Motion Picture Magazine (Aug 1915-Jan 1916)

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168 MOTION PICTURE MAGAZINE Ideas Wanted for Photoplays You can supply them. $25 to $100 each. Beginners encouraged and helped. We teach you all. Details Free if you write NOW. ASSOCIATED MOTION PICTURE SCHOOLS, 601 Sheridan Road, Chicago, 111. GYPSY FORTUNE TELLER And Dream Book Know thy future. Will you be successful in Love, Marriage, Health, Wealth, and Business. Tells fortunes by all methods, cards, palmistry, teacup, zodiaology, etc. Gives lucky and unlucky days. Interprets dreams A large book by mail for TEN CENTS. Earn money telling fortunes. ROYAL PUB. CO., Dept. 50. So. Nor walk, Conn. EXPERT MANUSCRIPT TYPEWRITING Scenarios, short stories, plays, essays, and technical manuscript correctly typed and returned to authors on short notice. Over 10,000 MSS. handled. Rate, 10 cents per typed page, with carbon. PHOTOPLAY CLEARING HOUSE 175 Duf field Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. ^MOVING PICTURE MACHINE and. 7 FILMS Complete with 215 views, 250 other presents free for Belling our Gold Eye Needles. Easy to sell, 2 packages for 10c with thimble free. Order. WE TRUST YOU When sold return $1.50 and re« ceive premium entitled to, select* ed from our premium book. eystone Gift Co., Box3 1 8 Greenville.Pa. Ig^Devbte ail or spare'time.Startatonce ^a^NDENCEmnpor DETAILS FREE Atlas Pub. Co., 795 Atlas Bldg., Cincinnati, 0. BIG PACKAGE OF FUN \QC Imitation Gold Tooth,Voice Thrower, Roll of Stage Money, Chess and Checker Game, Fox and Geese, Nine Men Mor/is, Authors, Spanish Prison, Dominoes, 14 Flirtation Signals, 12 Love Letters, 73 Toasts, 16 Feats in Parlor Magic. 7 Fortune Telling Secrets, 10 Funny Headings, 15 Tricks with Cards, 40 Experiments in Magic, 52 Money Making Secrets, 250 Jokes and Riddles, 12 Flirtation Cards, 14 Pictures of Married Life, 51 Verses of Comic Poetry and 11 Parlor Pastimes; all for 10c and a 2c stamp to cover mailing. ROGERS & ROTH, 32 Union Sq., Dept. 44, New York City K. P. — I agree with you, and get your point. So you thought "The Coward" had more correct military performances than "The Birth of a Nation." If you knew how I enjoyed your letter you would have been as happy as I was. Gussie J. — So you were up in the mountains. No, this Magazine has no editorial department, but it has an editorial policy, and it is stamped on every page. President Hadley says that a newspaper owes its power to the fact that its readers think as its editor wishes them to think. It is somewhat true of a magazine. June Beverly. — Beverly Bayne is stopping at the Biltmore Hotel, New York. Dorothy Phillips with Rex. Gypsy Abbott also in "The Exploits of Elaine." Dorothy A. — You want a chat with Marshall Neilan. I will tell the Editor. I am sorry, but I dont know how or where to find work for you. It is a strange dispensation that about one-third of those who are born to work cannot find it, and > that another third live on the toil of the others. Hence, one-third supports two-thirds. Seaside. — Thanks for yours. You ask us to give the cast of characters at the head of each story. "We cannot do this, but please observe that in Greenroom Jottings every month there is a paragraph which gives you the names of the principal characters and the pages on which their pictures appear. O. U. Kidd. — Did you send the addressed, stamped envelope? Did not get it. So you are mad and absolutely refuse to write to me any more. Very well, you can go where the woodbine twineth and stay there until you cool off a bit. You must be standing on your head, because you see everything upside down. P. P. K. — So you are for Mary Pickford. That's good. Harold Lockwood still with American. Olga, 17. — Crane Wilbur is with Mutual, and Mrs. Crane Wilbur (Cecile Stanton) is playing opposite him. Cedar Manor. — Why do you call me "an old faker"? I am not. Did you mean Quaker? Arthur Johnson is not playing. Please remember that I do not consider myself a teacher, but a companion in the struggle for information. Melva. — It is true that Mabel Normand has been very ill. Of course I like you. How could I help it? You are irresistible. I do not know why they took Anna Little away from Herbert Rawlinson, but I suppose it was because he was tall and Anna was so — dear me! I nearly perpetrated a pun. 'Pun my word! Jonsie. — You say that Earle Williams looks intellectual because he has the brow of a philosopher, but that his eyes are too deep-set. When he sees this no doubt he will promptly go and have them reset. Address all players in care of studio. When answering advertisements kindly mention MOTION PICTURE MAGAZINE.