Motion Picture Story Magazine (Feb-Jul 1912)

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Li^ o w to be happ y, tho married, is a problem as old as the hills. Dramatists have tackled its solution ; mothers-in-law have been known to try to solve it ; authors have torn their hair over it. It has been preached from the pulpit, written into the laws — vouched for as possible by Laura Jean Libby herself. But the little old divorce mill keeps right on separating the entities that promised to be as one. I am not going to solve it. It's something that 's got to have personal Scenario by Lawrence S. McCIoskey treatment — each man and woman his own practitioner. There's a lot to learn from the beasts yet, if we haven't got too far away from them. Take an old lion, for instance ; if he 's got an awful stomach ache, he doesn 't go ramping round telling all the other lions how bad it is. Not at all ; he hobbles out and chews an emetic, lying down quietly, and in a few days he's a king again. Or, if he gets a bad wound, he goes deep into the rocks and licks it to keep the germs out. For a few simple reasons like these most lions are normal, and most men are not. It might be beneficial — for the man — if they could change places, but man wouldn't, and1 dont censure the lion — from what he sees of us. So, you see, like every one else, I have offered a fine solution for 119