Motion Picture Classic (Feb 1917 - Jun 1919)

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MOTION PICTURE CLASSIC CASH’S WOVEN NAMES L uu Prevent loss at the laundry. They are neat and durable. Made in many styles in fast colors of Red, Blue, Black, Navy, Yellow, or Green. [ 5 .85 for 3 dozen Your full name for s 1.25 “ 6 “ l 2.00 “ 12 “ Samples of various styles sent fret J. & J. CASH, Limited 4 South Chestnut St. South Ncrwalk, Conn. Become Better Acquainted With Your Favorite Movie Stars IQ YX/E were the first to produce postcard photos I O v ' and photographs of the movie stars ana today for are the largest dinjet-to-you distributors. Our _ _ personal acquaintance with the screen favorites 2^0 enables us to oiler you exclusive and recent poses at low prices. IOO CSND a quarter for eighteen ot your own choice or fifty 1nr cents tor forty or a dollar for a hundred. Billie Burke, ^ . Mary Pickford, Clara Kimball Young, Francis S>|,00 X. Bushman, Theda Bara, and over 600 others that you know. Actual photographs in attractive poses. Size 8x10, of all Feature Stars, at 50 cents. Get three beautiful photos of your favorite in different views and Special at $1.00 for 3. Send a stamp for sample id our list, sent free with all orders. 127C 1st Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. i» t if i earn ana our list, sent tree witn an oi Y-.WVIie FILM PORTRAIT CO, jvwwiwwwvwwl WANTED! Send us your Ideas for Photoplays, Stories, Etc.! They may bring you BIG MONEY! Rowland Thomas, an "unknown writer," received $5,000 for one story! Elaine Sterne, another beginner, received $1,000 for a single play ! You Have Ideas If you go to the movies, if you read magazines— then you know the kind of material editors want. Special education is NOT REQUIRED. Writing is open to ALL CLASSES. "The best reading matter is as frequently obtained from absolutely new writers as it is from famous writers," says a prominent editor. EVERY life has its story. Your Ideas Accepted in Any Form We will accept your ideas in ANY form — either as finished scripts or as mere outlines of plots. Send us your Bare Id. as. Outlines, Plots, Synopses or Finished Stories. We Correct Your Scripts If your work shows merit — but needs correction before it can be sold — we will completely REVISE and TYPEWRITE it. Then promptly submit to the Leading Film or Fiction Editors. A small commission is charged for SELLING. This is YOUR OPPORTUNITY. So get busy! Send your manuscripts AT ONCE! WRITE TODAY for FULL DETAILS! WRITER’S SELLING SERVICE DEPT. 42 AUBURN. N. Y. iWMWMWWWW. DON’T YOU LIKE My Eyelashes and Eyebrows? Y ou can have the same applied once each day, will ahNolutely produce thick and long eyebrows and eyelHHlies. Easy to apply— sure in results. I.ashriccn 1* an Oriental formula. One box is all you will need. Not sold at Drugglxtrf. Mailed on receipt of 25c coin and two cents postage, or Canadian money order. LASHNEEN the Original— Accept no substitute. LASHNEEN COMPANY (Dept. 19), PHILADELPHIA ACHFELDT’S Perfection Toe Spring I Removes the Actual Cause | I of the enlarged joint and bunion. Sent on I approval. Money back if not as represented. Send outline of foot. Use my Improved Instep Support for weak arches. Full particulars and advice free in plain envelope. M. ACHFELDT, Foot Specialist, Est. 1901 | MAUIIRIIlOK HUII.IHM* Dept K.W. 1328 Broadway ( at 34th Street ) New York I sends us shows “Joblots” leading Jackie up the ladder — neither one knows where the other one is going to get off. The craze for adopting children has hit the studios hard. Recently little “M. M. M.’’ made a junketing trip to Los Angeles, and while there discov LASKY STUDIO GIRLS ered Baby Madeline Headley. Result : Madeline went back to Santa Barbara in charge of Mary, and now she is her tiny household goddess and studio protegee. We have always admired The Man Behind the Gun, but now here comes the Lasky studio girls with The Girl Behind the Gun — with a vengeance. At a recent THE ROBERT MAE DIRECTOR HARRON MARSH with flowers and shot them at the susceptible men in the audience. When Mae Marsh lost her “Biograph” Bob Harron and recently her “Fine Arts” Bobby, their friends before the screen grieved at the loss. But here we have the “twice divorced” couple together again — this time in the Goldwyn studio. Mae is in costume and make-up; Bob is an natural; and they are conning the lines of their first “reunited” picture. A Flower of the South ( Continued from page 27) you?’ I am earning a nice salary, living comfortably with my mother in a cute Hollywood bungalow, and taking advantage of the outdoor life ; traveling all over the country for different scenic views, and stopping at the best hotels. What more can a young girl yearn for in our present civilization ? I have my dogs and birds, and it is so much fun feeding them. I have made frequent trips to San Francisco and San Diego in my automobile, and have never had a blow-out. What if I ever do? I guess I could change tires like Anita King when she motored across the United States,” concluded one of the sweetest girls in filmdom, as she walked to the door with the interviewer and bade her a fond farewell. A Half Hour with Nazimova ( Continued from page 37) boiling water to stand until wilted. Remove a portion of the thickest part of the leaf so it will roll well. On each leaf place a tablespoonful of the mixture and roll up securely. Pack closely together in covered baking dish, sprinkle with salt and pepper, pour over a little melted butter and bake about thirty minutes in moderate oven. Potato Salad — Mix three cupfuls cold boiled potatoes, one cupful chopped Spanish onions, and one cup of pickled herring, cut in small pieces. Put in salad bowl, and pour over cooked salad dressing or mayonnaise, as preferred. Rice Pudding — One quart of milk, four tablespoonfuls rice, two tablespoonfuls brown sugar, one cup raisins, one cup chopped almonds ; bake in very slow oven four hours. When done, pour over one cup of cream. Make tea at table if possible, with freshly boiling water. When serving, pass thin slices of lemon, powdered sugar and whole cloves. A Modern Jekyll-Hyde ( Continued from page 25) assistants headed for the downtown apartment of Mr. Holmes. They discovered that the apartment was completely furnished in Japanese style, and that the bed was not the only thing worthy of attention in the room. The draperies of the apartment are a warm, deep red ; the rugs are of heavy velvet, and all lighting is indirect from colored electric globes concealed in soldiers’ inverted helmets. Would you like to know what Mr. Holmes’ plans for the future are? Well, here they are, in his own words : “After this war I am to lead a Fox company to Europe, where we are to make pictures. I have a new idea about the making of pictures that I wish to put in force. Gordon Craig asserts that a picture should be made in entire seclusion, as a man can do his best only when he is isolated from the rest of mankind.” (Sixty -six)