Photoplay (Jul-Dec 1922)

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Photoplay Magazine Questions and Answers {Continued from page 74) -Advertising Section 87 F. H. C, Billings, Okla. — My place in the sun? Well, I don't know that I want any. Not this weather, anyway. We are having a late summer. Tony Moreno is not married, but Conrad Nagel is. Conrad has light brown hair and blue eyes. Marjorie Daw and Lewis Stone in "River's End." Marjorie is still happily unmarried, in spite of all rumors to the contrary. Margaret, Montreal. — I could tell you the ages of Bebe and Lillian and Gloria; I could tell you the matrimonial status of Valentino; I could tell you the cast of "Over the Hill" — but I cannot tell you the age of Mary Miles Minter. I stopped telling her age months ago. Last report said twenty-one. Will that suffice? Billy, Florence, Ala. — Why on earth ask me about furs for next winter when there is Carolyn Van Wyck's department? However, I'll endeavor to please. I should say that gray fur — what's the name of it? — will continue to be worn; also seal. Then there's a brown fur that's popular. But this much I know to be a fact: You should eschew the muskrat and the dyed coney. No self-respecting moth will be seen on one. Henry B. Walthall in "One Clear Call." He is married to Mary Charleson. Danny. — I don't know about a Myra Brown; but won't Mae Busch do? I am sure that you will like Mae just as well, if not better. She's playing in "The Christian" for Goldwyn. Thomas Meighan and Wally Reid are still with Lasky. Tom in "If You Believe It, It's So." Wally in "The Dictator." Gerry. — You would like to see all the biggest stars in one picture. So would I! Pity the poor director of such a super-feature. One scene would finish him. Neal and Bill Hart are not related. Harry Carey is the realest cowboy in pictures, in my opinion. He used to live in New York, but he's completely westernized now; lives on a big ranch and raises cattle and horses and coyotes and everything. Olive Fuller Golden is his wife. There's a small Carey they call "Adobie." His real name, of course, is Harry, Jr. R. L. S. — You have distinguished initials, anyway. The little comedienne Betty Compson, whom you liked and thought should be in serious work, is the emotional star of "The Miracle Man." You and Betty and Paramount all thought the same way about it, evidently. But where have you been all these years? Annie M., Schenectady. — You thought Louise Huff a very pretty young girl, and here you discover she is married and the mother of three children. It is still possible for Louise to be very young and pretty — and she is. She prefers domesticity to drama, and is the wife of Edgar Stillman, well known engineer. "The Seventh Day" was her most recent picture. Jack Holt is a star now, and I agree with you that he deserves to be. I don't often commit myself to this extent, either. Rachel. — At least I can answer you. For three years I have kept your letter in a safe place in my desk, hoping against hope that the time would come when I could give you a satisfactory reply. And now — it has come. Norma and Eugene are playing together again, in "The Voice from the Minaret." The team of Talmadge-O'Brien will once more make feminine hearts throb — and maybe masculine. The good old days of romance are with us again. The — but I am getting positively maudlin about it. Like Fairy Foods Yet shot from guns The queerest foods in the world are Puffed Rice and Puffed Wheat. They look and taste like food confections — airy, flimsy, flaky morsels, almond-like in flavor. Yet they are Prof. Anderson's creations — the utmost in scientific grain foods. The grains are steam-exploded — shot from guns. Every food cell has been blasted. Every granule in the whole grain has been fitted to digest. No other process makes from whole grains such ideal foods as these. The finest cereals homes ever serve Puffed Grains have made whole grains tempting. Children revel in them. Millions of homes are serving them morning, noon and night. They make whole grains wholly digestible, so that all of the elements feed. All-hour foods in summer Make them more than mere breakfast dainties. Crisp and douse with melted butter for hungry children at their play. Mix in every dish of berries. Use like nutmeats on desserts. plete food which ; |^ does not tax digestion. It lends a fascination to the For luncheons and suppers serve Puffed Wheat in milk. That forms a practically com it doubles the delights of berries diet children need. Puffed Rice Puffed Wheat Steam-exploded grains Puffed to bubbles The Quaker Qals (bmpany Sole Makers When you write to advertisers please mention PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE.