Motion Picture Story Magazine (Feb 1914 - Sep 1916 (assorted issues))

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ANSWER DEPARTMENT 141 Pansy. — Fred Truesdell was opposite Mildred Bright in "One of the Rabble" (Eclair). Ford Sterling in the Keystones. Nearly all my correspondents are kiDd and generous with me, and I appreciate it. Only a few are disrespectful. Julia E. S. — Harry Beaumont was the major in "The Witness to the Will" (Edison)Harry Millarde in that Kalem, Wallace Keid in the Ilex, and Marshall Neilan in the Biograph. Margaret M. — Crane Wilbur in "The Mad Sculptor" < rathe). No cast for the Selig. I would like to answer your question, "Is divorce justifiable?" but I refuse to say yes or no unless I can give my reasons, which space and policy forbid. M. B., Charlotte. — Matt Moore opposite Florence Lawrence. Yes. Ernest P. M. — Thanks very much for the postal cards. William Duncan was Jim, and Tom Mix the Chief in "By Unseen Hand" (Selig). Yes; Herbert Rawlinson in "The Acid Test" (Selig). Robert Drouet in "The Inspector's Story" (Lubin). John Smiley in "The Engineer's Revenge" (Lubin). Gladys Brock well in "The Counterfeiter's Fate" (Lubin). Louise Huff in "The Hazard of Youth" (Lubin). Madeline. — Thanks for the present that accompanied your vituperous letter, but remember what my old friend Josh Billings said, "Munny will buy a pretty good dog, but it wont buy the wag ov hiz tale." Rosy Gtrl. — Velma Whitman and Ray Gallagher in "The Death-Trap" (Lubin). Julia Brunns and A. Moreno in "No Place for Father" (Biograph). Utahna La Reno was Dorothy in "Dorothy's Adoption" (Selig). Mickey the II. — Mary Pickford was Lena in "Lena and the Geese" (Biograph). Mae Marsh was the real princess in the same. You will find this department broader than it is deep, I fear, and longer than it is longed for. Hester H., Denver. — James Home was Edward in "Perils of the Sea" (Kalem). Guy Coombs is in Jacksonville. Write to Leah Morgan, 831 Main St., Stroudsburg, Pa. Merrie, Springfield. — Harry Myers in "The New Gown" (Lubin). Gertrude Robinson in that Biograph. In one sense all plays are dramas. In the better sense, plays are divided into two classes: comedies and dramas. Tragedy is a form of drama, and farce is a form of comedy. Tracey W. — Louise Huff and Kempton Greene in "The Hazard of Youth" (Lubin). Harry Myers and Rosemary Theby in "A Question of Right" (Lubin). Paul Hurst in "Trapped" (Kalem). Yes; Paul Kelly is back with Vitagraph. Dixie W. — The Great Artist contest will probably run several months yet. Plato was tall, handsome and had very broad shoulders. He was temperate in sleeping, eating and drinking, but approved of occasional intoxication, so you lose. Mrs. M. R. — Juanita Dalmorez was Sybil in "The Love-Lute of Romany" (Essanay). Al Jacoby was the sheriff in "The Circle's End." Mary Ryan has left Lubin. Ernest S. — I do not live on grape-nuts nor work twenty-three hours a day. Lillian Gish and Walter Miller in that Biograph. Your dad evidently believes in whipping his child to make him smart. Leonard E. C. — Lamar Johnstone in "The Wedding Write-up" (Majestic). Laura Sawyer has been with Famous Players for some time. David Hartford was Captain Kidd, and Cleo Madison was Peggy in "Captain Kidd" (Bison). E. K. Lincoln's picture appeared in September, 1013. Ida R. — Your prediction is clever, my lady. A woman's guess is generally more reliable than a man's certainty. Caiiyle Blackwell and Louise Glaum in "The Invisible Foe" (Kalem). Roberta G. — Warren Kerrigan had the lead in "The Girl of the Manor" (American). Harrish Ingraham and Octavia Handworth in "The Smugglers" (Pathe). Mabel S. — Harry Gripp was Mr. Lilly bool in "The Girl in the Middv" (Edison). Marshall Neilan in that Biograph. Like most girls, you prefer an Achilles to a Narcissus, and a Bonaparte to a Beau Brummel. That is why you admire G. M. Anderson in preference to those others you mention.