silk and velvet that can't be washed successfully. Try Deodo on sanitary napkins. A most distressing problem has been solved! Deodo is sold at most druggists' and toilet goods counters. Or I will gladly send you a miniature container, holding a generous supply, free. Mail the coupon today! ©ffiodto ■JUm A MULFORD PRODUCT prevents and destroys body odors FREE— MAIL COUPON NOW! H. K. Muliord Company Mulf'ord Building, Philadelphia, Pa. Please send me the free sample of Deodo. Name Street City State Of course you don't believe it Neither do we. But if the camera can lie, it does not in this case. Jack Duffy is thirty years of age. He plays the rheumatic old gent in Christie Comedies. Either the press agent and cameraman are guilty of collusion, or Duffy is a wizard at make-up few who tried and gave up, whether in despair or disgust, who shall say? Whether it is difficult for authors of plays and books to write motion picture stuff, or whether the producers have been too afraid or too blind to attempt the new and good things given them, will always be a matter of dispute. But Mr. Arlen is a businesslike person, young and very adaptable, and it may be that he will succeed — better, we hope, than did Joseph Hergesheimer with Pola's "Flower of the Xight,'' which was sad. ONCE telling time was a luxurious rite for Dick Bennett's beautiful young daughter, Constance, whose S6000 watch was the envy of everyone on the lot where she was working. Xow telling time is a deep pang for this young screen actress, for while she was working on the stage in "Sally, Irene and Mary" someone stole the beautiful new watch. It was of platinum set with diamonds, had a wristband of pearls and a diamond and onyx clasp. Maybe by now she has another one, for she just married one of the gay young bloods of Gotham, rhilip Plant, heir to several millions, more or less. IF there is a falling off of pictures before long, you can lay it to the football season. Being as how all Hollywood spends the entire day Saturday on football, it is bound to cut down on the production schedule a little. Colleen Moore has managed to get Saturday afternoons off by agreeing to work Saturday nights — that much I know. Rod La Rocque. having been told he had to work the day of the Stanford-U. S. C. game, didn't fuss about it. But when they started to look for him he just wasn't there, and 1 certainly saw someone who looked distinctly like him accompanied by a lady very like Pola Negri, in a box that afternoon. Hondas MacLean, with two or three exfootball heroes in his productions, has given up and declared it a holiday for everybody. Edmund Lowe, Pert Lytell, and their respective wives, l.ilyan Tashman and Claire Windsor, haven't missed a game this season. while Ann May and Gardner Sullivan are probably the best rooters out of the rooting section, especially Ann. What a yell leader she would make! r.wiy adTertlseraeot to r'toTOPT.AY maoaztnk i» tumntee^ Marion Davies. done up in a bright sweater, looks like a co-ed. and acts like one for that matter, and knows as much about the fine points of the game as some sporting writers try to make you think they do. Tom Mix and his wife are always on hand, and Tom's effort to stay in the grandstand is pitiful — you know he was a great football player once himself, and Andy Smith, coach of the California Wonder team, is a buddy of his. While as for Harold Lloyd — well, it's a good thing nobody recognizes him without his glasses. He really acts like a first class lunatic. Mildred says she's almost ashamed to go with him, but forgets about it when she gets there because she gets so excited herself. Yes. it's a good director that can get a company all before the camera on Saturday — but I guess they don't care, because they go, too. COLLKEX MOORE tells this one: At the Stanford-University of Southern California game, she sat right in back of the father of young Ted Shipkey. Stanford's phenomenal end. who is being touted everywhere as a coming All-American. Ted had a lot to do with Stanford's hard-won victory, and when the gun had finally ended the suspense, old man Shipkey said: "Well. I'll go down to the garage in Anaheim tonight and collect that ten dollars I win. I bet a fellow down there ten bucks Stanford 'ud win. ami he took me and says. 'Why. Mr. Shipkey, your money's just as good as gone already, it's just gone.' 1 says. "Say. young man. I heard a rooster crow right loud one morning and he got his head chopped off.' " LOIS MORAN. the sixteen-year-old actress whose work in "Stella Dallas'' shone forth so remarkably, is setting a new fashion in girls around Hollywood. Lois isn't what you'd call a pretty girl, but she has distinction, and she is as well-conducted a little miss as ever came out of a boarding school. The other day a group of young chaps from military school were introduced to her. They knew a young college athlete in New York who was also a friend of Lois's. and they spoke at great length of his prowess on the gridiron. Put I.ois never mentioned that she knew him. Afterwards, her mother asked her why. "Well." said I.ois. sedately. "I hadn't made up my mind whether I wanted those boys for