Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1930)

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122 Photoplay Magazine for February, 1930 You never lose Ivory in your bath — it floats I q 9 4 4/foo % pure Id Money • and stamps \ WANTED )OST YOURSELF! It pays! I paid J. — D. Martin .Virginia, $200 for a single copper cent. Mr. Manning, New York. S2.500 for one silver dollar. Mrs. G. F. Adams $740 for a few old coins. I want all kinds of old coins, medals, bills, and stamps. I pay big cash premiums. WILL PAY $100 FOR DIME 1894 S. Mint; $50 for 1913 Liberty Head Nickel (not buffalo) and hundreds of other amazing prices for coins. Get in touch with me. Send 4c for Large Illustrated Coin Folder. It may mean much profit to you. Write today to NUMISMATIC COMPANY OF TEXAS Dept. 105 . . . FORT WORTH. TEXAS [Largest Rare Coin Establishment in U. S.] UNIONS /VOW D/SSOLVED ! Test FREE Pain stops almost Instantly! THEN PERMANENT RELIEF. Amazing Falryfoot gradually dissolves painful, ugly bunions. Quickly enables you to wear smaller shoes. No messy salves. No cumbersome appliances. This marvelous discovery entirely different! Used successfully on 500,000 feet. 'Write today for trial treatment absolutely free! (Nothing to pay, no C.O.D.) FAIRVFOOT PRODUCTS CO. 1223 S. Wabash Ave. Dept. 25 Chicago, Illinois SUBSCRIBE FOR PHOTOPLAY See Page 118 for rates. Use the handy Subscription Blank. WHy put up with frequent colds? ^_ Strengthen the mucous membranes to resist colds! Get rid of the catarrhal inflammation that causes them! Use the one scientific 2-in-l treatment — Hall's Catarrh Medicine. While the ointment gives local relief, the tonic acts through the blood, building up the tissues to healthy tone. Start NOW and free yourself of colds this Winter! The only 2*in-l treatment, HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE Successful for over 50 yean Get the combined treatment at your Druggist's Dept. 342, Toledo, Ohio. . . 's. If he hasn't it, enclose 85c to F. J. Chenev & Company, . Write for New Radio Log Book, Free to Catarrh Sufferers' Every advertisement in PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE Is Guaranteed. They used to be out motoring, golfing or fussing, but now they're at home studying their music lessons. Jeanette MacDonald, of "The Love Parade," spends her morning at the scales and the breathing exercises body of water being struck with a paddle. "Ah-h-h-h-h, I lofe you!" A volley of Mexican followed this declaration. Violetta stared blankly at him, admiring the sheen of his blue-black hair, his compelling voice, the masterful way his eyes held hers, and then she looked beyond him to her secretary. "f^ ET that interpreter on the phone," she ^•ordered. "Tell him to hop out here right away." And for the next twenty minutes she exchanged soulful glances with Tomaso. "Senor Bustamente," said the interpreter, going into action with a rush, "says he wishes to marry you and that he will spill the blood of any man who interferes. He offers you his hacienda in Sinaloa, his fortune, his thousands of cattle, his heart, and, between ourselves, very likely his undying jealousy. Also, he says he has stolen enough to be honest for the rest of his life." "Explain why I can't talk much Mexican and tell him I think he's a knockout," said Miss Velasquez. "And ask him if he socked Oswald." When the question was put the Scourge dropped an unholy wink, shook his head until his golden earrings tinkled musically, and then launched into more language. "TL.TE says you are not meant for any pallid -* -^-gringo and asks you to fly with him before dusk. He has an airplane waiting at Glendale and wishes to leave before the authorities find out he is here." Violetta thrilled with mingled fear and ecstasy. A home in the Sinaloa hills! She had heard tales of the enchanted mountains, blued by distance, and the fog that drifted in from the ocean; of star-canopied nights that throbbed with the lilt of muted guitars. She drew a deep breath. "Ask him what he does with his afternoons." It developed that Senor Bustamente did nothing but recline in the shade of the cypress, sipping tequila, nibbling sickly-sweet cactus candy and knocking off the odd forty winks whenever he felt inclined. "He has dancers and an orchestra of his own," ended the translator, "and if you desire to hear an opera singer he will kidnap one from Mexico City. Your wish is his command." Violetta pinched herself, but no, there was