Photoplay (Jul - Dec 1920)

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114 Pno'i(»ri.\N M\(,\/.i\i. Ai)\ I It I iM\(. Sia iios Y UNSIGHTLY, on tne j'ace,C^rnvB,^mi08.tj Underarms permanent^ mthtReJloote m-em ^ A BEAUTIFUL SKIN IS ADORED Destroys permanently any growth because it lifts out the root easily and painlessly. No electncuy nor caustics. Formulated by a physician. Pleasing aroma. Satisfaction guaranteed. 3 1. CO at your dealer or direct by mail in pliin V nrpor Dept. P. What $1.25 Will Bring You More than a thousand pictures of photoplayers and illustrations of their workand pastime. Scores of interesting articles about the people you see on the screen. Splendidly written short stories, some of which you will see acted at your moving picture theater. The truth and nothing but the truth, about motion pictures, the stars, and the industry. You have read this issue of Photoplay so there is no necessity for telling you that it is one of the most superbly illustrated, the best written and mostatlractively printed magazine published today — and alone in its field of motion pictures. Send a money order or check for $1.25 addressed to Photoplay Magazine Dept. 7-G. 350 N. Clark St.. CHICAGO and receive the September isaue anei five issues thereafter. PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE Dcparlmcnt 7.G 350 North Clark Street, CHICAGO Criillrmcn : I t-nclose herewith SI.2.T (Canada $l..')ii) for which you will kindly enlcr ni\ subscription for Photoplav Magazine for six months, effective with the Sept., 1920, issue. Send to. Street Address. Citu j State ARTIST Stuart Hay s conception of the cue of the future: the new waiting line, the sub.^titute for "Standing Room Only." Ladies may do their window-shopping and gentlemen enjoy tea, chess, and conversation while comfortably seated in the cue-chairs, which you will note from one long train which winds around the square, not returning to the theater until the Thcda Bara of the box-office gives the signal that the house is empty for the next performance. Rialto and Rivoli. New York, please note. Questions and Answers (Coiitiiuied from page no) Elizabeth, St. Louis. — William Shea is (lead. Mary Fuller and Pauline Bush are rt'lircd. Irene Castle is seven inches over five feet tall and weighs 115 pounds. Her eyes are gray and her hair is brown. Norma Talmadge is five feet two, weighs 110 lbs. Sister Constance is three inches taller than Xorma and ten pounds plumper, though vou d never guess it. would vou? present writing. Farrar is an American, born in Melrose. Mass. Her father. Sidney Farrar. was once a ball -player. She is a most dazzling and remarkable personality. Gerrj'. Betty Migxon, St. Loims. — .\ great French poet once rcmarkecl that one can live for three days without bread, but not without poetry. I am ashamed to confess that I can only appreciate poetry when fil cd with ham sandwich or lemon meringue pie .\m I not a piliable obect? .\h — but well-fed, well-fed. lleraldine Farrar is now willi the .Associated Exhihilors. another one of those new companies. I can"t keep track of tliem, so I don't expect you to. Cu-ral(lim's I'lr't one. to be released through Palhe. is "The Riddle Woman" from the stace play which was enacted by Bertha Kalich. Lou Tellecen will not act with Farrar in this, as he has opened in a new play of his ; own, called "Underneath the Bough" at the Peggy, Topeka. — .\m I a myth or a real person? If I were a myth I wouldn't he able to answer you at all. As I am a person, I shall leave it to you to decide if I am real. Maruuerite Clark played "Come Out of the Kitchen " for Paramount She also made the "Bab" pictures from Mary Roberts Rinehart's sub-deb stories. Jennie. Delawanna. — I am sure Robert Gordon will be distressed when I tell him that his looks are driving you crazy. Of course I understand you mean to be complimentary, still I wouldn't want you to sav that about me. You won't, anyway. Gordon may be reached right now care \'itagraph studios. Brooklyn. X. Y., where ho again is playing opposite .\licc Joyce Mary Miles Minter of the Realart company is working at the Lasky Hollywood -tudios. Richard Baithelmess. Griffith studios, Mamaroneck. New York. Erory ulrrrtliriiidit in I'lHiTtU'LAV .MA(1A7.INK U jiurantwj.