Picture Play Magazine (Sep 1921 - Feb 1922)

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Advertising Section H 'JBELENEJCHADWICK ' CLARA_WILLIAMS LOUISE FAZENDA r RUTH ROLAND, t RUTH STONEHQUSE^MAY^ALLISOH* In "The Wonder Book for Writers," which we will send to you ABSOLUTELY FREE, these famous Movie Stars point out the easiest way to turn your ideas into stories and photoplays and become a successful writer. Millions oP People Can yftite Stories and Photoplays and DorftKnowIt/ THIS Is the startling assertion recently made by one of the highest paid writers in the world. Is his astonishing statement true? Can it be possible there are countless thousands of people yearning to write, who really can and simply haven't found it out? Well, come to think of it, most anybody can tell a story. Why can't most anybody write a story? Why is writing supposed to be a rare gift that few possess? Isn't this only another of the Mistaken Ideas the past has handed down to us? Yesterday nobody dreamed man could fly. To-day he dives like a swallow ten thousand feet above the earth and laughs do^n at the tiny mortal atoms of his fellow-men below ! So yesterday's "impossibility" Is a reality to-day. "The time will come," writes the same authority, "when millions of people will be writers — there will be countless thousands of playwrights, novelists, scenario, magazine and newspaper writers — ■ they are coming, coming — a whole new world of them !" And do you know what these writers-to-be are doing now? Why, they are the men — armies of them — young and old, now doing mere clerical work in offices, keeping books, selling merchandise, or even driving trucks, running elevators, street cars, waiting on tables, working at barber chairs, following the plow, or teaching schools in the rural districts ; and women, young and old, by scores, now pounding t y p e writers, or standing behind counters, or running spindles in factories, bending over sewing machines, or doing housework. Yes — you may laugh — but these are The Writers of Tomorrow. For writing isn't only for geniuses as most people think. Don't you 'believe the Creator pave you a story-ivriting faculty just as He did the nreatest writer? Only maybe .you are simply "bluffed" by the LETTERS LIKE THIS ARE POURING IN I "1 wonldn't take a mlllloa dolus for it."-MAEY WATSON, Taibmont. W. Va. It 1b worth its weiffht In sold. " -G. MOCKWITZ. New Castle. Wa3B. 'Every obstacle that menaces •access can be mastered through this simple but tlioroneh system.''-MRS. OUVE MICHAl/X. Charleboi, Pa. _j contains a sold mine of valnable savirostlons. " ~ LENA BAILEY. Mt. Vebnon. Iix. 1 can only say that I am amazed that it is possible to set forth the principles of short story and photoplay writing in such a clear, concise manner." GORDON MATHEWS, MoNTEKAL, Can. 'I received yoor Irvine System some time aKO. It is the most remarlcable tning I have ever seen. Mr. Irvinfir certainly has made story and play wrltins amazln^y almple and easy."— ALFRED BOBTO, Niagaba Falls. N.y. Of all the compositions 1 have read on this subject, I find yours the most helpful to aspirins authors." HAZEL SIMPSON N A Y L O R . Literary Editoe, Motion Picture Magazine. "With this volume betore blm. the veriest novice should be able to build stories or photoplays that wiU&ndareadymarket, Thebest treatise of its kind I have encountered in 24 years of newspaper and literary work." H. PIERCE WELt4ER, MAMAOINO EdiTOB, THS BinGHAMP TON Press. "When I first saw roar ad I was workins in a shop (or |B0 a week. Always havincT worked with my hands, I doabted my ability to make money with my brain. So ftwaawith much skepticism that I sent (or your Easy Method of WrltlnE. When the System arrived, I carefallystndIsd It evcninss after work. Withio a month I had completed tvro plays, one of which sold for $500. ttia other for $450. I nnbesltatllicly aay that! owe It all to tna b^nc System. "-HELEN KINDONT ATLUmo CITT, N.J. thought that you "haven't the gift." Many people are simply afraid to try. Or if they do try, and their first efforts don't satisfy, they simply give up in despair, and that ends it. They re through. They never try again. Yet If, by some lucky chance, they had first learned the simple rules of writing, and then given the imagination free rein, they might have astonished