Photoplay (Jul-Dec 1922)

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Photoplay Magazine — Advertising Section 91 The Great Film Mystery: is Rodolph Valentino ■wearing a wig in "Blood and Sand," or did he permit his slick hair to be coiffed into the curly mop you see under this Spanish cap? Cheer up — it's only temporary. Later on in the picture he looks more like Julio film affairs perhaps than any other screen woman except her friend Mary Pickford. It is stupid to retell the stories of her kindness to studio associates, her sympathy and her quiet charities. Her road has not been easy to travel, especially of recent months, since her mother's serious illness. Her new pictures— there will be three of them a year — are to be made at the Griffith studio, presumably under that director's personal supervision; so she will not be entirely removed from the scenes of her artistic triumphs. MARY PICKFORD'S divorce from Owen Moore has finally been upheld. The Supreme Court of Nevada handed down a decision sustaining the decree of divorce which she obtained at Minden, and which Attorney General Fowler so persistently tried to have set aside. Fowler claimed that Mary had obtained her divorce by collusion. The Court's decision closes the entire Pickford-Moore case. Now Mrs. Fairbanks may be let alone for a while. She is, by the way, working hard on her new picture, which is a new version of "Tess of the Storm Country," which she made for Famous Players some years ago. This time it will be called, simply, "Tess." The set for the village in which the action is laid was built out of doors, at Chatsworth Lake, California. Our Mary was a real life heroine on location when a girl member of her company was stung by a scorpion which she carelessly turned over with her foot. Familiar with the treatment necessary in such cases, Mary took charge, sent for her first-aid kit, and administered lo the girl, her quick work saving a life. Incidentally, the Pickford press department did not send out this story. It became known through the grateful girl whom Mary Pickford assisted. A FRIEND was talking to George Walsh -* *■ about a certain lion, which worked with him in a recent Universal serial. "He looked awfully vicious," said the friend; "how did he actually behave?" "He wasn't vicious at all," said Walsh, indifferently, "I liked him. Just once he got funny, and I had to hit him in the jaw. I felt real bad about it, too." Wiun y ft Rice -Nuts Just your morning Puffed Rice doused with melted butter Children eat Puffed Rice like a confection if you crisp and lightly butter. For the grains are like nuts puffed to bubbles. They are used in candy making — as garnish on ice cream. Millions mix them with their berries, to give a nutty blend. Yet these enticing tidbits are just whole-grain foods, with every food cell blasted. Steam-exploded grain foods Puffed Wheat and Puffed Rice are far more than dainties. They are Prof. Anderson's creations. They are steam-exploded — shot from guns. All to blast the millions of food cells, so digestion is made easy and complete. Mere cooking never does that, so this process was invented to make ideal whole-grain foods. If you believe in whole-grain diet, serve Puffed Grains in abundance, morning, noon and night. Puffed Wheat Ideal at night Whole wheat puffed to 8 times normal size. Every granule is fitted to feed. All 16 elements in wheat yield their nutriment in full. Puffed Wheat in milk forms the utmost in a food. Yet children count it a luxury dish. You cannot serve too often. Puffed Rice The morning dainty Bubble grains, as flimsy as snowflakes, as flavory as nuts. They crush at a touch and melt away into fascinating granules. No other process ever created a grain food anywhere near so delightful. Mix them also with your berries. 6] m write tu advertisers please mention PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE.