Photoplay (1923)

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I o Photoplay Magazine — Advertising Section EARLE E. LIEOERMAN as he is today Pills Never Made Muscles Wishing Never Brought Strength No one can paste muscles onto your arras and shoulders. If you wish a strong, healthy body, you must work tor it. And if you don't have one. you are doomed to a life of misery. Modern science has taught us that we must keep our bodies physically fit or our mental powers will soon e-xhaust themselves. That is why the successful business man resorts to golf and other active pastimes. Examine Yourselfj Do you have the strong, robust body which keeps you fit at all times to tackle the daily tasks confronting you — always looking for bigger things to do? Do you jump out of bed in the morning full of pep: with a keen appetite and a longing to enter the day's activities'.' Do you finish your daily tasks still thrilling with pep and vitality? Or do you arise only half awake and go through a languid day? PEP UP! Don't let it get you, fellows! Come on out of that shell and make a real he man of yourself. Build out those skinny arms and that flat chest. I^et me put some real pep in your old backbone and put an armor plate of muscle on you that will make you actually thrill with ambition. I can do it. I guarantee to do it. I will put one full inch on your arm in just 30 days and from then on. just watch 'eiO' grow. This is no idle boast. It's the real works. A genuine guarantee. Come on now. Get on the job and make me prove it. Send for My New Book "MUSCULAR DEVELOPMENT" It Is Free This will show you some of my remarkable achievements. Sixty-four pages with dozens and dozens of full page photographs of myself and a number of my pupils. Read what llieij say about my system. Don't take my word for it. This book will be an impetus, an inspiration to every red-blooded man. All I ask is the price of wrapping and postage — 10 cents. Remember this does not obligate you in any way, so don't delay one minute. This may be the turning point in your life. Tear off the coupon and mail at once — now, while it is on your mind. EARLE E. LIEDERMAN Dept. 104, 305 Broadway, New York City EARLE E. LIEDERMAN Dept. 104, 305 Broadway, New York City Dear Sir: — I enclose herewith 10 cents, for which you are to send me, without any obligation on my part whatever, a copy of your latest book, "Muscular Development." (Please write or print plainly.) Name Street City State F RI EN DLY A DV I C E From Carolyn %)an IVyck M, B., Toronto, Canada. Bobbed hair is not so smart as it was a season or two ago. But I verily believe that the style has come to stay. Many girls and young women have discovered, like yourself, that short hair is more becoming than the longer tresses. And they will be sensible enough to continue wearing the bob. Yes, grey and green are decidedly your colors. So are brown, cocoa, periwinkle, midnight blue, orchid, ashes-of-rose, and henna. And, if you have a high color, black. The evening frock that you describe, of jade green velvet, will be lovely. Trim it with a touch of silver and wear with it silver slippers. "Kitty," California. Indeed, I am sorry for you. Your girlhood was so free and unrestrained that it makes your married life even harder to bear. I am an advocate of tolerance — I believe in hearing both sides of a matter before giving advice upon matrimonial subjects — but I can, and will, answer your questions. First of all, a woman should not be made to listen to unpleasant language from her husband. She has every right to resent it, as you do. And she has a right to friends and amusements of her own. The modern woman is not like the inmate of a harem — her home should be a place that she stays in because she loves it — not because she has to. If your husband has plenty of money he should give you an allowance for clothes and personal expenses. If he fails to do this, I think that you have a right to go to work if you so desire. No woman should be forced to put up with humiliation and embarrassment because of the marriage vows that she had taken. This, however, is my real advice to you: Take your troubles to your mother. Explain to her that you are miserable, and I am sure that she will understand and, if it is within her power, help you. Peggy H., Toronto, Can.\da You are about ten pounds over weight, but }'ou are so young that your figure is in the formative stage and matters will probably adjust themselves. Perhaps you eat too much — especially fats, starches and sugars. -And perhaps you need a regular form of exercise. Try the Wallace method. With golden brown hair, blue ej^es and a medium complexion, you will be prettiest in shades of blue and green. Shell pink, orchid, grey, henna, cocoa and silver will be complimentary to your type. V. E. A., Waco, Tex.^s. You haven't told me why your husband left you. Or how you were able to find out that his leave taking was permanent. Or any other imp>ortant details, .And of course I do not blame you for not going into details — for a loss of love is numbing to any heart. But by not being very explicit you have limited any advice that I might be able to give jou. You are quite right in feeling that >ou want to make over your broken life. And you are young — it seems hard to reaUze that, at twenty, you have been married five years! Quite young enough to make a new start I like your wisdom in thinking of a couple of years at school — in this waj' it will be easy for you to gain a fresh point of \iew and a different set of ideals and friends. If you ■will send me j'our name and address, or a stamped, self-addressed envelope — I will write to you about schools that you might be interested in. "Freckles," .Alberta, Can.\da. Stillman's Freckle Cream ^^■iIl undoubtedly help you in remo\-ing the blemishes that so trouble you. .\re j'ou sure, though, that the freckles are actually unbecoming? Sometimes they lend piquancy to a face. .\nd — I am afraid that I cannot tell >-ou what colors you should wear without knowing something al out your complexion, and the shade of your eyes and hair. A, P,, Stamford, Conn. It is seldom a safe thing — and certainly never a con^•entional one — to meet a young man without an introduction. Even though your friend has seen this young man, day after day, she should be careful. Of course he has always been most respectful, and one cannot blame him for wanting to know her — and she is certainly not to blame in wanting to make his acquaintance! But I feel that she should ask her mother's advice, and if her mother thinks it wise, should in\-ite the young man to call. In this way he would know, definitely, that there was nothing irregular about the meeting. .\nd that, by bringing her mother into the affair, she was doing the most that a girl \v\i\\ a splendid bringing up and a good background could do! [ CONTINUED on PAGE 1 2 ] Let Carolyn Van Wyck be your confidante She will also be your friend /^AROLYN VAN WYCK is a society matron, well knotvn in New York's smartest and most exclusive inner circle. She is stilt young enough fully to appreciate the problems of the girl — she is experienced enough to give sound advice to those in need of it; he they flappers, business women, or wives and mothers. She invites your confidences — she will respect them — on any subject. Clothes, charm and beauty, love, marriage, the dreams and hopes that come to every one, the heartbreaks and the victories — who has not wished to talk them over with some woman who would be tolerant and just, sympathetic and filled with human understanding? Here is the opportunity to do so. —The Editor Every advertisement in PHOTOPLAY MAQAZINE is guaranteed.