Motion Picture Magazine (Feb-Jul 1920)

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N°U ion prcTA'ap MAOA2lNt 1. A Human I Will Make / Dynamo lOU — Act Like One — Look Like One —Be One Today the world is ing for EARLE LIEDERMAN The Acme of Physical Perfection callthe man of pep, ginger and action. The man who is on his toes every minute — ready to jump in and do things. The big man of powerful physique and untiring energy. The man who i s bubbling over with life, having the keen alert brain, the bright-flashing eyes and the (spring and step of youth. This is a day of critical events coming in rapid succession. Are You Fit? How do you measure with these re1 quirements? Can you feel the fire of youth running through your body? Do 1 you have the deep full chest and the huge square shoulders, the large muscular arms that mean you are 100% efficient? Can you go through a good hard physical tussle and come out feeling fresher and better than when you started? If not, you are unfit. Get busy — steam up at once before you are thrown aside as a failure. I Will Give You HEALTH-STRENGTH— DEVELOPMENT I will make a new man out of you in a remarkably short time. I will fill out your chest so that every breath means increased life, purifying your blood and filling you with vim and vitality. I will develop your whole body so that you will be admired and sought after in both the business and social world. I will give you the strength and power to do things that others would not even attempt to do. And I will do all this in so short a time that you will say, "I did not think it possible." I have already done this for thousands of others and my records are unchallenged. What I have done for them I will do for you. Come then, for time flies and every day counts. Let this very day mean the beginning of new life to you. Send for My New Book "MUSCULAR DEVELOPMENT" It tells the secret. Handsomely illustrated with 25 full page photographs of myself and some of the world's best athletes whom I have trained. Also contains full particulars of my splendid offer to you. The valuable book and special offer will be sent you on receipt of only 10 cents, to cover cost of wrapping and mailing. Sit right down now and fill in the coupon. The sooner you get started on ^ the road to health and strength the easier it will be to reach perfect manhood. Don't drag along one day longer — mail the coupon today. Earle E. Liederman Dept. 307, 203 Broadway, New York EARLE E. LIEDERMAN, Dept. 307, 203 Broadway, N. Y. City. Dear Sir: — I enclose herewith 10 cents for which you are to send me, without any obligation on my part whatever, a copy of your latest hook. "Muscular Development." (Please write or print plainly.) Q Name. . . Address. City Answer Man (Continued from page 88) I. M. S. — He who serves well need not be afraid to ask his wages. Camille Ankewich was Mrs. Rudder in "Stella Maris." You are on the right track, but never forget that a necessary part of good manners is punctual observance of time ; whether on matters of civility, business or pleasure. Anonymous. — You make me laugh, but we are rarely so unfortunate or so happy as we think we are. You are semper fidelis. Sarah Kernan was Marie in "Hearts of Men." Why dont you enter the Fame and Fortune Contest? A Mass. Fan. — If I didn't put that period in, it would sound funny, wouldn't it? Credit Wallace Reid with two childien. Lloyd Hughes in "The Haunted Bedroom." Put this in your little book, and read it over once in a while. The lessons Life teaches. The difficulties of life teach us wisdom ; its vanities, humility ; its calumnies, pity ; its hopes, resignation ; its sufferings, charity; its afflictions, fortitude ; its necessities, prudence ; its brevity, the value of time ; and its dangers and uncertainties, a constant dependence upon a higher and all-protecting power. Bill of my Heart. — What kind of a bill ? Never had the pleasure of meeting Bill Hart. Mary Charleson (Mrs. Henry Walthall) opposite Harry Carey in "Crossed Claims." Seena Owen opposite Bert Lytell in "The Temple of Dawn." Anna Nilsson and Eugene O'Brien in Selznick pictures on the coast. Genevieve D. — Children, yrou must not neglect your homework to write to me. Your lessons come first, and then the Answer Man. Thanks, but if you sent me that Eskimo Spitz, I don't know where I would put him. Thanks, just the same. Ella Phant. — Yes, Chaplin seems to be as popular as ever in spite of what Rochefoucauld says, "Those who have but one sort of wit are sure not to please long." Why dont you go to a Canadian university since you live in Canada? Yes, electrical engineering would be great for you. Gurp. — And let us hope that goodness will prevail when beauty fails. You want all I know of Olive Tell? That isn't much. She's very beautiful. No, you're wrong on my identification. Theodore Roosevelt's ancestry and religion, Dutch ancestry, Reformed Dutch Church. Jennie L. — Zippy, ippy, how do I know who is keeping house for William Russell? We'll have to move into the Carnegie Library if I must keep a card index of housekeepers, kinds of perfumes players use, the size of their shoes, who's married to whom, etc., etc. Have a heart, Jennie. U. F. M. — Yes, it is true they are selling alcoholic beverages in Cuba. Line for tickets to Cuba forms on the right. No, Grace George is not Alice Brady's mother, but stepmother. Yes, Marcia Manon. So you dont like the idea of my having a big head. Cant help it, child. Dont ever expect to get another. And it's getting bigger every year. M. J. T. — That's pretty good advice you give me : "If you would relish your food, labor for it; (and right here, let me say I do!) if you would enjoy your raiment, pay for it before you wear it ; if you would sleep soundly, take a clear conscience to bed with you." I take her with me every night. Edward Coxen is directing now. Savoir faire, I should say you have. (Continued on page 117) Vacation-time ! The Play-time of the World! The time for letting down the bars of daily toil, — the time for the muchdreamed-of period of forgetfulness, — of relaxation. The time in which once again, Youth dances away the long golden hours of fragrant sunshine. Vacation-time ! ■ — And whether you are spending it in a marble palace situated on the brink of some exclusive lake of cerulean blue, — or whether you are following the provocative flashing of a trout's tail up stream on some wooded mountain-side, — or whether you are indulging in the great outdoor sport (slightly old-fashioned, we admit, but nevertheless, enjoyable), of cow-milking down on some little farm, it matters not — The July Motion Picture Classic should be with you! It is the magazine for vacationtime! For you cannot milk cows all day — marble palaces pall on you — you cannot fish at night — and therefore at some time or other you will be able to enjoy that unique tete-a-tete which Frederick James Smith had with Bobbie Harron the other night over the dinner-table. Bobbie tells us some interesting facts about the early days of the Photoplay. We introduce Gladys George, who has been interviewed in her own home. You will be very much interested in this beautiful young newcomer to cinema fame. From all reports which have come to our ears, Friend James Abbe, the well-known photographer, went over to the Mack Sennett Studios out on the Coast the other day . . . and hasn't been heard of since. However, we have mysteriously received some very beautiful photographs, which will add a great deal to the beauty of the July issue of the Classic. Have you ever paused to consider into what unknown limbo the plays and players of yesteryear have gone? We are quite sure our readers will enjoy the story which B. F. Wilson has written about these beloved ghosts of the past. Motion Picture Classic 1 75 Duffield St., Brooklyn, N. Y U08 1A££