Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1920)

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I30 Photoplay Magazine — Advertising Section /J^o^ CXaua Up to the present time it has been almost impossible to get a face powder to stay on the face longer than it takes to put it on. You powder your nose nicely and the first gust of wind or the first puff of your handkerchief and away goes the powder, leaving your nose shiny and conspicuous, probably just at the very moment when you would give anything to appear at your best. A specialist has at last perfected a pure powder that really stays on ; that stays on until you wash it off. It does not contain white lead or rice powder to make it stay on. This improved formula contains a medicinal powder doctors prescribe to improve the complexion. In fact, this powder helps to prevent and reduce enlarged pores and irritations. . It is also astrin CrtJJ^jL^ -£aa -j:><H/MftA.. gent, discouraging fiabbiness, crow's feet and wrinkles. This unusual powder is called La-may, (French, Poudre L'Ame). Because La-may is pure and because it stays on so well, it is already used by over a million American women. All dealers carry the large sixty cent box and many dealers also carry the generous thirty cent size. When you use this harmless powder and see how beautifully it improves your complexion you will understand why La-may so quickly became the most popular beauty powder sold in New York. We will give you five thousand dollars if you can buy a better face powder anywhere at any price. There is also a wonderful La-may talcum that sells for only twenty-five cents. Herbert Roystone, Dept. K, 16 East 18th St., New York. Popular Ring* WE WILL SEND YOU ANY DIAMOND, n,JEWELRY.SHOWN IN OUR CATALOG FOR FREE EXAMINATION ,^ -\There are 128 illustrated pages fJ^^\,oi Diamond Rings, Diamond La {<//" XVallieres. Diamond Ear Screws. Diamond Scarf Pins, Diamond Studs, Watches, Wrist ■Watches; also our won,,, ,,\der£ully Bhowy assembled I .^J.> ' iiv\. Solitaire Diamond ClosVters. OarCatalogshows gVall the standard world renowned Watchessolid gold and gold ■ filled cases. Splen( \did bareainsin25 \V\i/;/\vear guaranteed MW^^atches on ^Kes£.^^\ credit terms ^^^^ as low 83 .$2.SO a month. We Accept Send for Catalog We are ofTerinp wonderful values in these and all other Diamond X "^^ — /// »„„_»* Rings, at SSO,\ //' ••owest $75. $85.S100, SISO and up. Every article in our . Catalog is priced unusually low.Whatever you select will be sent -v n/ — -' prepaid by us. If satisfied, X la XermS/j pay one -fifth of purchase price and keep it, balance divided into eight equ_. amount a, payable monthly. LOFTIS BROS. & CO. IHE MATIONAL CREDIT JEWELERS Dept.N 502. 108 N. State St., Chicago, III Stores in Leading Cities '^ $100 a week f At* l/Affl Yes. you ran mnke that I VI J\9%M with American Box Ball. Scores of others are doing it with just two alleys. Many are makinR even more. Go into this Vjiisiness for yourself or run it in connection with your present liu-^iness. Little money required. We help you start. American Box Ball Box Ball is nearly all protit. No operatinjj; expense. No pin boys, no helpers. Pins are rtset and balls returned automatically . Kledric lighted score board also operates autoraaticnlly, Tliese wonderful features add to tlie fascination of the pame. i*nd they speed up I he game. >>o time islost. You take in more money. 5c— the popular price Box Bailie 5 cents per player per game. Everybody has the price to play. And everybody wants to play Box Ball. More Bport tlian ordinary bowling. More excitement. Women love the game as much as men. A crowd is always present. And the more that people play the game the more they like it. Your business grows and grows. Start with one or two alleys and add to tnem as your receipts grow. All profit — no expense Remember, rent is your only item. And if you alreadyhaveastore.thatisalready taken care of. The game is a greater money-maker than ever since the saloons have closed. Let us show you what others are doing. Wehavefactsand figures that will startle you. Drs»# ->e u««tt Aa>>n Little cash is needed to open Box fay as you earn BallAlleys. Small payment down starts you. Pav the balance out of your profits. Alleys easy to setup. Write us for full information Do it today. Mail post card or letter. AMERICAN BOX BALL CO., fN^li^S^AlSLrs.^VNS! I REMEMBER — i \ Every advertisement in PHOTOPLAY is guaranteed, | [ not only by the advertiser, but by the publisher. | ■ When you write to advertisers please mention that | i you sav^ the advertisement in PHOTOPLAY. | rlMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiii|ii|iii'iiiii;:eiiIiilMiiiiiiii<|iiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiinliiliiliiBiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiluiiiliiliiliiliil)iliiliiliiiiiliiiiii~ Goin^ to bed, irt s tyle ? Rest >i assured ''TiieSNlGHTwe^i of a Natibrt^^" Kind To Dumb Waiters {Concluded from page jj) eye as Pauline Frederick do not expect that society will remain in ignorance of their private lives no matter how much they wish this, and Miss Frederick's recent divorce action announced the sensational failure of a marriage that promised much. Such a marriage with a brilliant writer one of the most brilliant playwrights of the day, could not fail to make a deep impression upon so receptive a nature as hers. It is this last marriage, perhaps, that has brought that look of deep, wistful sweetness to her face. We chatter for an hour. She adores babies, she likes dancing and cards and she gets as much pleasure from her magnificent wardrobe as you imagine you would if you could have it. In fact, her powers of enjoyment, for a woman who has seen the world so thoroughly, are singularly unspoiled. She sings exquisitely. She appeared, before her motion picture days, in "It Happened in Nordland," "Toddles," "When Knights were Bold." "Samson," "Innocent" and other successes. I am a little tired of the parade of "mother and daughter" sentiment, but there is about the relation of Pauline Frederick and her mother a wholesome respect, a mutual regard, that reminds of Jack Lait's famous line, "Gee, it must be wonderful to have a mother," and the little cabaret girl's breathless response, "Gee, it must be wonderful to be a mother." Pauline Frederick looked absurdly small in the corner of the big divan where she lay relaxed after a hard day at the studio. With one firm, magnetic little Land, she scooped up the small black Pomeranian who, all fours in the air, was trying by every known dog medium to carry to her his undying adoration, and cuddled him beneath her chin. "I don't like little dogs, do you?" she inquired lazily. "Fact is, I don't like women who like little dogs. But this darn thing appeals to my sense of humor. Somebody's kidded him into thinking he's a mastiff. It may result in an ultimate demise, but meantime it tickles me to see him attacking Airedales and German police dogs with impartiality. Beside, he just naturally picked me for his own and I haven't the heart to refuse him. I saw him at a dog show in New York one day and he hopped right down off his little old perch and followed me. When they tried to take him back, he howled like a wolf. My vanity was my undoing, I suppose, and anyway I like a dog that knows what he wants." Perhaps you have been thinking, after seeing Pauline Frederick on the screen for five years — first with Famous Players and now with Goldwyn — that she should be a vampire. On the contrary, she is a vampire who isn't. Romance S. King Russell I find my romance on the silversheet, It really is, by far, the safer way, My heroine is always pure and sweet Yet does not scold me, if I choose to stray. I never find her cross, this dainty miss. Nor see life's sorrow mirrored in her face I thrill to every final screenic kiss When fancy holds me close in love's embrace. I never worry when my love's pursued By cruel villains through a trackless waste The hero comes in time to end the feud My lady fair, though chased, will turn out chaste. And yet for all her lace and lingerie I never worry over bills to pay, I find my romance on the screen, you see, It really is by far the better way. Every advertisement in PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE is tmaranteea.