Photoplay (Jul-Dec 1922)

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.

Photoplay Magazine — Advertising Section "I Knew You'd Make Good" "T ALWAYS felt you had it in vou to get 1 ahead. But for a time I was afraid your natural ability would be wasted because you had never trained yourself to do anyone thing well. Yes, I was afraid you would always be 'a jack of all trade and master of none.' "But the minute you decided to study in your spare time I knew you'd make good. You seemed more ambitious — more cheerful— more confident of the future. And I knew that your employers couldn't help but notice the difference in your work. "Think what this last promotion meins! More money — more comforts — more of everything worth while. Tom, those hours you spent on that I. C. S. course were the best investment you ever made." HOW about you? Are you always going to work for a small salary? Are you going to waste your natural ability all your life? Or are you going to get ahead in a big way? It all depends on what you do with your spare time. Opportunity knocks — this time in the form of that familiar I. C. S. coupon. It may seem like a little thing, but it has been the means of bringing better jobs and bigger salaries to thousands of men. Mark and mail it today and without cost or obligation, learn what the I. C. S. can do for you. INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS Box 6465-B, Scranton, Penna. Without cost or obligation on my part, please send me full particulars about the subject before which I have marked an X in the list below: — BUSINESS TRAINING DEPARTMENT DBusiness Management □Salesmanship □ Industrial Management □Advertising □ Personnel Organization QBetter Letters □ Traffic Management ^Foreign Trade □Business Law ^Stenography and Typing □ Banking and Banking Law DBusiness English □ AccountancydncludingC.P.A.) nCivil Service □ Nicholson Cost Accounting DRailway Mail Clerk D Bookkeeping □ Common School Subjects □ Private Secretary DHigh School Subjects □ liusiness Spanish □ French □illustrating TECHNICAL AND INDUSTRIAL DEPARTMENT □ Electrical Engineering DAirplane Engines □ Electric Lighting □Architect □ Mechanical Engineer ^Contractor and Builder □ Mechanical Draftsman □ Architectural Draftsman □ Machine Shop Practice □ Concrete Builder □ Kailroad rosition3 □structural Engineer □ Gas Engine Operating DChemistry □ Civil Engineer UPharmacj □ Surveying and Mapping □Automobile Work □ Mine Foreman or Engineer □ Agriculture and Poultry □ Steam Engineering □wireless □Mathematics Name Street Address City State Occupation Persons residing in Canada should send this coupon to the International Correspondence Schools Canadian, Limited, Montreal, Canada. Send fortius Instrument Add to this summer's fun! If you can whistle or hum a tune, you can play a Ludwig Song Whistle. Sounds like the human voice. No lessons needed. Add pep to the party ! Take it on picnics, at the beach, house parties or use it at home with the Victrola. Most all musical dealers carry the Ludwig Song Whistle. If your dealer can't supply you, send S2 00 and we will ship to you prepaid. Satisfaction guaranteed. Send in your order now! LUDWIG & LUDWIG '1612 N. Lincoln St. Chicago, Illinois The prolific press agent for the Universal company sent this picture in with the following caption, which needs no explanation: "How important is the person telephoning Erich von Stroheim? Mighty important you may be sure, for the famous directorauthor-star is hiding out in the mountains around Universal City to write the continuity for his next story. His secretary and the manager of his unit are on sentry duty behind him." Even privacy must be acted and publicized pORINNE GRIFFITH, looking even ^-* lovelier than usual, all curled up in a big chair with Billy, her black pom, said she wanted to go abroad. She had a month's vacation and she had never been to Europe. There was a boat sailing next week, and she'd like to take it. "The only trouble is," said the beautiful sapphire-eyed Corinne, "I don't know a soul in Europe — except two people who are in Paris — and they wouldn't want to be bothered with me." "How about the Vitagraph representatives in London and Paris?" someone suggested. "They might take me around, mightn't they?" mused Miss Griffith. "Still, I don't know anybody — and they don't know me. Oh dear!" It never occurred to Corinne that she is somewhat of a celebrity, that her pictures are shown in London and Paris, and that several thousand people would be only too glad to see her. So she spent her vacation in Hot Springs, Virginia, instead! VX7ILL ROGERS is working hard these He is the foremost star of the sixteenth edition of Flo Ziegfeld's Follies, now holding forth at the New Amsterdam Theater in Manhattan; and besides that he is Ichabod Crane in "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow," which is being made into a motion picture by Carl Stearns Clancy. This is Rogers' first film appearance since "One Glorious Day," made for Paramount after he had completed his Goldwyn contract. Y\ THEN William Fox bought "If Winter ** Comes," A. S. M. Hutchinson's charming novel which has, strangely enough, become a commercial as well as an artistic success, there was a general gnashing of teeth by those who dislike to see their literary favorites mutilated in the movies. But Mr. Fox evidently has no intention of butchering the whimsical tale to make a boxoffice holiday. He has sent Harry Millarde, who made "Over the Hill," to England to direct the story on its native heath; and he has engaged to play Mark Sabre, the hero, a real English gentleman, Percy Marmont. We talked to Mr. Marmont a few months ago when he was playing opposite Mabel Ballin. "More than anything in the world," he said, " I would like to play Sabre of 'If Winter Comes' on the screen. It's the character of all characters in fiction that I would give my heart and soul to recreating. But I suppose there isn't a chance." Besides realizing his artistic ambition, Marmont achieves another: a visit to Britain. Every advertisement in PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE is guaranteed.