Motion Picture Magazine (Aug 1928-Jan 1929)

Record Details:

Something wrong or inaccurate about this page? Let us Know!

Thanks for helping us continually improve the quality of the Lantern search engine for all of our users! We have millions of scanned pages, so user reports are incredibly helpful for us to identify places where we can improve and update the metadata.

Please describe the issue below, and click "Submit" to send your comments to our team! If you'd prefer, you can also send us an email to mhdl@commarts.wisc.edu with your comments.




We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.

Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.

To have beautiful eyes —do this TN A TWINKLING . . . wonderful •*■ Winx makes eyes enchanting pools of loveliness — by framing them in a soft, shadowy fringe of luxuriant lashes. If you want beautiful eyes that can never be denied a whim or wish, apply Winx to the lashes. Fashion Decrees This Cream In this dainty compact is the bewitching lash dressing, Cream Winx,which gives to lashes and brows smartbeauty . It also aids their lustrous growth. So easy to carry. 75c complete. . Some Prefer This Cake Safe and harmless and simple to apply, this wonderful Cake Winx, preferred by many fastidious women, makes eyes seem larger, more expressive. A flick of the btush, and it's done! 75c complete. The Originator of the Smartest Mode Everywhere you'll see eyes made lovelier by Win x Waterproof, the liquid fash dressingwhich neither runs nor fades. It is safe, easy to apply and remove. 75c complete. Insist Upon Winx To be sure of the loveliest lashes and brows, insist upon Cream Winx, Cake Winx, or Winx Waterproof — whichever you prefer. For Winx is now the mode. Obtained where you purchase your aids to beauty. I NX ROSS COMPANY 243 West 17th Street, New York City C. S. Ball One white man's burden comes to two pounds. Johnny Mack Brown discovers, after emptying all the contents of his pockets on the scales, that he's been making a junk-wagon of himself A Cynic of the Cinema (Continued from page 55) movie companies in the business. It was his job to sell their program to slightly reluctant exhibitors. He put so much enthusiasm into the work that it rated him a promotion to manager of one of the eastern exchanges. He was making a pretty good salary and getting along great when along came the war. Bill wasn't born Irish for nothing. He loved a good fight, and so he went off and enlisted. The film company made a big fuss over him and gave him the glad hand and promised to keep his job open for him when he returned. His official business kept him in Europe about a year and a half. One summer day he landed back home in New York and beat it up to the home office to see about his job. He noticed that there wasn't as much hurrah over his home-coming as there had been at his departure. A couple of the fellows came out and shook hands with him and inquired after the Heinies. Then someone told him that his job had been filled. They were very sorry. They also hoped he understood, etc., etc. If anything came up. they would be glad to get in touch with him. Bill grinned. He shook them all by the hand, being careful to grip their knuckles to the breaking point. He said he understood perfectly — that they were a bunch of so-in-sos and dirty what-nots and lousy what-have-yous. He said he wouldn't work _for their and-so-on old company if they made him president. What I mean to say is that he pushed his overseas cap on the back of his head and told them exactly what he thought of them and their an cestors. Before he left, the report goes, he grabbed a paper-weight and threw it through a window that had been patriotically draped with an American flag. Then he bowed himself out. KNOCKED HIMSELF INTO A JOB HE was so sore he went down the street knocking people right and left and that is how he happened to bump into the head salesman of a rival film concern. Bumped into him, literally. "Hey," yelled this fellow as Bill made to pass by. "Hey! Howard! If you ain't doing anything now, I've got a job for you." That slowed Bill up, though he was wise enough in the ways of the cinema to realize immediately that there must be a catch in it somewhere or it would not have come so easily. But returned soldiers must eat. Bill accepted right on the spot without bothering to find out what his work consisted of. He wasn't long in learning that his job was to travel throughout the country selling the worst series of pictures that has ever been made by any producing company before or after. The boss told him, "We got these cooties on our hands, Bill, and we can't get rid of them. There's a nice commission in it if you sell a few of them." Bill took a look at the pictures and realized that cooties was a polite term for them. But he buckled down to the job and set out with a determination to sell them. His energy was part loyalty to the firm that had given him a job and part anger at their rivals. Before (Continued on page 97) 90