Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1920)

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io8 Photoplay Magazine — Advertising Section i«5^ '■w/Zi W.L,0OUGLAS ^, ^PEGGING SHOES^ '^^ AT SEVEN V YEARS OF AGE w *to«!fi" > >r ^s i^^^sstS ^ AT THE ST ART, W.L. DOUGLAS^ WAS BUYER. GUTTER , SALESMAN AND FREQUENTLY HIS' OWN EXPRESSMAN AS WELL. OLDN BROCKTON RESIDENTS TELL OF" OFTEN SEEING HIM COMfNQ FROM BOSTON CARRYING A ROLL OF LEATHER UNDER HISARM J ^^ W.L.DOUGLAS FREQUENTLY 'worked 18 TO 20 HOURS A DAY— RETURNINGTO HISFAC'TORY many A NIGHT TO LAY OUT THE NEXT DAY'S WORK, ^APTER SPENDtNG THE DAY IN BOSTON BUYING LEATHFR AND SELLING SHOES MANUFACTURING WL4]pU^LAS "TJ/ir SHj§^^0iT HOLDS ITS SHAPE " %j.Qo $ 3.00 ^$9.00 ^ $10 00 SHOES BOYS' SHOES $4.50 $5.00 $5.50 W. L. Douglas shoes are sold in 107 of our own stores direct from factory to the wearer. All middlemen's profits are eliminated. W. L. Douglas $9.00 and $10.00 shoes are absolutely the best shoe values for the money in this country. W. L. Douglas name and the retail price stamped on the bottom guarantees the best shoes in style, comfort and service that can be produced for the price. Ctamping the price on every pair of "^ shoes as a protection against high prices and unreasonable profits is only one example of the constant endeavor of W. L. Douglas to protect his customers. W. L. Douglas name on shoes is his pledge that they are the best in materials, workmanship and style possible to produce at the price. Into every pair go the results of sixtys^en years experience in making shoes, dating back to the time when W. L. Douglas was a lad of seven, The quality of W. L. Douglas product is guaranteed by more than 40 years experience in making fine shoes. The smart styles are the leaders in the fashion centers of America. They are made in a wellequipped factory at Brockton, Mass., by the highest paid, skilled shoemakers, under the direction and supervision of experienced men, all working with an honest determination to make the best shoes for the price that money can buy. The retail prices are the same everywhere. They cost no more in San Francisco than they do in New York. pegging shoes. W, Li, Douglas shoes are for sale by over 9000 shoe dealers besides our own stores. If your local dealer cannot supply you, take no other make. Order direct from the factory. Send for booklet telling how to order shoes by mail, postage free. CAUTION. — Insist upon having W. L. /. / ^^ ^ President Douglas shoes. The name and price is plainly l/f/f^mA .^ ,W.L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO. stamped on the sole. If it has been rhanged x/^^^C/^X^^a^^tA 126 Spark Street, or mutUated, BEWARE OF FRAUD. ' »-t--jr-.>-w BEOCKTON, MAsL Just apply a few drops of this snowy white, daintily scented lotion night and morning, and after exposure, as directed. Hinds Cream softens, cleanses and relieves the tiny pores of dangerous germs, alleviates irritation, soreness and roughness, and gives Nature an honest chance to restore the velvety, pure, fresh and colorful complexion of youth. FOR TRIAL: Be sure to enclose amount required, but do not scvd foreign \ ildmpi or foreign money. HmdsHoney and Almond Cream 5c. Either Cold or Disappearing Cream 5c. Talcum 2C. Face Powder sample c; trial size 15c. Trial Cake Soap 8c. Attractive Week-enJ Box, 50c. Hinds Cream Toilet Necessities are seliiD^throughoatfhe world. Mailed postoaid, ii U. S. A. from laboratory ii not easily obtaioable A. S. HINDS 228 West Street Portland, Maine fe Cream Questions and Answers ( Continued ) I. W., New York. — Dorothy Gish works in the Griffith studios in Mamaroneck, and lives in Mamaroneck, too. Dick Barthelmess may be reached care same studio; but he has an apartment in New York and commutes. Dick may be a writer some day as weU as an actor; he has literary leanings — but don't tell him I told you so. Naomi Childers, the Grecian Girl that was, is now a Goldwyn Duchess in Culver City, Cal. Mabel S. G., Peoria. — You wrong me; I do not have a contempt for sixteen-year-olds. That's a glorious age to be — ask any actress of thirty. Norma Talmadge's hair is not bobbed; it is shoulder length. Constance and Natalie have short hair, however. I never said Constance was engaged. I said she might be, for all I know. So you would hate to have been my high-school teacher. I may say that your detestation is not reciprocated; I should love to be yours. The Mystic Rose.— You're the first woman I ever knew who became incensed when accused of being in love. But perhaps you were only camouflaging. I take it back — the vampire is not dead; she will never die, any more than the ingenue. But some of the Cleopatra counterfeits are so bad, I sometimes wish they would. I join you heartUy with your enthusiasm over Pearl White's picture. I am sure if she sent me one I'd be tickled to death. No, no — Dick hasn't married anyone. I think your White surmise — the first^is right. Lift the old knocker again soon. Betsy Jane, Red Oak. — You know, you got yourself in awfully wrong in the beginning. I resent being called Mrs. Questions and Answers, just as the old newspaper man who conducts the "Advice to the Lovelorn" column must resent it when the letters come in saluting him as "Dear Lady." I smoke a pipe, not big black cigars. Cullen Landis is married; he's the father of a little girl. He's with Goldwyn on a long-term contract. That's his real name. That's all. J. D., Richmond. — My dear lady, you misread me entirely. I didn't say Richard Semler Barthelmess is married, for I know he is not. I didn't say I had an aversion to answering questions about him, for I haven't. It took a lot of bravery — it must have — for you to ask me that age-old question about Dick — again. Don't worry — when Barthelmess marries, or gets himself engaged, I'll use all my influence to have the Editor carry the announcement on the front cover. If the Editor won't do that, I'll wire you. Is that a bargain? Shake! Betty Gray, Detroit. — I am not in Chicago any more; I'm sorry. Manhattan is holding me. A young lady of twenty-seven is not too old to embark upon a screen career. B. H., Utica. — I should say about you that you had good taste. You wish to know how to reach Phyllis Haver, Kay Laurell, and Lucille Zintheo. Kay is on the ocean right now sailing to Europe. Her personal address is 125 East S6th Street, New York City, from whence her mail will be forwarded to her. I am sure she will send you her picture. Lucille ZintheoCarlisle is with the Larry Semon comedy company, care Western Vitagraph. She was a Photoplay Beauty-and-Brains contest winner. Phyllis Haver— also Mister Ben Turpin— may both be teached care Mack Sennett studio, Los Angeles, California. Ah, there, B. H.! Every advertisement in PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE is guaranteed.