Page:Screenland October 1923.djvu/6

6 Announcing

Screenland, Inc., publishers of Screenland Magazine, announce the first issue of a new national magazine—REAL LIFE STORIES.

A high and worthy purpose actuates the publishers in their new venture.

The new magazine, we believe, is destined, to be a very real and helpful force in the lives of its readers.

It is to be a Book of Life. Every story will be a heart story, a living, throbbing slice of Life. Our book will be written by our readers, out of the fullness and richness of their own experiences. The tawdry, the cheap, the flimsy, the unreal will have no place in REAL LIFE STORIES. But every phase of real life as it is lived in these good, old wholesome United States of America will be mirrored there.

From the very first number, we want you to feel its excellence, its sincerity, its dignity of purpose, and its absorbing interest.

Here are only a few of the titles, but they will give you a glimpse into the new book, sufficient, we are sure, to intrigue your interest:

The poignant story of a child-wife, bored with the monotony of the farm and with her silent, good husband, steps blindly out upon the primrose path with a charming vagabond poet, who feeds her on lyrics and "tramps" the lovely countryside with her in a rattling Ford, until—

Not all show-girls are tarnished gold; not all well-bred men are chivalrous; but some show-girls are pure and many "gentlemen" are cads, according to the bitter experience of a soubrette who steps down from the stage into marriage and grief.

An O. Henry bit of brilliant satire upon a stage woman's craving for domesticity, told by a newspaper reporter who interviews her.

Every man of forty-five who has been serenely married for years meets a Rosalind; and every Rosalind who works for a living meets her "Judge Thompson" sooner or later.

All the delicate wistfulness of the sorrow-ravaged face of her who wrote this story is here for you to see, together with a poetic quality which we had believed to be stifled with grief.

"I have heard a hundred variations of the gospel of free love, and every one of them from some man who wanted to possess me—temporarily—and to salve his conscience," said a self-sufficient and charming young business woman. "But I know a girl who beat the 'free love' game, and I believe she'll write her story for you." We found her in the little Western city where she now lives happily, and asked her to write the story—and she did.

The story of a dead soldier's intervention between his worthless wife and his own brother—a "come back" by way of a poppy plant and an opium pipe.

Watch for the first issue—fifteen splendidly told stories out of the lives of real men and women.



STUDIOS and ADDRESSES

Astra Studios Glendale, Calif.

Balboa Studio East Long Beach, Calif.

Berwilla Studios 5821 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood

Century Film Corp. 6100 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood

Chas. Chaplin Studios La Brae Ave., Hollywood

Christie Comedies 6101 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood

Irvings Cummings Prod. 1729 Highland Ave., Hollywood

Doubleday Productions Sunset & Bronson Ave., Hollywood

Ferdinand Earle Productions Hollywood Studios, Hollywood

Wm. Fox West Coast Studios 1417 N. Western Ave., Hollywood

Fine Arts Studio 4500 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood

J. L. Frothingham Prod. United Studios, Hollywood

Garson Studios 1845 Glendale Blvd., Glendale

Goldwyn Studio Culver City

Great Western Producing Co. 6100 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood

Thos. H. Ince Productions Culver City

Lasky Studios 1520 Vine Street, Los Angeles

Louis B. Mayer Studios 3800 Mission Road, Los Angeles

Metro Studio Romaine and Cabuenga Ave., Hollywood

Morosco Productions 3800 Mission Road, Los Angeles

Bud Osborne Productions 6514 Romaine Street, Hollywood

Pacific Studios Corp San Mateo, Calif.

Pickford-Fairbanks Studio Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood

Pacific Film Co. Culver City

Principal Pictures United Studios, Hollywood

R. D. Film Corp Balboa Studios, Long Beach

Chas. Ray Studios Hollywood, Cal.

Realart StndioStudio [sic] 201 N. Occidental, Los Angeles

Robertson-Cole Productions Melrose and Gower, Hollywood

Russell-Griever-Russell 6070 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood

Hal E. Roach Studio Culver City

Morris R. Schlank Productions 6050 Sunset, Hollywood

Jos. Schenck Prod United Studios, Hollywood

Schulberg Productions 3800 Mission Road, Los Angeles

Sennett Studios Edendale, Los Angeles

Selig-Rork 3800 Mission Road, Los Angeles

Universal Studio Universal City, Calif.

King Vidor Prod. Ince Studios, Culver City

Vitagraph Studio 1708 Talmadge, Los Angeles

Warner Bros. Studios. Sunset & Bronson, Hollywood

Ben Wilson Productions Berwilla Studios, East Long Beach, Calif.

Biograph Studios 807 East 175th St, N. Y. C.

Blackston Studios Brooklyn, N. Y.

Estee Studios 124 West 125th St., N. Y. C.

Famous Players' Studios Astoria, L. I., N.Y.

Fox Studios West 55th St., N. Y. C.

D. W. Griffith Studios Mamaroneck, N. Y.

International Film 2478 2nd Ave., N. Y. C.

Harry-Levy Prod 230 West 38th St., N. Y. C.

Lincoln Studio Grantwood, N. J.

Mirror Studios Glendale, Long Island, N. Y.

Pathe 1900 Park Avenue, N. Y. C.

Selznick Studios Fort Lee, N. J.

Talmadge Studios 318 East 48th St., N. Y. C.

Vitagraph Studios East 15th. St., Brooklyn, N. Y.