Photoplay (Jul - Dec 1920)

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I^IIOTOPLAV MXGAZINK — AUMCHIISING SECTION Dante Was Wrong { Concluded from page 31 j Vou sec, Louise Huff does. That was what we were heading" at. Louise Huff knows absolutely what love is, because she loves some one and that some one else loves her b.uk, and there's no question in the world about it. That some one else knew he was going to love her the minute he laid eyes on her, and she knew she was going to !ove him. (One of his fraternity brothers brought him along one day to a luncheon party so that there would be an even number.) And they were married a few months ago. and in sjiile of the fact that he is the president of the company that manufactures hydraulic engines (and is only 34 at ihal 1 and has such a practical name as Stillman, and she can't tell a valve from a radiator, they understand each other perfectly. Like Fanny Hurst, she is going to go on leading her own life and doing her own work — but she expects to keep the dew on the rose and the dust on the butterfly's wing with seven breakfasts a week with her husband, instead of two. Then there is this difference, too: in Louise Huff's case there is Mary Louise, in other words Miss Jones, or in still other words, her young daughter. Miss Huff was married before when she was very, very young — 100 young, it is to be feared, to know what Love really was. Louise Huff says she hates to tell how ii was that she went on the stage, because it is just like every novel that was ever written about any Southern girl. '"The family fortunes having dwindled away, she suddenlyfound that she must earn her own living. She had been trained to do nothing — what could she do to earn her own bread?" The case of the dwindled fortune, the lack of training, and the necessity to earn bread were true. So she went on the stage. The play was "Graustark."' Louise received the sum of twenty-five dollars a week without expenses. "It was a good thing we played in the South,'' she says, "because I had kinfolks in every town wt plajed in. They didn't approve of my being on the stage, but they did take me in and board me. Heaven knows I couldn't have made ends meet on that salary if they hadn't." From "Graustark"' our brown-eyed heroine went to a road company of "Ben Hur." She played "Esther" — with a Georgia accent. That lead to New York stock, and .stock to pictures with Lubin in Philadelphia. Miss Huffs last regular work was with Jack Pickford, until she came back a few months ago alter an absence of two years, as a Selznick star. Louise Huff is a simple, unaffected, studious young person with a mind as well as pulchritude. She is always studying something— botany, astronomy, history or something equally deep, and she says that when she finishes pictures for good she wants to go back to school. She was only 15 when she went on the stage, and she never has had all the schooling she hankers for. She also wants to write. Perhaps some day she'll write a handbook on Love. Just at present Miss Huff lives in a big apartment house on upper Fifth Avenue. Very soon she is to have a house in the "upper East seventies," and if you will look in any New York social register you will know what that means. g B & B 1920 A mere touch will end it — So with corns A spot on your hand is ended with a touch of soap. You don't cover it and keep it. A touch of Blue-jay ends a corn, as easily and surely. Then why pare and coddle corns, and let them stay for years? Millions of people nowadays end all corns in this way: They drop on liquid Bluejay or apply a BluCrjay plaster. The ache stops. The toe from that moment is comfort able. And shortly the entire corn loosens and comes out. The method was perfected in this world-famed laboratory. It is gentle, scientific, sure. It is now the recognized, the model way of dealing with a corn. It means to those who know it a lifetime without corns. It you let corns spoil happy hours, you should learn the folly of it. Try Blue-jay tonight. Your druggist sells it. Blue = jay Plaster or Liquid The Scientific Corn Ender BAUER & BLACK Chicago New York Toronto Makers of Sterile Surgical Dressings and Allied Products arc "as a clou J bt-f r . — , " hiiii njr yowr britrhf nes3, y-i.r In ,, .t , , u iiy nnc remove Ihom? JJou't delay. U^^e STILLMAN'SrR^/A*^M^ Made especially to remove frpcklrs. Leavc-9 tho (tkin clpitr, nnumth Qikil without a blemish. I'r^parcdby sprrialist^ with yearn of expcricnc*. Money rcfundrj If not aatlsfnetory. 60c per jar. Wrii« today for particulars and frco booklet — f'WoDldstTlioa Be Fair?" t'ontaltif miny »M*'ity Mutt. ■ nd (le9CTlh«« ft Duml'fF ofcir t I b» toilet. A'ufJ b]/all Urutfintt9 ^0*^71 STILLMAN CRr:.\M CO. Dipl. 3^ Aurora. 111. UlifD you wiity to advertisers please mention PHOTt»rL.VY MAGAZINE.