Motion Picture Magazine, July 1914 (1914)

Record Details:

Something wrong or inaccurate about this page? Let us Know!

Thanks for helping us continually improve the quality of the Lantern search engine for all of our users! We have millions of scanned pages, so user reports are incredibly helpful for us to identify places where we can improve and update the metadata.

Please describe the issue below, and click "Submit" to send your comments to our team! If you'd prefer, you can also send us an email to mhdl@commarts.wisc.edu with your comments.




We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.

Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.

ANSWER DEPARTMENT 141 Will H. rises to explain that problem about the hen and the egg—which came first? In the beginning God created all things, among them that humble and useful animal, the hen, and forsooth en- dowed her with egg-laying proclivities. Ergo, the hen came first. Eggsactly! Sit down, Willie, you're rocking the boat. Your verse is almost sublime, Mr. H. Mattoon Fan. — Edgar Jones was Dixon, Louise Huff was his sweetheart, and Brinsley Shaw was Reyo in "In the Gambler's Web" (Lubin). Octavia Hand- worth and William Williams are now with Excelsior, a new company. Mrs. G. M.—Tou refer to Harold Lockwood in that play. The Famous Players are at Los Angeles. Leo Delaney has left the Vitagraph Com- pany. He is not located at this writ- ing. Rosetta Brice is with Lubin. Carolyn W.—No, it is not fair to cheat in solitaire. Will pass your verse for Kerrigan along. Margarette T.—That was O. A. C. Lund In "When God Wills" (Eclair). Will Sheerer was Burke in the same. No, there are no signs of my leaving for the war. I get all the war I want right here. Brown Eyes. —Olive Golden was the sister in "Tess of Stomi County." Harry Myers and Rosemary Theby in "His Wife" (Lubin). Yes, I rise early, and I require neither yeast, dynamite nor an alarm clock. It is a matter of getting to bed early. Doig, Chicago. —George Cooper finds that he cant get along without playing leads for Vitagraph. He has returned to the Brooklyn studio. Only the coupons that have appeared in the last four issues are good. Not those from last year's contest. Thanks for those success wishes. Lottie D. T—Edward Coxen and Winnifred Greenwood in "The Lost Treasure" (American). Harry Ben- ham and Miss Beautiful in "Her Love-Letters" (Thanhouser). Irene Hunt and Harry Spingler in "The Faith of Her Fathers." Helen L. R.—Wheeler Oakman was John in "Until the Sea" (Selig). Thomas Santschi was the sister in "The Cruel Crown" (Selig). Yes, that was Oleo Ridgely in "Captured by Mexicans" (Kalem). "Did Brooklyn ever win a pennant in baseball?" Of course they did—several, and we have another in view for 1914. Reliance are very hard to ob- tain information from. Cant tell you about "A Man and a Woman." Mubl S.—Gadzooks! but a grass widow is never so green as her title would indi- cate. So you think Warren Kerrigan "cute"? He is a six-footer and weighs 180. W. T. H.—Days are growing longer, and also your letters, Allah be praised! How could I possibly live without them? (Your letters, I mean, not the days, altbo they come in handy at times.) Tbey tell me that Sidney Drew is getting, more popular than Bunny in some towns. I am much beholden unto thee. Troubled. —Thanks for the fee, but you must sign your name. No; Norma Phillips is not subject to St Vitus' dance. She is young and full of vivacity. The first edition of this magazine Feb., 1911. EVERYBODY.—Charles R. Holmes, 76 Vicksburg Street, San Francisco, Cal., will send to any one enclosing a stamped, addressed envelope, a postcard photo of Evelyn Selbie and Marguerite Clayton. SOLVING THE ETERNAL QUESTION AT HOME Olga, 17.—You. say I am becoming an absolute necessity for your life? Say, this is so sudden. So your postman thought you were in the mail-order business. Put not your faith in my epi- grams—not even in this one. Arms B. Dexter. —That unfortunate player was evidently brought up on the bottle and has stuck to it ever since. We could not get the Bison and Frontier information you ask. C. B.—Your verse for Marc MaeDermott is very good, and I shall hand it to the proper person. It is safer to send your verses direct to the Popular Player Department. George Stanley, formerly of Vitagraph, is now with Universal. Edith Sic.—Georgia Maurice in "The Warmakers." Kathlyn Williams and Harold Lockwood in "Child of the Sea" (Selig). Yes—to your last.