Motion Picture Magazine (Feb-Jul 1921)

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IOTION PICTURE L MAGAZINE^ "J "A Joy Forever" (Continued from page 37) Lasky-Famous Players, Helen Dewitt, who was with Metro for a while, and the other two Gold Medalists are Erminie Gagnon and Beth Logan. Two little girls, Dorothy Taylor, seven years old, and Ruth Higgens, six years old, were awarded Silver Medals. Both played in "Love's Redemption." We have now working in conjunction with us, "The Sunday Times," of New Brunswick, New Jersey. This paper is conducting a Fame and Fortune Contest of its own, and every Sunday they publish the pictures of their Honor Roll, which in turn is submitted to us. We appreciate their welcome co-operation, as it lessens the work at our end considerably. The judges of the 1921 Contest have been decided upon, and we herewith publish the illustrious list. Their names alone are a guarantee of their fitness for the task assigned to them. They are : Mary Pickford, Howard Chandler Christy, Thomas H. Ince, J. Stuart Blackton, Maurice Tourneur, Ruth Roland, Carl Laemmle, Jesse Lasky, Blanche Bates, Jules Brulatour, Eugene V. Brewster, and David Belasco. We publish every month in Motion Picture Magazine the Fame and Fortune Honor Roll, together with all news of the Contest. You cannot afford to miss a single issue. ni\e Little Clown (Continued from page 35) the weather and nothing of Pat's feelings. It had been cloudy lately, but today was very pleasant, only a trifle cool. She hoped it was pleasant where the circus was traveling, and had everybody forgotten the Littlest Clown? She hoped not, because she hadn't forgotten anybody herself, and often thought about how good they'd been to her and how happy she was then. Dick was perfectly splendid, and Dick's people had given her a set of Jane Austin for her eighteenth birthday. Then came still briefer letters, with a rumply spotty look about them, and blurred words and blots and trembling letters, spelling brave lies. Of course she was happy. Daddy Toto wasn't to worry. Only, of course, she was sometimes a little lonely. Dick was so busy. She wished she could see some of her old friends. Daddy Toto had known even before he came to it, that the Beverly house would be just such a big, white, bleak place with most of its shutters closed as tho the sun was something poisonous and to be dreaded. He had known even before he saw her that his little Pat would have the curls brushed out of her riotous hair and the curl cried out of her laughing mouth. But he had not known quite how it would feel to hold her, sobbing and laughing and trembling in his arms. "Oh Daddy ! Oh Daddy Toto Dear !" Pat kept saying, "You didn't forget me, did you ? I was afraid you had ! Oh, I was afraid nobody wanted me any more !" "Nobody wanted you, Pat?" said Daddy Toto with a hunger in his voice, and the fixed grin on his weathered face, "we always want you, dear. Come back to the circus, Pat ! Come home !" She looked at him longingly, but shook her head. "Dick's people dont want me to marry him." She spoke quietly, but her face was scorched with shame, "they dont say so, but they do so ! I'd go if — if I were (Continued on page 90) NABISCO Sugar Wafers Gossamer light strips enclosing vari-flavored fillings. ANOLA Sugar Wafers Creamy chocolate between chocolate-flavored wisps. RAMONA Sugar Wafers Centers of creamy cocoanut sandwiched between chocolate-flavored wafers. THE wise hostess knows that whatever surprise-dessert makes its appearance, these dainty three make the surprise and the enjoyment complete. So she sees to it that a ready supply of all three is kept in the pantry at all times. In this way she guards against surprise when company unexpectedly calls, while insuring delicious surprises for them. Sold in the famous In-er-seal Trade Mark package NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY = J.