Motion Picture Magazine (Feb-Jul 1920)

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^MOTION piCTURF 2*1 I MAGAZINE L. ■IIIIIHilllllllllWUIIWUinillllHIHi Portraits of Your Favorites TWENTY-FOUR LEADING PLAYERS What is a home without pictures, especially of those one likes or admires? How they brighter, up bare walls and lend a touch of human sympathy, alike to the homes of the rich and poor ! And what could better serve the purpose of decoration for the homes of motion picture enthusiasts than portraits of the great film stars, who have become world famous? The publishers of the three leading motion picture monthlies, the Motion Picture Magazine, Motion Picture Classic and Shadowland, have accordingly prepared at great expense, especially for their subscribers, an unusually fine set of portraits of twenty-four of the leading players. These portraits are S^2"x8" in size, just right for framing, printed in rich brown tones by rotogravure, a process especially adapted to portrait reproductions, and are artistic, attractive and high-grade in every way. You will like these portraits, you will enjoy picking out your favorites. You will delight in framing them to be hung where you and your friends may see them often. LIST OF SUBJECTS Mary Pickford Marguerite Clark Douglas Fairbanks Charlie Chaplin William S. Hart Wallace Reid Pearl White Anita Stewart Theda Bara Francis X. Bushman Earle Williams William Farnum Charles Ray Norma Talmadge Constance Talmadge Mary Miles Minter Clara Kimball Young Alice Joyce Vivian Martin Pauline Frederick Billie Burke Madge Kennedy Elsie Ferguson Tom Moore These portraits are not for sale. They can be secured only by subscribing to the Motion Picture Magazine, Motion Picture Classic or Shadowland for one year, and then they will be sent free. You will want the Magazine, Classic, Shadowland, or all three during the coming year. Subscribe now and get a set of these portraits. It will cost you less than to buy them by the month at your dealer's. Send in your order to-day and we will mail the portraits at once. COUPON Date SUBSCRIPTION PRICES: U. S. Can. For. Magazine $2.50 $3.00 $3.50 Classic . 2.50 3.00 3.50 Shadowland 3.50 4.00 4.50 All Three 8.00 9.50 11.00 BREWSTER PUBLICATIONS, INC. 175 Duffield Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Gentlemen : Kindly enter my subscription to the MOTION PICTURE MAGAZINE") MOTION PICTURE CLASSIC Jfor one year. Also SHADOWLAND J please send me at once a set of the twenty-four players' portraits. Name . . . Enclosed find $ in payment. Address [lEIilllHIilllBIIIV! WHAT EVERY GIRL SHOULD KNOW SENT PREPAID FOR ONLY 50c This book is written by Margaret Sanger, the great birth control advocate, and contains information never before published. Anyone reading this book cannot help but be benefited. It is highly endorsed by eminent physicians. Send us your order at once. Don't delay. Truth Pub. Co., Dept. E, 1402 B'dway, N.Y.C. Submit your Song-Poems on any subject for our advice-^T <J3p WE REVISE P0EMS.COMP05E MUSIC Of ANY OKCRIP-^-ljhH A^\X T10ILSECURC COPYRIGHT AND EMPLOY ORIGINAL^^fHs ft$-C0NTAIN5 METHODS FOR FACILITATING FREErXlBUCA-^rfC'S 3>^WtUABlE INSTRUCTION OR OUTRIGHT SALE OF S^ .^$£§P>TI0NST0 BEBNNERSANDTELLV under this i\izzoini ^f^&^^^i-Kmmw,\\mismwm CONCERNSGUARANTEE^f-'S 3 ij>**()FM5 ESSENTIALANDFAtlNATING PROfcSS Of SATISFAC -ff7 1 |L>nON.THE GREAT WORK ACCOMPLISHED BY THE POP TI0N' ^rt^Trk JiJl*'^'L*R50NGINW,NNINEIHtWWI5tlNI:rAN WDEXTOMMUCH df2\\ I (A^UIOERSCOPEANO GREATER OFPORTUNITIESAFrOROED BY PEACE. S£LL^*KNlCKERBOCKER STUDIOS2023AimBu>O,N.Y.Crnt b Q t, ... u t> u TRADE MARK REG. Bathe with Bathasweet. It adds the final touch of dainty luxuriousness to your bath— cools, refreshes and invigorates. Bathasweet keeps the skin soft and smooth PERFUMES YOUR. BATH-SOFTENS HARD WATER. INSTANTLY Bathasweet imparts the softness of rain water and the fragrance of a thousand flowers. Tiiir? lizei; 22 ' • At al drug and department stores or by mail. Send 2c stamp for sample. THE C. S. WELCH CO. DEPT. M-P, NEW YORK CITY 94 chasing the _ linens for their new home which is being built — "smack up against the Hollywood foot-hills in Beachwood Canon, with the most gorgeous view in the world spread out before us," as Mr. Hatton described it. "This is the first real home we have ever had," he went on, "and we are like a couple of children in our enthusiasm, for we talk about it all the time. My brother-in-law, Paul Chaflin, an architect in New York City, sent us the complete plans for a Christmas gift." "It is of adobe with walls two feet thick and hand-colored tiles for roof and floors," Mrs. Hatton took up the story. "There is a large living-room across the entire front of the house and three huge fireplaces." "And _ a fussy little kitchen with a roomy jam closet — she is an expert at preserving," laughed Raymond, with a proud nod across the table. "Raymond will have a chance to try his ideas at gardening. When he returned from location up north the other day he brought fifty rose-bushes and several rare and marvelous fruit-trees," teased his wife, merrily. "Best of all, it is to be a — home !" said Mr. Hatton. "Yes, a real home!" echoed Mrs. Hatton. It was during a season in summer stock up in Oregon a few years ago that the Hattons first met, and three months later they were married. Mrs. Hatton has acted in pictures from time to time and now, under a new contract, she will appear in the Goldwyn films under the name of Frances Hatton. Tho she loves her work, her chief interest is centered on the career of her talented husband and she has unbounded faith in his ability to climb to the greatest heights. She said, "I want him to have plays that bring out his broad sympathy, his great emotional depths, and his sincerity, and I believe he will have this opportunity in his new pictures." "All film stories should tend toward altruism," remarked Mr. Hatton, as we lingered over our dessert. "They should quicken our imaginations and lift us from the grey monotony, pointing to the poetry and romance of living. Then, too, there must alwa3's be something uplifting and helpful and, tho we do not make pictures to preach sermons, yet the greatest lessons of life may be taught thru the medium of the screen." Who will question that it is this very idealism that is needed to perfect the great art of the motion pictures? Mind the Little Things (Continued from page 73) We were sitting in Jeanie MacPherson's den and it was very pleasant. Most things about Jeanie MacPherson would be pleasant— she would see to it that they were. Yellow china blinks stvnnily upon still more yellow roses in a tall vase ; the brass tea-kettle catches gleams of old gold from the skylight, with its shirred yellow curtains ; the fat chair, made of old hogsheads and covered with yellow and black plaid cushions, invites one to a prolonged visit; and her desk is half the width of the room, made of rough timber and covered with interesting-looking memoranda. Above all else there are books and books. Mary Roberts Rinehart's "Dangerous Days" noses "The Holy Land," while (Continued on page 97) AG£.