Photoplay (Jul - Dec 1920)

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90 Photoplay Magazine — AovERtisiNT, Section Plays and Players (Cofttinufd from page SS ) $15.00 an ounc« Tlie Most Precious Perfume in the World CplEQER'S FLOWER DROPS _l\ are unlike anything you have ever seen before. The very essence of the flowers themselves, made without alcohol. For years the favorite of women of taste in society and on the stage. The regular price is $1 5. W an ounce, but for 20c Vou can obtain a miniacure boctic of this perfume, the most precious in the world. When the sample comes you will be delighted to 6nd that vou can use it withoutextravagance. It 19 so highlv cnncrnrratcd that the delicate odor from a (ingle a. op will last a week. Sample Send 20c (stamps or eilver) with the coupon below and we will eend you a sample vial of Rieger's Flower Drops, the most alluring and most costly perfume ever made. Your choice of odors, Lily of the Valley. Rose, X'lolct, Romania, Lilac or Crabapple. Twenty cents for the world's most precious perfuinci Other Offers Director from Drugfiiti Bottle of Flower Drop, with ?on» gla-is Btnpput. conUfoinir 3U drops, ■ supplr for 30 w»eks: Lilac. Crabapple. tl. GO Lily of the Valley, Koac, Violet .... $2.00 Romanza $2.60 Above odors. 1 oz. SIS H " * 8 Mon Amour Perfume, wimpL offer, 1 oz.|i.60 Souvenir Box Ertra Kprclal box of flva 2r,c bntll.-i of five diffproat perfumes $1.00 lult your tatta, Q'» noi nrsltAte to return •nd monvy will bo ro* tunded chi»«rfully. PER FCJ.ME: Sc TOILp-'^ATE., FToworDrops Send The Coupon Now! Paul Ricgcr &. Co., (Since 1872) 262 Firat Street. Saa Franciaco Enclosed find 20c for which pleove send me • ampl bottle of Rieger's Flower Drops in the odor which 1 have checked. □ Lily of the Valley □ Roie □ Violet □ Romama Q Lilac □ Crabapple Kamt. . , D Souienir Hot — ft. oo enclosed. □ % cnJn.ed. . RiMffcif . H mtt aha »i fmr —ay vtti W nimmti, , Breakfast for two a la Hollywood honeymooners. Here is Tom Gallery manfully assuring his bride. Zasu Pitts, that the toast isn't burned, at all. Tom is Zasu s leading man in films, too. ON'K way to be famous is to be born in Gotland, Sweden, come to New York" at an early age, get a job as a Ziegfeld Follies beauty and then proceed by easy stages to the screen. Diana Allen, first heard from as a Fox actress, and now signed by Paramount to play opposite Monle Blue in "The Kentucktans," did it that way. LOUISE F.\ZEXDA has left Sennett. No, she won't go with de Mille or Tucker or Griffith. She will keep right on doing her eccentric lady hicks for the Special Pictures Corporation, which also lately lured away from Mack's place Ford Sterling and Chester Conklin. L FAV CODY is not going to make any more pictures for Robertson-Cole. WHKN all the reporters in New York were pursuing Charlie Chaplin to get his views on divorce and marriage. Mr. Chaplin bravely announced that he wouldn't discuss his marital affairs and added that he was in New York on pleasure bent. But, boys and girls, what do you suppose he was really doing? He was reading Macaulay's "History of England" in his snug little suite at the Ritz. CtM.l.EEN MOORE gave the habitues of the famous Hotel .Mexandria dining room a treat the other day when she entertained a bunch of select moving picture beauties at a "regular" luncheon party. Everything was done up in the best "400 " style, including decorations in jiink and lavender, cors;iges and dainty favors to match. The honored guest was Sliss Lisbeth Stone, a Ne\>' Orleans society girl, and cousin of Miss Moore, who had been passing the summer in Hollywood. The other guests included Marjorie Daw, Zasu Pills. Doris May, Bessie Love, Carmel Myers. Pauline Starke, Grace Darmond, Dorothy Devore, Lois Wilson, Agnes Ayres and Kathleen Kirkham. It is whispered that this group of motion picture maidens united in a sort of secret society pledge to slay old maids— <ir words to that effect — and that Zasu Pitts, who recently became the bride of Tom Gallery, is the first to renounce the veil and become a wife. However, it seems only fair to surmise that she won't be the last. .Xs old maids, they present a very weak position. MUST be nice for the Crane family Jimmy is playing at the Forty-eighth Street Theater in papa-in-law Bill Brady's play, "Opportunity," and .Mice Brady Crane is right next door entertaining audiences in "Anna .\scends" at the Playhouse, so they can visit between the acts. They are certainly the most devoted couple Broadway ever bo-asted. MAE MURRAY left Par.imount. u,iu to Europe for a vacation, came back, and signed with Paramount acain. She left, they say, because sufficient inducement* Were not offered her to make it worth while remaining. So she formed her own company, the Invincible. Now she's to be a Paraniount-.Artcraft star, and her husband — the always-present Robert Leonard — i< to direct her. Which will it be— ihe M.ae Murray Productio.is or the Rolx-rt Z Leonard Features? .■Xnd what has become of the Invincible? They started out to sell stock to the public. BUCOLIC PRESS— (Los Angeles TimesV "To LetBeautifully furnished apartment in Hollywood. NLarried couple preferred." (Continued on page oi) Ltm dilTfrtlKCRip"! I" I'llOTHI'I.AY MA«A7,INK l> «iiar«nlcpd.