Photoplay (Jul-Dec 1922)

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102 Photoplay Magazine — Advertising Section For your convenience in subscribing for PHOTOPLAY The cost of twelve numbers of Photoplay bought single copies at a time is $3.00; by subscription it is $2.50. If you wish Photoplay to come regularly and promptly to your home every month, and at the same time effect this saving, use the coupon here: photoplay magazine 350 North Clark Street, CHICAGO, ILL. Enter my subscription for one year beginning with the .issue. f Check ) I enclose Cash for $2.50 I M. O. ) Canadian $3.00 Foreign . $3.50 Name Address tan*iifiii*«a>aaMati**a*a*a*^« FRECKLES Don't Hide Them With a Veil; Remove Them With Othine — Double Strength There's no longer the slightest need t feeling ashamed of your freckles, 5— Othine — double strength— is guarW anteed to remove these homely spots. Simply i^el an ounce of Othine — double strength — from any druggist and apply a little of it night and morning and you should sooi sse that even the worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It is seldom that more than an ounce is needed to completely clear the skin and gain a beautiful clear complexion. Be sure to ask for the double strength Othine, as this is sold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remove freckles. Bad teeth dangerous \ Aching cavities are a menace to health. Treat them regularly with Dent's Toothache Gum. It does four things for bad teeth. DENTS TOOTHACHE GUM 1. Stops toothache instantly 2. Cleanses* protects cavity 3. Retards further decay 4. Destroys all odor Dent's Toothache Gum contains no creosote or harmful ingredients. Does not spill or dry up like liquids. Get it today — any drug store. Made for 35 years by C. S. Dent & Co., Detroit. A Swell Affair BATHASWEET TRADE MARK REG. Bathe with Bathasweet. It adds the final touch of dainty luxuriousness to your bath — cools, refreshes and invigorates. Bathasweet keeps the skin soft and smooth. PERFUMES YOUR BATH — SOFTENS HARD WATER INSTANTLY Three sizes, 25c, 50c, and $1. At drug and department stores. Send 10c for miniature can. Bathasweet imparts the softness of rain water and the fragrance of a thousand flowers. ^____^p^ THE C. S. WELCH CO. Dept. P.P. NEW YORK CITY The Yellow Stain — Fox TOH\ GILBERT again — not so picturesque as he is in a turban — but a good actor withal. As the honest young lawyer who fights a crooked town he manages to keep busv. And at last, with a becoming bandage around, he wins everything — including the girl. Worth seeing, though not the world's best picture; but it won't hurt the children. The yellow stain? Oh, merely money! The Trap — Universal TON CHANEY, as a simple son of the *~t Canadian Northwest — with the heart of a child, and all that! Tricked by the man he trusted, betrayed by the woman he loved, he works out a plan of action and revenge that is both devilish and complete. But the plan boomerangs. Advertised as his "greatest triumph," but falling far short of his work in "The Miracle Man." The Village Sheik — Fox XJOT much or a story — few comedies have •*-^ 'em — but Al St. John with an adequate cast of fun makers and a whole flock of new gags, straight from the laugh factory! A barber shop full of soap suds, the original man whose face stopped the clock, and a score of others — all set in a country hotel. If you don't get a chuckle out of this there's something wrong — with you! The Rough Shod — Fox /"^NE of those breezy westerns, with a singin', ^-^ hard ridin', fast shootin' hero. It moves so speedily that you don't have much time to wonder what it's all about. Charles (Buck) Jones is the star and two attractive ladies come nobly to his support. They are Helen Ferguson and Ruth Rennick. Good cast, good scenery, and fairly good titles. The children will like it. Corinne Griffith's New Clothes (Concluded from page 55) shades as my dresses. I like the effect. Whenever I learn that I am to play a "dressed up" part in a picture, I am delighted. I revel in the selection of clothes for the screen. For on the screen I can afford to indulge every idea, no matter how daring— that's what my fans expect of me. And I like startling creations, provided always of course that they are in good taste. I love luxurious silks and satins and laces. I love feminine things. My tastes incline to pastel shades, and clinging silks, and high heels. I dislike the intensely fussy. Many women mistake the fussy for the feminine. My dressing table is not littered with French dolls and fancy powder boxes and perfume burners and lots of gilt. I don't care for that sort of thing. Simplicity as a rule for dress has been overstressed, to my mind. Over-elaboration is never good, but plain, severe clothes do not at all appeal to me. I have worn tailor-mades, but I don't feel right in them, and I know they are not particularly becoming. So — don't be afraid to let your frocks express yourself. Don't wear clothes made for someone else. And if you have any secret ideas about dresses don't hesitate to express them. These Le Bon Ton designs are just the sort of thing I like to wear. I hope you will find several of them to vour taste! AN Eastern politician advocates "intelligent censorship." Ere long, we presume, we shall be hearing of "artistic ditch-digging." — Ph otodramatist. Every advertisement in PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE is guaranteed.