Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1920)

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i iZ I'lioioi'i.w ivi.uiAziJN t; — /vuvt,Kll^»lJNU ofccriojN Hot(ds iss w^^^^^ lor THE fascinating hotel business has expanded to America's FOURTH LARGEST industry ! This tremendous expansion has created an urgent demand for trained executives. Hundreds of high-salaried positions are standing open today! You can easily get one of these splendid jobs. Make $200 to $500 a month— with board and room usually included for yourself and family if any. All you need is a few months' intensive training with the Lewis Hotel Training School. You learn in your own home -in your spare moments. And when you are competent we put you in touch with the best openings in the country's finest hotels. Our Students' Employment Service is flooded with calls for our graduates. Get into this fascinating business now! The cost is low — the terms easy— only a few cents a day! Work is Fascinatingly Interesting No work is more genuinely enjoyable than hotel work. Think of the pleasures that are yours as a mountain or seaside resort employee — bathing, fishing, tennis, golf, long walks in the healthful mountain or sea air — in fact you enjoy all the things that hotel patrons pay big money for. You hot only spend a delightful vacation — but you are well paid for it. And think of the splendid environment that the fashionable city hotel offers you, — a constant contact with people of wealth, prominence and influence. Clean, dignified work, quick advancement, high salary, free board and room — these are only a few of the advantages the hotel business offers .vou. No Previous Experience Necessary So thorough — so practical — so clearly explained is this remarkable course that dozens of our students have been able to get hotel jobs paying them $2,200 a year and over before they had entirely completed the course! The 50 lessons making up the course are founded on the lifelong experience of America's foremost hotel experts. Our course is endorsed by such great hotels as the Biltmore, Waldorf-Astoria, Copley-Plaza, McAlpin, Washington, Adelphia, and other leaders, all of which give preference to our graduatesand students. Get in line NOW for one of these big-paying hotel jobs. A little spare time study in your own home is all that is required. pfoo Rnnh f '^^^ coupon NOW for our vitally interestM IW MJiJtJt*, ing book, "Your Big Future in the Hotel Business." It tells all about the wonderful opportunities now open to you in this fascinating profession. Shows how you can quickly become a well-paid hotel executive. Illustrated Book free! Send for it today! 16 Years' Progress in 6 Months "I really believe I have made 16 years' progress in six months. The splendid position I now have would not be mine, had I not prepared for it throuffh your course of training. I heartily recommend it to other aspiring men and women.'* Oliver Crane. Manager, Columbia Country Club. Chevy Chase, Maryland. Lewis Hotel Training School Room 810, Mather Building, Washington, D. C. ' Lewis Hotel Training School, I Room 810, Mather BuUding, ' W^ CfiUnfin j WASHINGTON, D. C. LL, _ _ _ C^-f Please send me the free book, "Your Big Future in the Hotel Business." * I Name , ' I I Street f City y state I ^^ ^^ ^^™ ^^ ^"™ ^"^ ^^M ^^m ^t^ l^HM ^^m ^^m mmm mmm ^mb ^a^ MmmJ I^^^P arenas a cloinl before the sun," hiding your brightness, yourbeauty. Why not ^ remove them? Don't delay. Use STILLMAN^S^^RlTii^ Made especially to remove freckles. Loaveg the ekia clear, smooth and without a blemish . Prepared by specialists with years of experionce. Money refunded If not Batlsfaftfiry. 50c per jar. Wrica today for particulars and free booklet — f'WonMstThouBeFair?" Containe many beauty hinta, and do3crll>e8 a numlier of elepant prpoarallona iudispcnsit) 1o to (he toilet SoUt by all druggitta STTLLMAN CREAM CO. \ Dept. 32 Aurora, III. Beautifully Curly,Wavy Hair Like **Nature's Own" In three hours you 'itr I iji H!i-„1, — '"TflHTT" "^^^ have just the iMr\^ ^w^TvtrZdth-e^ remam a longtime, when Liquid Silmerineis used before rolling the hair in curlers. Liquid Silmerine is perfectly harmless. Easily applied with brush. Hair is nice and fluffy when combed out. Silmerine is also a splendid dressing. Keeps hair fine and glossy. Directions with botde. At your druggist's. The Shadow Stage (Continued) hardly have done better if his name had been Tucker or Dwan or Powell or Franklin. Kathleen Norris and Bessie Barrbcale together provide a one-hundred per-cent woman appeal. THE BLOOMING ANGEL— Goldwyn A nice little picture. Particularly if you happen to be one of those who consider no Thursday evening complete without the Sat. Eve. Post. If so, you will enjoy seeing onei of your favorite romances brought to life I by Madge Kennedy, who is a delicious farceuse if there ever was one. The story by Wallace Irwin has been pretty faithfully followed and while it isn't nearly so funny in pictures, it is bright, and then there is al-l ways Miss Kennedy. We like her new coiffure. Pat O'Malley, remembered from old Edison days, plays Chester Framm. Margery Wil-I son is Carlotta, the scholarly, behind hugh tortoise-shell-rimmed glasses. The elephant wasn't a bit funny. Why aren't elephants ever funny in pictures? ON WITH THE DANCE— Fitzmaurice-Artcraft Here is a picture we have been waiting for. It is a picture of New York. The story — and there is a story — is a melodrama, curiously lifelike. It's too long to \ tell. Ouida Bergere made the scenario from' Michael Morton's book, providing the background upon which Fitzmaurice built his^ glittering panorama. This is a FitzmauriceStar production, and makes one wonder why no producer has ever thought to recognize Fitzmaurice's talents before. This Irish-French maestro has made it at once a pageant of our greatest city, and an inti-! mate drama of personalities. He has a satirical, yet kindly philosophy; and he! really does understand men and women. There isn't an inch of excess footage in this;! it is crammed with color and vivid sets, — you can fairly see colors in Fitzmaurice's! black-and-whites — logical and yet melodramatic action, and acting. David Powell's fine sensitive delineation of Mr. Peter is as good as anything that has ever been done on the! silversheet. Alma Tell, sister of Olive, is a womanly Lady Joane. Mae Murray does her best work as Sonia, the sensuous little Russian dancer; she is Sonia. Don't be fooled by the advertisements; it isn't Mae's dancing you'll stake to see; it's her acting. And — just watch Fitzmaurice! STARVATION— Fred Warren "Starvation" has many, many reels and! titles calculated to infer that the picture will show how Mr. Herbert Hoover, w'th the co-operation of the United States, has been feeding a starving, wartorn Europe. The picture, decidedly a compilation and not in any sense a production, is made up of scenes dealing with the unloading of food ships, soup kitchens, emaciated hungry people, executions of Bolshevist persons bv German authorities and views of some prominent public buildings in European capitilsThe "punch" at the end shows two prisoners compelled evidently by the Russian Bolshevists to climb the gallows and ban;; themselves. The picture is calculated to make you want to help feed the starving nations. It very likely will. OTHER MEN'S SHOES— Pathe Many directorial roads for some time no doubt will lead from "The Miracle Man." Whether Edgar Lewis in making his first Pathe production was conscious of it or not, one feels that he took his cue for a great many of the incidents of "Other Men's Every advertisempnt in PHOTOPLAY MAOAZINB is guaranteed.