the world ! BUT two things are essential in order to become a writer. First, to learn the ordinary principles of writing. Second, to learn to exercise your faculty of Thinking. By exercising a thing you develop it. Y'our Imagination is something like your right arm. The more you use it the stronger it gets. The principles of writing are no more complex than the principles of spelling, arithmetic, or any_ other simple thing that anybody knows. Writers learn to piece together a story as easily as a child sets up a miniature house with his toy blocks. It is amazingly easy after the mind grasps the simple "know how." A little study, a little patience, a little confidence, and the thing that looks hard often turns out to be just as easy as it seemed difficult. Thousands of people imagine they need a fine education in order to write. Nothing is farther from the truth. Many of the greatest writers were the poorest scholars. People rarely learn to write at schools. They may get the principles there, but they really learn to icrite from the great, wide, open, boundless Book of Humanity ! Yes, seething all around you, every day, every hour, every minute, in the whirling vortex — the flotsam and jetsam of Life — even in your own home, at work or play, are endless incidents for stories and plays — a wealth of material, a world of things happening. Every one of these has the seed of a story or play in it. Think ! If you went to a Are. or saw an accident, you could come home and tell the folks all about it. Unconsciously you would describe it all very realistically. And if somebody stood by and wrote down exactly what you said, you might be amazed to find your story would sound just as interesting as many you've read in magazines or seen on the screen. Now, you will naturally say, "Well, if Writing is as simple as you say it is. why can't I learn to write?" Who says you can't? LISTEN ! A wonderful FREE book has recently been written on this very subject— a book that tells all about the Irving System — a Startling New Easy Method of Writing Stories and Photoplays. This amazing book, called "The Wonder Booh for Writers," shows how easily stories and plays are conceived, written, perfected, sold. How many who don't dream the.y can write, suddenly find it out. How the Scenario Kings and the Story Queens live and work. How bright men and women, without any special experience, learn to their own amazement that their simplest Ideas may furnish brilliant plots for Plays and Stories. How one's own Imagination may provide an endless gold-mine of Ideas that bring Happy Success and Handsome Cash Royalties. How new writers get their names into print. How to tell if you ARE a writer. How to develop your "story fancy," weave clever word-pictures and unique, thrilling, realistic plots. How your friends may be your worst judges. How to avoid discouragement and the pitfalls of Failure. How to WIN ! This surprising bool? is ABSOLUTELY FREE. No cliarge. No obligation. YOUB copy is waiting for you. Write for it NOW. GET IT. IT'S YOURS. Then you can pour your wliole soul into this magic new enchantment that has come into your life — story and play writing. The lure of it, the love of it. the luxury of it will fill your wasted hours and dull moments with profit and pleasure. You will have this noble, absorbing, money malting new profession! And all in your spare time, without interfering with your regular job. Wlio says you can't malte "easy money" with your brain! Who says you can't turn your Thoughts into cash! Who says you can't make your dreams come true! Nobody knows— BUT THE BOOK WILL TELL YOU. So why waste any more time wondering, dreaming, waiting? Simply fill out the coupon below — you're not BUYING anything, you're getting it ABSOLUTELY FREE. A book that may prove the Book of Your Destiny. A Magic Book through which men and women young and old may learu to turn their spare hours into cash ! Get your letter in the mail before you sleep to-night. Who knows— it may mean for you the Dawn of a New To-morrow! Just address The Authors' Press, Dept. 379, Auburn, New York. ThisBooKFREE \ THE AUTHORS' PRESS, Dept. 379, Auburn, N. Y. I Send me ABSOLUTELY FREE "The Wonder . Book for Writers." This does not obligate me in I any way [Print your name plainly in pencil] I I Name j A ddress I City and State.