comicbooks.com Join Free

Pulp Fiction, 1922 · page 84 of 126

Photoplay Magazine Cover — page 84: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Photoplay Magazine Cover — page 84: Pulp Fiction, 1922

What you’re looking at

# Page Analysis This is an advertising section (page 84) from *Photoplay Magazine*. The left side features an advertisement for Odorono, a deodorant product, with the slogan "Please, Ruth Miller, a pleasant way to remove hair!" The ad includes product images and testimonial text about underarm hair removal. The right side contains a photograph of a woman identified as Marie Jeritza, described as soprano at the Metropolitan Opera, with accompanying caption text. Below that is a column titled "Plays and Players" (continued from page 74), which discusses various celebrities' social activities and appearances, including mentions of May MacAvoy, Eddie Sutherland, Charlie Ray, and Kathlyn Williams. The page mixes entertainment gossip with product advertising.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.

a. 8 : Ge uth llliller a pleasant, way lo rcmove hair! The appeal a million women made to us to complete for toilette ' _ si a> | = ~ inem the mMuderarm | HROUGH you, who save us Odorono, we have S come to recognize a new f standard of personal cleanh- ness, Won’ryounow complete the underarm toilette by giving us a really pleasant, a dainty, feminine way to remove hair?” Letters daily brought this re- quest. So the chemists in the Odorono laboratories tried and tested until they perfected The Odorono Company’ s Depila- tory—a method as appealing in its use as a French tale or sweet scented cold cream. With its delicate almond fra- prance it is a delight to use. Swiftly and surely cffacing every trace of unsightly hair, it leaves the skin oa White and steooth as the outer arm. Anditts as harmless as soapsnds, giving ncvera twinge of after irritation. No repelicne oder, no irritating chemicals no dangerous blades. The Odorunc Company's Depilatory is the asicst, riost pleasant way to remove hair, Try tt tontcht before you dress At drug stores and toilec everywhiers, 750. to fo aut counters Send for a dainty sample Por 6c itt stamps, we will send you a sample of The Oforono Company's Depelatory—cnough for one thoreugh underarm opplicatnon. Mfnil rhe cou- pon below tow to Ruth Miller, ‘Phe Oxloroio Company, oo¢-D Bair Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohgo. Miss Ruth Miller, The Odorono Company, Ohio Enclose stainps for which ease sond me your sample package of Cincinnati, { fad 6c in The Odorone Company's De pilarory, Name Address Mail today ond we will include a sumple of After Cream fres. PHOTOPLAY Brety advettisememt in PHOFOPLAY MAGAZINE MAGAZINE—ADVERTISING SECTION The successor to Geraldine Farrar: Marie Jeritza, the new soprano at the Metropolitan. house, preferring to sing in concert. Farrar recently refused to renew her contract at the opera Jeritza, a blonde from Vienna. in private life the Baroness Popper. has captivated Manhattan as Tosca Plays and Players (Continued from page 74) T'S getting mighty hard to find anything to write about, the way all these couples that ga to the Cocoanut Grove remain faith ful It’s positively dull, the way you see the same people together. For instance, the other evening, 1 saw, as usual, May MacAvoy and Eddie Suther- land, and Helen Ferguson and Bill Russell, and Collecn Moore and John McCormick, and Lila Lee and Charlie Chaplin. To say nothing of the marricd one: hike Leatrice Joy and Jack Gilbert, Mr. and Mrs. Meighan, and the Dotuslas Macleans, One dinner table was surrounded by a group of screen and literary celebrities, in- cluding Ray Long, eclitor-in-chief of the Hearst magazines, Claire Windsor, Mr, and Mrs. Peter B. Kyne, Micky Neilan and Blanche Sweet, and Allan Dwan, Edna Purviance was there, too, with a handsome gray-haired man Miss Purviance is to be starred by Chap- lin. Sort of a reward for faithful service, apparently, as other companies have tried to always dancing get her away from the comedian before and she has always refused to go However, the always fair Edna looked @ bit heavy on the dance floor the other night. That sort of peaches and cream loveliness has a tendency to embonpoint— and if she isn’t careful Edna will be more popular in Turkey than anywhere else. NE of the principal calle Ethel Barry- more paid during her visit to Los An- geles, where she appeared for a week in “Dectasse,” was upon Jackie Coogan “I couldn’t go bome to my children,” said the great actress, “if I didn’t go to <ee Jackie Coogan HERE'S an awful lot of transcontinental travel going on just now Anita Stewart and ber husband, Ruddy Cameron, left recently for their home in Long Island. Anita has The bobbet her hatr, lutest is pearanteed, victim, as far a5 I can see, of the clippers. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Ince left their three boys at home and went for a jaunt to New York—on a combination business and pleasure trip, In the meantime, George Fitzmaurice and his wife, Ouida Bergere, were due to arrive in Los Angeles, and John Robertson, who di- rected “Sentimental Tommy,” and his better half, Josephine Lovell, arrived. Tom Ger- harty has ulso returned to Hollywood. OMEBODY asked Charlie Ray what he did during his recent trip to New York— his first, by the way. “Well,” said Charlie slowly, “I saw twen- ty-one shows in twenty-two days. The other day I had to appear at a charity benefit.” ERTAINLY, after this one, nobody sheuld say that all motion picture stars are extravagant and improvident, When Douglas Maclean went to file lik income tax return, he had a neat little let, among hie other exemptions, of the war tax he had paid during the past year, All war tax is exempt from income taxa- tion, and Douglas has prudently kept a record of tax on luxuries—hats, his wifes gowns, eckc. It amounted to about a thousand dollars. But Ill bet there are a lot of sound, hard- pends business men that didn’t think of thane, HE entire film colony of Hollywood has felt the deepest sorrow and depression over the recent death of Kathlyn Williams’ 2on. The boy was sixtecn, a student at the Hollywood High School, and be passed on during the “flu” epidemic that invaded the west. Kathlyn Williams is married to Charles Eyton, manager of the Lasky studio The actress was prostrated at her home by the boy's death. He was her only child. ieonieve : pues Ss 3 os ~ 2 +1142 eee de ee