Picture-Play Magazine (Sep 1926 - Feb 1927)

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57 Perfect Marriage? This interesting survey of both the happy and in an earlier issue, is here brought to a close. Schallert Dick Barthelmess may possibly have been added to these by the time this is read. Mary Hay Barthelmess is reported to be getting a divorce in Paris as this goes to press. Lew Cody and Dorothy Dalton were divorced many years ago, and now Lew is married to Mabel Normand, and Dorothy to Arthur Hammerstein. But imposing as these lists of the less fortunate may seem, there's an even longer one of those whose marriages have happily withstood the wear and tear of many years. We have already peeped into the tranquil homes of a great many of these, and tried to discover just what it was that had made their marriages so successful, but there are still many, many more whom we haven't even mentioned. Every one knows how Elinor Fair and William Boyd were brought together — "The Volga Boatman" did it. wo^lbu^y Mary Akin and Edwin Car ewe, who were so romantically married in Mexico City about a year and a half ago, now have Sally Ann to add to their bliss. To begin with, there are Mr. and Mrs. Pat O'Malley, who head one of the sturdiest families of Hollywood. They have three gorgeous red-haired lassies — Sheila, Eileen, and Mary. Mrs. O'Malley was not a professional before her marriage. She is very young and attractive, and is gifted with a lovely Irish wit. Harry Carey and his wife, formerly Olive Fuller Golden, and the two youngsters, a little girl of three and a boy of five, the latter called "Dobe" by his dad, have also helped to build up family life in the colony. One can scarcely speak of the Careys without wanting to mention the whole tribe of Navajos that they have on their extensive ranch in Saugus. It is a wonderful place and the Navajos, under the guidance of Harry and his resourceful wife, have made it one of the most interesting ranches in the neighborhood of Los Angeles. And if the Navajos on the place keep on multiplying as fast as they have been, there is no doubt about it that the last big Indian reservation in the world will be right at the Carey rancho. Henry Walthall and Mary Charleson, formerly an actress of both stage